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Mel Riddile
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Formative Assessment Works
by Mel Riddile
Formative assessment or assessment for learning is a proven strategy to improve student achievement.
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Mel Riddile
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More than half of the principals surveyed also said they were responsible for making safety decisions in their schools, including things like campus check-in procedures and security for after-school events.
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Mel Riddile
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Study after study finds students' motivation to learn is often driven by their relationships with their teachers, but a new report suggests many new educators enter the classroom with inconsistent training on what works to spark that drive.
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Mel Riddile
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Claiming that ‘teacher talk’ is bad also flies in the face of science–carefully designed direct instruction, ie a teacher talking, is pretty clearly one of the best ways to ensure that novices get the background knowledge they need to engage in critical thinking. A good discussion later happens because of the knowledge disseminated first. It’s also anti-intellectual. If you really don’t think you have any knowledge to impart that students can’t infer on their own in a 45 minute lesson, perhaps you’re in the wrong job. And no wonder teaching is too often perceived as low-status work. Teachers themselves constantly demean the value of their own voices.
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Within these methods you’ll find close to 40 tools and tricks for finding out what your students know while they’re still learning.
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Mel Riddile
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Researchers hope some new findings may eventually generate guidelines to help teachers optimally design classrooms. Psychology researchers Anna V. Fisher, Karrie E. Godwin and Howard Seltman of Carnegie Mellon University looked at whether classroom displays affected children’s ability to maintain focus during instruction and to learn the lesson content. They found that children in highly decorated classrooms were more distracted, spent more time off-task and demonstrated smaller learning gains than when the decorations were removed.
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Mel Riddile
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Amid public concerns about school safety fueled by high-profile school shootings, new federal data show reports of student fights, bullying, and other forms of victimization have continued a decades-long trend of decline. At the same time, schools have ramped up security measures, like the use of cameras and restricted entrances.
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Mel Riddile
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Teach students the strategies good readers use like questioning the text, visualizing and forming interpretations. Research shows "cognitive strategies" like these improve reading comprehension and writing.
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Mel Riddile
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Explicit instruction is a type of teaching model where students are shown what to do and how to do it.
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Mel Riddile
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How do you handle a class that is apt to talk to each other rather than listen to the instructor or other students? Here are 3 tips that you can incorporate to help reduce the chattiness of your class.
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Mel Riddile
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In the U.S. we call it “math phobia”; in the U.K. they call it “maths anxiety.” Either way you dub it, a negative emotional reaction to mathematics, which can manifest as a fear of or aversion to doing math-related work, is a real threat to mathematical competency. A new summary of research from the University of Cambridge adds a huge amount of detail to the picture of what causes math phobia in young people and what if anything can be done to mitigate its effects.
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Mel Riddile
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The rise of digital media has made it harder than ever to engage in deep, contemplative reading. As Maryanne Wolf writes in her new book, Reader, Come Home: The Reading Brain in a Digital World, skimming is the new normal. Marty West speaks with Doug Lemov, who reviewed Wolf's book for Education Next.
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Mel Riddile
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Educators share key moments that catalyzed change. ”We found no evidence that any particular kind or amount of professional development consistently helps teachers improve.” Each culture has big moments—birthdays, weddings, graduations—and “every last one of them was invented,” according to Chip and Dan Heath. In their book The Power of Moments, they argue that moments provide the spark for change. “In organizations, we are consumed with goals. Time is meaningful only insofar as it clarifies or measures our goals,” they write. “But for individual human beings, moments are the thing.” The Heaths write that we “can create defining moments” if we’re conscious of them as a tool for change. Although many of the moments described in the Twitter comments above seem random, certain practices can increase the likelihood of transformative experiences. By gathering student feedback, reflecting on our experiences, challenging our assumptions, and seeking to see students through new lenses, we lay the groundwork for important moments to occur. Systems and goals remain important for professional development, but don’t forget the power that moments have to transform. https://www.edutopia.org/article/sparking-change-teaching-practices?utm_source=twitter&utm_medium=socialflow
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Active strategies for annotation like collaborative work and illustration increase students’ comprehension and retention.
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A review of "Reader, Come Home" by Maryanne Wolf “On the digital screen we read fleetingly, flittingly. Our brains have what scientists call “novelty bias.” We are predisposed to attend to new information; from an evolutionary perspective, what’s new, bright, and flashing could contain survival information. It gets priority. Reading on screens sets up a cycle of expectation and gratification. We are repeatedly distracted by whatever pops up, rewarded for each distraction with a tiny surge of dopamine. This attraction to “the new” crowds out reflection, creative association, critical analysis, empathy—the keys to what Wolf calls the “deep reading process.” We read in a constant state of partial attention. And, Wolf points out, this is as much cause as effect. Human beings developed the capacity to read relatively recently, over the past 5,000 years or so. The brain has no reading center. Rather, when we learn to read, we call upon multiple areas of the brain, exhibiting a cognitive quality known as neuroplasticity.“
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Mel Riddile
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One of our most useful clips of the Cold Call technique is this short-but-super clip of Alex Timoll at Excellence Boys Charter School in Bed Stuy Brooklyn. There are a ton of things you could take away from it, and from Alex’s teaching generally, but there are three especially useful lessons i think that ever
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Mel Riddile
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A state Teacher of the Year shares her techniques for increasing the number of students who talk and share their ideas in class.
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Mel Riddile
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Higher-achieving students are flocking to career-technical-education classes, a new study says, and their participation could help erase the stigma that has long dogged old-school “voc ed” classes.
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Mel Riddile
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How can we equip new teachers to succeed? Guide aspiring teachers to the best training programs. Even better, give teachers crucial information about the learning process that even the best programs don’t provide.
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Mel Riddile
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Social and emotional learning is more than a side curriculum—it should be woven into everyday activities throughout the school day.
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Mel Riddile
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Washington, D.C. Social-emotional learning is important for schools to promote, but it shouldn’t come at the expense of academics, and new measures are needed to evaluate how it’s being taught, experts said at a panel Thursday. Research is increasingly showing that learning is easier in a positive environment than a negative one, and that negative […]
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Mel Riddile
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Readers using screens perform worse and tend to think they're processing and understanding texts better than they actually are, according to a new review of nearly three-dozen studies over the past decade.
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Mel Riddile
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The cognitive benefits of reading are well-established, and countless scientific studies conducted over the years have demonstrated how beneficial this complex cognitive process is to one’
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Mel Riddile
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Instructional leadership is not just about building leaders. Teacher leaders and instructional coaches have to worry about it too because it adds to their credibility in the role. Here's the thing though, instructional leadership is easy to talk about but hard to put it into practice, which is where coaching comes in. Here's how.
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Mel Riddile
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To start fixing income and wealth inequality, we've got to begin repairing the path to the future for millions of lower-income families. ”General job and life advice for many young people is to get a college degree—bachelor's at a minimum and post-graduate if possible. Even if you don't believe that college should be nothing but an expensive form of work training, it's hard to argue against the reality of the association. Here's a graphic from the Bureau of Labor Statistics showing some correlations between educational level attainment, median weekly income, and unemployment rate.
Many students are not good at evaluating the credibility of what they see and read online according to a now-famous Stanford study that was released just after the 2016 election. And while it’s true that 82 percent of middle schoolers couldn’t tell the difference between a native advertisement and a news article, neither could 59 percent of adults in a study conducted by the advertising industry.
Sam Wineburg, the Stanford professor who led the middle school study, is worried that everyone is “profoundly confused” right now and that schools aren’t doing enough to teach students the skills they need to be effective citizens and digital consumers.
Via John Evans
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