It is that time of the school year. You are ramping up to state testing, you aren’t close enough to Spring Break to get excited yet, and you’re exhausted. Your students too. The next thing you have to do… …is… Continue Reading →
What are you saying with your social media pictures? Let’s explore PicMonkey and consider what your Instagram, Twitter, and blog posts can convey. Created for TOMECON16, a regional literacy conference for Georgia students. Learn more about TOME.
A Moon Shot is a term used when a goal or a solution requires a revolutionary level of novel work to accomplish an unthinkable goal. Enjoy this inspiration from Solve for X: A Moon Shot is something which humanity can rally… Continue Reading →
Often in Education Compensation, Compliance, and Professional Learning all look similar from outside education. But every once in a while some daylight surfaces between these categories and something rises to the surface as different-even exciting. And it isn’t compliance or compensation… Continue Reading →
It is an honor when any other educator honestly asks you a question. Think about admitting what you do not know in education; until recently teachers were keepers of the knowledge – all the knowledge. Not anymore. You can imagine, a teacher… Continue Reading →
Attending a 2nd grade classroom play I had to snap some pictures of my son’s classmates. They were doing something I had not yet seen. These students were recording the various plays presented and immediately replaying and watching them; in… Continue Reading →
The good thing about Blended Learning is there are many ways to do it. The bad thing about Blended Learning is there are many ways to do it. So while you are planning as a school, grade level, or a… Continue Reading →
Some of the classrooms in America look like they could be launching a rocket any minute. Some look the same as when my great-grandmother taught in a one-room school-house, save the clothing fashions. But we are not talking about those two… Continue Reading →
No one would have worried about me coming around to the notions of Accounting when I took my first class in balancing a spreadsheet in my Junior year of High School. However, I am struck by the similar place I… Continue Reading →
How I taught Eratosthenes in a Face-to-Face Classroom One of my favorite books to read to my middle schoolers was The Librarian who Measured the Earth by Kathryn Lasky. And I read it to each of my classes before starting our study… Continue Reading →
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