Wednesday, August 3, 2011

Thanks Matt

SOS (Save Our Schools) Rally was July 28-31, 2011 in Washington, D.C. Read and watch Matt Damon's speech in defense of teachers. If you haven't seen it or read it you can do so here.


Link for above movie.

The follow-up interview (above) with Matt Damon in which he defends teachers again. The video speaks for itself. (Warning, some language is PG-13).

More informative links:
"Is Damon Right on Teachers S#$%ty Salary"
Ed Week: SOS Rally
SOS March: "Actor Matt Damon rallies teachers in Washington"

Monday, August 1, 2011

Differentiation gone ditsy

Differentiation — tailoring instruction to each student’s needs — is the education professoriate’s new buzzword, writes Malcolm Unwell on The American Thinker. ...[more]

Sunday, June 12, 2011

Adding it up: Research shows how early math lessons change children's brains

Researchers from the Stanford University School of Medicine have demonstrated that a single year of math lessons is associated with unexpectedly big changes in the brain’s approach to problem solving and that these changes can be seen in the brain scans of second- and third-graders. ...[more]

Wednesday, April 27, 2011

3 Practical Uses for Interactive Whiteboards

Posted by Ben Rimes on Apr 27, 2011 in Advocacy, Technology
This post is both a response to Gary Stager’s indictment of interactive whiteboards (IWBs) over at Tech & Learning and a cross posting of a few resources that ...[more]

Flash: School reform ‘won’t fix everything’

School reformers ignore student’s home life, asserts Joe Nocera, the New York Times new op-ed columnist. “At its core, the reform movement believes ...[more]

Sunday, March 27, 2011

It's Motivation ... really?

It's motivation, but eveyone wants you to believe that teacher quality is the panacea to huge educational gains. Why does the Department of Education choose to ignore evidence, studies, and data that indicate that teachers contribute to 5-20% of a student's educational output? Maybe because the Gates Foundation claims and is spending lots of money on research trying to prove teacher quality predominantly determines student educational outcome. Please help me here ... even the upper limit of 20% is not a predominant factor. I think this is gross ignorance. Maybe we should focus on some of the real causes of poor student output, like poverty, hunger, no parents, homeless, depressed neighborhood, no jobs, .... Maybe I should not have said "causes" but there is a strong correlation between student outcome and poverty, hunger, and poor role models. I wonder why the government does not want to tackle that BIG problem? ... [more]

These 3 videos of Dr. Diane Ravitch at 2011 AASA National Conference on Education are great:
Part 1 - www.youtube.com/watch?v=bvstR3Bkh4c
Part 2 - www.youtube.com/watch?v=p52Ygnt7B_E
Part 3 - www.youtube.com/watch?v=siRN0WNSqao

Sunday, February 20, 2011

You cannot multitask!

Researchers have routinely found that people in their 20s suffer “huge” performance costs when they try to multitask. In other words, 20-somethings, cannot actually study while texting, watching videos, and listening to music. ...[more]