White Teachers Need to See Color. Here's Why. - WeAreTeachers - 1 views
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Every person of color has a similar story where an elder takes time to talk about the way their physical appearance is interpreted by white people. Do white people talk about how to make themselves appear more culturally aware in interviews?
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Every time a white teacher says, “I don’t see color,” you abandon a child in an educational void by refusing to recognize them for who they are. Additionally you fail to prepare them to enter a world who will see their color as a factor to their success and abilities.
ADHD Myths: 10 Things People Should Stop Saying - 1 views
NAIS - Building More Inclusive Communities with Grading for Equity - 1 views
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Yet, grading—how teachers evaluate, describe, and report student achievement—is rarely considered part of DEI work.
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Perhaps most profoundly, grades shape how our students think about themselves—who they are, what they’re good at, and whether school is a place they can succeed.
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Averaging his performance doesn’t accurately describe his skills, and it hides all his growth and improvement.
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Can we keep SEL on course? - kappanonline.org - 0 views
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Think of SEL as an aspiration, not an intervention.
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Describe SEL in positive terms.
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Be skeptical of metrics.
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Recommended in this week's Marshall Memo: "In this column in Phi Delta Kappan, PDK International CEO Joshua Starr says three things worry him about "the rapid and widespread embrace" of social-emotional learning (SEL). First, the concept has become "too fuzzy to be useful" - it can mean growth mindset, grit, anti-bullying, collaborative learning, classroom management, and more. Second, developers are creating social-emotional learning products and hyping them as ways to transform schools (if we purchase and implement them with fidelity). Third, says Starr, 'I worry that the SEL movement hasn't been careful enough to address the racial divisions that permeate American public education… It's no surprise that many critics have begun to push back on the idea that children of color need white educators to teach them to persevere and regulate their behavior.' Starr has these suggestions to get social-emotional learning back on track so that it makes a positive difference in schools"
Devon Carbado - 0 views
5 Tips: Differentiating Sensory from Behavior - 1 views
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roblem behaviors are part of typical development.
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A child’s behavior is a form of communication.
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“Children do well if they can”
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Organizing Your School As A List Of Courses Doesn't Work For Learners - 0 views
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This was an incredible look at the structure of education and a look at redesign/restructure the entire idea of education. A selected excerpt: How would school be structured differently if we really wanted to cultivate youth leadership? Despite serving students with a distribution of skills, grade levels are the dominant architecture of K-8 schools and for the last 20 years, there has been a particular fixation with grade level proficiencies which has reinforced whole group learning in grade cohorts.
ADHD Homework Strategies: Study Smarter, Not Harder! - 0 views
Talking Race With Young Children : NPR - 1 views
Using Neuroscience to Launch a Research-Informed School Schedule | EdSurge News - 1 views
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Though we had changed many of our pedagogical practices, our schedule was still outdated. We wondered whether we could leverage research in educational neuroscience to transform it.
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students saw the value of about 90-minutes of quality homework that was assigned for one of three reasons: retrieval practice, to connect or extend prior learning or to be prepared for the next class period.
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Launching something imperfect when you already have something that is comfortable can be challenging, but it gave us an opportunity to model what we were already messaging to our students about “failing forward.”
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Group Work That Works | Edutopia - 0 views
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The most effective creative process alternates between time in groups, collaboration, interaction, and conversation... [and] times of solitude, where something different happens cognitively in your brain,
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Unequal participation is perhaps the most common complaint about group work.
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a handful of practices that educators use to promote equal participation. These involve setting out clear expectations for group work, increasing accountability among participants, and nurturing a productive group work dynamic.
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Alexa Helps With Homework, But Problem-Solving Skills Are Key : NPR - 0 views
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Still, he agrees that this debate is about much more than knowing what 5 minus 3 is. It's also about developing the patience to solve problems. "That ability to stay focused," he says, "particularly when something is not interesting, is one of the most important developmental skills that children acquire." In other words, it's not just about having the answers. It's about the work you put in to get them.
Where Kids Find Hate Online | Common Sense Media - 0 views
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Just by playing a game on the internet, looking up a definition, or maybe checking out some music, they'll encounter some of the most vile and offensive words and images that can be expressed in the comments section of a YouTube video, a meme in their feed, or a group chat
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The intensity of these ideas, the frequency with which kids see them, and the acceptance by so many that it's just part of internet life mean that it's critical to talk to kids about this difficult topic.
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Are tech companies really that dedicated to free speech, or do they just want more users?
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Home | Jacob Burns Film Center - 0 views
Home - Media Literacy Clearinghouse - 0 views
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