Posted inInstruction & Curriculum, Uncategorized

{Watch Live} The Educator's Room Lunchtime Google Hangout Dealing With Teacher Unemployment

Join The Educator’s Room as we have our first Google Hangout Lunchtime Series on Thursday, June 6th at 12pm EST. This week we will be talking with Cari Harris about her book, How To Finish The Test When Your Pencil Breaks, and she was able to overcome teacher unemployment. Follow The Educator’s Room on Google […]

Posted inCommon Core, Current Events in Education, From the Front Lines, The State of Education

The State of Education: State of Fear in Small-Town Tennessee

The area in which I teach can be viewed from the outside as your typical agricultural region: farms, tractors, cowboy boots, Southern accents, etc. Newcomers feel wary of the locals and of being treated like outcasts; meanwhile, locals feel wary of newcomers and of being treated like simpletons. Truth is, life is more complex than […]

Posted inElementary School, Instruction & Curriculum, Kindergarten, Literacy

Summer Reading: The 50/50 Paradox

The paradox of summer reading:  Read=pleasure or Read=work. All students should read at least one book this summer. Students should practice the independent reading skills they have used the whole school year. They should receive credit for reading over the summer, but to give credit means an assessment. An assessment comes dangerously close to committing Readicide,(n): The systematic killing […]

Posted inCurrent Events in Education, Featured, From the Front Lines, High School, Middle School, Opinion

Take a Moment to Stop – And Enjoy the End of the School Year!

“Hey Jake,” Bill, our school custodian, stopped me as I sped down the hallway with a list of things to accomplish, “did you see the beautiful, blooming dogwood out in front of the school?” “Yeah, it looks great,” I said as I shrugged him off in ways only busy teachers understand. “I’m serious man, come […]

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

The Truth Behind the Atlanta Public Schools Cheating Scandal

By now the headlines have screamed about how teachers and administrators cheated in Atlanta Public Schools (APS) to falsify results from the CRCT exams in elementary and middle schools. As a teacher who worked in APS for several years, these headlines literally make my stomach turn. Despite the claims about answer changing parties, administrators who […]