MSM 448: Privileged Moose with ketchup chips.

Jokes:


Cheer up. You could be stuck in a hole in the ground full of water. 

I know that you mean well….


Espresso may not be the answer, but it’s worth a shot.


A friend of mine tried to bother me with bird puns. 

Toucan play at that game.


Where can you find the Arnold Schwarzenegger action figures?

Aisle B, back


The other day I yelled into a colander. 

Yep, I strained voice.


I have a friend who is going bald. He’s getting a bunch of tattoos of rabbits. 

From a distance, it looks like hares.

Advisory:

How Privileged Are You?

https://www.buzzfeed.com/regajha/how-privileged-are-you#annotations:mWyoTDL_EeqwLC89L6_W3Q

What You Need to Be Warm: Neil Gaiman Reads His Humanistic Poem for Refugees, Composed from a Thousand Definitions of Warmth from Around the World

https://www.brainpickings.org/2020/01/08/what-you-need-to-be-warm-neil-gaiman/

Middle School Science Minute  

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

Middle School Science Minute: Hour of Code

I was recently reading the November/December, 2019 issue of “Science Scope,” a magazine written for middle school science teachers, published by the National Science Teachers Association. 

In this issue, I read the “Citizen Science” section. The title of the article, within the section was “Advance Technology Literacy and Bring Learners’ 21st Century Skills Up to Code with the Hour of Code,” written by Jill Nugent. 

The Hour of Code project provides an opportunity for every learner to try computer science programming/coding for one hour.  The “Hour of Code” takes place the second week of December. For more information, please visit:

http://code.org

http://hourofcode.com

From the Twitterverse:  

Brian Mendler@BrianMendler

5 non-negotiables for success w “hard to reach” kids. 1. Don’t take it personally. 2. 2nd to last word is best. 3. Late is better than not at all. 4. Some is better than none. 5. Private is better than public. Drop your best tip below! #edchat #edutwitter #thatonekid #tlap

Hong Kong Free Press@HongKongFP

Around 1,000 teachers have gathered at Central’s Edinburgh Place on Friday evening to protest against the Education Bureau’s investigation of complaints against pro-democracy teachers joining protests. Photo: Stand News screenshot. #hongkong #hongkongprotests #china #antiELAB

Typical EduCelebrity@EduCelebrity

Teaching tip: When students persistently put their Instagram handles on the board, change one letter in each without their knowing Make accounts with those handles with video recordings of your lessons. This will trick students into learning while they browse social media.

Fixing Education@FixingEducation

The most successful students have high EQ’s (Emotional Intelligence), not necessarily high IQ’s. Those students are better able to manage their emotions, in support of their goals and dreams. Should schools help students improve their EQ? Do we have the time? Resources?

Yong Zhao@YongZhaoEd

There are many “peculiar findings” in #PISA2018. Just in case, you missed, here is the 2nd one: PISA Peculiarities (2): Should Schools Promote a Competitive or Cooperative Culture?

PISA Peculiarities (2): Should Schools Promote a Competitive or Cooperative Culture?

Zhaolearning.com  

Typical EduCelebrity@EduCelebrity

Your teaching is only as good as it is worthy of being a post on your school’s social media account.

Don’t forget #mschat every Thursday at 8:00 pm EST.  Look for your host Todd Bloch to have a middle school topic all ready to go!  Make it a strategic part of your personal professional development.

Strategies:  

What do teachers need to know about Cognitive Load Theory?

Resources:

Portraits of America – Democracy on Film

The Story of Movies is an interdisciplinary film literacy program for middle and high school students created and distributed by The Film Foundation.

All print materials are available online at no cost to educators who have registered on The Story of Movies website.

http://www.storyofmovies.org/

The Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta

Classroom tools:  https://www.frbatlanta.org/education/classroom-tools  

Free Infographics Posters:  https://www.frbatlanta.org/forms/education/infographics-order.aspx  

Boundless OER Archive  

Everything you’d ever want from the Boundless Open Education Resources project.  Assessments, content, and stuff to keep your principal happy while he fills out that teacher observation sheet . . . 

https://courses.lumenlearning.com/catalog/boundlesscourses

60 Ways to Help Students Think for Themselves

https://www.teachthought.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/11/128ED0A3-0E80-40B1-A4A2-3B73467E3E3A.png

Bunk History

Bunk is, at its core, a connection engine. Each day,* we comb the internet for interesting articles, opinion pieces, videos, maps, visualizations, and other digital content that engages the American past. We manually tag each piece of content, and excerpt it on our own site alongside other material from our archive that intersects with it in some way.

As you explore the site, you’ll notice several specific types of connections being made. They are:

  • Idea: Shares several themes
  • Core Idea: Shares a fundamental theme
  • Person: Involves the same individuals
  • Place: Shares a geographical location
  • Previously: Similar themes in an earlier era
  • Later: Similar themes in a later era
  • Meanwhile: Happening around the same time

https://www.bunkhistory.org/

NPR Student Podcast Challenge

This contest is for teachers with students between 5th and 12th grade. Each podcast should be between three and 12 minutes long.

https://www.npr.org/2018/11/15/650500116/npr-student-podcast-challenge-home

Public Domain Day 2020

Why celebrate the public domain?

A wellspring for creativity. The goal of copyright is to promote creativity, and the public domain plays a central role in doing so. Copyright law gives authors important rights that encourage creativity and distribution. But it also ensures that those rights last for a “limited time,” so that when they expire, works can go into the public domain, where future authors can legally build upon their inspirations. As explained by the Supreme Court:

“[Copyright] is intended to motivate the creative activity of authors and inventors by the provision of special reward, and to allow the public access to the products of their genius after the limited period of exclusive control has expired.” Sony v. Universal (1984).

https://web.law.duke.edu/cspd/publicdomainday/2020/

Web Spotlight:  

The 100 Worst Ed-Tech Debacles of the Decade. . . with Pigeons

Ms. Watters has been documenting the short-comings of educational technology for over 10 years with a yearly list.  This is her one for the decade. Did your favorite teaching tech make the list?  

http://hackeducation.com/2019/12/31/what-a-shitshow

Top 5 FERPA & HIPAA Misconceptions for Schools

1. “HIPAA applies to schools.”Nope. 

2. “We can’t call the doctor who wrote the student note without a signed release.”That depends on who’s talking and what they’re sharing.

3. “Parents have access to all documents that mention their student.”Well, most documents, but actually ― not all.

4. “FERPA prohibits paraprofessionals/teacher aides from seeing IEPs and Section 504 plans.”That’s probably not right.

5. “Students can’t see other students’ grades under FERPA.”That depends on who’s grading.

https://www.frontlineeducation.com/blog/top-5-ferpa-hipaa-misconceptions-for-schools/#annotations:ZoYepDMnEeqI2HtrvNNpXQ

Canadian Clip Art

https://cira.ca/stock-images/gallery

This may be the fastest way to learn something new, according to science

“We reward perfection maybe too much,” Wilson said. “Errors and mistakes are just a part of life and as we’ve shown here, a crucial part of learning.”

https://www.inverse.com/article/61771-the-key-to-optimal-learning

Click the Play button below to listen to the show!

MSM 447: Don’t Make Your Social Studies Teacher Cry!

Jokes:

Coders:

“Every day, the feuding codebreakers had cryptic cross words.”

****

“How much does it cost to buy a large singing group?”

“A choir?”

“Okay, fine… how much does it cost to ‘acquire’ a large singing group?”

****

“A courthouse is where you can play indoor tennis.”

****

“Only a nickel for an embroidered pinwheel? 

Good buy, crewel whirled!”

****

My doctor was giving me a hard time about my health. To get back on his good side I bought a puppy and named him ‘Five Miles’.

That way, when I went to see my doctor I could tell him, “I walk five miles every morning!”

****

Advisory:

55 times people had no idea what they were looking at

Middle School Science Minute  

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

Middle School Science Minute: Making Science Come Alive with Clouds – Part 2

I was recently reading the November/December, 2019 issue of “Science Scope,” a magazine written for middle school science teachers, published by the National Science Teachers Association. 

In this issue, I read the “Integrating Technology” section. The title of the article, within the section was “Making Science Come Alive with Clouds,” written by Marile’ Colo’n Robles, Jeffrey Bouwman, and Caryn Smith-Long.  This is the second podcast in a two part series. Part 1 focused on the GLOBE Observer app and the second part will focus in on Investigations with the GLOBE Observer app taking place at Shumate Middle School in Gibraltar, Michigan.

The new GLOBE Observer app allows the general public to make observations of clouds, map out habitats of disease-causing mosquitoes, measuring tree height, and identify land cover from any mobile device.

From the Twitterverse:  

Typical EduCelebrity@EduCelebrity

Administrators must give ample time to their special education teachers to write IEPs. A single “IEP Day” is insufficient for all they need to do. It’s like giving them a five dollar gift card to Saks Fifth Avenue or a coupon for 10% off at Hammacher Schlemmer.

Dave Burgess Consulting, Inc.@dbc_inc

FREE Pajama PD! #DitchSummit = NOW! Read Dave’s latest blog w/a guest appearance from #DitchBook #DitchHW author, @jmattmiller (And #TechLAP in 2020!) https://daveburgess.com/the-return-of-pajama-pd/ Sign up info inside. #tlap #LeadLAP #dbcincbooks Dave Burgess @burgess_shelley @burgessdave

Massimo@Rainmaker1973

This giant elephant toothpaste experiment has been conducted by Nick Uhas and David Dobrik and it’s possibly one of the biggest reproduction of the rapid decomposition of hydrogen peroxide [full video: http://ow.ly/vX8o30q3Etc] [more about the experiment: http://ow.ly/D87r30q3Eth]

J.C. Derrick@jcderrick1

The new #EffectiveCompassion feed is now live! You can listen to the trailer and subscribe here:

Kristina A. Holzweiss #HackingSchoolLibraries

My grandmother passed away from Alzheimer’s. Years ago, she left home and was lost for hours before a policeman found her. She didn’t understand English. Please record a video about your loved one using @Flipgrid and create a #qrcode bracelet for them. It could make a difference.

Simon Henderson@simjhenderson

The education system in #HongKong continues to be viewed as a threat. Whether its liberal studies or teachers not being sufficiently patriotic. In the end, children will likely be affected, limiting their personal development & potential. Art 29, Convention Rights of the Child.

Xinqi Su 蘇昕琪 @XinqiSu

#THREAD HK Education Minister said the authority will adopt harsher measures on teachers arrested and complained in protest-related incidents to “correct mistakes”. Around 80 teachers were arrested in #HKProtests and 123 complaints on teachers were filed to the Buro.

Fixing Education@FixingEducation

Educators, enjoy your much deserved break. For the next couple weeks, you will be able to… •Use the bathroom when you want •Wake up at a reasonable time •Drink coffee when it’s hot •Go out to lunch •Sit down occasionally

Don’t forget #mschat every Thursday at 8:00 pm EST.  Look for your host Todd Bloch to have a middle school topic all ready to go!  Make it a strategic part of your personal professional development.

Strategies:  

Resources:

Students’ Civic Online Reasoning: A National Portrait

The results—if they can be summarized in a word—are troubling

Question 1 How do students across the United States perform on assessments of civic online reasoning? 

Overall, students struggled on all of the tasks. 

The Website Evaluation task had the highest proportion of Beginning scores, with 96.8% of students earning no points.

Nearly all students floundered. Ninety percent received no credit on four of six tasks.

Education moves slowly. Technology doesn’t. If we don’t act with urgency, our students’ ability to engage in civic life will be the casualty.

Our results are sobering.

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 Unported License

https://stacks.stanford.edu/file/gf151tb4868/Civic%20Online%20Reasoning%20National%20Portrait.pdf

Planets to Scale

https://xkcd.com/1071/large/

Mind Missions – Language Arts & Social Studies 

Social Studies instruction is enriched when students are given opportunities to experience the people and challenges of the past. In our lessons, students develop a deep understanding about historical people and events by constructing solutions to solve their problems. Mind Missions encourage students to interact with history as they learn it.

At the same time, Mind Missions develop skills critical for the future – encouraging creativity, developing problem-solving ability, and strengthening teamwork skills.

Sample:  https://mindmissions.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/11/Forge-Feet-Sample-Lesson-1.pdf  

Web Spotlight:

Native, But Not Adept

https://one-to-oneinstitute.org/one-to-one-institute/native-but-not-adept

I became part of the alt-right at age 13, thanks to Reddit and Google

https://www.fastcompany.com/90438818/i-became-part-of-the-alt-right-at-age-13-thanks-to-reddit-and-google?utm_source=nextdraft&utm_medium=email#annotations:XEdhuh-ZEeqm_tdozkPKmg

New Data: Students Who Read On Tablets Score Poorly In Reading

https://www.forbes.com/sites/helenleebouygues/2019/12/12/new-data-students-who-read-on-tablets-score-poorly-in-reading/#7336cde74d08

Click the Play button below to listen to the show!

MSM 446: Syrupticiously Deep Learning

Jokes:

Shop assistant: How about this one?

Psychic: That shirt is too small.

Shop assistant: You didn’t even try it on?

Psychic: I’m a medium.

***

Teacher: “How much is half of 8?”

Little Johnny: “Up and down or across?”

Teacher: “What do you mean?”

Little Johnny: “Well, up and down makes a 3 or across the middle leaves a 0!”

***

Me: “I just burned 2000 calories in 20 minutes.”

Friend: “How?”

Me: “I forgot to take my brownies out of the oven.”

***

Two guys went to a local pancake house that served real Vermont maple syrup but charged extra for it.

So the guys went to a supermarket, bought their own Vermont maple syrup, and brought it to the pancake house.

They didn’t want to get caught, so they were forced to pass the bottle between them… syrupticiously.

***

A guy gets shipwrecked and washes up on a beach.

The sand is dark red. He can’t believe it. The sky is dark red. He walks around a bit and sees there is dark red grass, dark red birds and dark red fruit on the dark red trees. He’s shocked when he finds that his skin is starting to turn dark red, too.

“Oh no!” he says. “I’ve been marooned!”

Advisory:

Fact or Fiction?

Use some of the useful tips to share with the students. Have the students create alternative, fictional purposes for those items. Then have them present to the class and let the class vote. 

For example:

Soda Can tabs:

  • They’re designed to swing around so you can keep your straw in place. 
  • They’re are designed to replace the tabs on a zipper. 
  • They’re designed to be pulled off and used as a fishing hook.

https://living.alot.com/home/40-common-household-items-with-a-surprisingly-useful-purpose–17180?s=4

9-Year-Old Kid Who Kept Getting In Trouble For Doodling In Class Gets A Job Decorating A Restaurant With His Drawings

https://www.boredpanda.com/doodle-boy-decorates-restaurant-joe-whale/?utm_source=hyp&utm_medium=referral&utm_campaign=organic#annotations:XvJL6B0SEeqd2ie33Mm4IQ

Middle School Science Minute  

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

Middle School Science Minute: Making Science Come Alive with Clouds – Part 1

I was recently reading the November/December 2019 issue of “Science Scope,” a magazine written for middle school science teachers, published by the National Science Teachers Association. 

In this issue, I read the “Integrating Technology” section. The title of the article, within the section was “Making Science Come Alive with Clouds,” written by Marile’ Colo’n Robles, Jeffrey Bouwman, and Caryn Smith-Long.  This is the first podcast in a two-part series. Part 1 focuses on the GLOBE Observer app and the second part will focus on Investigations with the GLOBE Observer app taking place at Shumate Middle School in Gibraltar, Michigan.

The new GLOBE Observer app allows the general public to make observations of clouds, map out habitats of disease-causing mosquitoes, measuring tree height, and identify land cover from any mobile device.

From the Twitterverse:  

Richard Byrne@rmbyrne

Proof that nothing good comes from comments on YouTube videos.

Image

Typical EduCelebrity@EduCelebrity

Explicit instruction is simply bad teaching. It stifles the student’s imagination and encourages the pompous teacher to show off what they know. Explicit instruction is ineffective. No one learns from explicit instruction. I am not sure how I can make myself any clearer.

Dennis Dill@DennisDill

Want to check your teacher-student relationship … stand in the hall during class change and say nothing. Will the kids initiate the “Hi” … do kids that are not in your class say anything to you? How many kids are late to your class? Reflect often. #CrazyPLN

Apple Education@AppleEDU

If it rains, open your umbrella . If it’s sunny, put on sunglasses. To plan for the unexpected in code, use an if statement.⁰⁰ Get your students coding with our free #HourOfCode Facilitator Guide! #EveryoneCanCode⁰⁰ #CSedWeek https://apple.com/education/docs

Typical EduCelebrity@EduCelebrity

While we are at it, what [in the world] does it mean when teachers are told to “take a risk”? Unless there is a chance of doing something that leads to a bad evaluation, you’re not exactly taking a risk.  

Typical EduCelebrity@EduCelebrity

Good morning class! Let’s recite our daily class self-affirmations: I have grit. I have a growth mindset. I am 6’8”. I am an NBA All-Star. I am going to Harvard on a full scholarship. I am immune to the limitations of the laws of physics. I am like Chuck Norris. Only better.

Dave Burgess@burgessdave

Have you allowed “groupthink” to limit your ability to create transformational change? Are you sure that door of opportunity is locked? Maybe you just need to Try the Door:   

https://daveburgess.com/try-the-door-overcoming-groupthink/ #tlap #LeadLAP  

Don’t forget #mschat every Thursday at 8:00 pm EST.  Look for your host Todd Bloch to have a middle school topic all ready to go!  Make it a strategic part of your personal professional development.

Strategies:  

Google Earth Creation Tools

http://ditchthattextbook.com/google-earth-creation-tools/#annotations:b1K49hkREeqkaXfVOiHKVA

How to Find Historical Comics and Create Lessons With Them

https://www.freetech4teachers.com/2019/12/how-to-find-historical-comics-and.html#annotations:Offl8hkPEeq8hZOq0GeyTg

Resources:

Understanding Comics

This is a wonderful comic on understanding comics. 

http://mm12.johncaserta.info/wp-content/uploads/2012/10/Understanding%20Comics%20(The%20Invisible%20Art)%20By%20Scott%20McCloud.pdf

How Learning Happens

Ton of resources about, well, how learning happens. 

https://www.edutopia.org/how-learning-happens#annotations:VxD7vBkXEeq3188R7zbKzg

Web Spotlight:

Texting really is ruining personal relationships

Our increasing preference for texting over email and phone calls creates a higher quantity of interactions, but it decreases their quality, harming our relationships.

…missing the human contact and learning that comes from true dialogue.

…encourages passive — or more often passive-aggressive — behavior, what I call “hit and runs.” Typing on a screen invites impulsive responses. 

…Written words can hide a great deal of emotion,

…texting enables more frequent contact, it also can be used to curtail conversation. The best example of this is the egregious way texts are used as preemptive apologies, as in the reflexive “sorrys” that accompany notes one is running late

https://www.nbcnews.com/think/opinion/texting-really-ruining-personal-relationships-ncna1097461#annotations:uHERghlHEeqxlHPqefzT_w

Deep Learning and the Curriculum Disconnect

I see school learning in 3 buckets. 

  • Introductory Learning directed and chosen by the adult…Taking advantage of the skills and interests of teachers
  • Mandated Learning (basic reading, math which could be embedded into other learning) ….the curriculum
  • Deep Learning and deep learning tasks chosen by students. 

http://ideasandthoughts.org/2019/11/29/deep-learning-and-the-curriculum-disconnect/#annotations:TidUFhkREeqReztKyLIbCQ

Click the Play button below to listen to the show!

MSM 445: But I was the Valedictorian, how can I fail Pinterest?

Jokes

I just started a new job at a factory making chess pieces.

  • This week I’m on knights!

***

***

I entered my first marathon and finished first!

  • Two steps into it I stubbed my toe and finished, first.

***

A Washington reporter was awakened by her husband in the middle of the night. “I think there’s a thief in the house,” he said.

  • “No doubt,” she said sleepily. “And there are a handful in the Senate, too.”

***

What do you call someone who can’t stick with a diet?

  • A desserter.

***

I had a crazy dream that I weighed less than a thousandth of a gram…

  • I was like 0mg!

Advisory:

Pinterest Fails

Pinterest provides the model. Sometimes, they even give you the recipe. What happens if you don’t follow the recipe? What happens if you are missing out on some background or details.

https://static.boredpanda.com/blog/wp-content/uuuploads/pinterest-craft-fails/pinterest-craft-fails-15.jpg

https://www.boredpanda.com/funny-pinterest-fails/

Middle School Science Minute  

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

I was recently reading the November/December, 2019 issue of “Science Scope,” a magazine written for middle school science teachers, published by the National Science Teachers Association.  

In this issue, I read the “From the Editor’s Desk” section, written by Patti McGinnis, the editor of Science Scope.  The title of the article was “Moving Up the SAMR Model.” In this article, we learn about the SAMR Model for the use of technology.  SAMR is an acronym for:

Substitution, Augmentation, Modification and Redefinition.

From the Twitterverse:  

Marvin Olasky @MarvinOlasky

At holiday gatherings, go ahead and tell those funny, wild or inspiring family stories. Their lessons can be beneficial over time for children. “If I had to leave the children with one or two stories, what are the ones I would want them to know?” https://wsj.com/articles/the-secret-benefits-of-retelling-family-stories-11573468201?shareToken=st4eff87ff22544c958b32b782d0d586c5 via  @WSJ

Nick LaFave @NFLaFave

40 teacher recommended math apps http://buff.ly/2tJb2Bb #EdTech #mathchat

Image

Tony Vlachakis @tvlachak

Using Dystopian Novels to Teach Bill of Rights One teacher offers a guide to help students compare the freedoms lost in dystopian novels with the freedoms secured by the Bill of Rights. https://buff.ly/33zzLFI by

@edutopia

Gen (Ret) Rob Spalding @robert_spalding

The beginning of the end of freedom is the banning of speech.

Fixing Education@FixingEducation

I am tired of people telling teachers: “You knew what you were getting into” (I didn’t know my salary would be stagnant for the last 8 years) “If you really love being a teacher, your pay shouldn’t matter”

“Must be nice to leave your job at 3 and have summers off” (I do?!)

The Modest Teacher@ModestTeacher

The Black Friday deals teachers really want: A substitute teacher when they’re gone A pass to go pee whenever needed A copy machine that doesn’t jam at the most inopportune times A 1000 pack of dry erase markers A renewable Jean day ticket Happy shopping!

MiddleWeb@middleweb

NEW: Design Your Tests with English Learners in Mind.

@TanELLclassroom#ell #ellchat #scichat #mathchat #sschat #engchat #educoach@Larryferlazzo @Seidlitz_Ed

Expert Tan Huynh on how to support ELs on summative tests AND accurately assess content knowledge https://middleweb.com/41698/design-y

Charles Mok 莫乃光@charlesmok

Almost 9:1 ratio of victory for “opposition” vs pro-Beijing. Stunning! Hong Kong Democracy Backers Win Big as Voters Flock to Polls A surge in voting, especially by young people, allowed democracy advocates to win many more seats on local councils.

https://t.co/WaugKy36Gg?amp=1

Hong Kong Free Press @HongKongFP

In Sai Kung’s Sheung Tak constituency, a particularly long queue of voters outside the polling station zigzagged multiple times on Sunday morning. Photo: Apple Daily. #hongkong

Image

Don’t forget #mschat every Thursday at 8:00 pm EST.  Look for your host Todd Bloch to have a middle school topic all ready to go!  Make it a strategic part of your personal professional development.

Strategies:  

7 Things People Think or Say that Reinforce Mediocrity

http://www.davidgeurin.com/2019/12/7-things-people-think-or-say-that.html

Resources:

How to Recognize a Toxic School Culture Before You Get the Job

Cook Something Up In Social Studies

Chefs cook up Ancient Babylonian recipes.  You could too, or rather, your students could?  

https://www.npr.org/sections/thesalt/2019/11/16/779930201/eat-like-the-ancient-babylonians-researchers-cook-up-nearly-4-000-year-old-recip?utm_campaign=storyshare&utm_source=twitter.com&utm_medium=social

Web Spotlight:

 Congratulations Nick Peruski Miliken Award Winner!

SANTA MONICA, Calif., (Dec. 6, 2019) – When it comes to the world of work, business and technology teacher Nick Peruski is really working it for his students at Lakeland High School in White Lake, Michigan. 

Science Says the Most Successful Kids Have Parents Who Do These 5 Things

A handful of recent studies indicate the important things which parents should focus on.

https://www.inc.com/christina-desmarais/science-says-most-successful-kids-have-parents-who-do-these-5-things_4.html

Wondering What Happened to Your Class Valedictorian? Not Much, Research Shows

…followed 81 high school valedictorians and salutatorians from graduation onward to see what becomes of those who lead the academic pack. Of the 95 percent who went on to graduate college, their average GPA was 3.6, and by 1994, 60 percent had received a graduate degree.

Nearly 90 percent are now in professional careers with 40 percent in the highest tier jobs. They are reliable, consistent, and well-adjusted, and by all measures, the majority have good lives.

But how many of these number-one high school performers go on to change the world, run the world, or impress the world? The answer seems to be clear: zero.

Research shows that what makes students likely to be impressive in the classroom is the same thing that makes them less likely to be home-run hitters outside the classroom.

Many of the valedictorians admitted to not being the smartest kid in class, just the hardest worker. Others said that it was more an issue of giving teachers what they wanted than actually knowing the material better.

…schools reward being a generalist. There is little recognition of student passion or expertise. The real world, however, does the reverse.

https://money.com/money/4779223/valedictorian-success-research-barking-up-wrong/#annotations:uI2t6gigEeqGNXfAgwgVjg

Random Thoughts . . .  

Click the Play button below to listen to the show!

MSM 444: Bold Humility – We need some Thanksgiving songs.

Jokes You Can Use:

Why is the third hand on the watch called the second hand?

Michelle, is the commander of a Coast Guard cutter. When she gave her dad, Bob, a tour of her ship, he was impressed with the neatness of all decks. However, when Michelle brought Bob to her house, he couldn’t believe the disorganization.

“Why is everything in its place on your ship,” he asked, “but your house is such a mess?”

Michelle replied, “My house doesn’t take 30-degree rolls.”


A man went into a store and bought a self help audio book…

It was called “How to Handle Disappointment”…

It was empty.


Interviewer: “How do you explain this 4-year gap on your resume?”

Me: “That’s when I went to Yale…”

Interviewer: “That’s impressive. You are hired.”

Me: “Thanks. I really need this yob.”


My wife and I run a small restaurant where we often name our specials after our employees, dishes like “Sally’s Chicken” after our maître d’ who gave us the recipe, and “Rod’s Ribs” after a waiter who had his personal style of barbecue.

One evening after rereading the menu, I broke with this tradition and changed the description of the special we had named after our chef.

Despite her skills and excellent reputation, somehow I didn’t think an entrée named “Salmon Ella” would go over big with our customers.


Doctor: “Do you want to hear the good news or the bad news first?”

Patient: “Good new please!”

Doctor: “Well, we’re naming a disease after you…”


A woman was shopping for something to wear to her 50th high school reunion when a group of teenage girls came into the same shop to try on dresses for their school formal.

“Gross,” complained one girl loudly to her friends, “this dress makes me look 40 years old!”

“May I have it?” called out the lady. “That’s just what I’m looking for!”


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.”


Kid: Did you hear that there is a report of snew tomorrow.

Teacher: What’s snew?

Kid: Nothing much, what’s snew with you?


Forget about the past, you can’t change it.

Forget about the future, you can’t predict it.

Forget about the present, I didn’t get you one.


Which rock group has four guys who can’t sing or play instruments?

  • Mount Rushmore

Advisory:

Who Did You Help Today?

https://daily-ink.davidtruss.com/asking-your-kids-the-right-questions/

Mentors

Sensory Path

After spending countless hours, and seeking advice from physical therapists, occupational therapists, and autism experts, we have designed true “Sensory Paths” that utilize a series of movements to decrease behaviors while increasing cognition. 

https://thesensorypath.com/#annotations:fIaFZgbiEeqDbx_oynuD-g

Middle School Science Minute  

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

Middle School Science Minute: Serendipitous Science Part 2

I was recently reading the September, 2019 issue of “Science Scope,” a magazine written for middle school science teachers, published by the National Science Teachers Association.  

In this issue, I read the article “Science-Based Serendipitous Events” written by William Sumrall, Hannah Robinson, and Kelle Sumrall.  In this article, we learn about the numerous examples of serendipity in science and how to use them to help students teach their classmates about historic scientific inventions.  In this second of a two part podcast series, we look at the lesson design and some interesting serendipitous events in science, such as:

  • Penicillin
  • Sugar Substitutes
  • Microwave Oven
  • Coca-Cola
  • Potato Chip
  • Chocolate Chip Cookies

From the Twitterverse:  

Typical EduCelebrity@EduCelebrity

Excellent teachers spend a substantial amount of time in school. If you see daylight entering or leaving the building, then you’re simply not a dedicated teacher. If seeing the sun is that important to you, there’s plenty of time to catch up on weekends and in the summer.

Dave Schmittou EdD  @daveschmittou

Understand the total context behind this tweet: It’s no coincidence that when we started proclaiming “Always do what’s best for the kids” that we began to have a teacher shortage. Doing what’s best for kids does not have to be in contrast to what’s best for adults.

Image

TeacherGoals@teachergoals

*Two more weeks until Thanksgiving Break *Teachers:

Image

Jennifer Bond @teambond

5 new thank-you books will be sent to the #FreedomCenter at Detroit Metro Airport from the #DesignTech kids at@CliffordSmart. #wleced@WalledLkSchools#OtherPeopleMatter

Larry Ferlazzo @Larryferlazzo

Eat Like The Ancient Babylonians: Researchers Cook Up Nearly 4,000-Year-Old Recipes

Eat Like The Ancient Babylonians: Researchers Cook Up Nearly 4,000-Year-Old Recipes

Written on four tablets, three of which date back no later than 1730 B.C., the recipes are considered to be the oldest known. And they taste pretty good, says a scholar who recreated them.

npr.org

Todd Bloch @blocht574

So my advisory class wants to know: are there any thanksgiving songs? #Thanksgiving … no ready for Christmas music #mschat 

Don’t forget #mschat every Thursday at 8:00 pm EST.  Look for your host Todd Bloch to have a middle school topic all ready to go!  Make it a strategic part of your personal professional development. 

Resources:

Overlap Maps

An Overlap Map is a map of one part of the world that overlaps a different part of the world. Overlap Maps show relative size.

Make an Overlap Map! Choose from the menus then click on the arrow below.

http://overlapmaps.com/#annotations:rF72KAMZEeqsCgMaesn_Kg

LOC – Maps

https://www.loc.gov/maps/

Trace

https://www.stickermule.com/trace#annotations:PDFykgYZEeqEjh86iyF7QQ

Web Spotlight:

ISTE Acquires EdSurge News

“EdSurge is joining the ranks of nonprofit newsrooms. Today the International Society for Technology in Education (ISTE) announced that it has agreed to acquire EdSurge, in a move that leaders of both organizations say will provide a stronger financial base to continue to produce EdSurge’s journalism, research and other services about the intersection of technology and education.”   

https://www.edsurge.com/news/2019-11-06-iste-to-acquire-edsurge-in-move-to-nonprofit

Leaders Don’t Hide Behind Data

https://sloanreview.mit.edu/article/leaders-dont-hide-behind-data/#annotations:CRJ7TgfrEeqf7QMKj-CPAw

Random Thoughts . . .  

Personal Web Site  

Click the Play button below to listen to the show!

MSM 443: Ooooooooommmmmm! I think I’ll Record This…Or Maybe Just Tweet It

Image by msandersmusic from Pixabay

Jokes You Can Use:

Middle School Girl to Middle School Boy:

Would you like to be the sun in my life?

Boy: Yes

Girl: Good. Stay 92.96 million miles away from me.

What lights up a Soccer Stadium?

  • A soccer match. 

Why do seagulls fly over the sea?

  • Because if they flew over the bay, they’d be bagels

Why did the mushroom get invited to the party?

  • Because he was a fungi

What do you call birds that stick together?

  • Vel-crows

What did the ocean say to the shore?

Advisory:

Meditation Can Alter Our Perception Of Time, Study Finds

https://www.mindbodygreen.com/articles/meditation-can-make-time-feel-like-it-moves-faster-research-shows#annotations:lNuAoAJsEeqTTmfzLz6FBg

Middle School Science Minute  

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

Middle School Science Minute: Serendipitous Science Part 1

I was recently reading the September, 2019 issue of “Science Scope,” a magazine written for middle school science teachers, published by the National Science Teachers Association.  

In this issue, I read the article “Science-Based Serendipitous Events” written by Jill Nugent.  In this article, we learn about the numerous examples of serendipity in science. There were so many examples, that I decided to do a two-part series.  Part 1 deals with the discovery of Teflon. Part 2 will do with a short summary of many serendipitous events.

From the Twitterverse:  

Dr. Mary Howard @DrMaryHoward

Thank you Stephen Krashen for sharing this wonderful 2005 article he wrote with JoAnne Ujiie: Junk Food is Bad For You, but Junk Reading is Good for You

@skrashen

http://sdkrashen.com/content/articl

Typical EduCelebrity@EduCelebrity

Principals: whenever a veteran teacher comes to you in despair saying that they are not respected or appreciated, remind them that their reward for 30 years of teaching was 30 years of teaching.

Typical EduCelebrity@EduCelebrity

Teachers, be sure to post your learning objectives in the hallway for the students who cut your class so they don’t miss anything.

Doug Robertson@TheWeirdTeacher

I don’t know if I’ve ever seen children play leap frog…

Rick Wormeli@rickwormeli2

We did at my house when our kids were young, but Leap-unicorn is a little rough. Leap-Dalek ‘even rougher.

Dominic Helmstetter

BBC World Service@bbcworldservice

1/8 The fall of the Berlin Wall on 9 November, 1989, was one of the most significant events of the 20th century. But why was the Wall built in the first place

#BerlinWall30 #BerlinWall  https://twitter.com/i/status/1193129374322757632  

Don’t forget #mschat every Thursday at 8:00 pm EST.  Look for your host Todd Bloch to have a middle school topic all ready to go!  Make it a strategic part of your personal professional development.

Strategies:  

Record Your Directions

Presentation Recording

I would twist this one an do this in Moodle. Using the Workshop Module, the students could complete their presentation (recording is simply a button) and submit it. Students would provide feedback to the student using a rubric. 

https://www.teachingenglish.org.uk/blogs/larry-ferlazzo/larry-ferlazzo-using-a-three-two-one-speaking-activity

Resources:

Justice Map: Visualize Race and Income Data

How can I use Justice Map?

  1. Visualize race and income data for your neighborhood, county, state, or the entire US.
  2. Share a custom map with your friends.
  3. Journalists, bloggers, activists, and others can create maps for their online or print publications.
  4. Map makers can add race and income layers to their maps.
  5. Spatial Analysis. Advanced mode lets you compare who lives within 1 vs 5 miles of a location (and more!).

http://www.justicemap.org/

KidCitizen

https://www.kidcitizen.net/episodes-blog

Student-Driven Differentiation

Book review from Middle Web

Web Spotlight:

Righting A Wrong: Japanese Americans And World War II Poster Exhibition

https://www.sites.si.edu/s/topic/0TO1Q000000MC9SWAW/righting-a-wrong-japanese-americans-and-world-war-ii-poster-exhibition

Why I’ve Stopped Using Teachers Pay Teachers

MSM 442: Clown on a Unicycle

Jokes

What did the duck say when he bought some lipstick?

  • Put it on my bill

 

Which animal is the worst at hide and seek?

 

What starts with E, ends with E and only has 1 letter in it?

  • An envelope

 

Why does Humpty Dumpty’s love autumn?

  • He had great fall/

 

The last thing the principal said before leaving the building was “Pints, Liters, Gallons”. 

  • That really spoke volumes. 

 

I was sitting drinking coffee in my slippers this morning when I had a thought. 

  • I really need to wash some mugs. 

 

What’s the difference between a cranky two-year-old and a duckling?

  • One is a whiny toddler and the other is a tiny waddler.

 

We are going on a cruise and my wife is worried about meeting new people. 

  • I told her not to worry, We’ll all be in the same boat. 

 

I warned my daughter about using her whistle inside and gave her one last chance.

  • Unfortunately, she blew it.

My friend Jay recently had twin girls, and wanted to name them after him.

  • So I suggested Kaye and Elle.

What are terminators called when they retire?

  • Exterminators

 

Advisory:

 

Clown on a Unicycle

You don’t have a student who unicycles in a clown suit every day, so you have to take advantage of these things.”

https://well.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/10/22/what-clown-on-a-unicycle-studying-cell-phone-distraction/#annotations:0VGADPgDEemWZEu2wlBtQg 

(reference:  http://www.theinvisiblegorilla.com/gorilla_experiment.html)  

 

World Toilet Day

 

https://www.worldtoiletday.info/wtd2019/ 

 

Cost of Living

 

https://www.adt.com/where-our-money-goes 

Middle School Science Minute  

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

Crowd The Tap

I was recently reading the September 2019 issue of “Science Scope,” a magazine written for middle school science teachers, published by the National Science Teachers Association.  

 

In this issue, I read the “Citizen Science” section, written by Jill Nugent.  The title of the article was “What Are Your Pipes Made Of? Find Out With Crowd The Tap Citizen Science.”  In this article, we learn about the Crowd the Tap Project which was created to create a comprehensive national inventory of tap water pipes as a first step toward ensuring safe drinking water for all. To learn more about this project, 

visit:

https://crowdthetap.org

 

From the Twitterverse:  

Jen Wall@JenWallLCPS

 

I spent some time with the unified mental health team at Lunsford MS. The students, parents, & staff have an awesome group of professionals supporting the schools needs. I also spotted this Sources of Strength display! #lcpsmh

@sourcesstrength @JML_MS_Official @DrAsiaRJones

Alice Keeler@alicekeeler

When I make a directions document I type DIRECTIONS super huge in the title. #googleEDU

 

𝙎𝙝𝙚𝙡𝙡𝙮 𝙎𝙖𝙣𝙘𝙝𝙚𝙯@ShellTerrell

Where to Find Tons of Awesome Student Templates for Google Docs, Slides, Sheets and Drawings! http://teacherrebootcamp.com/2019/10/13/googletemplates/ #edchat #edtech #elearning #gsuiteedu #googleedu

 

Phyllis Fagell, LCPC@Pfagell

Research shows that scolding won’t change a child’s behavior. Instead, invent a game that reinforces the desired behavior. For instance, if you want your child to make eye contact with adults, say: “Bet you can’t stare into my eyes for a full 10 seconds.”

 

DoInk Tweets@DoInkTweets

RT@MrAKovach

Students painting the green screen corner in the Innovation Center #greenscreen

 

Lisa Maucione@DrLMaucione

A couple of middle grade books to be published in 2020 that I enjoyed – From the Desk of Zoe Washington

@JanaeMarksBooks and Wink: Surviving Middle School With One Eye Open. They are definitely two to keep an eye out for. #pd4uandme

 

 

Pixton Comics@PixtonEDU

“Art is particularly powerful when it allows students to communicate learning when they cannot express it through writing.” https://teachingchannel.org/blog/2013/05/17/arts-integration #artseducation #edchat

Pixton Comics@PixtonEDU

The 32-page comic meets Common Core State Standards offers a concise overview of each branch of government, along with some encouraging messages about the importance of civic engagement, lest anyone feel helpless to change the status quo. https://sevendaysvt.com/vermont/a-new-comic-book-explains-how-government-democracy-work/Content?oid=28275256 #edchat

 

NPR@NPR

Crows have a reputation of being creepy. I mean, a group of them is called a “murder” —not exactly subtle. But what’s REALLY unsettling is that they can memorize human faces, they use tools, and they have so-called “funerals” for their dead. #NPRShortWave

 

Eric Sheninger@E_Sheninger

Don’t Forget Closure http://esheninger.blogspot.com/2019/10/dont-forget-closure.html

#edchat #edutwitter #education #pedagogy

Don’t forget #mschat every Thursday at 8:00 pm EST.  Look for your host Todd Bloch to have a middle school topic all ready to go!  Make it a strategic part of your personal professional development.

Strategies:  

 

Free, Online Conference

Practical Ed Tech Creativity Conference. It will be held over the course of three afternoons/ evenings in December (10-12).

https://www.freetech4teachers.com/2019/10/a-new-free-online-conference-for.html 

 

Digital Escape Room

 

http://ditchthattextbook.com/2019/10/21/how-to-create-a-digital-escape-room-for-your-class-or-pd/ 

Resources:

Math Resources

 

https://robertkaplinsky.com/ 

 

Voraciously Made in America:

How four dishes with roots in other lands tell a story of immigration and transformation.

By Tim Carman and Shelly Tan

 

https://www.washingtonpost.com/graphics/2019/voraciously/what-are-american-foods/#annotations:6i6ToPKxEem_AvPyClPkVw 

 

NPR Student Podcast Challenge

Will be announced in January. 

https://www.npr.org/2019/10/22/771843477/the-npr-student-podcast-challenge-is-back 

 

Earth History

http://dinosaurpictures.org/ancient-earth#240 

 

National History Day

https://www.nhd.org/

Sacrifice for Freedom®: World War II in the Pacific Student & Teacher Institute, sponsored by the Pearl Harbor Historic Site partners, provides an exceptional opportunity for 16 student/teacher teams to study World War II in the Pacific in Honolulu, Hawai’i, in summer 2020.

https://www.nhd.org/sacrifice-for-freedom-pacific  

Web Spotlight:

 

OliCav

 

https://www.olicav.com/#/posters/ 

Random Thoughts . . .  

Personal Web Site  

 

Click the Play button below to listen to the show!

 

MSM 441: Quick Setting Assesscements.

Advisory:

 Social Media Survival Kit

http://www.ascd.org/ascd-express/vol15/num03/the-social-media-survival-kit-every-student-needs.aspx

Middle School Science Minute  

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

Gifted and Advanced Learners

I was recently reading the September, 2019 issue of “Science Scope,” a magazine written for middle school science teachers, published by the National Science Teachers Association. 

In this issue, I read the section “From the Editor’s Desk” written by Patty McGinnis. She wrote an article entitled, “Gifted and Advanced Learners.” She discusses how closing the achievement gap means focusing on growing all students, including our nation’s brightest.

From the Twitterverse:  

NCTE @ncte

We’re 10 days away from the National Day on Writing. If you’re teaching eighth or eleventh-grade students, this is a great time to introduce the prompts for the 2020 Student Writing Awards. Learn more here: https://www2.ncte.org/awards/student-awards/ #WhyIWrite

Phyllis Fagell, LCPC @Pfagell

“Complaining is a violent move to inaction—it replaces the need to act. Let the uncomfortable feeling—the one that would otherwise lead you to complain—spur you to take productive action. Go ahead & complain—but go directly to the cause of the complaints.”  https://t.co/xb0kHlRhH7?amp=1  

Fixing Education @FixingEducation

Why Are Teachers So Tired All The Time? Research shows we make about 1,500 decisions a day! The constant requirement to ‘be on’ becomes DRAINING to our brains and bodies. It is called ‘Decision Fatigue.’

Doug Robertson @TheWeirdTeacher

I tried to get a reservation to the library. But I couldn’t. They were… … … All booked up

Phyllis Fagell, LCPC @Pfagell

“Moms. They love you and take care of you. But one thing they can’t do is remember celebrities’ names. Now there’s the Mom Celebrity Translator.” This is hilarious. ⁦

@nbcsnl   https://youtu.be/JcviVDizlJ0  

Dr. Mary Howard @DrMaryHoward

The problem I see with scripted curriculum is that we fix HOW and what you teach but we give teacher little room to use their professional judgement. If you have a script and take away professional judgment, you have the worst of both worlds. P David Pearson #ILA19 #G2Great

𝐁𝐫𝐚𝐝 𝐉𝐨𝐡𝐧𝐬𝐨𝐧 @DrBradJohnson

Admin, next time you plan to evaluate a teacher, ask them to invite you when students are presenting projects, or teaching a class. Education shouldn’t be about the teacher putting on a dog & pony show for an evaluation. Its about the students engaged in their own learning.

Don’t forget #mschat every Thursday at 8:00 pm EST.  Look for your host Todd Bloch to have a middle school topic all ready to go!  Make it a strategic part of your personal professional development.

Resources:

2020 Census (Statistics in Schools)

https://www.census.gov/programs-surveys/sis/2020census/2020-resources.html

Web Spotlight:

Laziness Does Not Exist

*Warning, there is a fair bit of swearing in the article. 

There are always barriers. Recognizing those barriers— and viewing them as legitimate — is often the first step to breaking “lazy” behavior patterns.

If you look at a person’s action (or inaction) and see only laziness, you are missing key details.

https://humanparts.medium.com/laziness-does-not-exist-3af27e312d01#annotations:u62UeOqpEemiwE-UdrRXaw

Jokes of the Day

My nerdy friend just got a PhD on the history of palindromes.

  • Now we call her Dr Awkward

***********

I asked Siri why I was still single.

  • She turned on the front camera.

***********

They all laughed when I told them that one day I would discover the secrets of invisibility.

  • If only they could see me now.

***********

Gravity is one of the most fundamental forces in the universe. What do you get when you remove it?

  • Gravy

***********

I struggle with Roman numerals until I get to 159.

  • Then it just CLIX.

***********

What is a web developer’s favorite tea?

  • URL Grey.

***********

It’s a five minute walk from my house to the pub.

It’s a 35 minute walk from the pub to my house.

  • The difference is staggering.

***********

I told my wife that I’ve always had a bit of a thing for Beyoncé.

“Whatever floats your boat”, she said.

  • I said, “No, that’s buoyancy”.

***********

Cardi B has a sister who’s a fitness instructor.

  • Cardio O

Click the Play button below to listen to the show!

MSM 440: Retake a Mystery Photo Contest and Other Stuff . . .

Advisory:

Mystery Photo Contest

Hello fellow photo sleuths!

For your frustration, we submit to you nine more super-hard, super-obscure publicity stills that the Library is trying to identify.

This new batch, like others in the previous MPC series, came to the Library’s Moving Image section as part of a much larger collection of film, TV and music stills. Most were properly identified, but these are among those that stumped us.

So we need your help. Do any of the people, places or things below look familiar?

A few words of caution:

  • We’ve tried web-based reverse-image searches; they don’t work.
  • We have no information beyond what is listed below. There are no dates, locations or titles. They may not be from the United States.
  • Standards of proof: We’d most like to see the same photo, with the person’s name, in a newspaper, magazine or somesuch. Failing that, another image from the same photo shoot, but with the person named

Good luck to one and all!

https://blogs.loc.gov/loc/2019/09/who-am-i-new-mystery-photo-contest/

Bluff The Listener

https://www.npr.org/2019/09/28/765337636/bluff-the-listener

Middle School Science Minute  

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

Test Retakes

I was recently reading the August, 2019 issue of “Science Scope,” a magazine written for middle school science teachers, published by the National Science Teachers Association. 

In this issue, I read the article “Creating a Self-Sufficient Classroom,” written by Katelyn McGlynn and Janey Kelly. In this article, we learn how various teachers have developed strategies to help students improve on assessments with which they were unhappy.

From the Twitterverse:  

Eric Curts@ericcurts

You can watch the live stream of my #avedtech keynote at 11:30am EST at https://youtu.be/_RuAi5LEEDI #edtech #gsuiteedu #GoogleEdu #ControlAltAchieve

Todd Bloch@blocht574

Middle level peeps #AMLEasks will be a weekly question about middle grades from

@AMLE follow the hashtag and join in Questions drop 7 pm ET on Monday’s! #mschat #colchat

Mrs. Englert@mrs_englert

Diving into the Five Critical Levels of Professional Development Evaluation with an amazing group of colleagues. What a great Friday afternoon! #proudtobeLBUSD

@tguskey

Bobson Wong@bobsonwong

I found this story really interesting. It raised a lot of good questions about the relevance of today’s math curriculum. #mtbos #iteachmath

Quote Tweet

Freakonomics@Freakonomics

Ninety percent of the data ever created by humanity was produced in the last two years. But are the students graduating high school prepared to understand it?

XQ@XQAmerica

In anticipation of #WorldTeacherDay, we asked #students if they had anything they’d like to share with the #teachers in their lives. And no, we’re not crying, our eyes are just… sweating.

#ReThinkHighSchool

Happy #WorldTeacherDay 2019

Happy #WorldTeacherDay from all of us at XQ. —- #ReThinkHighSchool Learn more about XQ: https://xqsuperschool.org Video is here:   https://youtu.be/jddKHdGwFAc  

Don’t forget #mschat every Thursday at 8:00 pm EST.  Look for your host Todd Bloch to have a middle school topic all ready to go!  Make it a strategic part of your personal professional development.

Strategies:  

Spaced Practice

I’m sometimes asked by other teachers how I show my students the positive effects of spaced practice. By definition, it takes time to see the results of spacing out your practice of material and this fact makes it more difficult to demonstrate in class. This past week, however, I was granted that perfect moment of instruction when it all came together and I was able to say, “See…I told you this stuff works.” 

Resources:

SnackVid

https://www.snackvids.com/#annotations:SmRCqOICEemvfVNz4sxHyw

SMS Generator

https://www.classtools.net/SMS/

Personal Web Site  

Click the Play button below to listen to the show!

MSM 439: Do you recommend…?

Weekly Review:

  • Social Media Threat
  • Greta Thunberg

Advisory:

WHEN I AM AMONG THE TREES


by Mary Oliver
Amanda Palmer reads “When I Am Among the Trees” by Mary Oliver – licensed under a Creative Commons License.

When I am among the trees,
especially the willows and the honey locust,
equally the beech, the oaks and the pines,
they give off such hints of gladness.
I would almost say that they save me, and daily.
I am so distant from the hope of myself,
in which I have goodness, and discernment,
and never hurry through the world
but walk slowly, and bow often.
Around me the trees stir in their leaves
and call out, “Stay awhile.”
The light flows from their branches.
And they call again, “It’s simple,” they say,
“and you too have come
into the world to do this, to go easy, to be filled
with light, and to shine.”

The United Nations has declared October 16th to be World Food Day.

Fish Bullies

http://nowiknow.com/the-aquarium-that-turned-a-blind-eye-toward-bullies/

Middle School Science Minute


by Dave Bydlowski (k12science or davidbydlowski@mac.com)
Celebrate Urban Birds with Citizen Science
I was recently reading the August, 2019 issue of “Science Scope,” a magazine written for middle school science teachers, published by the National Science Teachers Association.
In this issue, I read the “Citizen Science” section, written by Jill Nugent. The title of the article was “Celebrate Urban Birds with Citizen Science.” In this article, we learn about the citizen science project – Budburst. To learn more about this project, visit:
https://celebrateurbanbirds.org

From the Twitterverse:  

Typical EduCelebrity  @EduCelebrity

Before every lesson, students should record the learning targets, pertinent state and common core standards, their goals in life, preferred learning style, hopes and dreams for the world, Myers-Briggs type indicator, and current blood pressure. Otherwise, no learning will happen.

Ian Jukes@ijukes

If kids are way ahead of teachers in developing the skills needed to succeed…

Jordan Shapiro@jordosh

More and More Children Are Feeling Anxious. This Graphic Novelist Is Trying to Help.

https://www.nytimes.com/2019/09/17/books/review/guts-raina-telgemeier.html?action=click&module=Editors%20Picks&pgtype=Homepage

Joy Kirr  @JoyKirr

Huge shout out to those educators who keep the conversations going – when they disagree politely, welcome more conversation about an issue, and dive deeper with questions – instead of simply judging based on the little they know about the situation (280 characters or so).

Also from Joy Kirr:

Alice Keeler@alicekeeler

“Reading actual books alongside other people reading actual books.”

Scott Merrick@scottmerrick

Greta Thunberg’s famous speech turned into Swedish death metal is pure magic https://mashable.com/video/greta-thunberg-heavy-metal-remix/ via

@mashable

Trevor Muir@TrevorMuir

I spoke at a school today and just realized I accidentally stole this marker from a teacher‘s classroom. Is this an act of war?

Daniel Pink@DanielPink

Frequent short breaks beat the occasional elongated vacation, says @TimHarford. Why? The benefits of long vacations wear off depressingly fast. Meanwhile, regular exposure to new places, situations, and activities can spark creativity. http://ow.ly/lfTg50wubId

Don’t forget #mschat every Thursday at 8:00 pm EST.  Look for your host Todd Bloch to have a middle school topic all ready to go!  Make it a strategic part of your personal professional development.

Strategies:  

A Simple Practice Yields Big Results in Middle School for Less Than $2

A new study shows how a low-cost writing exercise improves the sense of belonging for incoming middle school students

While other social and emotional interventions cost more than $500 per student, according to researchers, the writing intervention costs a tiny fraction of that—an eye-popping $1.35 per student—and the results outperform the more expensive interventions, Lunscombe writes.  

The proposed solution is simple: New middle school students in the study completed two 15-minute writing exercises at the beginning of the year that asked them to reflect on statements like these from prior students: “Almost all 7th graders said they had worried a lot about taking middle school tests at the beginning of 6th grade, but almost all 7th graders say that they now worry much less about taking tests,” and “Almost all 7th graders said they had worried at first that they did not ‘fit in’ or ‘belong’ at the beginning of 6th grade, but almost all 7th graders say that they now know that they ‘fit in’ and ‘belong.’” 

https://www.edutopia.org/article/simple-practice-yields-big-results-middle-school-less-2#annotations:H4ffmNp6EemhzrcLD_d6yg

4 myths about great teaching debunked

MYTH #1: Traditional teaching methods should be replaced with more innovative, student-centered approaches.

MYTH #2: Lessons should be as creative and fun as possible to increase engagement.

MYTH #3: Including elements of students’ cultures in your lessons is the best way to teach a diverse group of students.

MYTH #4: Planning great lessons always takes a lot of time and preparation.

https://thecornerstoneforteachers.com/truth-for-teachers-podcast/4-myths-about-great-teaching-debunked/

(See first Twitterverse entry . . . .)  

Click the Play button below to listen to the show!