U.S. Under Secretary of Education Martha Kanter to Participate in Minnesota Higher Education Roundtable, Discuss College Affordability and the Skills Gap | U.S. Department of Education

This might be interesting to follow–especially in light of Minnesota’s recent politics. However, there is no doubt that college is getting more and more difficult for students and their families to afford. That there might be a link to the “skills gap” is an interesting perspective. Although almost all colleges and universities now include learning centers and other student skills support and improvement initiatives, it is difficult to imagine that the cost of such centers and services can substantially affect the cost of tuition and fees. As I said, this will be interesting to follow up on.

U.S. Under Secretary of Education Martha Kanter to Participate in Minnesota Higher Education Roundtable, Discuss College Affordability and the Skills Gap | U.S. Department of Education.

#educ_dr

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Put the Brakes on the Summer Slide | Teaching Tolerance

Here is a great–and short!–list of things one can do with a student during the summer.

Enjoy!

Put the Brakes on the Summer Slide | Teaching Tolerance.

If the link above does not work, copy and past this URL into your browser: http://www.tolerance.org/blog/put-brakes-summer-slide

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Students Must not be Treated as Criminals | Teaching Tolerance

Students Must not be Treated as Criminals | Teaching Tolerance.

Here’s a copy of the linked-to blog:

I don’t remember exactly what instigated it, but something had made Cashanda mad. She positioned herself—and her desk—right smack in front of the board. She was defiant. Her physical placement made it impossible to continue my lesson.

I was a second-year teacher. She was a student in special education because of her tendency toward aggression. I told her to move. She refused. I repeated my instruction. She yelled back. She may have cursed.

At that time, I hadn’t developed the tools I now have for de-escalating defiant students, so I used the intercom to call down to the office. I told them I had a student who needed to leave the classroom and go to see the disciplinarian. She was disrupting class and was impeding my ability to teach.

A few moments later, the disciplinarian, principal and an on-campus police officer arrived at my door. Cashanda rolled her eyes, pushed her desk and stormed out of class.

Despite a number of incidents like these, I adored and respected Cashanda as a student. She was quick-witted, observant and visibly self-determined in every way aside from controlling her anger. She was a foster child, switched from house to house numerous times in her 13-year-old life. She had already attended an alternative school and, like a surprisingly large number of my students, already had a probation officer. She wrote great poetry about empowerment and railed against black-on-black crime. She knew about it. She’d lived it.

When the police officer and company showed up at my door, I felt a knot of disappointment. While it’s true that she left the class relatively peacefully, and my class was able to continue, I was frustrated that whatever had made her so angry was being left unresolved. The reason she walked out without a fight was that she couldn’t risk another arrest. Students did routinely get arrested at my old school, especially African-American students.

It’s troubling that we’re treating children in schools so much like adults are treated in prisons. Children are being arrested for misbehaviors that could instead be mediated in the office of a principal, counselor or social worker. Students are being branded with criminal records at a young age. It’s part of the school-to-prison pipeline. When we treat kids as criminals instead of as children who need to be taught how to do better, we are giving up.

I’m glad to now work at a school that handles discipline in a drastically different way. We serve low-income kids from violent neighborhoods. Many come from households where food, electricity and a sense of safety are unreliable. We have a good handful of Cashandas, whose life circumstances have impaired their ability to control their anger. But this school doesn’t choose to employ a police officer on campus, and there isn’t any need for it.

We are firm but fair, and treat our kids as just that: our kids. We believe it is our responsibility to raise them right, to teach them rather than punish them. And the opportunities to do this are everywhere. Each time we have a conversation instead of simply issuing a consequence, we build the capacity to connect with a student in a meaningful way.

The school-to-prison pipeline is certainly systemic, but we can begin to combat it each day with small interactions in our classrooms. It is our duty to do that.

Craven is a middle school English teacher in Louisiana. 

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10th Grade Exam Question: “And the Most Interesting Character of the Year Award Goes to____”? | Used Books in Class

If you are interested in a creative way to challenge your students on an English or literature or (as in this case) world literature class, try this idea.

This certainly would have made some of my literature classes more fun when I was a student!

10th Grade Exam Question: “And the Most Interesting Character of the Year Award Goes to____”? | Used Books in Class.

The URL, if you need to copy and paste it into your browser, is: http://usedbooksinclass.com/2012/06/20/10th-grade-exam-question-and-the-most-interesting-character-of-the-year-award-goes-to____/

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Web Tools Blog Series: Collecting, Organizing and Making Sense of Information | Edutopia

Are you a teacher or school internet administrator/advisor? Are you just someone interested in innovative technology? Sign up for this blog and learn the latest information. Although geared for educators, it can be useful to everyone.

Read on…

Web Tools Blog Series: Collecting, Organizing and Making Sense of Information | Edutopia.

If the link above does not work, copy and paste this URL into your web browser. Be aware that you may need to sign up for Edutopia.

http://www.edutopia.org/blog/collecting-organizing-information-summer-professional-development

#educ_dr

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For those of you interested in e-publication, this blog may be of interest to you. It includes a list of blogs that do more with their content than just review a good book. Read not only the blog, but also some posts at the links that are included. Enjoy!

#educ_dr

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This post is from an official WordPress blogger. If you are a novice, like I am, this blog is indispensable.
#educ_dr

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Free Internet Tools for Teachers

Although I haven’t looked at all the applications at this site, there is certainly a lot to look at. If you use the internet as or in your classroom, it’s worth a thorough look.

Free Internet Tools for Teachers at Internet 4 Classrooms.

(I linked to this site via http://alanadelorme.wordpress.com/2012/06/19/genius/)

#educ_dr

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Education Week Teacher: Classroom Management That Creates Harmony Instead of Hostility

From a blog I meant to repost almost two months ago:

Although many experts oppose punishment-and-reward systems, they are still used in almost every classroom. Teachers are often required to adopt a school-wide classroom-management system, or they may institute their own out of a need for structure. But given these realities, you can still incorporate classroom-management levers that are tied directly to learning goals and that reinforce expectations, rather than simply punishing so-called “bad” behavior. In doing so, you can foster inclusiveness rather than divisive competition in the classroom.

Education Week Teacher: Classroom Management That Creates Harmony Instead of Hostility.

Click on the link above to see the full article. It comes from Education Week, and makes a lot of sense for classroom management. Just keep in mind that rewarding good behavior is not the same as a bribe. Rather, it is a way to help students maintain harmony in the classroom and in life as a whole. Teachers who have trouble with behavior in class may find the problem shrinking and vanishing as students “catch on” that there are consequences for appropriate behavior–not just punishment for poor behavior. Behavior management is such a simple technique, yet is so underused in non-special education classrooms.

If the link above does not work, please copy and paste this URL into your browser: http://www.edweek.org/tm/articles/2012/05/02/fp_mixen_classroommanagement.html?tkn=WOCFC7ZgDamzybWFu0lwvJLv4dOLYx7qYbdq&cmp=clp-sb-teacher

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Edutopia News | May 30, 2012

Always a pleasure to share Edutopia newsletters and blogs. Here’s one that was sent out a few weeks ago–yes, I’m catching up. (wink)

You don’t have to wait for me and my input. You can get Edutopia information directly from the site. Support Edutopia, because it is a strong supporter of education in general, and the use of the Internet and technology in education in specific.

Consider joining this organization. You get lots of freebies with a membership, including world-class webinars and hard-copy  publications, if you like. I don’t get anything for plugging it except the knowledge that I may have helped one more educator (or parent or …) join the discussion.

Edutopia News | May 30, 2012.

If the link above doesn’t work, copy and paste this URL into your browser:

http://www.edutopia.org/files/existing/edutopianews.html

#educ_dr

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