Posted inFeatured, Instruction & Curriculum, Mathematics, Uncategorized

The Mathematical Workshop Model: How Data, Differentiation, and Classroom Management Combine in an Elementary Classroom

We have all heard of various writing workshop models. Students working diligently on various stages of the writing process: pre-writing, drafting, revising, proofreading and publishing. But how can we incorporate similar structures in the math classroom? To some, this may not be new. Various levels of the math workshop model do exist and so I am […]

Posted inStellar Educator of the Week

Graham G.-Stellar Educator of the Week

Name : Graham G. School District: Chicago Public Schools Years Teaching : 7-8 years  Certification Areas: English/ Language Arts, Science, Social Studies Recommendation: “Graham has put his heart and soul into teaching since his first day teaching inner city students in Chicago, fresh out of college. He consistently finds new and interesting ways to engage his students, from […]

Posted inCurrent Events in Education, High School, Middle School, Parents

The Flip Side of Virtual Schools: When a Child Gets Behind – Part 1

When a child falls behind in school, the parent looks for help from teachers, family, friends, anyone that can potentially help them help their child. But what happens when both of your kids attend a virtual school ? What if all the  help appears to be completely on the parent’s shoulders? What can be done? I recently […]

Posted inInstruction & Curriculum, Middle School, Social Studies

Social Studies Facts American Students Should Know: The American Government and Geography Edition

As a 6th-12th grade social studies teacher for the past 6 years, I have seen my fair share of students. I taught high school during a time of many standards changes were taking place here in Georgia. I would get a group of high school students who always claimed that they didn’t remember (or they weren’t  taught the […]