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Beth Miller

Who Benefits From the Expansion of A.P. Classes? - The New York Times - 0 views

  • These success-against-all-odds stories are captivating. It’s hard to overstate how much “Stand and Deliver” — the 1988 movie about an A.P. calculus teacher who overcame the odds when all his low-income Latino students passed the exam — has influenced many advocates’ perceptions about what an A.P. class can do. And things like this do happen; “Stand and Deliver” is based on real events. But they’re anomalous. Yom credits his success to a number of things: a math department that lays out clear expectations from ninth grade on about what students need to know to get to A.P. calculus, a mentor who has taught A.P. calculus at Lincoln High for 16 years and his own ability to devote countless hours to his students. But once Yom is married and has children, he told me, it simply won’t be sustainable to continue spending so much time with his classes.
  • Even if students don’t pass the test, there is reason to believe that simply taking A.P. courses is valuable. After all, many students receive passing grades in their courses while still failing the A.P. exam. But because so much focus is on the test — the College Board tracks only participation and outcomes from the tests, not the classes — and because numbers are so much easier to measure than the far more intangible benefits of teaching and learning, the real value of A.P.s can be hard to assess. It seems logical to assume that taking a more rigorous course can have benefits in and of itself: by opening horizons, by sending a message to students that they are capable. And many teachers and students feel that way. Calid Shorter, 17, who was in Fuchs’s A.P. government class this past year, says she was one of his best teachers. “They really care,” he says. “Pushing me into classes has been a benefit — it’s given me more of a go-getter mind-set.”
  • Is it effective to be investing the time and resources in a program whose benefits seem so difficult to pin down?
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  • Klopfenstein argues that the A.P. program should remain accessible, but that it must be accompanied by regular classes in which students learn skills like note-taking, outlining and intellectual discipline. Others think the mandates on the number of A.P. classes must go, that districts should instead look at which subjects might benefit the most students, rather than arbitrarily drawing a line. Some even advocate for keeping the classes but getting rid of the high-stakes tests at the end.
Beth Miller

Differentiation Doesn't Work - Education Week - 0 views

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    Here's the other side of the argument...
Beth Miller

Differentiation Does, in Fact, Work - Education Week - 0 views

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    From UVA's own, Carol Ann Tomlinson
Beth Miller

http://www.inclusiveva.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/01/2017-2018-Interfaith-Calendar.pdf - 0 views

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    The Virginia Center for Inclusive Communities calendar of holidays and festivals - a resource to encourage awareness of the great diversity of religious and ethnic groups that live in the US.
Beth Miller

Most Likely To Succeed - 0 views

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    Shared by Tom Weis
Beth Miller

Flipped Learning Global Initiative - Supporting Flipped Learning Worldwide - 0 views

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    JJ and Ben participated in a webinar by this group and found it "brief but helpful."
Michele Mathieson

Question / Project Cards - Unprofessional Development - 0 views

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    "The contemporary questions that interest us as adults - like those about power, extinction and health - can be asked in ways that resonate with young people, too. And, their answers can be manifest in real world answers: games, books, stories, art, and more. " Here is a collection of questions and project cards you can use with your students.
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