Scholars are rethinking the effectiveness of zero-tolerance policies.
School Safety
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Diversity, Equity, InclusionEducatorsK-12 TeachersParentsProject-based learningSchool Safety
Different Learning Needs
by Ian Egan4 minutes readChildren have settled into patterns of learning that persist for life by the end of third grade.
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Alex Terego | Author
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AdministratorsAdvocatesAround the WebCollege ProfessorsK-12 TeachersParentsSchool SafetyStudents
Have Librarians’ Value Diminished in the New Digital Age?
4 minutes readIf you were to take your eyes off of your book for one minute, you’d notice what has happened around you. Technology is advancing at warp speed; it’s everywhere and owned by everyone. But are establishments that provide books to the public able to survive?
The answer is yes. The librarian’s value has not diminished with the forthcoming of the digital age. Libraries are adapting to these changing times, and becoming thought leaders in utilizing technology for research purposes. -
BusinessDigital CitizenshipProfessional DevelopmentSchool Safety
Common Sense Education and Public Consulting Group Partner to Offer...
3 minutes readSan Francisco, CA [August 30, 2016] — To help educators teach their students how to use technology safely, respectfully, and responsibly, Common Sense Education and Public Consulting Group (PCG) have partnered to offer Digital Citizenship courses through Pepper, PCG’s online professional learning network.
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EducatorsHybrid and Remote LearningK-12 TeachersSchool Safety
Audio: VH1 Save the Music Foundation Impacts School Music Programs...
12 minutes readHenry Donohue, Executive Director of VH1’s Save The Music Foundation, talks about the impact of musical instrument donations to our nation’s schools and students. For the past 20 years, VH1’s Save The Music Foundation has donated over $50 million in instruments, virtually saving music programs as it enriches the lives of students. Henry adds his insight into past DIY musicians and the changes technology inspired. On a side note: Punk Rock is finally given the much-needed attention it deserves.
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AdvocatesCommunityEditorialParentsSchool SafetyStudents
Cyberbullying: Grab the Tablet by the Horns!
7 minutes readby Sgt. Thomas Rich
This post, Understanding Cyberbullying Through Immersion: Educate, Empower, Engage, was originally published in SEEN Magazine.
Today’s technology has taken on a life of its own. Words such as “tweet,” “hashtag,” “snap” and “follow” have become integrated into our daily vocabulary. Every day there seems to be a new social media platform that kids are using, whether it’s Twitter, Snapchat, Yik Yak or Facebook. -
From U.S. Uncut – Detroit’s students are trying to learn while breathing in black mold and sitting in classrooms filled with buckets catching toilet water leaking through the ceiling. And that’s not even the worst part. Republican Governor Rick Snyder is not only using the financial emergency management laws to poison children in Flint; he’s doing the same thing in Detroit via the public school system, which the state has controlled for the last seven years.
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School districts are under pressure from the federal government, foundations, and states to include value-added assessment as a part of a teacher’s evaluation to meet the widely supported policy goal of identifying the most effective and the least effective teachers in a school system. On its face, the argument for value-added models (VAM) seems to make sense. How well a student does after a year with a teacher should serve as an indicator of how effective that teacher was. But by what measures? How valid are those measures? If the student measure is a score on a standardized test, what evidence do we have to indicate the standardized test accurately measures teacher effectiveness? Which students are being compared?
