Eric Hoefler's Library tagged → View Popular
James Moore: The Lies of Texas Are Upon You
"So this is Texas, folks, created by god 10,000 years ago with all fossils and fossil fuels in place, where black presidents are not allowed to encourage our children, there are two sides to every story, even McCarthyism, Richard Nixon is the man that sav
Copyright and Fair Use Guidelines for Teachers
Also has links to other resources and a PDF version of the chart.
Stanford study: Media multitaskers pay mental price
“People who are regularly bombarded with several streams of electronic information do not pay attention, control their memory or switch from one job to another as well as those who prefer to complete one task at a time, a group of Stanford researchers has
Tuttle SVC: It’s That Bad
“That’s where we’re headed. If you’ve got a family and a mortgage, you don’t have the luxury of indulging your desire to help bring up a low-performing school. If it is closed or re-organized, which is likely, you could be completely screwed. You could lo
U.S. 'Soviet-style' education system not cutting it
"The government decides where your kids go to school; what curriculum they'll study; and even develops long-term educational plans just like the Communists devised five-year plans."
Truthdig - Reports - Liberating the Schoolhouse
An article discussing the changes that happend in an LA school when teachers were given true professional responsibility.
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As the teachers expanded their responsibility, a new professional authority began to emerge among them that translated into new norms for the school. Instead of blaming everyone but themselves for the students’ failure, the teachers took on collective responsibility for the students’ success.
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The pressure for test scores leads school boards and superintendents to mandate what is to be taught and to reward principals and teachers who comply and punish those who do not.
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Bridging Differences: A Marshall Plan for Teaching
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Imagine schools where educators work together to address students needs, not federal mandates, where the decisions are made by those closest—not farthest—from the real action. Where student engagement and responsibility for their work is mirrored in the attitudes of their faculty.
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They are designed so that teachers are powerful adults who make decisions that continually improve the school—who work in teams that share students, and who have time every week to plan a curriculum together that responds to the realities on the ground as well as in the subject disciplines, to develop and evaluate portfolio assessments, and to talk about kids and what they need and how to support them.
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What Should Happen in Our Houses of Learning? | Bridging Differences
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When I think of “the street,” I think of those aspects of youth behavior that adults should not tolerate, like profanity, rudeness, violence (lack of impulse control), semi-nudity, purposefully slovenly dress, etc.
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I admit my limitations, but I can’t see the value of studying the “art” of Britney Spears, Lindsey Lohan, Justin Timberlake, or other current media stars.
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Bridging Differences: Our Overarching Disagreements
Parents do not send their children to school to learn the vulgar language, misogynistic and homophobic attitudes, racism, violence, and crude behavior that are common on “the street,” but to learn language, values, and behavior that is better than what they encounter outside school.
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Parents do not send their children to school to learn the vulgar language, misogynistic and homophobic attitudes, racism, violence, and crude behavior that are common on “the street,” but to learn language, values, and behavior that is better than what they encounter outside school.
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Indeed, we look to the schools to pass on the wisdom, knowledge, and skills that have been accumulated over the years, and, in that sense, they are a conservative agency. And yes, they can change the social order by making us wiser, more civilized, smarter and better able to collaborate with others. But they can't improve the social order if they do no more than reflect what is.
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Behavioral Study on Students Stirs Debate
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black and Hispanic students and special education students received lower marks than white and Asian American students for demonstration of "sound moral character and ethical judgment."
Such findings have prompted a debate on the potential bias in how teachers evaluate student behavior and how the school system analyzes and presents information about race
What Should Be Done About Standardized Tests? A Freakonomics Quorum - Freakonomics - Opinion - New York Times Blog
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Some standardized tests perform their measurement mission marvelously; others do a dismal job of it.
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It depends on whether the right kinds of tests are being used and whether those tests are good ones. Given the kinds and caliber of the standardized tests currently being used in our schools, I come down on the “less” side of the argument. But that’s chiefly because the wrong sorts of standardized tests are frequently being used.
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The Secret to Raising Smart Kids
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more than 30 years of scientific investigation suggests that an overemphasis on intellect or talent leaves people vulnerable to failure, fearful of challenges and unwilling to remedy their shortcomings.
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Such children hold an implicit belief that intelligence is innate and fixed, making striving to learn seem far less important than being (or looking) smart.
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where the locus of authority should be in school reform
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NCLB is a repudiation of the nation's long tradition of local authority in public education
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Education Week: Smart and Good Schools
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Throughout history and in cultures around the world, education rightly conceived has had two great goals: helping students become smart and helping them become good. They need character for both.
The wisdom of the ages recognizes the centrality of character in education, citizenship, and living an ethical and productive life.
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high school teachers typically identify themselves as subject-matter specialists rather than as “character educators.”
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Education Week: Closing the Measurement Gap
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Not that this is necessarily "bad," but the comparison is somewhat problematic. Asking "which hospitals are likely to have their heart patients die" is not the same as "which schools are failing to successfully educate students in basic skills."
Nevertheless, the more nuanced (and logical) approach to school assessment seems smart to me.
- ehoefler on 2007-11-08
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high-mortality hospitals for heart patients
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rather than reporting hospitals’ raw mortality rates, states “risk adjust” these numbers to take patient severity into account.
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Education Week: No Quick Fixes to 'Poverty Gap' Under NCLB
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struggling schools that serve predominantly poor student populations are the very schools most likely to suffer from a drain on resources
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his own experiences suggest that students need at least 100 individual lessons, at 40 minutes each, to get a grade-level-size boost.
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Education Week: Shift Happens
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With most homes and classrooms connected to the Internet, one form of engagement that warrants a deeper look is the use of e-mail.
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What would happen if every teacher and parent exchanged one e-mail per day, perhaps about a lesson that day and one for the next?
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