4 Ways to Reboot, Refocus and Recharge your Teaching

In the on-season, athletes train for long periods, enter competitions and win (or lose). During the off-season, they rest, meditate, do some physical prep for the next season like stretching and weight training, study their craft and reconnect with friends and family. What athletes like Serena Williams and Christiano Ronaldo do in the off-season is Read More

“Does Spelling Count?”: Literacy, Math and Science

A colleague of mine, a biologist, (let’s call him Ken) teaches an upper-level college course on genetics. Course requirements include the usual—class participation, quizzes, exams, and …a scientific paper. Each semester, when Ken mentions the paper the classroom erupts in shrieks and murmurs. Immediately after the noise dies down, hands shoot into the air and Read More

4 Tips to Learn How to Learn

You attended that work retreat least weekend that was supposed to help you learn new stuff. But did you ever learn how to learn? Did you ever learn how to make information part of long-term memory that can be appropriately used in the future? Most people are not taught strategies and habits that help them Read More

Does Social Class Matter in the Classroom?

Most teachers I ask say no. It doesn’t matter if students are wealthy, middle class or poor, they say. Then I ask other questions: Does what’s happening in the world affect the schoolhouse? Social media? Prejudice? Teachers always answer yes to these questions. Which brings us back to social class. Social class is a powerful force Read More

The Crisis of Multicultural Education: Part II

Multicultural Dilemmas: The Nation-state and Identity Politics Inherent in the idea of globalism is the notion that the influence of cultural mores on individuals and groups might be reduced and replaced with a global culture. However, contemporary time is plagued with ethnic, religious and cultural balkanization and conflict that that run the gamut from relocating Read More

Unconscious Bias Part 1: Traditional Family Structure

Do you have an inclusive approach to teaching? An inclusive approach includes all students and fosters equal educational opportunities for all. You probably answered yes. At the word ‘inclusion’ most teachers think about things like non-white students, students who are differently abled or those who need a little extra help to grasp concepts. But what Read More

Reflective Teaching and the Self

You teach your self. Who ever you are, who ever that ‘self’ is will determine the words and deeds you perform in the classroom. It’s really difficult to change the teaching self from the outside. Governments, district leaders and principals could mandate policies and training meant to change attitudes and instructional strategies. But in the Read More

Teaching and Prejudice

Everyone has prejudices. Some judgment or attitude, for or against, an idea, a person or a thing. Prejudice isn’t just about race, ethnicity or culture. Think conservative vs liberal. The student in your class who you give a high grade because she reminds you of your daughter. These attitudes develop over time. And are often Read More

Rubrics, In a Nutshell

What is a rubric? A rubric is a scoring tool that lists the standards on which judgment or decisions about a piece of work will be based. A good rubric… Tells you what you’ll be looking for to give a certain grade (or score) for a test or assignment. A rubric should say what skills Read More

4 Ways to Teach Math with Precision

Some students in the math methods class were pissed. I read the comments to find out why. One comment summed it up, ‘She wanted everything to be so exact even though we were just doing elementary.’ They were talking about teachers being precise when writing and speaking about math with elementary students. I’ve been thinking Read More