Learning Maps: Empowering Students to Chart Their Own Course
Learning Maps makes learning and assessment more accessible to students, allowing them navigate curriculum in their own way.
Education, Grades, and Liberation w/Julia E. Torres
As a teacher/activist, Julia Torres's work is grounded in empowering students to use the Language Arts to fuel resistance and positive social transformation.
Feedback on Writing: Providing Strategies for Revision
I have tried many ways to get students to understand that writing is neither “right” nor “wrong.” Writing is about what works, what touches the reader, and what is authentic to the writer’s experience.
Grades Are Not the Whole Equation
In my years as a math anxiety specialist, I have found two main things to be helpful: written feedback and parents and teachers who are supportive and work as a team.
Providing Feedback to Promote Student Growth
Just as a coach provides feedback on improving a baseball swing or long jump form, I provide feedback on the use of historical evidence, thesis construction, and other discipline related skills.
Improve Understanding with Video Feedback
Andrew Burnett uses video to augment the power of verbal and written comments in his feedback to students.
Self Assessment: Empowering Students in their Own Learning
Although we tout education theories like “inquiry-based learning” or having a “student-centered curriculum,” the reality is that students slowly lose their agency or any sense of control over their learning as they move through the ranks.
Towards a Culture of Learning
Taking away grades signals a fundamental change in the power dynamics of a classroom, and students need to be supported in order to thrive.
My Room: Accepting the Mantle of Classroom Culture
I am a teacher. I am a room. I am a space to fill. I am a culture to create. I am a world to shape.We are teachers. We are rooms. We are spaces to fill. We are cultures to create. We are worlds to shape.
School Culture w/Bennett Jester
This episode features an interview with Bennette Jester, high school student, author of the website My Grading Story and advocate for student voice in learning.
Make Time for What You Believe is Right and Good
We should be focusing on “better” practices, as what is “best” today may not be best for the children we teach in the future. With that in mind, we need to continue to be on the lookout for teaching practices that we feel are right and good for the children we have in front of us.
Learning Culture: My Perspective as a Montessori Graduate
So the question is: How do we, people who are interested in making education better for students, help traditional schools adopt some of the things that made my education so far fantastic?