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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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    • Teacher Branding 101:Teachers are The Experts
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  • Education in Atlanta
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Tips for Student Success

Posted inSchool Improvement

TEDTalk: Help for Kids the Education System Forgets

by Jake MillerDecember 2, 2016November 20, 2016

One of the best TED Talks I’ve seen in a while was by Victor Rios, a sociology professor at the University of California. The segment, titled “Help for kids the education system ignores” was poignant, direct, and necessary. His speech highlighted how some of our neediest students are falling through the cracks, and what our mandate – as […]

Posted inInstruction & Curriculum

How Response Notebooks Differ From Reading Logs

by Katie SluiterNovember 2, 2016March 12, 2025

When I moved from teaching high school to teaching 8th grade English three years ago, I was introduced to an independent reading requirement: each student would read one book of their own choosing each quarter. How we chose to implement this requirement was up to the teacher, but each student had to produce a product […]

Posted inInstruction & Curriculum

Teach Like Someone is Watching–Because Someone is Always Watching

by TeresaOctober 7, 2016November 1, 2016

Do you ever feel that you aren’t teaching at your best? Not that you are deliberately not trying, but that you aren’t being deliberate about how you teach all of the time? Sometimes I go home and think about how the day has gone and realize, that I could have done better. So what, right? […]

Posted inInstruction & Curriculum

How To Do A Focused Writing Bootcamp

by Christina GilSeptember 16, 2016April 11, 2020

Using the term “boot camp” to describe a teaching experience suggests something perhaps not so pleasant—what’s the classroom equivalent of crawling through mud under barbed wire? But teaching a focused bootcamp can be a lot of fun, and it’s actually a nice break from the norm.  Students gain a great deal by an intense focus […]

Posted inClassroom Management

Time to End Students’ Need for Instant Gratification

by Jake MillerSeptember 16, 2016November 1, 2016

When you were in your educational psychology class a few years back, you probably learned about instant gratification. This behavior, at heart, is when we pursue what we want, when we want it. Often, that means now. The primal need couldn’t be more evident in our school children – and it’s up to us educators to redirect it. […]

Posted inBack to School

Small Things to Create a Great Community

by Laina PorterSeptember 15, 2016November 1, 2016

At the end of last school year, after I informed my students that I would be leaving the district, they showered me with gratitude. They wrote notes; they gave speeches; they made a scrapbook; they spent money on gifts; they arranged parties with food; they collaborated with teachers and counselors to surprise me with a […]

Posted inInstruction & Curriculum

Why I Like to Start the Year with a Poetry Unit

by Christina GilAugust 31, 2016September 2, 2023

Figuring out how to begin the school year can be intimidating.  You’ll be setting the tone for the rest of the year, and you will never quite get the same amount of energy or hard work from your students as you do while the year is still fresh.  (Ever notice that every single kid does […]

Posted inInstruction & Curriculum

A Veteran Teacher’s Regrets: Student Choice

by Christina GilAugust 29, 2016November 1, 2016

In my classroom, I integrated student choice whenever I could.  We did reading workshop every Friday, when students read an independent reading book of their choice.  Whenever we did a personal essay or literary analysis paper, I let students choose their own topics and ideas.  I started doing I-Search papers, where students chose their own […]

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