Skip to main contentRemainders: Teachers offer sage words for test-taking students
By | April 18, 2012, 12:53am UTC - A third-grade teacher writes a letter to his students on the eve of their first state test. (Mr. Foteah)
- Another city teacher pens “An Ode to the Big Tests,” concluding that “this too shall pass.” (Jose Vilson)
- A longtime observer of gifted and talented programs answers post-screening questions. (Insideschools)
- A teacher lists the books she’s found are good at getting her students to read for 15 minutes. (prelife)
- A useful primer on how schools accumulate local, state, and federal funding. (Schools of Thought)
- A panel on education that included Joel Klein and Randi Weingarten stuck to the script. (Atlantic)
- Philadelphia is adding an average of 120 seats at 19 high-performing schools. (Notebook)
- Philadelphia is also recalculating the grades of schools where cheating was detected. (Notebook)
- An argument for forcing teachers to work together more often, instead of isolating them. (Atlantic)
- A math teacher offers 10 principals for designing math assignments that will engage students. (dy/dan)
- In a beautiful video, an NPR series analyzes just what makes up kids’ cafeteria food. (Russo)
- The education department Republican candidates love to hate probably won’t disappear. (CSMonitor)
- A Finnish education expert explains what the U.S. can and can’t learn from his country. (Answer Sheet)