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Brendan McIsaac

Educational Leadership:Teacher Evaluation: What's Fair? What's Effective?:How to Use Va... - 1 views

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    Using Value Added measures
Brendan McIsaac

Educational Leadership:Teacher Evaluation: What's Fair? What's Effective?:Use Caution w... - 0 views

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    Discussion of Value Added
Tom McHale

Reconsidering Rigor in Schools - The Synapse - Medium - 0 views

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    ""Instead of measuring difficulty in terms of information retrieval, or amount of homework, the new standard of personal rigor puts thinking and intelligent behaviors at the forefront. How a student expresses those personal qualities become the standard for capability and performance. In effect, we're starting to redefine what is 'hard' in school." So what happens when a school takes the shifting digital landscape seriously, acknowledging how the brain works, the essential need for intrinsic motivation, the reality of the declining value of fixed knowledge, the importance of social and emotional learning, and the critical need to focus on learning how to learn in new and dynamic ways?"
Tom McHale

8 writing lessons from Michelle Obama's DNC speech - Poynter - 0 views

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    "Great oratory magnifies the lessons of great writing. Written for the ear, memorable speeches tend to use certain rhetorical devices - such as parallelism or emphatic word order - in greater measure than less dramatic forms of communication. The language strategies rise to the surface, so you may not even need a pair of X-ray reading glasses to see them."
Tom McHale

4 Reasons to Start Class With a Poem Each Day | Edutopia - 0 views

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    "If this year's National Poetry Month inspires you to give daily poetry a go in your classroom, maybe even just for the month, consider these four reasons why starting class with a poem each day will rock your world. Just for good measure, I've included a few poem suggestions as well."
Tom McHale

Say What? 5 Ways to Get Students to Listen | Edutopia - 1 views

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    "Ah, listening, the neglected literacy skill. I know when I was a high school English teacher this was not necessarily a primary focus; I was too busy honing the more measurable literacy skills -- reading, writing, and speaking. But when we think about career and college readiness, listening skills are just as important. This is evidenced by the listening standards found in the Common Core and also the integral role listening plays in collaboration and communication, two of the four Cs of 21st century learning. So how do we help kids become better listeners? Check out these tactics for encouraging a deeper level of listening that also include student accountability:"
Tom McHale

More Progressive Ways to Measure Deeper Levels of Learning | MindShift - 0 views

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    "In addition to making it clear to students what learning goals will be covered and required of them through the rubric or performance framework, students need constructive feedback in order to improve. But feedback isn't always appropriate; there are times when it's very effective and other times when it can be a waste of precious energy. "Assessment is really time consuming and exhausting," Staff said. "So when I do it, and give a lot of meaningful feedback, I want to do it at a time that it will help them to improve." Students don't want to know how they could have done better after they've already turned in the project. Peer assessment is another way for students to gain valuable input on how they can iterate on an idea or project, helping to push towards another, better version."
Tom McHale

Hacking Feedback: Receiving Feedback From Students - 0 views

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    "More than test scores, or my desire to introduce students to great novels and great questions, I teach so that students feel someone believes in them and they feel empowered to learn, grow, and succeed. Measuring success on that mission requires hearing directly from students."
Brendan McIsaac

Education Week Teacher: Grade Changes: Using Marks to Motivate Students - 1 views

  • There is often truth to these statements. But I have come to believe that great teachers accept responsibility for motivating their students. The most effective educators establish an environment where kids not only want to succeed but feel that they can. Here are several ideas teachers can implement to transform grading practices for motivational purposes while protecting the rigor of instruction:
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    A few years ago, my principal called me into his office and explained that too many students were failing my honors language arts class. I deflected his comments as no fault of my own. "They're not putting in the effort it takes to master the content," I said. "It's an honors class." How many teachers have had similar conversations and responded defensively like I did? But I taught the material! The kids aren't trying … don't have the basic skills … didn't meet deadlines … need to learn responsibility. And so forth. There is often truth to these statements. But I have come to believe that great teachers accept responsibility for motivating their students. The most effective educators establish an environment where kids not only want to succeed but feel that they can. Here are several ideas teachers can implement to transform grading practices for motivational purposes while protecting the rigor of instruction:
Brendan McIsaac

Education Week: Rifts Deepen Over Direction of Ed. Policy in U.S. - 0 views

  • Armed with nearly $100 billion in education aid from the 2009 economic-stimulus package passed by Congress, Secretary Duncan used $4 billion to entice states into embracing common standards, charter schools, and teacher evaluations tied to student test scores through his Race to the Top contest.
  • He's advanced that general platform more recently by granting states waivers from compliance with many of the core tenets of the NCLB law if they adopt the Obama administration's preferred improvement ideas—even as education research paints a mixed picture about whether such measures as charter schools and merit pay have much effect on student learning.
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    Great overview of the current education landscape
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