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Tom McHale

How Educating Students About Dishonesty Can Help Curb Cheating | MindShift | KQED News - 0 views

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    "The upshot for schools is clear: honor codes work, Ariely said, provided that students write them out and talk about them. Codes signed at the start of the year and tucked away in an administrator's office will flop, however; the same holds true for one-off lectures on moral behavior. To reduce cheating, the honor codes need to be woven into the school's culture, a recurrent nudge that honesty matters. Now closing in on the end of the school year, Tammi is hopeful that students at Fieldston will grow to see the new academic integrity board as educational rather than disciplinary, and will come to welcome the restorative justice philosophy that serves as its foundation. "Being academically honest helps them," Tammi said. To say nothing of the rest of us. "Every time we cheat, we break a little bit of trust in society," Ariely said."
Tom McHale

A Classroom Where No One Cheats - The Atlantic - 0 views

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    "A new book says it's possible-but only if teachers get their students to care about learning for learning's sake."
Tom McHale

Our 100 Most Popular Student Questions for Debate and Persuasive Writing - The New York... - 1 views

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    We've done the math, and below you'll find the 100 most-commented-upon questions we've ever asked that call for persuasive writing. Many of them are, of course, on topics teenagers care about - technology, video games, sports and gender issues. Others are classic debate issues like government regulation and gun violence. But, perhaps unsurprisingly, the broad topic that seems to engage students the most? School - from questions about homework to cheating, bad report cards, bullying and gym class. So skim the list and pick issues that interest you. Each question is linked to a related Times article, which you can access free, and includes additional subquestions to help you flesh out your ideas. "
Tom McHale

The Great Common Core Swindle: Denying students an audience | S/Z - 0 views

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    "Students who write for their teacher write for a grade. Students who write for an audience write to connect, to argue, to entertain, to inform. And when they have other purposes for their writing other than a grade, they begin to care about the craft, choose carefully their words, shape thoughtfully their sentences. Isn't this the goal of writing standards? So the question is: Does your school provide or cheat your students out of an audience? Or, to cut to the chase: Does your school actively support a newspaper or broadcast program? If it doesn't, please stop going on about how you're meeting the Common Core standards. Because in spirit you're not."
Tom McHale

Common Core Practice | Cheating Scandals, Fractals and Creative Descriptions of Cheese ... - 0 views

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    "What is your favorite food? How would you describe it? Using the sample descriptions in the article as mentor texts, compose a two or three-sentence description of your favorite food, using figurative language and unusual comparisons."
Tom McHale

It's a Mistake Not to Use Mistakes as Part of the Learning Process | Edutopia - 0 views

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    "When mistakes become learning opportunities, everything changes. Students take more risks, think in new ways, cheat less, and solve mysteries that had previously eluded them. Here are some things that we can do in the classroom to change this defeating way of thinking, including both formal and informal evaluation processes:"
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