Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?
More Annotations
A complete backup of xdlatino.blogspot.com
Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?
A complete backup of explicithistoire.wordpress.com
Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?
A complete backup of xalxalmektebi.blogspot.com
Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?
A complete backup of thebellyguide.tumblr.com
Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?
Favourite Annotations
A complete backup of hopetreecare.com
Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?
A complete backup of bluepromocode.com
Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?
A complete backup of consumerrewards.co.za
Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?
A complete backup of farmaciasloshidalgos.com.do
Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?
A complete backup of allyounedfresh.de
Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?
A complete backup of our-happy-cat.com
Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?
A complete backup of actuarialeye.com
Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?
Text
you
USING LEARNING THEORIES AS A FRAMEWORK FOR TEACHING The Importance of Theories of Learning. As Wiggins states in his chapter on the job of teaching, a teacher should define his or her job in terms of what the teacher is “supposed to accomplish” (Marzano, 2010, p. 9). In order to cause successful learning in the classroom, teachers must plan intentionally for units and lessons in order to STANDARDS-BASED GRADING MUST DIE For those unaware, standards-based grading is a popular evaluation system designed to simplify teaching, learning, and assessment. It strips a student’s grade down to their ability to meet the announced standards. The idea is that students will learn more easily if teachers grade based upon very explicit and clear standards. 10 TERRIFIC TEAM-BUILDING ACTIVITIES FOR SECONDARY STUDENTS The Shoe Box or Paper Bag. Here, you can give each student either a shoe box or a paper bag. Have the students design the outside so it holds meaning for them. On the inside, they can place 3-5 items that hold importance in their lives. Each day, have 2-3 students present their symbolic representations to the class. WHAT I HAVE LEARNED: FAREWELL LETTER TO MY STUDENTS Over the past few weeks, my students have made certain that I leave feeling valued and loved; they have thrown parties, brought treats, serenaded me with songs, given speeches, written encouraging notes, and presented me with heartfelt gifts. Teachers have commented that they have never seen students express their gratitude in these ways.We have
4 WAYS TO PREPARE YOURSELF FOR A CAREER IN EDUCATION For fifteen years Franchesca taught English/Language Arts in two urban districts in Atlanta, Georgia, and Memphis, Tennessee. Increasingly frustrated with decisions being made about public education from people who were not in the classroom, in 2012 she decided to start a blog about what it was really like to teach in public schools. LGPT PRIDE MONTH- CELEBRATING IT IN YOUR CLASSROOM President Mike Bloomberg Would Be a Nightmare for Public Schools - March 2, 2020. It’s Time to Rethink Your School’s “Holiday” Celebrations - December 18, 2019. June isn’t just the last month of school for most of us. It is also LGBT Pride Month. While teachers know teaching about diverse histories, cultures and identities should CHOIR PROGRAM: IF YOU BUILD IT THEY WILL COME Part 1: Educate the Children. Building a choir program from nothing is a daunting task. I am always amazed at the number of directors that leave floundering choir programs and play the blame game. Directors will blame everyone from the “untalented” student body, their administration that has it “out to get them”, to the communitybuying
TIER 1 SHOULD BE BAE (BEFORE ANYTHING ELSE)! About LaToya Morrison. LaToya Morrison is an Assistant Principal of Instruction in Austin, Texas. Previous to this position, she was an ELA Secondary Instructional coach in Round Rock ISD, taught ELA (grades 6-9 for 10 years) during her time as a classroom teacher in Fort Worth and Round Rock ISD. She was named Teacher of the Year in2008 at
MY LIFE AS A TEACHER In the last four years, The Educator's Room has grown to become the premiere source for resources, tools, and strategies for all things teaching and learning. To learn more about Franchesca Warren's work, please visit www.franchescalanewarren.com. Class Divide in Emergency Learning: A Crisis Overseas - September 10, 2020. A LETTER TO MYSELF AS A FIRST YEAR TEACHER The Initial Shock. As a first year teacher, your first few months in the classroom will be “survival mode”. You will feel an overwhelming sense of responsibility to not just the students but to the world. You’ll realize that in the short time you have with them,you
USING LEARNING THEORIES AS A FRAMEWORK FOR TEACHING The Importance of Theories of Learning. As Wiggins states in his chapter on the job of teaching, a teacher should define his or her job in terms of what the teacher is “supposed to accomplish” (Marzano, 2010, p. 9). In order to cause successful learning in the classroom, teachers must plan intentionally for units and lessons in order to STANDARDS-BASED GRADING MUST DIE For those unaware, standards-based grading is a popular evaluation system designed to simplify teaching, learning, and assessment. It strips a student’s grade down to their ability to meet the announced standards. The idea is that students will learn more easily if teachers grade based upon very explicit and clear standards. 10 TERRIFIC TEAM-BUILDING ACTIVITIES FOR SECONDARY STUDENTS The Shoe Box or Paper Bag. Here, you can give each student either a shoe box or a paper bag. Have the students design the outside so it holds meaning for them. On the inside, they can place 3-5 items that hold importance in their lives. Each day, have 2-3 students present their symbolic representations to the class. WHAT I HAVE LEARNED: FAREWELL LETTER TO MY STUDENTS Over the past few weeks, my students have made certain that I leave feeling valued and loved; they have thrown parties, brought treats, serenaded me with songs, given speeches, written encouraging notes, and presented me with heartfelt gifts. Teachers have commented that they have never seen students express their gratitude in these ways.We have
4 WAYS TO PREPARE YOURSELF FOR A CAREER IN EDUCATION For fifteen years Franchesca taught English/Language Arts in two urban districts in Atlanta, Georgia, and Memphis, Tennessee. Increasingly frustrated with decisions being made about public education from people who were not in the classroom, in 2012 she decided to start a blog about what it was really like to teach in public schools. LGPT PRIDE MONTH- CELEBRATING IT IN YOUR CLASSROOM President Mike Bloomberg Would Be a Nightmare for Public Schools - March 2, 2020. It’s Time to Rethink Your School’s “Holiday” Celebrations - December 18, 2019. June isn’t just the last month of school for most of us. It is also LGBT Pride Month. While teachers know teaching about diverse histories, cultures and identities should CHOIR PROGRAM: IF YOU BUILD IT THEY WILL COME Part 1: Educate the Children. Building a choir program from nothing is a daunting task. I am always amazed at the number of directors that leave floundering choir programs and play the blame game. Directors will blame everyone from the “untalented” student body, their administration that has it “out to get them”, to the communitybuying
TIER 1 SHOULD BE BAE (BEFORE ANYTHING ELSE)! About LaToya Morrison. LaToya Morrison is an Assistant Principal of Instruction in Austin, Texas. Previous to this position, she was an ELA Secondary Instructional coach in Round Rock ISD, taught ELA (grades 6-9 for 10 years) during her time as a classroom teacher in Fort Worth and Round Rock ISD. She was named Teacher of the Year in2008 at
HOME | THE EDUCATORS ROOM Sarah Styf is a 19-year high school English teacher currently on a teaching sabbatical. She lives in the Houston area with her husband and two children. She is passionate about education reform and civic engagement and Callie Goss 2021-05-11T14:15:05-04:00. WHAT TEACHERS CAN LEARN FROM NAOMI OSAKA Like seemingly everything else, issues surrounding the importance of mental health have been highlighted to an unprecedented level during this pandemic. Some might consider athletes, celebrities, and influencers an unlikely source for teachable moments, but the importance of those like Naomi Osaka is the perfect real-time, relatable, and relevant stories teachers should pay close CRITICAL RACE THEORY: WHEN THE TEXAS GOP TRIED TO STOP Critical Race Theory: When the Texas GOP Tried to Stop Teachers From Teaching About Racism - June 7, 2021; Take a Sigh of Relief: End of the Year Reflection - May 21, 2021; It’s Worth A Shot: A Teacher Reflects on Mandatory Covid-19 Vaccines - April 27, 2021; Death and Resurrection: A Time for Repentance and Change Around Race - April 4, 2021; What Are Your Qualifications to Be an Educator ? A MILLENNIAL LIBRARIAN WANTS TO CHANGE HOW WE VIEW THE The Price of Accessibility for Deaf/Hard of Hearing Students During a Pandemic - June 4, 2021; A Millennial Librarian Wants to Change How We View the Library - June 2, 2021; Teaching is a Political Act, Just Not Like People Think - May 14, 2021; Building a Teacher Rep-utation - May 10, 2021; Reinventing Pandemic Schooling: More than Making Lemonade from Lemons - May 7, 2021 10 TERRIFIC TEAM-BUILDING ACTIVITIES FOR SECONDARY STUDENTS The Shoe Box or Paper Bag. Here, you can give each student either a shoe box or a paper bag. Have the students design the outside so it holds meaning for them. On the inside, they can place 3-5 items that hold importance in their lives. Each day, have 2-3 students present their symbolic representations to the class. 5 UNEXPECTED BENEFITS OF REMOTE TEACHING Using Rituals to Survive Remote Learning - January 8, 2021; Teachers: Stop What You’re Doing - October 12, 2020; Ending White Supremacy is a White Educators’ Fight - August 4, 2020; Before a New School Year Begins, We Must Grieve - July 20, 2020; Preparing for a Long Journey of Anti-Racist Teaching - June 11, 2020; Mental Health Support for Remote Teaching and Learning - April 29, 2020 8 WAYS FOR TEACHERS TO COMMUNICATE WITH PARENTS IN THE In the 21st century, there is a multitude of ways to communicate with parents. I know a large part of the education workforce is comprised of ‘digital immigrants’, but with a little time and motivation, all teachers can (and should) utilize technology to increase communication with parents and students. Here are my eight favoriteways
WHITE HOUSE INFRASTRUCTURE BILL: WHAT IT MEANS FOR Just two months into Joe Biden’s Presidency and one COVID-19 relief bill later, there are talks of a substantial infrastructure bill from administration insiders. The bill, which hopes to bring job opportunities to countless Americans, includes provisions related to climate change, pharmaceutical drug affordability, and childcare. The provisions that would have perhaps the most profound THE BENEFITS OF AN INDIVIDUALIZED APPROACH The beauty of this self-guided and individualized approach is that the child does not ever feel forced or required to do anything. The guide helps navigate the student through windows of opportunity, thus eliminates the fights, the struggles, the constant repetition that drive early childhood educators to the brink of insanity. 4 WAYS TO PREPARE YOURSELF FOR A CAREER IN EDUCATION For fifteen years Franchesca taught English/Language Arts in two urban districts in Atlanta, Georgia, and Memphis, Tennessee. Increasingly frustrated with decisions being made about public education from people who were not in the classroom, in 2012 she decided to start a blog about what it was really like to teach in public schools. HOME | THE EDUCATORS ROOMBECOME A SPONSORABOUTGET INVOLVEDCONTACT4 KEYS TO EDUCATION BLOGGINGADVERTISE Sarah Styf is a 19-year high school English teacher currently on a teaching sabbatical. She lives in the Houston area with her husband and two children. She is passionate about education reform and civic engagement and Callie Goss 2021-05-11T14:15:05-04:00. A LETTER TO MYSELF AS A FIRST YEAR TEACHER The Initial Shock. As a first year teacher, your first few months in the classroom will be “survival mode”. You will feel an overwhelming sense of responsibility to not just the students but to the world. You’ll realize that in the short time you have with them,you
STANDARDS-BASED GRADING MUST DIE For those unaware, standards-based grading is a popular evaluation system designed to simplify teaching, learning, and assessment. It strips a student’s grade down to their ability to meet the announced standards. The idea is that students will learn more easily if teachers grade based upon very explicit and clear standards. 10 TERRIFIC TEAM-BUILDING ACTIVITIES FOR SECONDARY STUDENTS The Shoe Box or Paper Bag. Here, you can give each student either a shoe box or a paper bag. Have the students design the outside so it holds meaning for them. On the inside, they can place 3-5 items that hold importance in their lives. Each day, have 2-3 students present their symbolic representations to the class. WHITE HOUSE INFRASTRUCTURE BILL: WHAT IT MEANS FOR Just two months into Joe Biden’s Presidency and one COVID-19 relief bill later, there are talks of a substantial infrastructure bill from administration insiders. The bill, which hopes to bring job opportunities to countless Americans, includes provisions related to climate change, pharmaceutical drug affordability, and childcare. The provisions that would have perhaps the most profound THE STUDENT WHO CAN, BUT WON'T The Student Who Can, but Won’t - July 10, 2017. Making the Most out of Teachers Pay Teachers - May 15, 2017. Teaching English with Technology - April 17, 2017. Every teacher is told that they must teach to all learning styles, that they must follow 504 plans and Individual Education Plans (IEPs), and that they are responsible for WHAT I HAVE LEARNED: FAREWELL LETTER TO MY STUDENTS Over the past few weeks, my students have made certain that I leave feeling valued and loved; they have thrown parties, brought treats, serenaded me with songs, given speeches, written encouraging notes, and presented me with heartfelt gifts. Teachers have commented that they have never seen students express their gratitude in these ways.We have
CHOIR PROGRAM: IF YOU BUILD IT THEY WILL COME Part 1: Educate the Children. Building a choir program from nothing is a daunting task. I am always amazed at the number of directors that leave floundering choir programs and play the blame game. Directors will blame everyone from the “untalented” student body, their administration that has it “out to get them”, to the communitybuying
DEAR ADMINISTRATORS: DON’T MOVE INEFFECTIVE TEACHERS TO A Guest Writer: Shawnta S. Barnes The great school mix up is one strategy elementary principals use to remove ineffective teachers from upper elementary grades, the grades where state standardized tests are taken. Apparently, moving these teachers to an ‘easier’ grade will magically fix the problems they faced in their upper-grade classroom.There are a few
TEACHING IS DIFFICULT WHEN ADMINISTRATIVE SUPPORT IS Teachers – Your Impact on Students is Greater Than You Know! - July 7, 2019. When teachers have administrative support that’s an ideal teaching situation, but the reality is that too often administrative support is not available. Thus, new teachers have the biggest problems and often leave the profession because of support of this. HOME | THE EDUCATORS ROOMBECOME A SPONSORABOUTGET INVOLVEDCONTACT4 KEYS TO EDUCATION BLOGGINGADVERTISE Sarah Styf is a 19-year high school English teacher currently on a teaching sabbatical. She lives in the Houston area with her husband and two children. She is passionate about education reform and civic engagement and Callie Goss 2021-05-11T14:15:05-04:00. A LETTER TO MYSELF AS A FIRST YEAR TEACHER The Initial Shock. As a first year teacher, your first few months in the classroom will be “survival mode”. You will feel an overwhelming sense of responsibility to not just the students but to the world. You’ll realize that in the short time you have with them,you
STANDARDS-BASED GRADING MUST DIE For those unaware, standards-based grading is a popular evaluation system designed to simplify teaching, learning, and assessment. It strips a student’s grade down to their ability to meet the announced standards. The idea is that students will learn more easily if teachers grade based upon very explicit and clear standards. 10 TERRIFIC TEAM-BUILDING ACTIVITIES FOR SECONDARY STUDENTS The Shoe Box or Paper Bag. Here, you can give each student either a shoe box or a paper bag. Have the students design the outside so it holds meaning for them. On the inside, they can place 3-5 items that hold importance in their lives. Each day, have 2-3 students present their symbolic representations to the class. WHITE HOUSE INFRASTRUCTURE BILL: WHAT IT MEANS FOR Just two months into Joe Biden’s Presidency and one COVID-19 relief bill later, there are talks of a substantial infrastructure bill from administration insiders. The bill, which hopes to bring job opportunities to countless Americans, includes provisions related to climate change, pharmaceutical drug affordability, and childcare. The provisions that would have perhaps the most profound THE STUDENT WHO CAN, BUT WON'T The Student Who Can, but Won’t - July 10, 2017. Making the Most out of Teachers Pay Teachers - May 15, 2017. Teaching English with Technology - April 17, 2017. Every teacher is told that they must teach to all learning styles, that they must follow 504 plans and Individual Education Plans (IEPs), and that they are responsible for WHAT I HAVE LEARNED: FAREWELL LETTER TO MY STUDENTS Over the past few weeks, my students have made certain that I leave feeling valued and loved; they have thrown parties, brought treats, serenaded me with songs, given speeches, written encouraging notes, and presented me with heartfelt gifts. Teachers have commented that they have never seen students express their gratitude in these ways.We have
CHOIR PROGRAM: IF YOU BUILD IT THEY WILL COME Part 1: Educate the Children. Building a choir program from nothing is a daunting task. I am always amazed at the number of directors that leave floundering choir programs and play the blame game. Directors will blame everyone from the “untalented” student body, their administration that has it “out to get them”, to the communitybuying
DEAR ADMINISTRATORS: DON’T MOVE INEFFECTIVE TEACHERS TO A Guest Writer: Shawnta S. Barnes The great school mix up is one strategy elementary principals use to remove ineffective teachers from upper elementary grades, the grades where state standardized tests are taken. Apparently, moving these teachers to an ‘easier’ grade will magically fix the problems they faced in their upper-grade classroom.There are a few
TEACHING IS DIFFICULT WHEN ADMINISTRATIVE SUPPORT IS Teachers – Your Impact on Students is Greater Than You Know! - July 7, 2019. When teachers have administrative support that’s an ideal teaching situation, but the reality is that too often administrative support is not available. Thus, new teachers have the biggest problems and often leave the profession because of support of this. MY LIFE AS A TEACHER In the last four years, The Educator's Room has grown to become the premiere source for resources, tools, and strategies for all things teaching and learning. To learn more about Franchesca Warren's work, please visit www.franchescalanewarren.com. Class Divide in Emergency Learning: A Crisis Overseas - September 10, 2020. EXPLORING THE COMMONALITIES FOUND WITHIN DIVERSITY IN A Exploring the Commonalities Found Within Diversity in a Classroom - June 1, 2021; The Culturally Affirming Power of Music - May 25, 2021; Teachers Don’t Need More Mugs, They Need Respect and Empathy for Teacher Appreciation Week - May 4, 2021; Opinion: Two Men in Uniform: The Lessons Black Educators Have to Teach Students - April 29, 2021; Inhale Adversity, Exhale Hope: Reflections of 7 GOALS OF EDUCATION Education is so much more. My goals for education are the following. 1. To have the basic skills needed to build upon to accomplish whatever task or job is assigned in the future. This is the part where we train workers for the future. Our children need the math and language arts skills needed to CRITICAL RACE THEORY: WHEN THE TEXAS GOP TRIED TO STOP Critical Race Theory: When the Texas GOP Tried to Stop Teachers From Teaching About Racism - June 7, 2021; Take a Sigh of Relief: End of the Year Reflection - May 21, 2021; It’s Worth A Shot: A Teacher Reflects on Mandatory Covid-19 Vaccines - April 27, 2021; Death and Resurrection: A Time for Repentance and Change Around Race - April 4, 2021; What Are Your Qualifications to Be an Educator ? WHAT TEACHERS CAN LEARN FROM NAOMI OSAKA Like seemingly everything else, issues surrounding the importance of mental health have been highlighted to an unprecedented level during this pandemic. Some might consider athletes, celebrities, and influencers an unlikely source for teachable moments, but the importance of those like Naomi Osaka is the perfect real-time, relatable, and relevant stories teachers should pay close 29 ELEMENTARY CLASSROOMS THAT YOU WANT TO TEACH IN! For fifteen years Franchesca taught English/Language Arts in two urban districts in Atlanta, Georgia, and Memphis, Tennessee. Increasingly frustrated with decisions being made about public education from people who were not in the classroom, in 2012 she decided to start a blog about what it was really like to teach in public schools. A MILLENNIAL LIBRARIAN WANTS TO CHANGE HOW WE VIEW THE The Price of Accessibility for Deaf/Hard of Hearing Students During a Pandemic - June 4, 2021; A Millennial Librarian Wants to Change How We View the Library - June 2, 2021; Teaching is a Political Act, Just Not Like People Think - May 14, 2021; Building a Teacher Rep-utation - May 10, 2021; Reinventing Pandemic Schooling: More than Making Lemonade from Lemons - May 7, 2021 USING LEARNING THEORIES AS A FRAMEWORK FOR TEACHING The Importance of Theories of Learning. As Wiggins states in his chapter on the job of teaching, a teacher should define his or her job in terms of what the teacher is “supposed to accomplish” (Marzano, 2010, p. 9). In order to cause successful learning in the classroom, teachers must plan intentionally for units and lessons in order to 8 WAYS FOR TEACHERS TO COMMUNICATE WITH PARENTS IN THE In the 21st century, there is a multitude of ways to communicate with parents. I know a large part of the education workforce is comprised of ‘digital immigrants’, but with a little time and motivation, all teachers can (and should) utilize technology to increase communication with parents and students. Here are my eight favoriteways
THE BENEFITS OF AN INDIVIDUALIZED APPROACH The beauty of this self-guided and individualized approach is that the child does not ever feel forced or required to do anything. The guide helps navigate the student through windows of opportunity, thus eliminates the fights, the struggles, the constant repetition that drive early childhood educators to the brink of insanity. HOME | THE EDUCATORS ROOMBECOME A SPONSORABOUTGET INVOLVEDCONTACT4 KEYS TO EDUCATION BLOGGINGADVERTISETHE TEACHERS ROOMASSOCIATION OF TEACHER EDUCATORS CONFERENCE FEATURED POSTS or skip straight to the blog HOT TOPICS I received a powerful but simple text message from my state assemblyman hours after the January 6th siege on A LETTER TO MYSELF AS A FIRST YEAR TEACHER About Allyson A. Robinson With a deep commitment and passion for all things youth, Allyson began her teaching journey in 2014. After two years of teaching her “kids” in Baltimore, she decided to try taking her passion abroad to the UAE. STANDARDS-BASED GRADING MUST DIE Working to Rule is an Absurd Form of Protest - March 23, 2021; Abusing Teachers is Normal: Normal is the Problem - March 9, 2021; Today’s Homeschool Struggles Are Yesterday’s In-School Struggles - February 8, 2021; Maryland’s Governor Bullies Teachers, But This One Isn’t Lying Down - January 29, 2021; 4 Ways This Teacher Is Thankful -November 24, 2020
WHITE HOUSE INFRASTRUCTURE BILL: WHAT IT MEANS FOR Just two months into Joe Biden’s Presidency and one COVID-19 relief bill later, there are talks of a substantial infrastructure bill from administration insiders. The bill, which hopes to bring job opportunities to countless Americans, includes provisions related to climate change, pharmaceutical drug affordability, and childcare. The provisions that would have perhaps the most profound THE STUDENT WHO CAN, BUT WON'T Every teacher is told that they must teach to all learning styles, that they must follow 504 plans and Individual Education Plans (IEPs), and that they are responsible for differentiating assignments so that all students can learn equally. What if a teacher does all of these things, but a student simply won’t learn? Believe it or not, this happens a lot more frequently than one might think. 10 TERRIFIC TEAM-BUILDING ACTIVITIES FOR SECONDARY STUDENTS About Teresa Teresa Cooper is a 30-something divorced mom and teacher from North Carolina. She has a Masters of Science in Education for Curriculum, Instruction, and Assessment from Walden University and a BA in Psychology with a minor in CHOIR PROGRAM: IF YOU BUILD IT THEY WILL COME About TER Staff The Educator's Room is a daily website dedicated to showing that teachers are the experts in education. If you are interested in submitting a piece for publication, please send a draft to info@theeducatorsroom.com. LGPT PRIDE MONTH- CELEBRATING IT IN YOUR CLASSROOM Using Rituals to Survive Remote Learning - January 8, 2021; Teachers: Stop What You’re Doing - October 12, 2020; Ending White Supremacy is a White Educators’ Fight - August 4, 2020; Before a New School Year Begins, We Must Grieve - July 20, 2020; Preparing for a Long Journey of Anti-Racist Teaching - June 11, 2020; Mental Health Support for Remote Teaching and Learning - April 29, 2020 TEACHING IS DIFFICULT WHEN ADMINISTRATIVE SUPPORT ISADMINISTRATIVE SUPPORT MEANINGADMINISTRATIVE SUPPORT SERVICES When teachers have administrative support that’s an ideal teaching situation, but the reality is that too often administrative support is not available. Thus, new teachers have the biggest problems and often leave the profession because of support of this. Whether you are a veteran teacher or just starting your career you will deal withadministrators
DEAR ADMINISTRATORS: DON’T MOVE INEFFECTIVE TEACHERS TO A Guest Writer: Shawnta S. Barnes The great school mix up is one strategy elementary principals use to remove ineffective teachers from upper elementary grades, the grades where state standardized tests are taken. Apparently, moving these teachers to an ‘easier’ grade will magically fix the problems they faced in their upper-grade classroom.There are a few
HOME | THE EDUCATORS ROOMBECOME A SPONSORABOUTGET INVOLVEDCONTACT4 KEYS TO EDUCATION BLOGGINGADVERTISETHE TEACHERS ROOMASSOCIATION OF TEACHER EDUCATORS CONFERENCE FEATURED POSTS or skip straight to the blog HOT TOPICS I received a powerful but simple text message from my state assemblyman hours after the January 6th siege on A LETTER TO MYSELF AS A FIRST YEAR TEACHER About Allyson A. Robinson With a deep commitment and passion for all things youth, Allyson began her teaching journey in 2014. After two years of teaching her “kids” in Baltimore, she decided to try taking her passion abroad to the UAE. STANDARDS-BASED GRADING MUST DIE Working to Rule is an Absurd Form of Protest - March 23, 2021; Abusing Teachers is Normal: Normal is the Problem - March 9, 2021; Today’s Homeschool Struggles Are Yesterday’s In-School Struggles - February 8, 2021; Maryland’s Governor Bullies Teachers, But This One Isn’t Lying Down - January 29, 2021; 4 Ways This Teacher Is Thankful -November 24, 2020
WHITE HOUSE INFRASTRUCTURE BILL: WHAT IT MEANS FOR Just two months into Joe Biden’s Presidency and one COVID-19 relief bill later, there are talks of a substantial infrastructure bill from administration insiders. The bill, which hopes to bring job opportunities to countless Americans, includes provisions related to climate change, pharmaceutical drug affordability, and childcare. The provisions that would have perhaps the most profound THE STUDENT WHO CAN, BUT WON'T Every teacher is told that they must teach to all learning styles, that they must follow 504 plans and Individual Education Plans (IEPs), and that they are responsible for differentiating assignments so that all students can learn equally. What if a teacher does all of these things, but a student simply won’t learn? Believe it or not, this happens a lot more frequently than one might think. 10 TERRIFIC TEAM-BUILDING ACTIVITIES FOR SECONDARY STUDENTS About Teresa Teresa Cooper is a 30-something divorced mom and teacher from North Carolina. She has a Masters of Science in Education for Curriculum, Instruction, and Assessment from Walden University and a BA in Psychology with a minor in CHOIR PROGRAM: IF YOU BUILD IT THEY WILL COME About TER Staff The Educator's Room is a daily website dedicated to showing that teachers are the experts in education. If you are interested in submitting a piece for publication, please send a draft to info@theeducatorsroom.com. LGPT PRIDE MONTH- CELEBRATING IT IN YOUR CLASSROOM Using Rituals to Survive Remote Learning - January 8, 2021; Teachers: Stop What You’re Doing - October 12, 2020; Ending White Supremacy is a White Educators’ Fight - August 4, 2020; Before a New School Year Begins, We Must Grieve - July 20, 2020; Preparing for a Long Journey of Anti-Racist Teaching - June 11, 2020; Mental Health Support for Remote Teaching and Learning - April 29, 2020 TEACHING IS DIFFICULT WHEN ADMINISTRATIVE SUPPORT ISADMINISTRATIVE SUPPORT MEANINGADMINISTRATIVE SUPPORT SERVICES When teachers have administrative support that’s an ideal teaching situation, but the reality is that too often administrative support is not available. Thus, new teachers have the biggest problems and often leave the profession because of support of this. Whether you are a veteran teacher or just starting your career you will deal withadministrators
DEAR ADMINISTRATORS: DON’T MOVE INEFFECTIVE TEACHERS TO A Guest Writer: Shawnta S. Barnes The great school mix up is one strategy elementary principals use to remove ineffective teachers from upper elementary grades, the grades where state standardized tests are taken. Apparently, moving these teachers to an ‘easier’ grade will magically fix the problems they faced in their upper-grade classroom.There are a few
EXPLORING THE COMMONALITIES FOUND WITHIN DIVERSITY IN A Exploring the Commonalities Found Within Diversity in a Classroom - June 1, 2021; The Culturally Affirming Power of Music - May 25, 2021; Teachers Don’t Need More Mugs, They Need Respect and Empathy for Teacher Appreciation Week - May 4, 2021; Opinion: Two Men in Uniform: The Lessons Black Educators Have to Teach Students - April 29, 2021; Inhale Adversity, Exhale Hope: Reflections of 29 ELEMENTARY CLASSROOMS THAT YOU WANT TO TEACH IN! For fifteen years Franchesca taught English/Language Arts in two urban districts in Atlanta, Georgia, and Memphis, Tennessee. Increasingly frustrated with decisions being made about public education from people who were not in the classroom, in 2012 she decided to start a blog about what it was really like to teach in public schools. THE PRICE OF ACCESSIBILITY FOR DEAF/HARD OF HEARING The Price of Accessibility for Deaf/Hard of Hearing Students During a Pandemic - June 4, 2021; Reading is the Cheat Code: Why Reading Must Have a Place in Schools - May 5, 2021; President Biden Pushes For Teachers To Get Their COVID Vaccine Dose By March - March 2, 2021; The Teacher Learns the Lesson: Reminiscing on 48 Years of Teaching - January 28, 2021; We’re Just People Who 7 GOALS OF EDUCATION Education is so much more. My goals for education are the following. 1. To have the basic skills needed to build upon to accomplish whatever task or job is assigned in the future. This is the part where we train workers for the future. Our children need the math and language arts skills needed to A MILLENNIAL LIBRARIAN WANTS TO CHANGE HOW WE VIEW THE The Price of Accessibility for Deaf/Hard of Hearing Students During a Pandemic - June 4, 2021; A Millennial Librarian Wants to Change How We View the Library - June 2, 2021; Teaching is a Political Act, Just Not Like People Think - May 14, 2021; Building a Teacher Rep-utation - May 10, 2021; Reinventing Pandemic Schooling: More than Making Lemonade from Lemons - May 7, 2021 THE IMPORTANCE OF UNDERSTANDING CHILD DEVELOPMENT There are five main areas of development in which children develop skills: Cognitive Development: This is the child’s ability to learn and solve problems. Social and Emotional Development: This is the child’s ability to interact with others, which includes being able to help themselves and self-control. Speech and Language Development:This
USING LEARNING THEORIES AS A FRAMEWORK FOR TEACHING The Importance of Theories of Learning. As Wiggins states in his chapter on the job of teaching, a teacher should define his or her job in terms of what the teacher is “supposed to accomplish” (Marzano, 2010, p. 9). In order to cause successful learning in the classroom, teachers must plan intentionally for units and lessons in order to 5 UNEXPECTED BENEFITS OF REMOTE TEACHING Using Rituals to Survive Remote Learning - January 8, 2021; Teachers: Stop What You’re Doing - October 12, 2020; Ending White Supremacy is a White Educators’ Fight - August 4, 2020; Before a New School Year Begins, We Must Grieve - July 20, 2020; Preparing for a Long Journey of Anti-Racist Teaching - June 11, 2020; Mental Health Support for Remote Teaching and Learning - April 29, 2020 THE CASE FOR GRAPHIC NOVELS IN THE CLASSROOM How to Think Like Shakespeare: A Fun Educational Tool - October 29, 2020; Teaching In A Mask: Preparing for Fall 2020 - August 9, 2020; Preparing to Teach in an Upside-down World - July 2, 2020; Support in Schools is a Circle - June 18, 2020; Opinion: Right Now Things Are Hard, But It’s Going to Be Fine - May 13, 2020; The Case for Graphic Novels in the Classroom - April 4, 2020 HOW TO INTEGRATE LITERACY INTO THE NON-ELA CLASSROOM My suggestion for a good first step to integrating literacy into the non ELA classroom is to assign outside reading of high-interest texts. Books like The Hot Zone: A Terrifying True Story by Richard Preston or Outliers by Malcolm Gladwell are good reads, and could easily be assigned for independent reading. If a book is too much to take on, an HOME | THE EDUCATORS ROOMBECOME A SPONSORABOUTGET INVOLVEDCONTACT4 KEYS TO EDUCATION BLOGGINGADVERTISETHE TEACHERS ROOMASSOCIATION OF TEACHER EDUCATORS CONFERENCE FEATURED POSTS or skip straight to the blog HOT TOPICS I received a powerful but simple text message from my state assemblyman hours after the January 6th siege on A LETTER TO MYSELF AS A FIRST YEAR TEACHER About Allyson A. Robinson With a deep commitment and passion for all things youth, Allyson began her teaching journey in 2014. After two years of teaching her “kids” in Baltimore, she decided to try taking her passion abroad to the UAE. STANDARDS-BASED GRADING MUST DIE Working to Rule is an Absurd Form of Protest - March 23, 2021; Abusing Teachers is Normal: Normal is the Problem - March 9, 2021; Today’s Homeschool Struggles Are Yesterday’s In-School Struggles - February 8, 2021; Maryland’s Governor Bullies Teachers, But This One Isn’t Lying Down - January 29, 2021; 4 Ways This Teacher Is Thankful -November 24, 2020
WHITE HOUSE INFRASTRUCTURE BILL: WHAT IT MEANS FOR Just two months into Joe Biden’s Presidency and one COVID-19 relief bill later, there are talks of a substantial infrastructure bill from administration insiders. The bill, which hopes to bring job opportunities to countless Americans, includes provisions related to climate change, pharmaceutical drug affordability, and childcare. The provisions that would have perhaps the most profound THE STUDENT WHO CAN, BUT WON'T Every teacher is told that they must teach to all learning styles, that they must follow 504 plans and Individual Education Plans (IEPs), and that they are responsible for differentiating assignments so that all students can learn equally. What if a teacher does all of these things, but a student simply won’t learn? Believe it or not, this happens a lot more frequently than one might think. 10 TERRIFIC TEAM-BUILDING ACTIVITIES FOR SECONDARY STUDENTS About Teresa Teresa Cooper is a 30-something divorced mom and teacher from North Carolina. She has a Masters of Science in Education for Curriculum, Instruction, and Assessment from Walden University and a BA in Psychology with a minor in CHOIR PROGRAM: IF YOU BUILD IT THEY WILL COME About TER Staff The Educator's Room is a daily website dedicated to showing that teachers are the experts in education. If you are interested in submitting a piece for publication, please send a draft to info@theeducatorsroom.com. LGPT PRIDE MONTH- CELEBRATING IT IN YOUR CLASSROOM Using Rituals to Survive Remote Learning - January 8, 2021; Teachers: Stop What You’re Doing - October 12, 2020; Ending White Supremacy is a White Educators’ Fight - August 4, 2020; Before a New School Year Begins, We Must Grieve - July 20, 2020; Preparing for a Long Journey of Anti-Racist Teaching - June 11, 2020; Mental Health Support for Remote Teaching and Learning - April 29, 2020 TEACHING IS DIFFICULT WHEN ADMINISTRATIVE SUPPORT ISADMINISTRATIVE SUPPORT MEANINGADMINISTRATIVE SUPPORT SERVICES When teachers have administrative support that’s an ideal teaching situation, but the reality is that too often administrative support is not available. Thus, new teachers have the biggest problems and often leave the profession because of support of this. Whether you are a veteran teacher or just starting your career you will deal withadministrators
DEAR ADMINISTRATORS: DON’T MOVE INEFFECTIVE TEACHERS TO A Guest Writer: Shawnta S. Barnes The great school mix up is one strategy elementary principals use to remove ineffective teachers from upper elementary grades, the grades where state standardized tests are taken. Apparently, moving these teachers to an ‘easier’ grade will magically fix the problems they faced in their upper-grade classroom.There are a few
HOME | THE EDUCATORS ROOMBECOME A SPONSORABOUTGET INVOLVEDCONTACT4 KEYS TO EDUCATION BLOGGINGADVERTISETHE TEACHERS ROOMASSOCIATION OF TEACHER EDUCATORS CONFERENCE FEATURED POSTS or skip straight to the blog HOT TOPICS I received a powerful but simple text message from my state assemblyman hours after the January 6th siege on A LETTER TO MYSELF AS A FIRST YEAR TEACHER About Allyson A. Robinson With a deep commitment and passion for all things youth, Allyson began her teaching journey in 2014. After two years of teaching her “kids” in Baltimore, she decided to try taking her passion abroad to the UAE. STANDARDS-BASED GRADING MUST DIE Working to Rule is an Absurd Form of Protest - March 23, 2021; Abusing Teachers is Normal: Normal is the Problem - March 9, 2021; Today’s Homeschool Struggles Are Yesterday’s In-School Struggles - February 8, 2021; Maryland’s Governor Bullies Teachers, But This One Isn’t Lying Down - January 29, 2021; 4 Ways This Teacher Is Thankful -November 24, 2020
WHITE HOUSE INFRASTRUCTURE BILL: WHAT IT MEANS FOR Just two months into Joe Biden’s Presidency and one COVID-19 relief bill later, there are talks of a substantial infrastructure bill from administration insiders. The bill, which hopes to bring job opportunities to countless Americans, includes provisions related to climate change, pharmaceutical drug affordability, and childcare. The provisions that would have perhaps the most profound THE STUDENT WHO CAN, BUT WON'T Every teacher is told that they must teach to all learning styles, that they must follow 504 plans and Individual Education Plans (IEPs), and that they are responsible for differentiating assignments so that all students can learn equally. What if a teacher does all of these things, but a student simply won’t learn? Believe it or not, this happens a lot more frequently than one might think. 10 TERRIFIC TEAM-BUILDING ACTIVITIES FOR SECONDARY STUDENTS About Teresa Teresa Cooper is a 30-something divorced mom and teacher from North Carolina. She has a Masters of Science in Education for Curriculum, Instruction, and Assessment from Walden University and a BA in Psychology with a minor in CHOIR PROGRAM: IF YOU BUILD IT THEY WILL COME About TER Staff The Educator's Room is a daily website dedicated to showing that teachers are the experts in education. If you are interested in submitting a piece for publication, please send a draft to info@theeducatorsroom.com. LGPT PRIDE MONTH- CELEBRATING IT IN YOUR CLASSROOM Using Rituals to Survive Remote Learning - January 8, 2021; Teachers: Stop What You’re Doing - October 12, 2020; Ending White Supremacy is a White Educators’ Fight - August 4, 2020; Before a New School Year Begins, We Must Grieve - July 20, 2020; Preparing for a Long Journey of Anti-Racist Teaching - June 11, 2020; Mental Health Support for Remote Teaching and Learning - April 29, 2020 TEACHING IS DIFFICULT WHEN ADMINISTRATIVE SUPPORT ISADMINISTRATIVE SUPPORT MEANINGADMINISTRATIVE SUPPORT SERVICES When teachers have administrative support that’s an ideal teaching situation, but the reality is that too often administrative support is not available. Thus, new teachers have the biggest problems and often leave the profession because of support of this. Whether you are a veteran teacher or just starting your career you will deal withadministrators
DEAR ADMINISTRATORS: DON’T MOVE INEFFECTIVE TEACHERS TO A Guest Writer: Shawnta S. Barnes The great school mix up is one strategy elementary principals use to remove ineffective teachers from upper elementary grades, the grades where state standardized tests are taken. Apparently, moving these teachers to an ‘easier’ grade will magically fix the problems they faced in their upper-grade classroom.There are a few
EXPLORING THE COMMONALITIES FOUND WITHIN DIVERSITY IN A Exploring the Commonalities Found Within Diversity in a Classroom - June 1, 2021; The Culturally Affirming Power of Music - May 25, 2021; Teachers Don’t Need More Mugs, They Need Respect and Empathy for Teacher Appreciation Week - May 4, 2021; Opinion: Two Men in Uniform: The Lessons Black Educators Have to Teach Students - April 29, 2021; Inhale Adversity, Exhale Hope: Reflections of A MILLENNIAL LIBRARIAN WANTS TO CHANGE HOW WE VIEW THE The Price of Accessibility for Deaf/Hard of Hearing Students During a Pandemic - June 4, 2021; A Millennial Librarian Wants to Change How We View the Library - June 2, 2021; Teaching is a Political Act, Just Not Like People Think - May 14, 2021; Building a Teacher Rep-utation - May 10, 2021; Reinventing Pandemic Schooling: More than Making Lemonade from Lemons - May 7, 2021 29 ELEMENTARY CLASSROOMS THAT YOU WANT TO TEACH IN! For fifteen years Franchesca taught English/Language Arts in two urban districts in Atlanta, Georgia, and Memphis, Tennessee. Increasingly frustrated with decisions being made about public education from people who were not in the classroom, in 2012 she decided to start a blog about what it was really like to teach in public schools. THE PRICE OF ACCESSIBILITY FOR DEAF/HARD OF HEARING The Price of Accessibility for Deaf/Hard of Hearing Students During a Pandemic - June 4, 2021; Reading is the Cheat Code: Why Reading Must Have a Place in Schools - May 5, 2021; President Biden Pushes For Teachers To Get Their COVID Vaccine Dose By March - March 2, 2021; The Teacher Learns the Lesson: Reminiscing on 48 Years of Teaching - January 28, 2021; We’re Just People Who 7 GOALS OF EDUCATION About Lee-Ann Meredith "The journey of a thousand miles begins with a single step." Lao Tzu Lee-Ann Meredith is a second grade teacher, author, Department Chairperson and education advocate who has spent the duration of her time in public education at John B. Murphy Elementary School in inner city Chicago. USING LEARNING THEORIES AS A FRAMEWORK FOR TEACHING About Teresa Teresa Cooper is a 30-something divorced mom and teacher from North Carolina. She has a Masters of Science in Education for Curriculum, Instruction, and Assessment from Walden University and a BA in Psychology with a minor in PODCASTS IN THE CLASSROOM: BENEFITS, TOOLS, AND TIPS The Quest for the “Perfect” World Literature Book - June 20, 2018; Podcasts in the Classroom: Benefits, Tools, and Tips - January 23, 2017; Podcasts in the Classroom: My Students - January 10, 2017; Harper Lee's Impact on My World - February 19, 2016; Net Neutrality and Educational Technology - March 2, 2015; The Instructional Techie: Interview with James Sanders of the Ed Tech THE IMPORTANCE OF UNDERSTANDING CHILD DEVELOPMENT Paula has a Masters degree in education with an emphasis on child development and child behavior. She has been an educator for 22 years. She founded a private elementary school in 2003 and is now working through the Moore Public School District in Moore, Oklahoma as a 5 UNEXPECTED BENEFITS OF REMOTE TEACHING Using Rituals to Survive Remote Learning - January 8, 2021; Teachers: Stop What You’re Doing - October 12, 2020; Ending White Supremacy is a White Educators’ Fight - August 4, 2020; Before a New School Year Begins, We Must Grieve - July 20, 2020; Preparing for a Long Journey of Anti-Racist Teaching - June 11, 2020; Mental Health Support for Remote Teaching and Learning - April 29, 2020 DIFFERENTIATED ASSESSMENTS IN THE INCLUSION CLASSROOM AND About Teresa Teresa Cooper is a 30-something divorced mom and teacher from North Carolina. She has a Masters of Science in Education for Curriculum, Instruction, and Assessment from Walden University and a BA in Psychology with a minor inSkip to content
facebook twitter
youtube
* Home
* Become a Sponsor
* Job Board
* About __
* The Educator’s Room * 4 Keys to Education Blogging * Professional Learning* Get Involved __
* Write for Us
* Advertise
* Affiliate Program
* Contact __
* Privacy Statment
* Home
* Become a Sponsor
* Job Board
* About
* The Educator’s Room * 4 Keys to Education Blogging * Professional Learning* Get Involved
* Write for Us
* Advertise
* Affiliate Program
* Contact
* Privacy Statment
EMPOWERING TEACHERS AS THE EXPERTS IN EDUCATION.Search for:
Search for:
* Start Here __
* Impact Statements: Teacher Expertise* Browse Topics __
*
Content Strategies
* Literacy
* Mathematics
* Social Studies
* Educational Technology* ELL & ESOL
* Fine Arts
* Special Education
*
Popular Topics
* Teacher Self-Care
* Instructional Coach Files* Common Core
* The Traveling Teacher * The Unemployed Teacher * The New Teacher Chronicles* Book Review
*
Grade Levels
* Elementary (K-5)
* Middle (6-8)
* Adult
* New Teacher Bootcamp * Hot Button Topics __*
* Principals’ Corner* Charter Schools
* Confessions of a Teacher* Interviews
* The State of Education * Stellar Educator of the Week*
* How to Fix Education* Featured
* Ask a Teacher
* Teacher Branding
* Current Events
* Podcast __
* Newsletters
* Courses __
* Books
* Shirts
* Education in Atlanta* Teacher Self-Care
* The Instructional Coach Academy* Start Here
* Impact Statements: Teacher Expertise* Browse Topics
* Content Strategies* Literacy
* Mathematics
* Social Studies
* Educational Technology* ELL & ESOL
* Fine Arts
* Special Education
* Popular Topics
* Teacher Self-Care
* Instructional Coach Files* Common Core
* The Traveling Teacher * The Unemployed Teacher * The New Teacher Chronicles* Book Review
* Grade Levels
* Elementary (K-5)
* Middle (6-8)
* Adult
* New Teacher Bootcamp* Hot Button Topics
* Principals’ Corner* Charter Schools
* Confessions of a Teacher* Interviews
* The State of Education * Stellar Educator of the Week * How to Fix Education* Featured
* Ask a Teacher
* Teacher Branding
* Current Events
* Podcast
* Newsletters
* Courses
* Books
* Shirts
* Education in Atlanta* Teacher Self-Care
* The Instructional Coach AcademySearch for:
HomeTER Staff
2020-05-05T10:18:48-04:00FEATURED POSTS
OR SKIP STRAIGHT TO THE BLOGHOT TOPICS
I HAVE A CONFESSION TO MAKE: SINCE SCHOOL DOORS HAVE CLOSED AND EDUCATION HAS MOVED ONLINE,
I HAVE SLEPT TERRIBLY. Insomnia arouses my slumber around 2 or 3 a.m., and I tend to look at the ceiling for an hour before trodding downstairs for my first cup of coffee. _Read more here._..
COMMONLIT : CommonLit is a nonprofit education technology organization dedicated to ensuring that all students, especially students in Title I schools, graduate with the reading, writing, communication, and problem-solving skills they need to be successful in college and beyond...…._ __READ MORE here_.
_I REMEMBER MY FIRST YEAR TEACHING….I WAS HAVING DIFFICULTY WITH A FEW OF MY 6TH-GRADE STUDENTS. They were male and Hispanic. I wasn’t sure what the gap was but they ignored me when I spoke, they made rude comments and made it quite clear they weren’t going to do anything that I asked (including their homework). To read more, click here._
Please allow me to write an open letter to you. We face the possibility that March 13, 2020 (or earlier) was the last time we will see our students during the 2019-2020 school year. I walked out of school on Monday, March 16, 2020, with a fellow teacher who told me: “Laura, this is not how I want to leave.” Her words have remained in my head like a thought bubble.…Read more.
FEATURED CATEGORIES
LATEST AND GREATEST
*
*
*
Jackie Parrish
2020-05-08T19:19:33-04:00 SCHOOLS ARE CLOSED, BUT EDUCATIONAL INEQUALITY REMAINSJackie Parrish
2020-05-08T19:19:33-04:00May 8th, 2020|0 Comments Inequality in education exists. I have observed it from the beginning of my career in a relatively poor area of Philadelphia. It is real and it has gotten worse over the years. I began teaching*
*
*
Brittany White
2020-05-08T08:50:59-04:00 TEACHER APPRECIATION DAY: HOW CAN SCHOOLS APPRECIATE TEACHERSREGULARLY?
Brittany White
2020-05-08T08:50:59-04:00May 8th, 2020|0 Comments Happy Teacher Appreciation Day to every single educator. We at The Educator's Room are incredibly grateful for how you show up for your students every single day. We believe that you are the experts in*
*
*
TER Staff
2020-05-07T14:25:46-04:00 OPINION: TEACHER TRIBES, NOW MORE IMPORTANT THAN EVERTER Staff
2020-05-07T14:25:46-04:00May 7th, 2020|0 Comments by Elizabeth Schreidber M.Ed. Isolation, self-doubt, insecurity, fear, fatigue, depression, loneliness, anxiety, insomnia, stress, disconnect, disinterest, sorrow, lethargy, grief, frustration, irritability, distress, the list goes on and on. Welcome to COVID-19 distance learning. As teachers*
*
*
TER Staff
2020-05-04T19:35:12-04:00 ASSESSING WITH MULTIPLE CHOICES INSTEAD OF MULTIPLE CHOICE: A WAY TOTRANSFORM EDUCATION
TER Staff
2020-05-04T19:35:12-04:00May 6th, 2020|0 Comments By Terri Eichholz In the maker space where I previously worked, we required students to get 100% on tool safety tests before they were allowed to use the tools. My colleague had created the tests*
*
*
Mike Dunn
2020-05-05T14:33:31-04:00 SCHOOL CLOSURES ARE HITTING PRESCHOOLS HARDMike Dunn
2020-05-05T14:33:31-04:00May 5th, 2020|0 Comments “Ugg. I HATE coronavirus! I just want to go to school and places!" proclaimed fellow TER writer Katie Sluiter’s young daughter. For a preschooler who loves seeing her friends, being with her teachers,gymnastics, and
*
*
*
Laura Brown
2020-05-06T15:29:25-04:00 TEACHING DURING A PANDEMIC: WHERE THE GRADES DON’T COUNT, AND EVERYTHING IS MADE UPLaura Brown
2020-05-06T15:29:25-04:00May 5th, 2020|0 Comments Teachers on social media are posting inspirational videos. School districts are compassionately giving students food, paper packets, Chrome Books, internet connectivity, and yard signs for seniors. Educators are doing the best they can to make*
*
*
Sadie Hewitt
2020-05-05T10:13:47-04:00 I CAN’T GET AHOLD OF MY STUDENTS: TOOLS FOR MAINTAINING RELATIONSHIPS WITH STUDENTS DURING DISTANCE LEARNINGSadie Hewitt
2020-05-05T10:13:47-04:00May 5th, 2020|0 Comments Teachers around the world are missing their students. We miss being in the classroom and getting to connect with real students in real-time. Every district has its own plan for when they will return to*
*
*
Jake Miller
2020-05-04T12:30:19-04:00 I’M A TEACHER AND A FATHER,HERE ARE 10 THINGS MY YOUNGER SON TAUGHTME ABOUT EDUCATION
Jake Miller
2020-05-04T12:30:19-04:00May 4th, 2020|0 Comments Isaiah, my second son, will celebrate his 2nd birthday on May 4. When he was born and I held him in my arms, I thought about all the things I had learned from his older*
*
*
TER Staff
2020-05-04T19:35:29-04:00 WHAT I MISS MOST:THE SOUND OF SEVENTH GRADETER Staff
2020-05-04T19:35:29-04:00May 4th, 2020|0 Comments Guest Writer: Tamara Sloan Ritchie–7th Grade ELA Teacher, Truman Middle School, Tacoma, WA Don’t get me wrong. I’m appreciating the quiet. Just before all this happened, I was starting to feel thecrispy edges of
*
*
*
Jake Miller
2020-05-06T00:28:42-04:00 PANDEMIC MOVIE CHOICE: BAD EDUCATION: A MOVIE REVIEWJake Miller
2020-05-06T00:28:42-04:00May 3rd, 2020|0 Comments "It's not having what you want," quips Roslyn Assistant Superintendent Pam Gluckin in her Long Island accent, "it's wanting what you got." And what educators got from HBO's Bad Education was a harrowing detailof
*
*
*
Franchesca Warren
2020-04-30T20:12:07-04:00 DEAR TEACHERS OF THE ARTS: THE WORLD STILL NEEDS YOUFranchesca Warren
2020-04-30T20:12:07-04:00April 30th, 2020|0 Comments Guest Writer: Caitlin Conklin Dear Arts Teachers, At this point in time, my guess is that you're feeling a bit discouraged by the remote learning experience we are finding ourselves in. For many of us,*
*
*
Franchesca Warren
2020-04-30T22:54:27-04:00 URBAN DISTRICTS WARN THAT 275,000 TEACHER JOBS COULD BE AT RISK DUE TOCOVID-19
Franchesca Warren
2020-04-30T22:54:27-04:00April 30th, 2020|0 Comments In an unprecedented move, the Council of Greater City schools drafted a letter asking Congress for emergency funding of $200+ billion for the upcoming school year. Without this aid, the group says that anestimated
WHAT ARE WE READING? 20+ Memes That Accurately Describe Homeschooling During the COVID-19Pandemic
The New Normal: Teaching is as it Should Be Dear Teachers: There Are Many Things That No Longer Matter The Importance of Understanding Child Development Teaching in a Post-COVID-19 World: 8 Bold Statementscenter>
Create Your Destiny for 2020ABOUT US
The Educator's Room, LLC ™ is dedicated to improving education by recognizing that real experts, classroom teachers, are needed at the table of education reform. Copyright 2016 The Educators Room | Designed by Blue Ivory Creativefacebook twitter
youtube
Go to Top
×
An Elite CafeMedia Family & Parenting PublisherDetails
Copyright © 2024 ArchiveBay.com. All rights reserved. Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | DMCA | 2021 | Feedback | Advertising | RSS 2.0