the majority of adults with mental-health problems first experienced them in childhood
How to: survive teacher training by @NQTBlogger101 - UKEdChat.com - 12 views
-
I tried to think of a different way of titling this post, I wasn't keen on the word 'surviving' but the more I thought about it, the more I realised that actually, you really do feel like you're surviving… Just about. I've been onto Twitter, Instagram and even scrolled through my personal Facebook a few times to discover that Teacher Training Nerves are setting in. Now, I know you've probably (definitely) heard some complete horror stories but let's begin with an open mind. Having just completed the PGCE, I totally understand why you are so nervy and that is why I've created this post… So, sit back, take a deep breath and repeat "I can do this"...
Any human heart - feature - TES - 4 views
-
-
the majority of adults with mental-health problems first experienced them in childhood
Professional Learning | Really? | {et al} - 15 views
-
""Yes, you can make a lot of things look bad taken out of context, but I don't think a case can be made that this is appropriate for any professional development, or classroom, context…. When I first watched it many emotions swarmed inside me; sadness, horror, embarrassment, anger, disbelief. At one stage I may have laughed at the outrageousness of it all."
Education World: Improving School Culture - 78 views
-
Studies are finding that the culture or climate of a school can have a marked impact on student performance.
-
school's performance never will improve until the school culture is one where people feel valued, safe, and share the goal of self-improvement
-
School culture, he says, is shared experiences both in and out of school, such as traditions and celebrations, a sense of community, of family and, team."
- ...2 more annotations...
-
What kind of culture pervades your school? Do staff members feel like a family? Or is it like a factory or a Little Shop of Horrors? One way to assess school culture, and then strive to improve it, is through the Center for Improving School Culture's triage survey. Included: Links to the triage survey.
The Yellow Wallpaper, by Charlotte Perkins Gilman - 95 views
-
-
I must not let her find me writing
-
sub-pattern in a different shade
- ...18 more annotations...
The Canadian Press: Students failing because of Twitter, texting and no grammar teaching - 25 views
-
Almost a third of those students are failing.
-
For years there's been a flood of anecdotal complaints from professors about what they say is the wretched state of English grammar coming from some of their students.
-
the failure rate has jumped five percentage points in the past few years, up to 30 per cent from 25 per cent.
- ...4 more annotations...
Can Mary Shelley's Frankenstein be read as an early research ethics text? | Medical Hum... - 7 views
-
Can Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein be read as an early research ethics text?
-
Frankenstein is an early and balanced text on the ethics of research upon human subjects and that it provides insights that are as valid today as when the novel was written.
-
Mary Shelley conceived the idea for and started writing Frankenstein in 1816 and it was first published in 1818.1 In its historical context, the earlier 17th and 18th centuries had seen the early signs of the rise of science and experimentation. Francis Bacon (1561–1626) had laid the theoretical foundations in his “Great Insauration”2 and scientists such as Boyle, Newton, and Hooke developed the experimental methods. Sir Robert Talbor, a 17th century apothecary and one of the key figures in developing the use of quinine to treat fevers, underlined this: “the most plausible reasons unless backed by some demonstrable experiments seem but suppositions or conjectures”.3
- ...5 more annotations...
1 - 9 of 9
Showing 20▼ items per page