MSM 668: ISTE Shiny Things: Product or Pedagogy?

Summary:

Shawn and Troy talk about ISTE25. Dave teaches science to girls.

Jokes:  

A boxer complains to his doctor about insomnia.

Doc Have you tried counting sheep?

Boxer Yes, but whenever I get to 9, I stand up


Beethoven wasn’t in the market to buy a house.

  • He was just looking Für Elise.

Nothing embarrasses a psychic more than throwing them a surprise party.


If my name were Bill, I would go to the payroll department every payday and say “it’s time to pay your Bill”.


for those of you asking:

do ya know where my jokes come from?

  • I get them from my dad-a-base…

Turns out when you’re asked who your favourite child is you’re expected to pick from your own. 

  • I know that now.

A dog gave birth to puppies on the road…

  • A cop cited her for littering…

What’s the difference between a jeweller and a jailer? 

  • One sells watches while the other watches cells.

My air conditioner broke.

  • I lost my cool.

First panel:"One adult ticket, please"
Second panel: "I can tell you're three sheep in a trenchcoat." Are you sure?"
Third panel: "Yes, Look, one, two, three..."
Fourth panel: Ticket taker is asleep, the sheep walk in.

William Shakespeare Account makes a social media post:

"Shall I compare thee to a summer's day? Fine. Thou art a sticky, uncomfortable mess and thou goest on and on interminably. Art happy now?"

Well Jim, I can knock the patient out with gas or a boat paddle. 

It's an Ether/Oar situation.

Middle School Science Minute  

by Dave Bydlowski (k12science or davidbydlowski@mac.com)

Teaching Science to Girls

I was recently reading the June 20, 2025 blog posting on the National Science Teachers Association website. 

The blog was posted by Susan Deemer and the title of her blog post was “Why Teaching Science to Girls Now is More Important Than Ever.”

Susan said that the longer she teaches, the more she realizes that cultivating a scientific mindset is the most important thing that she can teach, particularly when teaching girls, as she has for most of her career.  This is important for two reasons:

1.  Scientific thinking can help eradicate self-defeating thought patterns and deconstruct stereotypes about girls and women perpetuated for generations.

2.  A scientific mindset is critical as girls grow up to become consumers of products, news, and services, as well as citizens who effect change in their communities.

https://k12science.net/teaching-science-to-girls/

Reports from the Front Lines

The Social Web

‪Eric Curts‬ ‪@ericcurts.bsky.social‬

Did you know that Quizizz is changing their name? I received this box from them with the new name inside. On June 24th I will open the box and reveal the new name! Stay tuned… @quizizz.bsky.social  #BeyondtheZZZ #EduSky #EdTech . And here’s a rant by a teacher whose computer finally doesn’t autocorrect Quizizz and will now have to be retrained on the new name:  https://youtu.be/-CK0MkdO1XY .  The new name is Wayground.  Got the t-shirt.  

‪Eric Curts‬ ‪@ericcurts.bsky.social‬

· 14m

If you attended #ISTELive (in person or virtual) and missed my session: 🧰 The AI Toolbox: Best AI Tools for Schools ▶️ You can watch the recording of the session on the ISTE site – conference.iste.org/2025/program…

Eric Curts  @ericcurts

If you attended #ISTELive keep the learning going by sharing your favorite resources, sessions, takeaways and more in our sharing document – http://bit.ly/iste25-share

Stephanie Howell  @mrshowell24

Don’t miss out—level up your edtech experience with my specially curated ISTE 25 resources. Packed with valuable insights and ideas you can implement immediately!  Grab your resources here: http://tinyurl.com/4rthmcve #ISTELive25 #ASCDAnnual

Strategies:  

Using AI in the Classroom

Finding the right visual to explain a difficult concept is time consuming.  Here’s a strategy for making your own quick image to use in class. First, open an AI that does graphics.  Second, ask it to define the difficult concept using metaphors and similes.  Ask it to be visual and verbose. Check the output for accuracy and then finish it off by asking it to create an image based on that description.  Chat GPT has worked well for me on this.  

Resources:  

Book:  The AI Assist by Nathan Lang-Raad 

“We must recognize the value of human connection in teaching, ensuring that AI tools serve as supplements to—not replacements for—human teachers. This approach will help maintain a balance where AI enriches human interaction, creativity, and empathy in the classroom.”  

AXIS:  The Culture Translator

Peak Gaming

What it is: A difficult and cute cooperative climbing game called Peak has grown in popularity in the gaming space over the last few weeks.  

Why it’s so popular: In Peak, the goal is to summit a mountain with up to three friends by solving puzzles, fighting off environmental hazards, and helping each other up. Failing any of these means you could fall, and lose minutes or even hours of progress. Peak combines two of the more modern genres in gaming: simple, open-ended co-op games (think Lethal Company and REPO) and punishing, challenge-based games (like Getting Over It and Jump King). Teens and social media algorithms appear to love the combination of friends on voice chat and the triumph and anguish of a challenge.  

175 Writing Prompts to Spark Discussion and Reflection

https://www.nytimes.com/2025/06/10/learning/175-writing-prompts-to-spark-discussion-and-reflection.html

Web Spotlight: 

My students think it’s fine to cheat with AI. Maybe they’re onto something.

What is the real value of a humanities education?

Their real aim, as the philosopher Megan Fritts writes, is “the formation of human persons.”

…while the purpose of other departments is ultimately to create a product, a humanities education is meant to be different, because the student herself is the product. 

 Aristotle proposed back in Ancient Greece. He believed the real goal was not to impart knowledge, but to cultivate the virtues: honesty, justice, courage, and all the other character traits that make for a flourishing life.

your job is to focus on something else — something that will help them flourish in the long run, even if they don’t fully see the value in it now.

Your job is to be their Aristotle.

 …knowing how to make good judgments when faced with the complex, dynamic situations life throws at you.

 breakneck pace of technological innovation means they’re going to have to choose, again and again and again, how to make use of emerging technologies — and how not to. The best training they can get now is training in how to wisely make this type of choice.

 using generative AI in the classroom threatens to short-circuit, because it removes something incredibly valuable: friction.

Encountering friction is how we give our cognitive muscles a workout. Taking it out of the picture makes things easier in the short term, but in the long term, it can lead to intellectual deskilling, where our cognitive muscles gradually become weaker for lack of use.

https://www.vox.com/advice/413189/ai-cheating-college-humanities-education-chatgpt

Random Thoughts . . .  

Our Matrix discussion platform is public!

https://h5p.org/node/1536211

Click the Play button below to listen to the show!

MSM 667: Ouiji(PT)

Summary:

Shawn and Troy talk about ISTE plans, summer, mistakes, and more. Dave documents the logistics. 

Jokes:  

When God created ducks he thought, “I’ll waterproof that chicken and give it a kazoo.”


Guy just went by with a cart of horseshoes and rabbits’ feet. 

  • I think he’s pushing his luck.

There wasn’t one artist gun fight that didn’t end in a draw.


Not sure if I’ll lolly gag or dilly dally today


It’s challenging for bank managers at parties. 

  • They’re loaners.

Onya Marx must be SO sick of being asked if she’s ready.


I remember that time I woke up in a panic that I was late for work. 

  • Fortunately I was already at my job.

I finished the 14 Day Diet in two hours and 11 minutes.


Those who are organized are just too lazy to look for things.


No need to drive me crazy. I can walk from here.


Free Geese? 

  • Not sure what I’d do with one but I might go take a gander.

We all understand good, better and best. 

  • Why then do we contact the Better Business Bureau?

"Sorry, I couldn't resist" is written above the image of a physical resistor (oval, green in color, with four dark red stripes). The resistor is split apart and shows signs of burning.

Middle School Science Minute  

by Dave Bydlowski (k12science or davidbydlowski@mac.com)

K12Science Podcast:  Logistics Engineer

I was recently reading the May – June 2025 issue of “The Science Teacher”, a publication of the National Science Teaching Association.

In this issue, I read the section, “Career of the Month” written by Luba Vangelova  She wrote an article entitled, “‘Logistics Engineer Ron Charest.”

Logistics engineers typically work on supply chains, which encompass all of the steps required to get finished products to users, from procuring raw materials for factories, to warehousing and transporting goods.  Ron Charest is a logistics engineer for the Coast Guard in Washington, DC.

 http://k12science.net/logistics-engineer/

Reports from the Front Lines

  • Ahh…Summer time
  • ISTE
    • Devices (MacBook, iPad, iPad, iPhone, Insta360)
    • Sessions

The Social Web

‪Keep Indiana Learning‬ ‪@keepinlearning.bsky.social‬

Summer plans + license renewal? Get your PGPs done with ease! Our Digital Content Library lets you learn wherever you are this summer. Flexible & convenient & ready for you! keepindianalearning.org/digital-cont… #EduSky

Brian Klaas ‪@brianklaas.bsky.social‬

After the latest round of grading papers, I wrote about AI, ChatGPT, the death of the student essay, and what it means for the future of human cognition.  https://www.forkingpaths.co/p/the-death-of-the-student-essayand 

MiddleWeb‬ ‪@middleweb.bsky.social‬

OUR 2025 SUMMER BOOK REVIEW FESTIVAL Doing some personal PD this summer? We’ve pulled together 23 of our reviews from the past year, highlighting books for teachers, school leaders & other educators working with grades 4-8. Check out these summaries! #edusky middleweb.substack.com/p/mw-substac…

‪Ron King‬ ‪@mthman.bsky.social‬

Wrapping up year 27 today! #edchat #mtbos #mschat #EduSky

‪Bernie Goldbach “topgold”‬ ‪@topgold.bsky.social‬

Reuters survey asked about AI platforms and chatbots. Publisher worry that these could further reduce traffic flows to websites and apps. But _all_ generations still prize trusted brands with a track record for accuracy. reutersinstitute.politics.ox.ac.uk/digital-news… h/t @marklittle.bsky.social

PUNS  @ThePunnyWorld

For the science nerds.

Image of a modern cursor and the image of a antique arrowhead.

Susie Dent @susie_dent

Thanks to everyone who voted for ‘went’ – an example of language swerving the expected. Instead of ‘go, goes, goed’ we have ‘go, goes, went’, because speakers decided to opt for the past tense of ‘wend’. This process is called ‘suppletion’.

Eric Curts  @ericcurts

Super excited for #ISTELive in a few weeks! Get details on all 16 of my presentations, booth sessions, and events here: https://controlaltachieve.com/2024/12/my-iste-2025-sessions.html

Strategies:  

Don’t Erase That Mistake

https://www.ascd.org/blogs/dont-erase-that-mistake

Resources:  

Cartoon Academy

Pittsburgh cartoonist Joe Wos takes students through the creative steps of drawing cartoon characters while sharing educational facts on the cartoon subjects. Viewers will also learn artistic terms during each lesson. The videos will be produced in chapter clusters of three, by topic, with episode one in the chapter being the most elementary, and the second and third being slightly more advanced. For ages 6-12.

https://mainepublic.pbslearningmedia.org/collection/cartoon-academy

Than Average

ThanAverage is a small unscientific investigation into how we value and compare ourselves to each other.

https://thanaverage.xyz

Connect Safely

ConnectSafely is a nonprofit based in Silicon Valley that educates people of all ages about online safety, privacy, security and digital wellness. Our resources include research-based safety tips, parents’ guidebooks, advice, news and commentary on all aspects of tech use and policy. We offer in-depth guides and “quick-guides” for parents, educators, youth and policymakers along with resources for seniors and other adults. We also produce the twice-weekly ConnectSafely Report for CBS News Radio along with webcasts, podcasts and special events.

Whether it’s social media, virtual reality or the emerging metaverse, connected technologies bring us enormous advantages, along with some challenges. ConnectSafely’s job is to help users get the most from their technology while managing the risks and help decision-makers craft sensible policies that encourage both innovation and responsible use. ConnectSafely has been a leading voice for rational, research-informed policies — not “moral panics” — when it comes to dealing with challenges brought about by emerging technologies.

We are the U.S. host of Safer Internet Day, a global celebration that takes place on the second Tuesday of each February, and founders of the One Good Thing campaign to surface and celebrate the many ways people of all ages and cultures use connected technology to make the world a better place.

ConnectSafely was founded in 2005 by technology journalist Larry Magid, also founder of SafeKids.com, and Anne Collier of NetFamilyNews.

https://connectsafely.org

AXIS The Culture Translator

“Fridge Sigs”

What it is: “Fridge cigs” are now some teens’ favorite way to take the edge off.

Why it’s not as scary as it sounds: A “fridge cig” doesn’t have any nicotine in it. In fact, it isn’t a cigarette at all—it’s a Diet Coke, chilled to perfection and sipped straight out of the can. Coca-Cola products, in general, have become extremely popular with young people, and now some TikTokers have been coming up with a bevy of tobacco-product inspired nicknames based on the type of cola being consumed. According to some, regular Coke in a glass bottle is a “cigar,” and a Coke Zero is akin to American Spirit cigarettes. As Eve Upton-Clark put it in Fast Company, “In a world full of prebiotic soda and protein water, sometimes all you really want is a crispy “fridge cigarette” to take the edge off.” As far as vices go, Diet Coke barely ranks—and it’s way better than mindlessly trawling on YouTube to de-stress.

Artificial Wisdom

What it is: Some ChatGPT users now believe they’re speaking with spirits.  

Why it’s unsettling: A New York Times article shared the stories of people who became emotionally entangled with AI—convinced it was offering companionship, secret knowledge, and even spiritual insight. Part of the problem is how convincing talking to ChatGPT can feel. It doesn’t “know” anything but it can echo our thoughts, wounds, and desires with uncanny precision. A recent reflection on St. Augustine’s De Doctrina Christiana compares the experiences of these AI users to how demons deceive: not through producing misleading signs directly but through encouraging observers’ mistaken interpretation of what they see. AI works similarly: it mimics meaning, and we supply the rest. AI may be a tool we can use—but it is not a voice we can trust.  

Web Spotlight: 

The Death of the Student Essay—and the Future of Cognition

That’s why convincing students that intelligence is a skill they must cultivate through hard work—no shortcuts—has become one of the core functions of education.

https://www.forkingpaths.co/p/the-death-of-the-student-essayand

Random Thoughts . . .  

Click the Play button below to listen to the show!

MSM 666: Spending The Shekels to Keep Up

Summary:

Shawn and Troy discuss ISTE, summer, and more. Dave has us naturally looking. 

Jokes:  

My kids love their trampoline, but they only spend 50% of the time bouncing up, wasting the other 50% falling down.

That’s why I’m not spending another penny on trampoline maintenance until they can improve efficiency and reduce wasted falling time to at most 25%.


What do you call a snail on a boat?

  • A snailor.

Im color blind and the other day I thought I could actually detect purple… …but it was just a pigment of my imagination.


don’t run behind a car…

  • you’ll get exhausted

don’t run in front of a car

  • you’ll get tired

Me: I used to use an exercise bike

Daughter: Did you?

Me: Yeah, but I stopped

Daughter: Why?

Me: It was getting me nowhere


When I was abducted the aliens made me wipe my feet, blow my nose, and eat my greens…I think I was on the mother ship…


What do you call someone who has 10 ants? 

  • A landlord.

Do you think the movie Singing in the Rain would have been more effective is it was filmed in Singapore?


"Every child needs a champion. An adult who will never give up on them. "
- Rita Pierson

An old black and white photo with a very large box (6 foot by 12 foot?) being slid off of a trailer. Six men are sliding the box.

Two people watching TV. Once says, "Have you see the Movie 'RV'?" The other responds: "No, But I Saw the Trailer".

Middle School Science Minute  

by Dave Bydlowski (k12science or davidbydlowski@mac.com)

K12Science Podcast:  Nature Scavenger Hunt

I was recently reading the May – June 2025 issue of “Science and Children”, a publication of the National Science Teaching Association.

In this issue, I read the section, “Science 101” written by Matt Bobrowsky.  He wrote an article entitled, “‘What Would Be An Activity That Involves Both Learning and Play?.”

A nature scavenger hunt can encourage exploration, observation, and critical thinking while being fun and engaging which shows that it can be an activity that involves both learning and play.

 http://k12science.net/nature-scavenger-hunt/

Reports from the Front Lines

  • New Building
  • Alaskan Heat Advisory
  • WWDC
  • Room Clean Out
    • Flags
  • Next Year Planning
    • Field Trips
    • Mi Youth in Government
  • ISTE Prep
    • EduCelebrity Sessions
    • Food
    • Wander
  • Poetry Update

The Social Web

The OED  @OED

OED #WordOfTheDay: spring fret, n. A sense of restlessness or desire to wander, felt by humans or animals in the spring. View entry: https://oxford.ly/4kjWTj8

Gitanas Nausėda  @GitanasNauseda

84 years ago, on June 14, the Soviet occupiers began the mass deportations from Lithuania. On this Day of Mourning and Hope,  honor the memory of the hundreds of thousands of Lithuanians who were torn from their homes, families, and homeland by totalitarian Kremlin regime. Children, parents, intellectuals—entire generations—were deported in cattle cars to the unknown, condemned to hunger, suffering, and death. Their broken lives became the price of our lost freedom. But Lithuania did not surrender. Through resilience and courage, our people endured and reclaimed liberty. The pain of the past became the seed of our freedom. We remember. We carry their names, their stories, their truth. And we vow: never again.

MiddleWeb  @middleweb

REVIEW: Support student-driven learning in ELA classes. “Step Aside” is full of ideas secondary teachers can use to build classrooms that support and encourage students to be involved and engaged readers and writers. By Sarah Zerwin. https://middleweb.com/52319/support-

MiddleWeb‬ ‪@middleweb.bsky.social‬

Review: SUPPORT STUDENT-DRIVEN LEARNING IN ELA CLASSES. “Step Aside” is full of ideas secondary teachers can use to build classrooms that support and encourage students to be involved and engaged readers and writers. #edusky #educoach @laurenadavis.bsky.social www.middleweb.com/52319/suppor…

‪Foeke Postma‬ ‪@foeke.bsky.social‬

We ran 500 tests and: LLMs are quickly passing the threshold of being the most useful tool out there, if you’re looking for the location of a photo from scratch.

‪Yanis Varoufakis‬ ‪@yanisvaroufakis.bsky.social‬

Against Technofeudal Education – Pillars For Protecting Our “Core Infrastructure” From OpenAI theamericanvandal.substack.com/p/against-te…

‪AMLE‬ ‪@amleorg.bsky.social‬

AMLE is committed to supporting future educators. ⭐ That’s why we’re excited to announce a new program to celebrate exceptional middle level teacher prep programs. Congrats to @GeorgiaCollege & @NationalLouisU for their 2025 recognition! 🥳 Learn more: ow.ly/GJr050W7FRM

Strategies:

How to Make Learning Stick

For decades, there has been evidence that classroom techniques designed to get students to participate in the learning process produce better educational outcomes at virtually all levels. A Harvard study suggests it may be important to let students know it. The study shows that, though students felt as if they learned more through traditional lectures, they actually learned more when taking part in classrooms that employed so-called active-learning strategies by scoring higher on tests. 

https://esheninger.blogspot.com/2021/05/how-to-make-learning-stick.html

Scaffolding Strategies to Teach Challenging Text

1 – Frontloading Key Concepts or Vocabulary

2 – Making Connections to Prior Experiences

3 – Partially Completed Graphic Organizers

Question-Answer Relationships, or QAR (Raphael, 1986)

https://www.middleweb.com/52305/scaffolding-strategies-to-teach-challenging-text/

Getting Math Students to Show Their Reasoning

…it feels like no matter what we do, students resist showing their reasoning.

https://www.middleweb.com/52313/getting-math-students-to-show-their-reasoning/

Resources:  

AXIS The Culture Translator

Fake Plastic Trees

What it is: A new game on Roblox called “Grow a Garden” is attracting millions of players—and was reportedly created by a 16-year-old.

Why it’s popular: You might have guessed that the game would be about tending to a virtual garden. What you might not have guessed, unless you’re familiar with Roblox’s game mechanics, is how the game incentivizes spending (your parents’) real-life money to get ahead. Players start with a small amount of in-game currency, called “Sheckles.” They get enough to buy a few seeds, which grow into carrots, strawberries, and other crops—and they can then sell their harvest to make more Sheckles. It’s satisfying, but it also takes time—and seeing other players’ elaborate, gorgeous gardens might make the average player want to ask mom for her credit card to purchase more Sheckles and keep up. For more on how Roblox works, check out our 7 Minute Video.  

Rock Lobster

What it is: Nautical-themed knitwear, such as lightweight beach sweaters emblazoned with lobsters, are selling out for Gen Z this summer.  

Why it makes sense: “Coastal grandma” and “tomato girl summer” were both trending aesthetics in the warmer months last year, and this summer’s must-haves combine both. Searches for “lobster sweater” are surging, but the trend is bigger than Maine’s favorite fresh catch. Teen girls are aiming for a look that feels breezy, luxe, and kitsch—informed by proximity to wealth, but ultimately too cool to care. (See also: jewelry that celebrates sardines). This trend also reflects a change in how Gen Z wants to spend their summer. Jet-setting to a splashy (read: spendy) destination is still seen as desirable, but young people are also looking to elevate more humble experiences, like road tripping to quaint beach towns in Massachusetts or Rhode Island (“townsizing”)—locations where an embroidered crustacean is right on vibe. 

National History Day Theme 2026

Revolution, Reaction, and Reform in History:  https://nhd.org/en/contest/theme/  

Organizer:  https://docs.google.com/document/d/1baC7qfreopboC5D19RRAQfmhAHCcx_URFT2q2SxyO5g/copy?usp=sharing  

Web Spotlight: 

The Phrases That Keep Us Stuck and What to Do About Them

These phrases are more than just words—they’re warning signs of fixed mindsets, low expectations, and a resistance to change. Left unchecked, they become part of the culture, quietly influencing decisions, limiting innovation, and undermining student success.

1. “That’s the way we’ve always done it.”

2. “These kids can’t…

3. “We tried that already.

4. “It’s not my job.

5. “They’re just not motivated.

6. “That won’t work with our kids.

https://esheninger.blogspot.com/2025/06/the-phrases-that-keep-us-stuck-and-what.html

Random Thoughts . . .  

Click the Play button below to listen to the show!

MSM 665: Unferhoodled

Summary:

Shawn and Troy talk about summer, jobs, and more. Dave is planning an amazing summer.

Jokes:  

My friend who’s a knitter told me she has a pattern for sunglasses.

  • I think she’s trying to pull the wool over my eyes.

According to the will, I’m getting a couple of yurts.

  • That’s my inheri-tents.

What’s a dinosaur’s least favorite reindeer?

  • Comet!

Odorless perfumes are non-scents.


I’ve got some racing geese for sale. 

  • Let me know if you want a quick gander

My book, How to say no emphatically in German, Is now available –

Only $9.99.

In all good bookstores…


I had a dream where I weighed less than a thousandth of a gram.

I was like 0mg.


I just discovered that the word nothing is a palindrome…

  • Backwards it spells gnihton, which also means nothing.


Middle School Science Minute  

by Dave Bydlowski (k12science or davidbydlowski@mac.com)

K12Science Podcast:  Amazing Summer

I was recently reading the May – June 2025 issue of “Science and Children”, a publication of the National Science Teaching Association.

In this issue, I read the section, “The Poetry of Science” written by Amy Ludwig VanDerwater.  She wrote an article entitled, “‘Out of the Box Summer.”

As we enter, “Summer Vacation Time,” it is helpful to provide students with some creative ways that they can enjoy summer outdoors. 

http://k12science.net/amazing-summer/ 

Reports from the Front Lines

  • End of the school year
  • WWDC

The Social Web

Susie Dent  @susie_dent

Word of the day, from Pennsylvanian Dutch, is ‘ferhoodled’, meaning ‘tangled’ or ‘all mixed up’. Can be used of anything from a sock drawer to life.

‪Ron King‬ ‪@mthman.bsky.social‬

Good morning from the #PNW #pnwonderland

‪MiddleWeb‬ ‪@middleweb.bsky.social‬

REVIEW: Grammar Inquiries in Middle School. In his latest book, teacher educator Sean Ruday prioritizes inquiry-based learning and asset-based practices to foster a deeper understanding of English grammar. @seanrudayliteracy.bsky.social #edusky #iteachEnglish www.middleweb.com/52298/integr…

‪Keep Indiana Learning‬ ‪@keepinlearning.bsky.social‬

Level up your skills this summer! ☀️ Dive into Building Thinking Classrooms, Secondary Science of Reading, ILEARN Checkpoints, Supporting multilingual learners, SIOP, & Teacher Evaluations. Invest in YOU! Register now: keepindianalearning.org/events #EduSky

Resources:  

AXIS The Culture Translator

The Ties That Bind

What it is: A story in the New York Times explores the unique challenges of so-called “grandfamilies,” in which grandparents serve as primary caregivers for their grandkids.  

Who it is impacting: According to the U.S. Census Bureau, about 6.7 million adults live with their grandchildren. Of this number, about a third are the primary or sole caretaker for their grandkids. This dynamic occurs for all sorts of reasons—financial convenience or a preference for community living, for example. But oftentimes, there are tragic circumstances at play, including mental illness, disability, and death of an adult child. The grandparents highlighted in this first-person essay are a Christian couple raising four grandchildren after raising five of their own kids. They admit that they’re very, very, tired. But they also say that raising their daughter’s children feels like a deep and special way to love their daughter, who lives with substance use disorder.  

Twine

https://twinery.org

Web Spotlight: 

It’s Not Just a Feeling: Data Shows Boys and Young Men Are Falling Behind

https://archive.md/GB8QH

Impossible Fold

https://www.youtube.com/shorts/Uph85if3lEs

You Can Use ChatGPT for Looksmaxxing, but You’ll Regret It

https://www.vice.com/en/article/you-can-use-chatgpt-for-looksmaxxing-but-youll-regret-it/

Greater awareness behind ADHD surge, study suggests

https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cg5vp62dnnro

Random Thoughts . . .  

Forget Paper Routes—12-Year-Olds Are Making Bank Online

Side hustles used to mean lemonade stands, mowing lawns, or babysitting your neighbor’s kid. Now, some 12-year-olds—barely out of elementary school—are making $14 an hour streaming Minecraft, flipping sneakers, or editing TikToks from their bedrooms.

Popular online income streams include selling clothes (20.1%), streaming games (14.1%), editing content (10.5%), and influencer marketing (9.1%). For a growing number of Gen Z and Gen A, this work is structured, intentional, and profitable. It’s starting to replace traditional part-time jobs altogether—and, in many cases, out-earning them.

https://www.vice.com/en/article/forget-paper-routes-12-year-olds-are-making-bank-online/

Click the Play button below to listen to the show!

MSM 664: Choose Your Own AI Adventure

Summary:

Shawn and Troy talk about AI, Metacognition, banning water, and more. Dave plays around. 

Jokes:  

To everyone that received a book from me for Christmas, they’re due back at the library next Monday.


While most puns make me feel numb. math puns make me feel number.


I know a man who can chop down trees in his sleep.

  • He’s a slumberjack.

My friend said he didn’t understand what cloning was. I said that makes two of us.


To the person who stole my glasses.

  • I will find you, I have contacts!

I’ve been teaching myself to juggle clocks. 

  • People are saying I’ve got too much time on my hands.

What do you call a man in a slow cooker painting a portrait?

  • Stuart.




Middle School Science Minute  

by Dave Bydlowski (k12science or davidbydlowski@mac.com)

K12Science Podcast:  Playful Classroom

I was recently reading the May – June 2025 issue of “Science and Children”, a publication of the National Science Teaching Association.

In this issue, I read the section, “Editor’s Note” written by Elizabeth Barret-Zahn. She wrote an article entitled, “‘Prioritizing Play.”

We can’t turn every lesson into an open-ended discovery session. But where can discovery, creativity and fun be sprinkled in? With a subtle mindset change, we can make learning feel less like work and more like play.

 http://k12science.net/playful-classroom/

Reports from the Front Lines

The Social Web

Marco Luna  @mluna360

Happy Last Day of School 2025 to all elementary thru high school students whose last day of school for the 2024-2025 school year is today!    

TIME  @TIME

Today’s Word of the Day with  @MerriamWebster is ‘apotheosis.’

https://twitter.com/i/status/1096423953218879488

‪Keep Indiana Learning‬ ‪@keepinlearning.bsky.social‬

Discover a wealth of professional development opportunities on the Keep Indiana Learning YouTubechannel! 💡It is packed with options for teachers, administrators, and counselors, and we’re constantly adding new content. Check it out & subscribe today – youtube.com/KeepIndianaL… #EduSky

‪AMLE‬ ‪@amleorg.bsky.social‬

Our celebration of advisory wraps up this week! As the school year also closes, it’s a great time to reflect on how your team advocated for students this year. Share what worked in the comments! Need advisory support? Check out these resources from AMLE: ow.ly/L8wX50VZ8kN

Mike Shaw‬ ‪@mikeshaw.bsky.social‬

Word of the day

Knobstacle 
a person who consistently gets in the way, either through incompetence, arrogance, or unhelpful behaviour - and makes situations more difficult than they need to be.

ALT

Strategies:  

What Happens to Reading Comprehension When Kids Focus on the Main Idea

Why do so many students struggle to understand what they read, even after they learn how to read?

One camp has been arguing that schools have been going about it all wrong. These critics say that instead of drilling students on the main idea (similar to questions students will see on annual state exams), teachers should spend more time building students’ background knowledge of the world.

“If we want all the children to read, we have proven that they can be taught with the right strategies,”  

…drilling students on the main point or the author’s purpose isn’t helpful because a struggling reader cannot come up with a point or a purpose from thin air. (She’s also not a fan of highlighting key words or graphic organizers, both common strategies for reading comprehension in schools.

…first step is to guide students through a series of questions as they read, such as “Is there a problem?” “What caused it?” and “Is there a solution?” Based on their answers, students can then decide which structure the passage follows: cause and effect, problem and solution, comparisons or a sequence. Next, students fill in blanks — like in a Mad Libs worksheet — to help create a main idea statement. And finally, they practice expanding on that idea with relevant details to form a summary.

https://www.kqed.org/mindshift/65536/what-happens-to-reading-comprehension-when-kids-focus-on-the-main-idea

Affirming Neurodiversity Through Our Practices

Neurodiversity recognizes that every person’s brain functions uniquely, contributing a wide array of perspectives, skills, and ideas to society. 

Neurodivergent, however, specifically describes individuals whose neurological characteristics diverge significantly from what society has established as norms. Conditions typically classified under neurodivergence include autism, ADHD, dyslexia, dysgraphia, dyscalculia, epilepsy, and Tourette’s syndrome. 

https://www.middleweb.com/52270/affirming-neurodiversity-through-our-practices/

Resources:  

Chat-Animator

https://motion-tools.com/chat-animator

AXIS The Culture Translator

Meme of the Week:  “Holy Airball”

This trend is much easier to understand if you see it, so here’s an example! “Holy airball” is a social media trend that involves someone (usually a girl) saying something about themselves, a faceless responder (usually a boy) misunderstanding what they mean and asking a presumptive question, and then an image or response proving their ignorance, accompanied by the phrase “holy airball!” The expression offers a tongue-in-cheek commentary about the often incorrect assumptions people make when they are getting to know someone. It also plays on some cultural idioms, with the term “airball” referring to missing a shot in basketball so badly that it only hits the air, as well as the idea of “shooting your shot” being the moment someone tries to ask someone for a date.  

Screentime Regrets

What it is: A handful of Gen Zers explained to The Guardian why they plan on implementing significant restrictions in their own kids’ smartphone and social media use.  Se also The World from A to Z at https://youtu.be/VSfBQ48w8MM?t=193 

Web Spotlight: 

‘Metacognitive Laziness’: How AI Helps Students Offload Critical Thinking, Other Hard Work

Tech evangelists may be dazzled by the promise of AI, but two well-designed new studies — one in China and one by a leading AI company — signal trouble ahead.

Many students are letting AI do important brain work for them.

To the researchers’ surprise, the students in the ChatGPT group improved their essays the most — even more than the group with human writing teachers. But the ChatGPT group didn’t learn more about the topic they read and wrote about, nor did the ChatGPT students feel more motivated to write and learn than students in the other three groups. Indeed, there were signs that the students who enjoyed the assignment the most and maintained interest were those who merely received the writing checklist but otherwise completed the assignment without AI or human handholding.

As the researchers analyzed how students completed their work on computers, they noticed that students who had access to AI or a human were less likely to refer to the reading materials. 

“This highlights a crucial issue in human-AI interaction,” the researchers wrote. “Potential metacognitive laziness.” By that, they mean a dependence on AI assistance, offloading thought processes to the bot and not engaging directly with the tasks that are needed to synthesize, analyze and explain.

“This raises questions about ensuring students don’t offload critical cognitive tasks to AI systems,” the Anthropic researchers wrote. “There are legitimate worries that AI systems may provide a crutch for students, stifling the development of foundational skills needed to support higher-order thinking.”

The hope is that AI can improve learning through immediate feedback and personalizing instruction for each student. But these studies are showing that AI is also making it easier for students not to learn.

AI advocates say that educators need to redesign assignments so that students cannot complete them by asking AI to do it for them and educate students on how to use AI in ways that maximize learning. To me, this seems like wishful thinking. Real learning is hard, and if there are shortcuts, it’s human nature to take them.

“Writing is not correctness or avoiding error,” she posted on LinkedIn. “Writing is not just a product. The act of writing is a form of thinking and learning.”

https://www.kqed.org/mindshift/65511/university-students-offload-critical-thinking-other-hard-work-to-ai

I was a first-round MLB bust. Here are 5 lessons I learned

  1. The hard moments teach you what the easy ones never could
  2. Your identity must be bigger than your achievements
  3. Sometimes the greatest growth comes after letting go
  4. Letting go of something allowed an even better version of myself to emerge
  5. What feels like a loss can actually be relief in disguise

https://archive.md/rCt74

But what if you ask an AI?  Here’s what it says:

Bloom’s Taxonomy Levels and Perplexity Usage

Bloom’s LevelDefinition & Example Activities
How Perplexity Supports This for 13-Year-Olds
RememberRecall facts, definitions, lists.“List Newton’s laws of motion.”Perplexity provides quick, accurate retrieval of factual information, dates, names, and definitions, helping students memorize and recall key concepts.
UnderstandExplain ideas, summarize, interpret.“Summarize the plot of a novel.”Students can ask Perplexity to explain or paraphrase concepts, summarize readings, or clarify confusing topics in accessible language.
ApplyUse knowledge in new situations.“Solve a math problem using a formula.”Perplexity helps students apply learned concepts by guiding them through problem-solving steps or showing how to use information in practical scenarios.
AnalyzeBreak down information, compare, contrast.“Differentiate between two theories.”Students can use Perplexity to compare sources, analyze arguments, and break complex topics into parts for better understanding.
EvaluateJudge, critique, defend positions.“Assess the credibility of a source.”Perplexity’s citation feature allows students to evaluate the reliability of information, critique arguments, and justify their opinions with evidence.
CreateProduce new work, design, invent.“Write a story or design an experiment.”Students can synthesize information from Perplexity to generate original projects, essays, or creative work, using the tool to gather and combine ideas.

Key Points

  • Bloom’s Taxonomy is hierarchical: each level builds on the previous one

By mapping Bloom’s Taxonomy to Perplexity’s capabilities, educators can design activities and assessments that leverage AI to foster higher-order thinking skills in young learners.

Perplexity’s features—such as natural language querying, source citations, and summarization—support learning objectives at every level of the taxonomy.

For 13-year-olds, this means Perplexity can be used not just for memorizing facts, but also for deeper understanding, critical thinking, and creative synthesis, aligning with modern educational goals

Click the Play button below to listen to the show!

MSM 663: Making the Lunch Ladies Cry

Summary:

Shawn and Troy talk about DHMO, student conferences, and more. Dave buzzes about the bees. 

Jokes:  

What is the leading cause of dry skin? 

  • Towels

According to this BMI chart, I need to grow a lot taller.


If Watson isn’t the most famous doctor in the world… Then Who is.


Scottie always finds fastening two pieces of metal together to be riveting.


Good bread dough always rises to the occasion.


I taught a creative writing class at a prison.

It had it’s prose and cons.


DIET DAY 1

I have removed all the bad food from my home.

It was delicious.


Good night to everyone except people who use various color fills in spreadsheet rows without telling anyone what the colors mean.

Middle School Science Minute  

by Dave Bydlowski (k12science or davidbydlowski@mac.com)

K12Science Podcast:  Bumble Bee Watch

I was recently reading the May – June 2025 issue of “Science Scope”, a publication of the National Science Teaching Association.

In this issue, I read the section, “Citizen Science” written by Jill Nugent.  She wrote an article entitled, “‘Participate in Pollinator Science This Season with Bumble Bee Watch.”

Spring and summer serve as a rewarding time for students to survey pollinator biodiversity.  In fact, the month of June is known as pollinator month, making this a natural time of the year to incorporate pollinator science in your classroom.  Bumble Bee Watch is a collaborative project focused on tracking North American Bumble Bees.  To learn more, visit the project website at:

https://www.bumblebeewatch.org

http://k12science.net/bumble-bee-watch/ 

Reports from the Front Lines

  • DHMO – 92% of the vote . . . and how to make the lunch ladies cry.  
  • MLTI Conference
  • Flint K-12 AI
    • Tutor for students
  • Great or Gimmick

The Social Web

Susie Dent  @susie_dent

Word of the day is ‘ingordigiousness’ (19th century): extreme greed at the expense of principles.

‪Rick Wormeli‬ ‪@rickwormeli.bsky.social‬

ICYMI: New piece, candid and practical, hopefully useful: “When Our Grading Philosophies Conflict With Those of Our Faculty,” Principal Leadership from NASSP, May 2025 www.nassp.org/publication/…

‪Rene Corbeil‬ ‪@utrgv-edtech.bsky.social‬

“Ella Stapleton said she was surprised to find that a professor had used ChatGPT to assemble course materials. “He’s telling us not to use it, and then he’s using it himself,” she said.” nytimes.com/2025/05/14/t… #edtech #ILoveEdTech #ImFutureReady #elearning #AIEd

https://archive.md/sTgpX

AMLE‬ ‪@amleorg.bsky.social‬

Excited to be launching our account here on Bluesky! We’re the Association for Middle Level Education, the only international organization of its kind for middle school educators. AMLE is dedicated to helping middle school educators reach every student, grow professionally, & create great schools.

Let's Network!

Resources:  

101 Rules of Effective Living

https://mitchhorowitz.substack.com/p/101-rules-of-effective-living

Five small habits sports psychologists wish everyone did

  • Switch out the word “but” for “and”
  • Scenario plan
  • Be on time
  • Call yourself out when you notice your mood is based on results
  • Break large tasks down into steps

https://www.nytimes.com/athletic/6358944/2025/05/16/five-small-habits-sports-psychologists-wish-everyone-did

It’s Not Just a Feeling: Data Shows Boys and Young Men Are Falling Behind

https://archive.md/cqwvG

A Parent Guide Through the Middle Grade Years

https://www.middleweb.com/52264/a-parent-guide-through-the-middle-grade-years/

https://www.middleweb.com/52027/why-its-hard-to-teach-parent-middle-graders/

​​7 Graphic Organizers to Scaffold Student Learning

https://www.middleweb.com/52250/7-graphic-organizers-to-scaffold-student-learning/

Flint K12 AI

https://app.flintk12.com

Have you considered having an AI create a chat around your math or reading resources?  Flint K12 is an AI with prebuilt resources that can have a “chat” with your students around 

Web Spotlight: 

ChatGPT Rewrote a Newsweek Article in Gen Alpha Slang, Here’s What It Said

https://www.newsweek.com/chatgpt-newsweek-article-gen-alpha-slang-2073347

I’m a college writing professor. Here’s what AI still can’t do

https://mashable.com/article/how-a-college-writing-professor-teaches-students-about-ai

Random Thoughts . . .  

Click the Play button below to listen to the show!

MSM 662: Humans in the Loop

Summary:

Shawn and Troy talk about AI, creative counting, PD, and more. Dave is passionate about passionate teachers. 

Jokes:  

Professional drum solos are hard to beat.


Why are pediatricians always so angry? 

  • They have very little patients

I asked a friend how it was going down at the National Ambidextrous Society. He said people are joining left and right.


At an interview..

First question: Describe yourself in 3 words

Me: Not very good with numbers


I’ve just deleted all the German names from my phone. 

  • Now it’s completely Hans-free.

What sound does a cow make when it runs out of milk?

None.

There is udder silence.


Drilling holes is boring


I saw a microbiologist today…

they were much bigger than I expected…


A guy has just assaulted me with a strawberry flavored milk!

How dairy!


My son: The manual in the car says not to turn up the volume of the stereo to the maximum.

I told him that’s…. sound advice.


This lady is taking FOREVER to tell this story and now I’m really regretting eavesdropping in the first place.


Which mountain do they harvest the dew from? 

  • Is it a trade secret?



Middle School Science Minute  

by Dave Bydlowski (k12science or davidbydlowski@mac.com)

K12Science Podcast: A Passionate Teacher

I was recently reading the May – June 2025 issue of “Science Scope”, a publication of the National Science Teaching Association.

In this issue, I read the section, “From the Editor’s Desk” written by Patti McGinnis.  She wrote an article entitled, “‘The Power of a Passionate Teacher.”

Passionate teachers inspire their students to learn, they create collaborative learning environments where risk-taking is encouraged, and they help students connect their learning to real-world applications.  Passionate teachers are committed to their discipline, are knowledgeable to world events, and are committed to ensuring their students learn.

http://k12science.net/a-passionate-teacher/

Reports from the Front Lines

  • Presentation Acceptance
  • AI PD
  • End of the Year Planning
  • Creative Counting
  • DHMO

The Social Web

@vanderZwan@vis.social

Hey, psst, would you like an intuitive explanation of binary and hexadecimal numbers? (and really, any number base as long as it’s a positive whole number)

Because I may have something for you.

https://observablehq.com/@jobleonard/binary-counting-made-easy

Made with @observablehq

(I started working on this all the way back in 2019 and then completely forgot about it for six years)

Kōtare @jdmcg@mastodon.nz 

My 17yr old was ranting last night about teachers encouraging the use of AI and how stupid it was.

They had done a quiz about a film, and the quiz had been ai generated. They spent most of the lesson pointing out all of the mistakes in the quiz and the woefully incorrect answers.

It became an impromptu lesson on why you *shouldn’t* use AI.

“I hate everything about it” she finally said.

L. Rhodes ⁂@lrhodes@merveilles.town 

Striking sailors would sometimes sign their petitions with their names arranged in a circle to prevent management from singling out the first signatories for retaliation as strike leadership, hence the term “ringleaders.”

Generika @generika@bananachips.club 

If everything around seems dark, look again, you may be the light!
~Rumi

Cassidy James @cassidy@blaede.family

I recently tried to search the web for whether or not it was possible to embed a calendar in a Google Doc. Every single result I found said yes it totally is, and then invented steps that do not exist. In hindsight, clear AI slop.

Not some “AI overview” (I don’t use those); actual articles on actual websites that do not disclose they are machine generated—and flat out lies.

The Web we once knew is dead, murdered by the world’s richest corporations burning our planet and shilling their garbage.

Susie Dent  @susie_dent

I love this, almost as much as German’s ‘Fernweh’: ‘far-sickness’.

Quote:  The OED @OED

OED #WordOfTheDay: spring fret, n. A sense of restlessness or desire to wander, felt by humans or animals in the spring. View entry: https://oxford.ly/4kjWTj8

Katie Powell  @Beyond_the_Desk

When you’re interviewing middle school students about their school, and they keep using the word… Joyous. 

Resources:  

“Fast Fourteen” Bellringers

https://blog.tcea.org/fast-fourteen-bellringers/

Web Spotlight: 

AXIS The Culture Translator

Slang of the Week:  “Aura Farming”

Have you ever met someone who you’re convinced does certain things to try to look cool? There’s a new term for that: “aura farming.” For teens, “aura” is the charisma and coolness you exude. “Aura farming” is doing specific things to try to elevate that “aura.” Young people continue to value authenticity above almost anything else, so calling out aura farming is a way to call out people who are trying maybe a little too hard. Online, the term is often used to poke fun at certain storytelling clichés, like Batman overlooking Gotham City in the rain or Darth Vader doing… pretty much anything.

It’s Breathtaking How Fast AI Is Screwing Up the Education System

https://gizmodo.com/its-breathtaking-how-fast-ai-is-screwing-up-the-education-system-2000603100

U.S. Department of Education “Humans In The Loop”

USDE guidance on using AI in local school districts is here.  

https://www.paulmcafee.com/paul_mcafee_educator/artificial-intelligence-and-the-future-of-teaching-and-learning-us-dept-of-education

Everyone Is Cheating Their Way Through College 

ChatGPT has unraveled the entire academic project.

Lee used AI to breeze through with minimal effort. When I asked him why he had gone through so much trouble to get to an Ivy League university only to off-load all of the learning to a robot, he said, “It’s the best place to meet your co-founder and your wife.”

Although Columbia’s policy on AI is similar to that of many other universities’ — students are prohibited from using it unless their professor explicitly permits them to do so, either on a class-by-class or case-by-case basis — Lee said he doesn’t know a single student at the school who isn’t using AI to cheat. To be clear, Lee doesn’t think this is a bad thing. “I think we are years — or months, probably — away from a world where nobody thinks using AI for homework is considered cheating,” he said.

https://archive.md/a93f7

Craig Mod on the Creative Power of Walking

“From this boredom, words flow. I can’t stop them.”

When I’m not talking, just walking (which is most of the time), I try to cultivate the most bored state of mind imaginable. A total void of stimulation beyond the immediate environment. My rules: No news, no social media, no podcasts, no music. No “teleporting,” you could say. The phone, the great teleportation device, the great murderer of boredom. And yet, boredom: the great engine of creativity. 

https://lithub.com/craig-mod-on-the-creative-power-of-walking

Click the Play button below to listen to the show!

MSM 661: The Law of Unintended Lessons

Summary:

Shawn and Troy talk about Blookit, AI, and more. Dave fosters Innovation, Creativity, and Curiosity. 

Jokes:  

Napoleon and his wife are buried next to each other.

  • They’re only a bone apart…..

Every horse in the 2025 Kentucky Derby traces back to Secretariat.

  • This is a clear case of neighpotism.

I just saw a sign “Laser hair removal” Why would anyone want to remove their laser hair? Laser hair would be awesome


the formula to measure the area of a pun is

  • Length time wit!

I don’t mean to alarm anyone, but the orcas now have two F/A-18 Hornets


DO people in electric cars listen to AD/DC…

  • or something current?

I have a phobia of trampolines.

I can’t help it, they just always make me jump.


what do you call fire fighters who become influencers?

  • Stop, Drop, and Roll Models!

My favorite butcher links their own sausage, to make ends meat…


What do Alexander the Great and Winnie the Pooh have in common?

  • Same middle name.

Middle School Science Minute  

by Dave Bydlowski (k12science or davidbydlowski@mac.com)

K12Science Podcast:  Innovation, Creativity and Curiosity

I was recently reading the May – June 2025 issue of “The Science Teacher”, a publication of the National Science Teaching Association.

In this issue, I read the section, “Editor’s Corner” written by Brooke A. Whitworth.  She wrote an article entitled, “‘Fostering Innovation, Creativity, and Curiosity in Science Education.”

In this article, Brooke shared many practical strategies that teachers can implement immediately, regardless of resources, in the areas of:

  • Community-Connected Science
  • Resource-Conscious Innovation
  • Curiosity-Driven Learning

http://k12science.net/innovation-creativity-and-curiosity/ 

Reports from the Front Lines

  • ACTEM Spring 2025
    • AI DIY
    • JAMF
    • Google Admin
  • Blookit!
  • DHMO Project Update

The Social Web

Susie Dent  @susie_dent

Wonderful. Although I quite like ‘restaurant’ because it rests on the idea of being ‘restored’. Restaurants were originally establishments supplying fortifying meat broth intended to restore health.  

Wylfċen @wylfcen

DON’T say “restaurant,” which is from French. The native English word is SNEEDINGHOUSE. 

Dupont La Joie  @HyperDupont

Indeed, Restaurant being derived from French should be the word for places serving food fit for human consumption whereas. Another word is needed for places offering British food.

4 Frens  @4_frenz

I feel like this is knowledge I was never, ever meant to learn.

‪Martin Compton‬ ‪@martc.bsky.social‬

The AI festival is just round the corner … a ton of events and an entire day dedicated to AI in Education – if you can be in London 20th-24th May, sign up for events here: www.kcl.ac.uk/events/serie…

‪Bernie Goldbach “topgold”‬ ‪@topgold.bsky.social‬

Ethics, morals, road rage killing, and forgiveness: www.bbc.com/news/article…

‪Dublin City University‬ ‪@dublincityuni.bsky.social‬

Who owns my child’s data? Teachers, parents and children should have a say in the role of technology in schools. Piece by DCU’s Dr Eamon Costello  @eam0.bsky.social and Dr Rob Lowney @lwnyrb.bsky.social for @rtebrainstorm.bsky.social. Read here: launch.dcu.ie/3EZO0Mt #RTEBrainstorm

‪Duncan at CAPDM‬ ‪@capdm.com‬

This is a *really* good set of tactics for reducing the impact of AI rot in teaching and learning.

Dan Hassler-Forest‬ ‪@danhf.bsky.social‬

After the brutal reality of dealing with student papers in the ChatGPT era finally hit me, here are a few tactics that I’ve found at least somewhat effective in getting students to do their own writing:

1. LOWER THE BAR: most students don’t think they write well, so they are easily tempted to “improve” their writing by asking AI for alternatives. Giving them extra credit for imperfect but genuine writing while teaching them to take ownership of their words and ideas has helped.

2. MAKE IT PERSONAL: Rather than asking students to explain a theory, apply a conceptual framework, or reproduce material they rarely feel confident they really understand, I ask them to reflect in writing on what an essay or an idea has meant to them.

3. FEEDFORWARD, NOT FEEDBACK: instead of having students submit a paper and return a grade (with maybe a little bit of feedback), I now have students submit a first complete draft, for which I give them a provisional grade and feedforward that they can use to revise and resubmit for a final grade.

4. RAGE AGAINST THE MACHINE: in every course I teach, I now make sure to incorporate at least two moments in which I launch into a diatribe about the evils of AI. It gives me an opportunity to vent and the students love it because deep down, they know it’s wrong and need to hear that.

5. DON’T PANIC: after a moment of deep depression, I realized that most students really can be persuaded to do work in good faith. Some will of course end up cheating, but this has always been the case and it always will be. So focus more on inspiring them and less on making courses “AI-proof.”

6. NEVER USE IT YOURSELF. EVER! The most common issue I hear from students is that some of their lecturers use ChatGPT for feedback, syllabus creation, etc., so why shouldn’t they? Of course I’m not the boss of you, but as soon as you use it for ANYTHING, you’re giving students implicit permission.

Reposted by

Rick Wormeli

‪Hypervisible‬ ‪@hypervisible.bsky.social‬

“Massive numbers of students are going to emerge from university with degrees, and into the workforce, who are essentially illiterate…Both in the literal sense and in the sense of being historically illiterate and having no knowledge of their own culture, much less anyone else’s.”

https://nymag.com/intelligencer/article/openai-chatgpt-ai-cheating-education-college-students-school.html

Reposted by

Rick Wormeli

Jane Rosenzweig‬ ‪@janerosenzweig.bsky.social‬

Reply to

Jane Rosenzweig

What structures are in place that make students choose to outsource their own thinking, and how we got to a point where the step that seems important to do yourself is the “writing up” of a bot’s ideas rather than the thinking. /2

Whenever Wendy uses AI to write an essay (which is to say, whenever she writes an essay), she follows three steps. Step one: “I say, ‘I’m a first-year college student. I’m taking this English class.’” Otherwise, Wendy said, “it will give you a very advanced, very complicated writing style, and you don’t want that.” Step two: Wendy provides some background on the class she’s taking before copy-and-pasting her professor’s instructions into the chatbot. Step three: “Then I ask, ‘According to the prompt, can you please provide me an outline or an organization to give me a structure so that I can follow and write my essay?’ It then gives me an outline, introduction, topic sentences, paragraph one, paragraph two, paragraph three.” Sometimes, Wendy asks for a bullet list of ideas to support or refute a given argument: “I have difficulty with organization, and this makes it really easy for me to follow.

Resources:  

Your Student Finished Early—Now What?

These extension activities for all grades will help teachers keep fast finishers engaged in meaningful work.

https://www.edutopia.org/article/fast-finishers-school-keeping-students-any-grade-engaged

AXIS The Culture Translator

Please Don’t Stop The Music

What it is: Some young people are taking a break from listening to music

Why it’s happening: There was a time when hearing music required access to an actual musician. Now, the infinite availability of music on apps like Spotify can lead to a paradox of choice, and to a desire to find the “perfect” soundtrack for every moment. Some young people are finding that the ability to completely control every sound they hear is turning into an unhealthy coping mechanism—a way of managing their thoughts and feelings into submission, instead of truly sitting with them. Others find that constantly filling their space with music is making it harder to think clearly. As Dazed puts it, “The rise of algorithmically generated playlists and near-constant headphone use means music has often become background noise, something to fill space, not deepen experiences.

Web Spotlight: 

The LLMentalist Effect: how chat-based Large Language Models replicate the mechanisms of a psychic’s con

https://softwarecrisis.dev/letters/llmentalist

Parents’ Phone Use May Harm Kids’ Health and Development

A new study published in JAMA Pediatrics found that when parents use technology in the presence of their young children—a behavior researchers call “parental technology use” (PTU)—it may be harming key aspects of kids’ health and development.

https://www.newsweek.com/parents-phone-use-harm-kids-health-children-screen-2067235

Productive Struggle: What We Lose When AI Does the Thinking

https://ideasandthoughts.org/2025/05/06/productive-struggle-what-we-lose-when-ai-does-the-thinking/

AI Is Bad At Grading Essays (Chapter #412,277)

The main hurdles to computerized grading have not changed. Reducing essay characteristics to a score is difficult for a human, but a computer does not read or comprehend the essay in any usual understanding of the words.

Like self-driving cars, robograding has been just around the corner for years. 

The Learning Agency. TLA is an outfit pushing “innovation.” It (along with the Learning Agency Lab) was founded by Ulrich Boser in 2017, and they partner with the Gates Foundation, Schmidt Futures, Georgia State University, and the Center for American Progress, where Boser is a senior fellow. 

TLA has dug through data again, to produce “Identifying Limitations and Bias in ChatGPT Essay Scores: Insights from Benchmark Data.” They grabbed their 24,000 argumentative essay dataset and let ChatGPT do its thing so they could check for some issues.

This particular study found bias that it deemed lacking in “practical significance,” except when it didn’t. Specifically, the difference between Asian/Pacific Islanders and Black students, which underlines how Black students come in last in the robograding.

…result is that ChatGPT just isn’t very good at the job. At all. There’s more statistical argle bargle here, but the bottom line is that ChatGPT gives pretty much everyone a gentleman’s C. 

Using ChatGPT to grade student essays is educational malpractice. It is using a yardstick to measure the weight of an elephant. It cannot do the job.

TLA ignores one other question, a question studiously ignored by everyone in the robograding world– how is student performance affected when they know that their essay will not be read by an actual human being? How does one write like a real human being when your audience is mindless software? What will a student do when schools break the fundamental deal of writing–that it is an attempt to communicate an idea from the mind of one human to the mind of another?

“The computer has read your essay” is a lie. ChatGPT can scan your output as data (not as writing) and compare it to the larger data set (also not writing any more) and see if it lines up. Your best bet as a student is to aim for the same kind of slop that ChatGPT churns out thoughtlessly.

https://curmudgucation.blogspot.com/2025/05/ai-is-bad-at-grading-essays-chapter.html

Why Even Try if You Have A.I.?

https://archive.md/DaoUj

Click the Play button below to listen to the show!

MSM 660: The Dangers of Dihydrogen Monoxide (DHMO) and Seventh Graders

Summary:

Shawn and Troy talk about charts, graphs, Dihydrogen Monoxide, and more. Dave stops. 

Jokes:  

Why did the pencil get flushed down the toilet? It was a #2!


Did you hear about the piece of fruit that left it’s wallet at a George Michael concert in Zurich?

  • It was a Careless Swiss Pear.

Which word becomes shorter when you add two letters to it?


how do you tell the sex of an ant?

  • Put it in water.  If it sinks, girl ant.  If it floats….  boy ant

Today, my son asked “Can I have a book mark?” and I burst into tears. 11 years old and he still doesn’t know my name is Brian.


To the person who stole my glasses. I can still drink from the bottle.


My mate is the biggest Beatles fan in the world.

He’s got every single they made except one.

I think he needs Help.


I’m giving my chimney away for free… You could say it’s on the house


“I’m now up to 1000 crunches a day. Between the capt crunch, cornnuts, pringles, bugles, crunch bars, crunchy general tsos, granola and bunch a crunch. I’m getting it done!”


The Swiss must’ve been pretty confident in their chances of victory if they included a corkscrew in their army knife.


I don’t get all the excitement surrounding Nintendo’s new product announcement…

My house is full of light switches!




Middle School Science Minute  

by Dave Bydlowski (k12science or davidbydlowski@mac.com)

K12Science Podcast:  STOP Doing

I was recently reading the March – April 2025 issue of “The Science & Children”, a publication of the National Science Teaching Association.

In this issue, I read the section, “The Poetry of Science” written by Amy Ludwig VanDerwater  She wrote an article entitled, “‘If We Stopped.”

When we imagine acting as Earth’s stewards, we often focus on what we can DO, but in this poem, the author challenges us to consider what we might STOP doing.

http://k12science.net/stop-doing/ 

I checked out birdcast.info.  It is a pretty good website.  It had a ton of information regarding the birds that are in the air.  The only thing was that it did not go into specifics regarding species of birds.  I look forward to the return of hummingbirds and baltimore orioles.  For hummingbirds, I use:  https://www.hummingbirdcentral.com/hummingbird-migration-spring-2025-map.htm

Reports from the Front Lines

The Social Web

Nathan Lowell (he/him)@nlowell@indieauthors.social

What does the word creativity mean to you?

I thought I knew.

Like “making something new” but sometimes it’s making something different.

Or looking at something old from a different perspective, with a different lens.

Or sorting through a pile of maybe to find the one.

Now? Having thought about it?

I don’t know.

Susie Dent  @susie_dent

Word of the Day is ‘apricate’ (17th century): to turn your face to the sun and bask in its warmth.

‪Rick Wormeli‬ ‪@rickwormeli.bsky.social‬

New piece out today in Principal Leadership (NASSP) with behinds-the-scenes advice when talking with faculty about changes in grading practices, which can be challenging. www.https://www.nassp.org/publication/principal-leadership/volume-25-2024-2025/principal-leadership-may-2025/viewpoint-may-2025/

Resources:  

Landmark Cases of the Supreme Court

Street Law, Inc. and the Supreme Court Historical Society developed and launched LandmarkCases.org to provide teachers with a full range of resources and activities to support the teaching of landmark Supreme Court cases.

https://landmarkcases.org/landmark-cases

How To Say The Number 92

https://brilliantmaps.com/number-92/

Chart of the Day

Looking for some great charts? Need examples to show kids? Want a good discussion topic?

https://www.statista.com/chartoftheday

Based on A True Story?

https://informationisbeautiful.net/visualizations/based-on-a-true-true-story

AXIS The Culture Translator

Hard to Believe

What it is: According to Politico, being a digital native doesn’t make someone information-savvy—and Gen Z is the generation most likely to be duped by unverified information online.

Why there’s more to it: We know that teenagers, young adults, and their parents are all susceptible to being misled by wild claims shared online. (That’s why we teamed up with The Pour Over last year to make a Media Literacy Kit.) Politico gives some extreme examples of Gen Z’s credulity, including a TikTok trend from several years ago that insisted Helen Keller had faked her disabilities. The article points out that young people just don’t trust institutional sources of information, which could be part of why they sometimes don’t bother to verify facts by looking them up. But this cynicism about traditional media isn’t limited to just young people—and maybe, that isn’t entirely a bad thing.  

National History Day

Is funded through 2025 and is looking for funding for 2026.  States and affiliates are funded for next year.  

https://nhd.org/en/

Web Spotlight: 

Responding to Calls for “Free Speech”

In reality, the First Amendment is a limit on government power. It ensures that the state cannot punish or restrict most types of speech. It does not compel private individuals, organisations, or platforms – centralised or decentralised – to host, promote, or tolerate any particular content.

Put simply, free speech in the US is a legal guarantee against government censorship, not a free pass to say anything without consequence in any context.

 Most social media platforms, including decentralised ones, are operated by private individuals or communities. These platforms are free to establish their own rules, block or restrict content, and curate community standards that suit their values and needs. This is not a violation of free speech, it is a legitimate exercise of community autonomy.

Within the legal boundaries of the US, certain forms of speech are not protected under the First Amendment. The US Supreme Court has long recognised that some categories of speech carry such significant risk of harm that they may be legally restricted or punished. These include:

When community guidelines prohibit content that falls within or even near these legally unprotected categories, they are not stifling freedom, they are building safer, more inclusive environments.

https://connect.iftas.org/library/community-management/responding-to-calls-for-free-speech

People You Should Know

Mike Rowe’s Show is back . . . 

“Your mission this weekend, should you choose to accept it, is to share this trailer with everyone on the planet. Or at least, with a few friends who might enjoy a show about the neighbors you wish you had. Episode one of People You Should Know drops right here on my YouTube Channel May 2nd. I don’t have a network behind me on this one, or a big production company, so you guys are my marketing and publicity department. No pressure, but the entire endeavor is in your hands.”  

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4w2y1fixzpU

Click the Play button below to listen to the show!

MSM 659: AEIOU and Sometimes Y I Didn’t Pay Attention

Summary:

Shawn and Troy talk about AI, middle school students who are not lazy, and more. Dave goes to the birds. 

Jokes:  

To stay in shape my grandma started walking five miles a day when she was 60.

  • She’s 97 today and we don’t know where she is

No matter how kind you are, German children are kinder.


I was told that exercise helps with your decision-making.

It’s true…

After going to the gym earlier I’ve decided I’m never going again.


chopping cheese, but I think that I may have a grater problem


It’s alright if you don’t know what “prefix” means.

  • It’s not the end of the word.

One shouldn’t throw sodium chloride at people.

  • That’s a salt.


Frazz by Jef Mallet


Middle School Science Minute  

by Dave Bydlowski (k12science or davidbydlowski@mac.com)

K12Science Podcast: Bird Count History

I was recently reading the March – April 2025 issue of “The Science Teacher”, a publication of the National Science Teaching Association.

In this issue, I read the section, “Right to the Source,” written by Jessica Fries-Gaither  She wrote an article entitled, “‘The 1900 Christmas Bird Census: Introducing a New Annual Tradition and Citizen Science Project.

This “historical” podcast provides an entry point for students in the Christmas Bird Count’s history and current applications in ornithology.  Students use data from the Count’s history to help construct their scientific understanding.

http://k12science.net/bird-count-history/ 

Bonus: 

https://birdcast.info/

Reports from the Front Lines

The Social Web

Susie Dent  @susie_dent

Soubhiye, from Lebanese Arabic, is the enjoyment of a quiet moment of peace in the early morning, before everyone else is awake. Gökotta is a Swedish term for waking up early to enjoy the birdsong.

Kit Bashir@Unixbigot@aus.social

Via Mx 17 (final year of high school):  “One of the kids in my class called a landline a ‘table cellphone'”

MiddleWeb‬ ‪@middleweb.bsky.social‬

NEW: Vision Boards Can Help Us Reignite Our Career Goals. If you know your ‘why,’ parlay it into a set of directions that will motivate your daily work. Educator Kelly Owens shows how vision boards help both teachers and their students. #edusky #mschat #educoach www.middleweb.com/51732/vision…

Michael Taylor‬ ‪@teacherrunner42.bsky.social‬

One of my FAVORITE parts of the old place was #MSChat – a place where middle school educators could come together – I haven’t seen much here yet want to restart #MSChat in 2025 – Please join us on January 9th at 8:00 PM Eastern! @blocht574.bsky.social  #edusky #booksky #mathsky #elasky

Strategies:  

“I Got Nothin…”

https://bsky.app/profile/tcea.org/post/3lnpqnt6cmr2e

Resources:  

AXIS The Culture Translator

Ice Breaker

What it is: The Ice Bucket Challenge is back, this time to raise awareness for mental health.

Why it’s resonating: The University of South Carolina’s MIND (Mental Illness Needs Discussion) Club is bringing back the social media trend under the new name #SpeakYourMIND. In the videos, a teen stands somewhere outside, they say a few words about mental health, they tag three friends to keep the trend going, and then someone drenches them with a bucket filled with ice water. The movement began at USC in honor of two students who died by suicide, and it has since raised nearly $300,000 for the mental health non-profit Active Minds. It’s personal, it’s performative, and it’s everywhere—especially on TikTok and Instagram. Gen Z is embracing this new version of the challenge not just because it’s going viral, but because mental health issues have affected so many members of their generation.  

Harvard X

https://www.edx.org/school/harvardx

EZ Gif

Ezgif.com is a simple, free online GIF maker and toolset for basic animated image editing.

Here you can create, edit and convert GIF, APNG, WebP, MNG and AVIF animations.

https://ezgif.com

Google Learn About

Discover how Learn About can enhance your learning experience. Learn About is a generative AI learning companion that brings Google Search, Gemini, and teaching principles to provide interactive learning experiences.

https://learning.google.com/experiments/learn-about

Learn About Learn About

https://support.google.com/websearch/answer/15662709?visit_id=638812767833106988-560311743&p=learn_about&rd=1

Web Spotlight: 

COPPA Update

https://natlawreview.com/article/ftc-publishes-final-coppa-rule-amendments

https://www.federalregister.gov/documents/2025/04/22/2025-05904/childrens-online-privacy-protection-rule

The Professional Development Paradox: Why Good Intentions Go Astray in Schools

PD is the cornerstone of district and school culture. The idea is sound: equip educators with new skills, knowledge, and strategies to better serve their students. Yet, for many teachers and administrators, the mention of PD evokes a sigh rather than excitement. Why does this crucial investment so often fall short of its potential? The answer lies in several common pitfalls that plague PD initiatives in schools.

https://esheninger.blogspot.com/2025/04/the-professional-development-paradox.html

10 factors to consider when lesson planning with AI 

https://ditchthattextbook.com/learning-genie

Yes, Middle Schoolers Are Hard To Teach, and Nobody Is Really Lazy

I taught 39 years, and I never met a lazy student in my entire life. What I met were students who were making choices about their own agency.

https://curmudgucation.blogspot.com/2025/04/yes-middle-schoolers-are-hard-to-teach.html

https://www.theatlantic.com/family/archive/2025/02/disengaged-teens-parents-nagging-school/681834

Random Thoughts . . .  

Click the Play button below to listen to the show!