Posted inCurrent Events in Education, From the Front Lines, Uncategorized

5 Ways to Flip the Parent-Teacher Conference Script

With a total of five hours to meet 20-something families, elementary school teachers in New York City have between 10 and 15 minutes for each conference. That doesn’t leave a lot of time to cover a child’s academic progress, social-emotional progress, areas for growth in these areas, and provide suggestions for supporting learning at home. […]

Posted inCurrent Events in Education, Featured, Opinion, Principals' Corner, School Improvement, Uncategorized

Zero Tolerance For Zero Tolerance

As Russell J. Skiba points out in his research on zero-tolerance policies, it’s quite difficult to find the “moment” when our schools implemented zero-tolerance policies in our school, but we can trace the impact of them to the 1994 Free Schools Act as a time when districts were quick to suspend students for fear of […]

Posted inCommon Core, Current Events in Education, Opinion, Uncategorized

What President Obama Didn’t Say About Standardized Testing

On Saturday, October 24th, President Obama came out with a wholehearted message about his concern about how much schools, teachers, and students were focusing on standardized testing. He began his speech with a pop quiz, asking parents what school options they would like to provide students who had more time to learn and what they could […]

Posted inCommon Core, Current Events in Education, Instruction & Curriculum, Middle School, Uncategorized

Why Data is Important

There were eight of us gathered together early Wednesday morning: 8th grade teachers of History, English, PE, Math, Science, Spanish, a para educator and a counselor. Our task? Analyzing data from last year’s SBAC scores. To three in the group, this was an impossible task. Immediately the environment became toxic. “Maybe you like data, Jennifer, […]

Posted inCurrent Events in Education, Instructional Coach Files, Principals' Corner, Uncategorized

Instructional Coaching: Finding Your Purpose

You clear your throat. “Today we’re going to learn how to monitor data in our classrooms..” You look around the room and 20 pairs of eyes are looking at you waiting for you to finish your sentence. “..and how to increase student achievement at our school.” As you turn around to grab your handouts you […]