Helping Students Start the Year with a Positive Mindset
http://www.edutopia.org//blog/helping-students-start-year-positive-mindset-maurice-elias?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+EdutopiaNewContent+%28Edutopia%29
Now that students are back in school, it's a good time to help them refocus on learning, their strengths, and the personal and other resources that will help them succeed.Giving the kids fuel for confidence is the wisest way for a successful year.
Starting From Scratch: A Public School Built on Dreams of Students and Parents
http://blogs.kqed.org/mindshift/2014/08/starting-from-scratch-a-public-school-built-on-dreams-of-students-and-parents/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+kqed%2FnHAK+%28MindShift%29
All last year five teachers and two administrators researched school models, drew on business practices and used design thinking principles to combine the most inspiring practices into a new school. They even brought their ideas before the community several times to get feedback.
I would like to see the plan for Special Education.
The Problem With Understanding
http://www.teachthought.com/learning/the-problem-with-understanding/Unfortunately, professional development gives a lower level of attention to developing quality assessments, training that is rarely commensurate with this complexity. The challenge of assessment is no less than figuring out what a learner knows, and where he or she needs to go next. In other words, what do they know, and how should I respond?
The preparation and execution of assessment needs to include seeing the whole student--providing a learning environment supporting SEL (Social and Emotional Learning) and considering physical needs. Is the testing room comfortable? Are the students hungry, thirsty? Is there tissue? I know, I'm sounding like a mom. But I've tested hundreds of students K-12--and the greatest success equaled the greatest respect and attention to the needs of the students.
Also check these websites for more interesting articles: Edutopia, TeachHUB, TeachThought, MindShift KQED.
Why do some literacy tools flourish in the classroom, while others don’t get traction?
Online discussion are a great source of information so we don't try everything ourselves first.
Share Lesson Outlines in Google Calendar
In my Google Calendar account I always create a calendar for each the
classes that I teach. Then in those calendars I create events for each
class meeting.
Richard is the best resource online for free ed tech as well as clear instruction for us folks not very techy.
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