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Laura Shaw

Gates Puts the Focus on Teaching - NYTimes.com - 2 views

  • All along, Gates says, he had been asking questions about teacher effectiveness. How do you measure it? What are the skills that make a teacher great? “It was mind-blowing how little it had been studied,
  • True education reform requires engaging all of the country’s teachers.
Laura Shaw

Usable Knowledge: Measure for measures: What do standardized tests really tell us about... - 1 views

  • the misconception that matters the most is the notion somehow a good test measures all of what’s important.
  • you sample from this big domain of achievement a modest number of things that allow you to predict the whole. That’s all a test is
  • its value is only as a tool for estimating what kids really know about the whole.
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  • if the pressure becomes too severe, then people game the system.
  • The answer to the current problems we’re seeing is not, in my view, stop holding schools accountable for teaching kids. It’s, find a better way to do it, one that has fewer side effects.
  • Breaking people into these bins — below basic, basic, proficient, advanced — has, in my view, been one of the worst decisions we made in testing in decades.
  • it’s a very insensitive way to report performance.
Laura Shaw

Usable Knowledge: Measure for measures: What do standardized tests really tell us about... - 1 views

  • The problem is that as people have become increasingly focused on the tests that matter, the tests for which people are held accountable, scores on those tests have often become misleading, sometimes wildly misleading. And that’s ironically undermined what we can say with confidence about how much kids actually know and can do.
  • nobody is spending a lot of time prepping kids specifically for that test. So when scores go up on one of those tests, we have a fair degree of confidence that kids really know more.
  • look for the big picture. Make comparisons to countries that make sense to compare us to, but don’t pay attention to small differences, because you can’t trust them.
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  • there is no international average, other than the average of the countries that happened to participate that time.
Laura Shaw

Superstar teachers | Harvard Gazette - 2 views

  • high value-added (HVA) teachers — those that do the best job of raising students’ scores on standardized tests.
  • while the new research may identify HVA teachers, it’s still not clear what constitutes good teaching.
  • There’s one predictor of value-added, which is teacher experience. In the first couple of years, teachers’ value-added goes up quite a bit. Beside that, people who have more-advanced degrees, [have] higher SAT scores, graduated from a better college, are certified versus uncertified — none of these things are strong predictors of value-added.”
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  • improving the quality of teaching will have substantial returns for the economy and even decrease poverty. The question is how to go about it.
Laura Shaw

Interventions Shown to Aid Executive Function Development in Children 4 to 12 Years Old - 1 views

  • Montessori (36) curriculum does not mention EFs, but what Montessorians mean by “normalization” includes having good EFs. Normalization is a shift from disorder, impulsivity, and inattention to self-discipline, independence, orderliness, and peacefulness (37). Montessori classrooms have only one of any material, so children learn to wait until another child is finished. Several Montessori activities are essentially walking meditation (Fig. 3).
  • As in Tools, the teacher carefully observes each child (when a child is ready for a new challenge, the teacher presents one), and whole-group activities are infrequent; learning is hands-on, often with ≥2 children working together. In Tools, children take turns instructing or checking one another. Cross-age tutoring occurs in Montessori mixed 3-year age groups. Such child-to-child teaching has been found repeatedly to produce better (often dramatically better) outcomes than teacher-led instruction (38–40).
  • Children chosen by lottery to enter a Montessori public school approved by the Association Montessori Internationale (AMI) were compared to those also in the lottery but not chosen, at the end of kindergarten (age 5) and the end of grade 6 (age 12) (41). At age 5, Montessori children showed better EFs than peers attending other schools. They performed better in reading and math and showed more concern for fairness and justice. No group difference was found in delay of gratification. At age 12, on the only measure related to EFs, Montessori children showed more creativity in essay writing than controls. They also reported feeling more of a sense of community at school.
Laura Shaw

http://www.education.umd.edu/EDHD/faculty/Fox/publications/26.pdf - 2 views

    • Laura Shaw
       
      Rothbart (1981, 1986) found dramatic increases in positive affect and decreases in distress from 3-6 months during episodes of focused attention.  
Laura Shaw

Children's A.D.D. Drugs Don't Work Long-Term - NYTimes.com - 0 views

  • Of course the brains of children with behavior problems will show anomalies on brain scans. It could not be otherwise. Behavior and the brain are intertwined.
  • If these children are not paying attention because of lack of motivation or an underdeveloped capacity to regulate their behavior, their brain scans are certain to be anomalous.
  • However brain functioning is measured, these studies tell us nothing about whether the observed anomalies were present at birth or whether they resulted from trauma, chronic stress or other early-childhood experiences. One of the most profound findings in behavioral neuroscience in recent years has been the clear evidence that the developing brain is shaped by experience.
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  • By late adolescence, 50 percent of our sample qualified for some psychiatric diagnosis. Almost half displayed behavior problems at school on at least one occasion, and 24 percent dropped out by 12th grade; 14 percent met criteria for A.D.D. in either first or sixth grade.
  • patterns of parental intrusiveness that involve stimulation for which the baby is not prepared. For example, a 6-month-old baby is playing, and the parent picks it up quickly from behind and plunges it in the bath. Or a 3-year-old is becoming frustrated in solving a problem, and a parent taunts or ridicules.
Laura Shaw

What's Wrong With the Teenage Mind? - WSJ.com - 2 views

  • Becoming an adult means leaving the world of your parents and starting to make your way toward the future that you will share with your peers. Puberty not only turns on the motivational and emotional system with new force, it also turns it away from the family and toward the world of equals.
  • emotion and motivation
  • control
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  • Children have lots of chances to practice the skills that they need to accomplish their goals as adults, and so to become expert planners and actors.
Laura Shaw

Students of Virtual Schools Are Lagging in Proficiency - NYTimes.com - 0 views

  • About 116,000 students were educated in 93 virtual schools — those where instruction is entirely or mainly provided over the Internet — run by private management companies in the 2010-11 school year, up 43 percent
  • “E.M.O.’s” — educational management organizations, a term coined by Wall Street in the 1990s — now operate 35 percent of all charter schools, enrolling 42 percent of all charter school students, according to the report.
  • for-profit companies (K12 Inc. leads this sector, with 65,396
Laura Shaw

Idaho Teachers Fight a Reliance on Computers - NYTimes.com - 0 views

  • teachers have been in open revolt. They marched on the capital last spring, when the legislation was under consideration. They complain that lawmakers listened less to them than to heavy lobbying by technology companies, including Intel and Apple.
  • Gov. C. L. Otter, known as Butch, and Tom Luna, the schools superintendent, who have championed the plan, said teachers had been misled by their union into believing the changes were a step toward replacing them with computers.
Laura Shaw

What Influence Do Peers Have on Preschoolers' Language Skills? | NewAmerica.net - 0 views

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    "...evidence that by virtue of limiting enrollment in public preschools to low-income students, classrooms tended to have high proportions of students with low skill levels, since economically-disadvantaged children often enter school with lower language abilities than their higher-income classmates."
Laura Shaw

Now We Are Six - The Hormone Surge of Middle Childhood - NYTimes.com - 0 views

  • middle childhood
  • is a time of great cognitive creativity and ambition, when the brain has pretty much reached its adult size and can focus on threading together its private intranet service
  • dihydroepiandrosterone, or DHEA
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  • Middle childhood is when the parts of the brain most closely associated with being human finally come online: our ability to control our impulses, to reason, to focus, to plan for the future.
  • every group examined recognizes middle childhood as a developmental watershed, when children emerge from the shadows of dependency and start taking their place in the wider world
  • The growth of the skeleton, by contrast, slows from the vertiginous pace of early childhood, and though there is a mild growth spurt at age 6 or 7, as well as a bit of chubbying up during the so-called adiposity rebound of middle childhood, much of the remaining skeletal growth awaits the superspurt of puberty.
Laura Shaw

http://www.ucc.org/justice/public-education/pdfs/NatlOTL.pdf - 4 views

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    Diane Ravitch's December 9, 2011 speech.
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