Help your students develop their writing skills with techniques that are aligned to standards, but still feel relevant to students.
Stephanie Abbott
Live chat, class discussion boards, email, webinars, and virtual field trips are all samples of online course interactions that have become staples over the past 10 years. Are they all needed for online student success? Or is it primarily the frequency and/or the application of a substantial grade percentage that needs to be changed to existing modes of online interactions between students and instructors?
Shane Dennison
If your state’s assessment season hasn’t kicked off yet, it’s about to.
Scott Sterling
No teacher has ever said grading papers is the best part of the job. I’ve seen English teachers cite that as the reason they left the profession.
Let’s be honest: field trips may be worthwhile, but they’re incredibly stressful for teachers and chaperones.
By now, you’re familiar with TED talks and their format. TED, which stands for Tech, Entertainment, and Design, has grown to be a leading source of informative, short (10-15 minutes) lectures from people with “ideas worth spreading”.
As discussed in my previous blog, Common Core standards, and related assessments coming down the pike have become a political tug of war. How will this tug of war affect teachers and what are some of the challenges they are facing with the Common Core?
When I was teaching, I always made it a point to integrate current events whenever possible.
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