Sat.Sep 16, 2023 - Fri.Sep 22, 2023

article thumbnail

Making Learning Personal: 5 Steps for Success

A Principal's Reflections

Learning is a deeply personal journey and tailoring it to individual needs and preferences is essential for fostering meaningful and effective education. Personalized learning increases engagement and helps learners develop a deeper understanding of the subject matter. It all begins with understanding the learner's interests, something I dive deeply into in Disruptive Thinking in Our Classrooms.

Pedagogy 452
article thumbnail

Shift to Self-assessment

Catlin Tucker

Who decided that grading and assessment should be the exclusive responsibility of teachers? Why do we sideline students when it comes to assessment? Self-assessment is a powerful strategy that encourages students to become more invested in their learning journeys. It is a process where students evaluate their work, reflecting on what they’ve learned, how well they’ve understood complex concepts, how much progress they’ve made toward mastering key skills, and where they may need

Tradition 174
educators

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

article thumbnail

Nothing’s Going to Change My Mind: How Unconditional Positive Regard Transforms Classrooms

Cult of Pedagogy

Listen to the interview with Alex Shevrin Venet ( transcript ): Sponsored by EVERFI and Listenwise This page contains Amazon Affiliate and Bookshop.org links. When you make a purchase through these links, Cult of Pedagogy gets a small percentage of the sale at no extra cost to you. What’s the difference between Amazon and Bookshop.org? Among the many challenges teachers have faced since the onset of the pandemic , one that persists is this feeling that students have changed , that they are

Pedagogy 130
article thumbnail

10 Great Ways to Use Scavenger Hunts in the Classroom

A Lesson Plan for Teachers

This generation of students has been raised playing games. They play them for fun, to keep distracted or entertained, and even to help them complete chores or fall asleep. Gaming is a way of life. So why not use games in the classroom to help students learn? Even better, how about learning 10 great ways […] The post 10 Great Ways to Use Scavenger Hunts in the Classroom appeared first on A Lesson Plan for Teachers.

article thumbnail

PROOF POINTS: It’s easier and easier to get an A in math

The Hechinger Report

Amid the growing debate over how best to teach math, there is another ballooning problem: grades. They’re becoming increasingly untethered to how much students know. That not only makes it harder to gauge how well students are learning math and catching up from pandemic learning losses, but it’s also making math grades a less reliable indicator of who should be admitted to colleges or take advanced courses.

article thumbnail

Students Know What They’re Looking for Online. Are Colleges Delivering What They Want?

ED Surge

Most of us know what to expect in a face-to-face classroom: Students sitting in rows, facing instructors and listening to lectures, watching videos displayed on screens up front, or, in smaller classes, participating in lively discussion. Altogether, a modest set of conventional choices we’re all familiar with as students and faculty on campus. But in the last couple of decades, since the introduction of online instruction in higher ed, students now expect a much wider range of options — a colle

article thumbnail

Four Tips for a Successful Device Rollout

Digital Promise

Leaders from Verizon Innovative Learning Schools’ newest cohort share best practices from their recent rollout events.

129
129

More Trending

article thumbnail

‘Data days’ and longer math classes: How one district is improving math scores

The Hechinger Report

While the rest of the country’s schools were losing ground in math during the COVID pandemic, students in a small rural Alabama school district soared. This story also appeared in AL.com and The Associated Press Piedmont City schools landed in the top spot among all school districts nationwide in a comparison of math scores in 2019 and 2022. Other Alabama school districts fared well, too, but Piedmont, a small, 1,100-student district where 7 out of 10 students qualify for free or reduced-price l

article thumbnail

Evidence Is Mounting That Calculus Should Be Changed. Will Instructors Heed It?

ED Surge

Calculus is a critical on-ramp to careers in science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM). But getting to those careers means surviving the academic journey. While there’s been progress of late, it’s been “uneven” and Black, Hispanic and women workers are still underrepresented in some STEM fields. Traditional methods of calculus instruction may be knocking students off the path to these vital occupations, which is why advocates warn that getting diverse students into these careers ma

Tradition 122
article thumbnail

How Learning Pathways Bring the Portrait of a Graduate to Life

Digital Promise

Digital Promise has designed learning pathways to explicitly connect classroom learning to attributes districts identified through Portrait of Graduate

111
111
article thumbnail

What are the best sorting games?

Maitri Learning

Okay, sorting is fun. I admit it. I feel a strange sort of joy when I can organize things. Although I don't always do it in a timely fashion, having those piles of laundry folded Maria-Kondo-style in little piles on my bed gives me such a sense of satisfaction. And yes, sorting is a key skill children develop in early childhood. Sorting games guide children to group things into categories.

article thumbnail

COLUMN: Can we find the solution to middle school math woes in a virtual world?

The Hechinger Report

NEW YORK — I strap on a virtual reality headset. A screen appears and dramatic music pounds into my ears. I’m told there has been a nasty avalanche and that it’s my job to restore power to the grid. The exercise is part of a new program that encourages learning middle school math through real world problem-solving, now in use in 190 school districts across 36 states.

article thumbnail

How ‘Climate Anxiety’ Affects Students — and What We Can Do About It

ED Surge

Clad in a beanie, university sweatshirt and gold-rimmed glasses, a TikToker who goes by Mimi looks directly into the camera and speaks in a gentle tone as she addresses her viewers on the topics that flash in red-highlighted letters at the top of the video: “TW: Climate Anxiety & Doomism.” The trigger warning is buttressed by a more hopeful message accentuated in green: “& TIPS on how to deal with that.

article thumbnail

A Rally for Change and Equity: Closing the Adult Literacy Gap

Digital Promise

Digital Promise supports Adult Education and Family Literacy Week and closing the literacy gap for adults.

Education 117
article thumbnail

What are the best sorting games?

Maitri Learning

Okay, sorting is fun. I admit it. I feel a strange sort of joy when I can organize things. Although I don't always do it in a timely fashion, having those piles of laundry folded Maria-Kondo-style in little piles on my bed gives me such a sense of satisfaction. And yes, sorting is a key skill children develop in early childhood. Sorting games guide children to group things into categories.

article thumbnail

For teachers who fear math, banishing bad memories can help

The Hechinger Report

Editor’s note: This story led off this week’s Early Childhood newsletter, which is delivered free to subscribers’ inboxes every other Wednesday with trends and top stories about early learning. Email Address Choose from our newsletters Weekly Update Future of Learning Higher Education Early Childhood Proof Points Leave this field empty if you’re human: At the start of her Math Methods course at Drexel University, Karen Greenhaus has a simple assignment for her pre-service early ed teachers

article thumbnail

More States Are Screening for Dyslexia. We Need a Plan for What Happens Next.

ED Surge

Researchers estimate that dyslexia affects one in five individuals. Yet, it is often misdiagnosed or missed entirely. Even more common than a misdiagnosis is the likelihood that a student with dyslexia will find themself in a classroom without the resources to become a successful reader. In fact, according to the International Dyslexia Association , only about 5 percent of students who have dyslexia are properly identified and given support.

Research 111
article thumbnail

How to Support Students in Creating Learning Materials with Low-Cost Tech

Digital Promise

The post How to Support Students in Creating Learning Materials with Low-Cost Tech appeared first on Digital Promise.

106
106
article thumbnail

Shaking Up High School Math

Achieve the Core

“Miss, you do know that one person does the homework and then passes it around the lunch table for everybody else to copy, right?” — 9th grade student, circa 2005 Welcome to My “Why” I probably should have known. I vaguely remember the same practice from back when I was in high school. Homework counted 15%, maybe 30%, of our grade in some classes.

article thumbnail

How can you help your kids get better at math?

The Hechinger Report

In this short video, reporter Sharon Lurye discusses how parents can help their young children gather basic math skills. This story also appeared in The Associated Press Math is all around us. You don’t have to buy anything expensive or plan an activity in advance. It’s all about taking advantage of those spontaneous opportunities to ask your kids questions and help them learn.

Education 101
article thumbnail

How a Parking Lot Became a Panacea for This School District’s Housing Crisis

ED Surge

Shirley Cruz used to pass an old parking lot on her way to and from work. Adjacent to a former high school, the lot was wasted space back then, she says. Uber and Lyft drivers would congregate there, waiting to get assigned to their next rides, Cruz recalls. Otherwise, it sat empty. In Daly City, California, just south of San Francisco city limits, that’s prime real estate.

article thumbnail

Can AI Be Leveraged to Support Competency-Based Assessments?

Digital Promise

The post Can AI Be Leveraged to Support Competency-Based Assessments? appeared first on Digital Promise.

102
102
article thumbnail

Adapting to more extreme weather

O-Level Geography

What is extreme weather? Why is there a need to adapt to more extreme weather? How can Singapore adapt to more extreme weather? Weather monitoring through weather model. Flood alert through SMS and Telegram channel. Public education - how to respond to alert and flash flood in Singapore. [link] 70% of Singapore's coast protected by hard structures. Dam gates to help divert storm water into the sea.

article thumbnail

Can free college coaching help National Guard members graduate?

The Hechinger Report

Editor’s note: This story led off this week’s Higher Education newsletter, which is delivered free to subscribers’ inboxes every other Thursday with trends and top stories about higher education. Email Address Choose from our newsletters Weekly Update Future of Learning Higher Education Early Childhood Proof Points Leave this field empty if you’re human: When the Covid-19 pandemic hit Northeastern Ohio, it was the National Guardsmen and women who stepped up to save the day.

article thumbnail

Free Social Studies Activities for Every Occassion

TCI

TCI’s free social studies activities will keep students engaged throughout the year as they explore the history behind Labor Day and biographies for Black History Month. Review the list to find seasonal social studies lessons, primary source activities, and biographies for K-12 classrooms. Labor Day (September) Labor Day is celebrated on the first Monday in September to honor the American labor movement.

article thumbnail

Study: The Indo-European language family was born south of the Caucasus

Strange Maps

Proto-Indo-European (PIE) is a language that gave rise to many others. About 46% of humans, well over three billion people, are native speakers of an Indo-European language. But where did PIE first arise, and who spoke it: pastoralists from the Pontic steppe straddling eastern Europe and west Asia or agrarians from Anatolia in Turkey? The answer to that question has been eluding anthropologists for ages.

article thumbnail

Balancing Routines

All Things Pedagogical

A blog post on a Monday, what is this chaos? I apologize to my regular readers for the lack of scheduled posts lately. If you read the previous posts you know that I have been floating between two cities for the last month. On Saturday I managed to bring everything to my new place and so now I hope to start posting and sharing the things I usually do with more of a routine.

Library 40
article thumbnail

OPINION: America should learn from Europe and adopt tougher regulations on artificial intelligence

The Hechinger Report

This summer, the White House persuaded seven major tech companies to make substantial commitments toward the responsible development of artificial intelligence; in early September, eight more joined in. The companies pledged to focus on researching the societal dangers of AI, such as the perpetuation of bias and abuse of privacy, and to develop AI that addresses those dangers.

K-12 99
article thumbnail

This Popular High School Civics Requirement Doesn’t Boost Voting Habits

Education Week - Social Studies

More than a dozen states require students to take the U.S. Citizenship exam, but it doesn't seem to boost turnout.

article thumbnail

More Than a Standard: Getting Back to the Heart of Education

ED Surge

Picture it: Thirty students in your classroom, each at different levels, with varying needs and interests. Yet, there is just one set of learning standards, one big state exam and one of you. The predicament arises when learners struggle to keep pace with a mandatory curriculum, raising questions about the effectiveness of a one-size-fits-all, grade-level approach to education.

article thumbnail

OPINION: Why turning school libraries into discipline centers will backfire

The Hechinger Report

School libraries should be places where students can learn independently and think creatively outside the traditional classroom. But that won’t happen under a new plan proposed for Houston, the largest school district in Texas. Instead, spaces once reserved for quiet contemplation of books will now be transformed into disciplinary spaces for troubled students.

Library 81
article thumbnail

One Day, AI Will Make Teaching Obsolete. As Educators, We Have a Different Role to Play.

ED Surge

This past spring, I overheard one of my fifth graders boast that he would start using ChatGPT to do his homework. I chuckled because I knew him well enough that he wouldn’t follow through. Frankly, I would have been thrilled that he did any homework, even with assistance. I’d already read many stories about ChatGPT in the news, and initially, I wasn’t concerned that the emergence of artificial intelligence (AI) would impact my teaching.

Teaching 140
article thumbnail

Will Virtual Reality Lead More Families to Opt Out of Traditional Public Schools?

ED Surge

For students at a new Florida-based charter school, entering the classroom means strapping on a VR headset. While plenty of schools have experimented with short lessons conducted in virtual reality, this new school, called Optima Academy Online, has embraced the technology as a primary mode of course delivery. That means participants log a lot of time in VR most every school day: Students in third through eighth grade are given a Meta Quest 2 VR headset and wear the devices for about 30 to 40 mi

article thumbnail

In Virginia, a battle over history standards ends in compromise

The Hechinger Report

Jenna Saykhamphone, a senior at Annandale High School in Fairfax County, Virginia, helped start an equity team at her high school to fight stereotypes both inside and outside her school in suburban Washington, D.C. Saykhamphone, who has Laotian and Nigerian ancestry, said there are not many other Black or Hispanic students in her accelerated International Baccalaureate (IB) classes, even though 85 percent of the student body is Black, Hispanic or Asian.

History 79