Posted inFeatured, Legal, Recruitment & Retention, Uncategorized

Changing the Conversation: Teacher Tenure

“When I first started teaching, I thought that I was doing it for all of the right reasons: shorter hours, summers off, no accountability.”- Bad Teacher In one of my undergraduate courses, we analyzed the culture’s view of teachers.  Although inspirational teachers like Mr. Feeny (Boy Meets World), Mr. Holland (Mr. Holland’s Opus), and Mr. […]

Posted inClassroom Management, Featured, Opinion, Principals' Corner

Deskside Manner: How Doctors Have An Unfair Advantage Over Teachers

Last week, we explored several what teachers can learn from doctors in my first article on “deskside manner.” As some of our readers and Facebook followers pointed out, there are some serious discrepancies and disadvantages that teachers have in comparison to doctors. Let’s explore some of them: 1 – Teachers need to see 20-30 students at a […]

Posted inCommon Core, Featured, Instruction & Curriculum, Social Justice

Challenging Your Students on Assessments

In a few weeks, students in public schools and charter schools across New York State will take hours of state assessments in English Language Arts and Mathematics. Teachers are nervous, parents are frustrated, and students are indifferent. The students’ indifference is what scares the teachers and administrators of charter schools because our very survival depends […]

Posted inFeatured, Instructional Strategies, Social Justice

5 Ways Teachers Can Fight the Power

Reflections from the annual conference of New York Collective of Radical Educators Before I even sat down for my first workshop at the 2016 New York Collective of Radical Educators (NYCoRE) conference, I knew I would be leaving reinvigorated. The keynote speaker of the seventh annual NYCoRE conference, themed “Fight the Power” was Dr. Bettina […]