Posted inFeatured, From the Front Lines, Instruction & Curriculum

Classroom Activity Breaks – Reap the Benefits!

Research continues to show that activity breaks in the classroom can lead to improved focus and performance by our students. As a Physical Educator, I get tickled when a classroom teacher drops off their students and says, “Run them! They are WILD today!” This happens more frequently during the winter months when recess time and […]

Posted inFeatured, Instruction & Curriculum, Social Studies

Teaching Human Rights

by: Ric Domingo Like any profession, we teachers have to keep up-to-date with our craft.  Content, methodology and, of course, testing, all go through phases of creation, disfavor, re-creation, and evolution.  One trend that is very likely here to stay, especially for the social studies and humanities, is “global” education.  State and federal standards don’t […]

Posted inFeatured, Instruction & Curriculum, Literacy

Using Threaded Discussion to Generate Peer Feedback

Peer feedback is an essential tool to build stronger writers. But how exactly does one encourage fruitful peer feedback? I struggled with finding the best method that would stimulate meaningful comments among my students. At first, I would have students exchange papers and use generic checklists with items like “Is the thesis statement clear?” or […]

Posted inFeatured, Instruction & Curriculum, Literacy, School Improvement, Uncategorized

Written Text or Audiotext in the Classroom? We Should Have Both

I am passing out Brave New World to the 10th graders. “Is there an audiobook for this?” a student asks. “Why not just read the book?” I respond. “I can’t read this without help,” explains the student. “I’ll see,” I sigh. I admit that in the past I had been a little frustrated at these requests. I […]

Posted inInstruction & Curriculum

Fulfilling The Interdisciplinary Dream

The education world is all about buzzwords. From early classes in all disciplines to graduate level courses in specialized topics, practitioners are constantly throwing around terms like “differentiation”, “STEM” (now STEAM), “flipped classrooms”, “high-stakes testing”, “collaborative learning”, and “MOOCs”. These catchphrases live in the hearts and minds of professionals from first-grade math and high school […]

Posted inFeatured, Instruction & Curriculum, Literacy

Shakespeare Doesn’t Have to be Scary! Six Tips to Help you Start Teaching Shakespeare and be Glad You Did!

In my first year of teaching, I wanted to teach a Shakespeare play, but was completely intimidated by where to start. I befriended the most veteran member of our English department, an actress, director and drama teacher, who gave me fantastic tips and assured me that I would love it and that students would, too. […]

Posted inCharter Schools, From the Front Lines, Uncategorized

Charter School Diaries #4 – Order in the Court

Working in a school, I’ve learned that there is so much more that happens during the day time than just actual instruction. The instruction of children in the center of what we do as educators, yet everything else going on that surrounds instruction sometimes gains more attention than it should. More often than not, the budget gains […]

Posted inFeatured, Instruction & Curriculum, Social Studies

A More Perfect Union: Our Students Will Continue The Quest

This month marks 150 years since Abraham Lincoln signed the Emancipation Proclamation.  This year marks 50 years since Dr. Martin Luther King gave his great “I Have a Dream” speech on the Mall in Washington, D.C. that spurred the Civil Rights Movement forward.   And this week marks the second inauguration of President Barack Obama as […]