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Contents contributed and discussions participated by Caitlin Steele

Caitlin Steele

How a Radical New Teaching Method Could Unleash a Generation of Geniuses - 3 views

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    This is an uplifting read, very relevant to the themes of our upcoming conference.
Caitlin Steele

What's the Big Idea? - 1 views

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    The education wide-ranging ideas - presented in snapshots from principals, professors, policy makers, students, and others - really speak toward the Rowland community's drive toward shaking up the status quo in education. My personal favorite: scrap business-as-usual twelfth grade in favor of universal pre-school.
Caitlin Steele

An Argument for Teaching Literary Fiction - 1 views

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    The Common Core emphasizes the instruction of nonfiction. I'm all for that push in general. Nonfiction is the genre where I spend the vast majority of my (ridiculously limited) free reading time. It offers so many rich texts through which we may integrate the traditional disciplines. Still my two degrees in English have served me very well in helping me understand context, motivation, and complexity in the world around me. This little NPR article discusses a study that offers empirical evidence for the power of reading literary fiction. As we de-emphasize the arts and literature, how many opportunities do we lose to teach and foster empathy?
Caitlin Steele

The Ten Most Important Questions In Science - 1 views

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    I have a BA and MA in English, but in my doc degree I'm focusing on the inter- and trans-disciplinary studies of complex systems. I'm reading a ton about math, science, and computer programming lately and find myself questioning why I chose English over a STEM field so many years ago. One reason: the science classes I did take in high school sure didn't seem to be pointing me toward profound questions like these.
Caitlin Steele

Education Week Teacher: Why Twitter and Facebook Are Not Good Instructional Tools - 2 views

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    Written by a classmate of mine at Bread Loaf. On how to use (and how not to use) technology in the classroom. Short and thoughtful.
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