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  • Educator’s Emotional Well-Being
  • Start Here
    • Impact Statements: Teacher Expertise
    • Newsletter
  • Browse Topics
    • Content Strategies
      • Literacy
      • Mathematics
      • Social Studies
      • Educational Technology
      • ELL & ESOL
      • Fine Arts
      • Special Education
      • Popular Topics
        • Teacher Self-Care
        • Instructional Coach Files
        • Common Core
        • The Traveling Teacher
        • The Unemployed Teacher
        • The New Teacher Chronicles
        • Book Review
        • Grade Levels
          • Elementary (K-5)
          • Middle (6-8)
          • Adult
          • New Teacher Bootcamp
          • Hot Button Topics
            • Menu Item
              • Principals’ Corner
              • Charter Schools
              • Confessions of a Teacher
              • Interviews
              • The State of Education
              • Stellar Educator of the Week
            • Menu
              • How to Fix Education
              • Featured
              • Ask a Teacher
              • Teacher Branding
              • Current Events
  • Podcasts
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    • Practicing Self-Care to Avoid Teacher Burnout- An 8 Week Course
    • Becoming An Educational Consultant
    • Teacher Branding 101:Teachers are The Experts
    • The Learning Academy
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    • Shirts
  • Education in Atlanta
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testing

Posted inFrom the Front Lines

Teachers Talk about RTI: The Educator’s Room Survey Results

by Aimee CribbsOctober 22, 2017October 30, 2017

RTI – Response to Intervention – has made its way to the top of the list of most commonly used education acronyms.  Since changes to policy language in the 2004 Individuals with Disabilities Act (IDEA), the Response to Intervention framework has emerged as the favored way to identify students with learning disabilities.  After a decade […]

Posted inSpecial Education

Making Special Education Work For Everyone

by Paula Kay GlassOctober 15, 2017

I teach in a mild/moderate special education classroom, meaning that all of my kids are on IEPs and have been placed in my room because they meet disability criteria that my school district recognizes. They are able to attend a regular education classroom for all other subjects besides reading, language arts, math and adaptive behavior. […]

Posted inCurrent Events in Education

Testing Season: Prepare to be Accountable

by Dan McConnellApril 3, 2017April 2, 2017

It’s testing season In New York, the state tests are here. Technically speaking the ELA tests have gone by already, other than make-ups that need to still happen. The math 3-8 exams are still to come, and in the tiny rural school system I teach in these tests are all taken seriously by the teachers. […]

Posted inInstruction & Curriculum

How To Teach Creativity In A Test Driven Culture

by Pedro CabreraFebruary 8, 2017February 6, 2017

I am blessed to have what many other teachers don’t: autonomy.  A 2014 Forbes article listed the top 10 skills wanted by employers: ability to work in a team structure, the ability to make decisions and solve problems, the ability to communicate, the ability to plan, organize, and prioritize work; and the ability to obtain and process […]

Posted inThe State of Education

Teaching, Unions and Parenting in New York

by Dan McConnellJanuary 12, 2017January 11, 2017

Teaching these days drives one to read and research whenever possible about what has been going on. I read an old article with a title that grabbed my attention. My search was driven by curiosity regarding the roles of teacher unions moving forward, as well as what they have been doing (or not doing) for the […]

Posted inParents

Being a Teacher (but first, just being “Dad”)

by Dan McConnellJanuary 9, 2017January 8, 2017

About four years ago my wife called me at school and told me that our oldest daughter had gotten off the school bus crying. Walking up our 100 feet of driveway between the road and our door, she had her report card in one hand and was clearly trying to gather herself before getting to […]

Posted inInstruction & Curriculum

Six Reasons Why Tests Suck

by Christina GilOctober 20, 2016November 1, 2016

I’ve probably given hundreds of tests during my career, but the truth is, if I had the choice, I would never give my ELA students tests of any kind. This is one of those things that has sort of snuck up on me over the years.  For example, I used to give a test on […]

Posted inInstruction & Curriculum

To Test or not to Test: That is the Question

by Emily MaddenJuly 13, 2016November 1, 2016

Picture this, lush green fields and ancient ruins of magnificent structures gazing over the tops of houses on the lanes.  This is my view on the train from York to London.  My family is from Yorkshire and I had the delight of spending time with them during my brief stop.  However, I’m left contemplating a pressing […]

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