Posted inCurrent Events in Education, Featured, High School, Instruction & Curriculum, Middle School, Opinion

What Frustrates Me About Non-Public Schools

This article is published simultaneously with its partner article, “What Bothers Me About Public Schools“   Let me preface this article by saying that I am in no way, shape, or form opposed to private or charter schools. There’s a school for every child on this planet, and for some students, it’s not a public […]

Posted inFeatured, From the Front Lines, Instruction & Curriculum, Middle School, Opinion, Parents

Pay It Backwards: Reach Out to Your Former Teachers

Growing up, I remember learning about Benjamin Franklin explaining life’s assurances: “…in this world nothing can be said to be certain, except death and taxes.”  He was explaining to a French pen pal that the American experiment was as raw as it was unpredictable. The Constitution and our fledgling country were trees in the desert, […]

Posted inFeatured, From the Front Lines, Instruction & Curriculum, Middle School, Uncategorized

Raising Boys' Achievement Involves More Male Teachers

It’s no shock to any reader – teacher or parent – to learn that boys are not just falling behind, they’re sinking. In the middle school where I teach, of our nearly 1,100 students, roughly 80% of the special education students are male. More than 2/3 of the students failing classes are male. More than […]

Posted inFeatured, Instruction & Curriculum, Opinion, Principals' Corner, Uncategorized

Use Your Holiday Break to Get Political

This summer at my first PSEA Summer Leadership Conference (our union getaway in Gettysburg, PA), I heard what was probably the most interesting speech in years. The president of Student PSEA, a college senior about to begin her student-teaching that fall, talked about politics and education. She said that, while in high school leading up […]