Sat.Aug 17, 2024 - Fri.Aug 23, 2024

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Prioritization: The Key to Leadership Success

A Principal's Reflections

Do you ever feel virtually everything seems critical or important as a leader? Most, if not all, of us have been in this position repeatedly. What happens, though, is that we place an emphasis on tasks that seem essential but have little to no impact on student learning. Prioritization The reasons people often prioritize less essential tasks over crucial ones are multifaceted.

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8 Of The Most Important Critical Thinking Skills

TeachThought

Critical thinking is the ongoing application of unbiased analysis in pursuit of objective truth. Although its name implies criticism , critical thinking is actually closer to ‘ truth judgment ‘ based on withholding judgments while evaluating existing and emerging data to form more accurate conclusions. Critical thinking is an ongoing process emphasizing the fluid and continued interpretation of information rather than the formation of static beliefs and opinions.

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How Metacognition Can Optimize Learning

Cult of Pedagogy

Listen to my interview with Megan Sumeracki ( transcript ): Sponsored by EVERFI and The Wired Classroom 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? Here’s a scenario you might be familiar with: A person — maybe you, maybe someone you know — studies for hours to prepare for a test.

Pedagogy 248
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Creating Inclusive Classrooms with Co-Teaching and the Station Rotation

Catlin Tucker

This post is a Noelle Gutierrez & Catlin Tucker collaboration. In today’s educational landscape, the emphasis on inclusion and creating the least restrictive environments for students with Individualized Education Programs (IEPs) has significantly reshaped classroom dynamics. This shift has led to the growing adoption of co-teaching models, where general and special education teachers collaborate to meet the diverse needs of their students.

Teaching 158
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How Skill Recognition Can Create Equitable Pathways for Student Advancement

Digital Promise

The post How Skill Recognition Can Create Equitable Pathways for Student Advancement appeared first on Digital Promise.

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How to Create Engaging and Interactive Lessons With Technology

TeachThought

Education has gone beyond acquiring knowledge to acquiring skills using EdTech tools; students learn digital literacy, teamwork, and critical thinking skills. Using technology in learning also enhances the student’s ability to appreciate and ponder on issues in a previously deemed impossible manner. Thus, tech serves as an additional tool for navigation, similar to how tutors and experts at a professional coursework writing service assist with developing writing skills.

EdTech 290
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The fastest-growing college expense may not be what people think

The Hechinger Report

Hear the audio version of this story, from Vermont Public. BURLINGTON, Vt. — In his first year in graduate school at the University of Vermont, John Ball lived in a dark studio apartment in the basement of a building three miles from the campus. With utilities, it cost him $1,500 a month — more than the national median rent. “I just needed a place, and I was, like, OK, I’ll live anywhere, basically,” said Ball, who is working toward a doctorate in cellular, molecular and biomedical sciences.

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The Week That Was In 234

Moler's Musing

This week marked the start of a new chapter in my teaching career. I’ve transitioned to Batavia Middle School, where I’m now teaching 8th grade social studies in room 234. While the subject remains the same, I’m facing new procedures, new students, and a new textbook. Thursday and Friday – Frayers, 3xCER Adapting to Change At my previous school, we used TCI History Alive, but now I’m working with McGraw Hill’s Voices of the Past.

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The Evolution of Cooking: A Defining Moment in Human History

Anthropology.net

Cooking is often viewed as a significant turning point in human evolution. It not only provided the extra calories needed to support larger brains 1 but also transformed the way early humans interacted with their environment. When exactly did our ancestors begin to control fire and cook food? While the answer remains elusive, a combination of archaeological and biological evidence provides clues, suggesting cooking may have begun as early as 2 million years ago.

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PROOF POINTS: Why are kids still struggling in school four years after the pandemic?

The Hechinger Report

Four years after the pandemic shuttered schools, we all want to be done with COVID. But the latest analyses from three assessment companies paint a grim picture of where U.S. children are academically and that merits coverage. While there are isolated bright spots, the general trend is stagnation. One report documented that U.S. students did not make progress in catching up in the most recent 2023-24 school year and slid even further behind in math and reading, exacerbating pandemic learning los

Tutoring 145
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Teaching Bilingual Learners in Rural Schools

ED Surge

This story was originally published by The Daily Yonder. Throughout rural America, non-native English speakers are less likely than their urban peers to get proper support in school, sometimes leading to a lifetime of lower educational attainment. But some rural schools are developing multilingual education strategies to rival those found in urban and suburban districts.

Teaching 133
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Fire’s Alter-Lives: Climate Change Adaption and Settler Futurity in Bolivia

Anthropology News

Jesús Valdivia planned to get his cows high. This, he explained, would calm them, and guard them against the frantic despair that animals in close quarters feel when they collectively sense their impending death. We were seated on the third floor of a sprawling mall on the outskirts of Santa Cruz de la Sierra. Over vegetarian quiche, Jesús described “Paradise Farm,” his nascent ethical meat business.

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The Week That Was In 234

Moler's Musing

So far this school year is flying by. I’m really enjoying my new schedule. My day begins with teaching two 65-minute social studies periods, followed by a plan period, co-teaching a reading workshop with an ELA teacher, and ending the day with two more 65-minute social studies classes. It makes for a nice day. At the beginning of the year, the name of the game is teaching the process and procedures of EduProtocols.

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‘Not waiting for people to save us’: 9 school districts combine forces to help students

The Hechinger Report

DURANGO, Colo. — For three dozen high schoolers, summer break in this southwest Colorado city kicked off with some rock climbing, mountain biking and fly-fishing. Then, the work began. As part of a weeklong institute on climate and the environment, mountain researchers taught the students how to mix clumps of grass seed, clay, compost and sand for seedballs that they threw into burned areas of the Hermosa Creek watershed to help with native plant recovery.

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How a Best-Selling Food Writer Came to Run a Wish List-Clearing Project for Teachers

ED Surge

As someone who views cooking and baking as hobbies, not chores, I follow a lot of food bloggers and recipe developers on social media. I subscribe to many of their newsletters. I, well, make and eat a lot of their food. Yet I’ve only come across one who devotes back-to-school season to easing the financial burden on educators. Deb Perelman, the best-selling author and food blogger behind Smitten Kitchen, has been running the Classroom Wishlist Project for three years now.

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Anthropology at a Crossroads: Confronting Challenges and Reimagining the Future

Anthropology News

Anthropology has long been celebrated as a discipline that offers profound insights into human cultures, societies, and behaviors. Its holistic approach and emphasis on reflexivity have contributed significantly to our understanding of the human experience. As we navigate the complexities of the twenty-first century, anthropology faces an ever-evolving landscape that presents challenges and opportunities for renewal and growth.

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Expanding the Horizons of Human Evolution: The Hidden Bias in Africa's Fossil Record

Anthropology.net

The reconstruction of early human evolution has largely been shaped by fossil evidence found in a few key locations in Africa. These "fossil hotspots," such as the eastern branch of the East African Rift System, have yielded invaluable insights into our ancestral past. However, recent research underscores the limitations of this approach, highlighting the potential biases introduced by relying on such geographically limited data.

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OPINION: As a Black middle-school student, I was tracked into lower-level math classes that kept me back

The Hechinger Report

When people learn that I have a doctorate in educational psychology and quantitative methods, they often assume that I love math. And the truth is, I do now, although that wasn’t always the case. Like many Black students, I faced challenges throughout my academic journey, with math tracking being the primary one. Despite high math scores in earlier grades and a passion for the subject, I was placed into lower-level math courses in middle school.

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How to Bring to Life the Science of Reading

ED Surge

“You go into your own world for a moment. Like, if someone's talking to me and I'm reading a book, I wouldn't hear them,” says Aylynn, an eighth grader in Pendergast Elementary District in Phoenix, Arizona. “You can understand someone else's culture, what they celebrate, what they honor and what they believe in, without personally asking. It makes me empathize with other people.

Pedagogy 110
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LGBTQ+ Histories of the U.S. Summer Institute

ASHP CML

In July, thirty secondary school teachers joined ASHP for an NEH-funded summer institute focused on topics in LGBTQ+ history and culture, discussion of pedagogy, and an introduction to historical documents and materials for classroom use. After meeting virtually for a week, participants traveled from across the U.S. to gather at the Graduate Center and to visit New York City archives and cultural sites.

History 75
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On the Podcast: Engaging Students with Book Clubs

Heinemann Blog

On the commute this morning, Penny Kittle and Kelly Gallagher explore how personalized and student-driven reading experiences can cultivate a deep appreciation for literature. In this excerpt from their audiobook, 4 Essential Studies , we'll hear about research-backed strategies for integrating book clubs into your curriculum and practical methods to prepare for meaningful book club discussions that will deeply engage students and push their critical thinking skills.

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OPINION: As federal pandemic funds end, K-12 systems must look for bold changes

The Hechinger Report

Educators around the country are scrambling to save jobs and programs created in the last few years as they face the end of the federal funds aimed at helping schools recover from the pandemic. The Elementary and Secondary School Emergency Relief (ESSER) Fund gave districts nearly $200 billion. School systems leveraged these funds to pay for high-dosage tutoring, early literacy support, leadership development, enhanced counseling, expanded student exposure to career pathways and other endeavors.

K-12 112
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How Home Visiting Programs Benefit the Whole Family

ED Surge

This essay was adapted from a piece posted on Medium. About nine months ago, Dara told me she was interested in bringing her mother and nephew from Syria to the United States, and she needed assistance. She had immigrated to Evanston, Illinois from Syria five years ago, along with her husband and five children and had a goal of reuniting with her family.

Research 104
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New Genetic Study Redefines Origins On Japan's Ancestry

Anthropology.net

A groundbreaking genetic study conducted by researchers at the RIKEN Center for Integrative Medical Sciences has uncovered new evidence that challenges the longstanding belief in a dual-origin model of Japanese ancestry. The research, published in Science Advances 1 in April 2024, reveals that the people of Japan descend from three distinct ancestral groups rather than two, as previously believed.

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A student eye view on the value of learning game theory by playing games

CORE Econ

This blog was originally published on the Centre for Teaching and Learning Economics website. When exploring Game Theory in our Microeconomics lecture, the first year BSc Economics, Finance and Data Science cohort was given the opportunity to engage, through the ClassEx software, in a real-life simulation of a repeated public goods game featured in Unit 4.8 of The Economy 2.0: Microeconomics.

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Unlocking the Secrets: Best Practices in Micro-credential Implementation

Digital Promise

The post Unlocking the Secrets: Best Practices in Micro-credential Implementation appeared first on Digital Promise.

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Alan Harwood

Anthropology News

(1935-2024) On July 5, 2024 Dr. Alan Harwood, Professor Emeritus of Anthropology at the University of Massachusetts Boston, died at the Hospice of the Fisher Home in Amherst, Massachusetts surrounded by his children, Jessica and Seth Harwood, and his wife, Margot Welch. Alan first came to UMass Boston in 1972, and for the next 30 years until retirement in 2002 played a pivotal role in establishing and leading the university’s Anthropology Department.

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Humanity's Epic Journey to Australia Through an Ancient Resin Artifact

Anthropology.net

Archaeologists have long debated the exact paths taken by early modern humans on their journey to Australia. While genetic data has estimated the arrival of Homo sapiens in Australia to be under 50,000 years ago, archaeological findings suggest an earlier presence, possibly as far back as 65,000 or even 80,000 years ago. An exciting new discovery 1 from eastern Indonesia, a tiny piece of plant resin, has pushed the timeline back and revealed critical insights into the route early humans might ha

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Outbreak of Monkey Pox

O-Level Geography

Where is the Monkey Pox (MPox) more vulnerable? Why is MPox deadly? How does the outbreak of disease affect tourism? What are the measures taken to contain the spread?

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World Economic Forum - Global Risks Report 2024

Living Geography

Geographers are very much interested in the future and the nature of risk. The World Economic Forum publishes an annual report on perceptions of global risks. The 2024 report can be viewed here, along with some shareables. From the preamble. Underlying geopolitical tensions combined with the eruption of active hostilities in multiple regions is contributing to an unstable global order characterized by polarizing narratives, eroding trust and insecurity.

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Anticipating More Unrest, Colleges Prioritize Civic Dialogue

Institute for Citizens & Scholars

Two College Presidents for Civic Preparedness member institutions are featured in an Inside Higher Ed article for taking proactive steps to prioritize civil discourse and civic engagement this fall.

Civics 52
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Clovis People and the Ingenious Use of Braced Pikes in Megafauna Hunting

Anthropology.net

In the wake of the last Ice Age, vast herds of megafauna roamed North America, and the Indigenous peoples who lived alongside these colossal creatures needed effective hunting methods for survival. Recent research 1 has unveiled a remarkable technological adaptation used by the Clovis culture—a system of braced pikes that were likely employed in the hunting of massive megaherbivores and for defense against large predators.

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How to Crack the Code of Benchmark Assessments Step-by-Step | Step 6

Maitri Learning

How do we help young children crack the code of benchmark tests? The sixth step is enhancing Word Reading Fluency. In the sixth video of our "Crack the Codes" series, our literacy expert shares two straightforward ways to help young readers master high-frequency words—sometimes called puzzle words, sight words, or red words. You'll see how to map these words to boost recognition and practice them with a fun game that makes learning feel like play.

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Adrift on a Painted Sea

Living Geography

I love Tim Bird's graphic novels , several of which connect back to my own childhood home area in various ways. Tim's latest book also visits places I know very well along the East Yorkshire coast. I supported the book on a crowdfunding campaign and my copy of the book arrived last week. It's a really wonderful thing and a short but heart-warming read.

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Professional Development to Look Forward To

Zinn Education Project

We are thrilled to announce the 2024–2025 Teach the Black Freedom Struggle season of online classes — a series unlike any other professional development. This approach to professional development recognizes teachers as intellectuals and brings people together from across the country to deepen their understanding of the vital history of the Black Freedom Struggle.

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Reggie’s Realm™, The Soothsayer and The Pawpaw!

Life and Landscapes

Reggie’s Realm , The Soothsayer and The Pawpaw in Shelby County, Kentucky! Reggie Van Stockum studying as part of his Lyceum teaching for his Life and Landscapes® classes. Examine his short story, “The Snake and the Pawpaw” here: [link] [link] #reggievanstockum #reggiesrealm #pawpaw #kentuckyauthor #reginaldbareham #lifeandlandscapes Facebook.com/reginaldbareham, Instagram @reggievanstockum, YouTube @reggievanstockum1097, Spotify- Reggie Van Stockum, Apple Music- Regg

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Call for Applications: 2025 – 2026 Getty Scholars Program at the Villa

Society for Classical Studies

Call for Applications: 2025 – 2026 Getty Scholars Program at the Villa kskordal Mon, 08/19/2024 - 08:50 Image Getty Scholars Program at the Villa The J. Paul Getty Museum is pleased to announce the research theme for the 2025 – 2026 Getty Scholars Program at the Villa , “Religious Experience in Antiquity.” Applications for residential scholar grants are due on 1 October 2024 by 5pm PDT.

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