MSM 457: WeChat, er, Video Conference, How about you?

Jokes:

Someone told me it takes 5 sheep to make a sweater. 

  • I didn’t even know that they could crochet.

I think I made a mistake. I put my dryer on spin. I asked why it lost one sock:

  • “I didn’t lose your sock so much as I provided you an opportunity to stimulate the economy.” 

I’ve started investing in stocks: chicken, beef, vegetable

  • One day I hope to be a bouillonaire.

I got into a fight with a fellow stamp collector. 

  • There was no clear winner. We both got some pretty good licks in. 

What kind of lights were on Noah’s ark?

  • Floodlights

I used to think that I was indecisive. 

  • Now, I’m not so sure. 

I, for one, like Roman numerals. 

Middle School Science Minute  

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

Middle School Science Minute: From STEM to STEAM

I was recently reading the March, 2020 issue of “Science Scope,” a magazine written for middle school science teachers, published by the National Science Teaching Association. 

In this issue, I read the “From the Editor’s Desk” section and the title of the article, within the section was “From STEM to STEAM” written by Patty McGinnis. 

The article describes how her school’s annual career day has morphed from STEM to STEAM.

Resources:

Video Conferencing:

  • Comfort
  • Security
  • Whole Group vs Individual

Web Spotlight:  

Future

Natural disaster plus government botch job equals the board being swept clean, allowing players a golden opportunity to move in and clean up.

But while some folks may view this shutdown as a philosophical opportunity, for some it’s all about the investment opportunities. Like Katrina’s aftermath, vulture capitalism at its finest.

http://curmudgucation.blogspot.com/2020/03/the-ed-tech-vultures-circle.html

The Twitterverse

Greg Wolcott  @GregJWolcott

TEACHERS:1000’s of you work in schools that have been canceled in the upcoming weeks. Make it UR goal to either call every kid & say hi or write them a letter, telling them what you appreciate about them, recognize the strengths they bring to your classroom! #Significant72  

Typical EduCelebrity  @EduCelebrity

A number of schools are closing in order to do a “deep cleaning“ of the buildings. Normally, this might take a day to do, but thanks to all of the budget cuts throughout the years, it will take weeks with the two people each has remaining.  

Yo-Yo Ma  @YoYo_Ma

In these days of anxiety, I wanted to find a way to continue to share some of the music that gives me comfort. The first of my #SongsOfComfort: Dvořák – “Going Home” Stay safe.

Leonardo Carella@leonardocarella

Italians in lockdown all over Italy are keeping each other company by singing, dancing and playing music from the balconies. A thread to celebrate the resilience of ordinary people. This is Salerno:

https://twitter.com/i/status/1238511612270690305

See also this BBC Report:  https://www.bbc.com/news/av/world-europe-51886547/coronavirus-italians-sing-from-their-windows-to-boost-morale  

TeacherGoals@teachergoals

It’s been a week to remember

Ms S. Scanlon @ShaunaScanlon10

When your white board is at school. Sometimes the most simple ideas are simply the best. This really made me smile  @Colaistebride

Dave Schmittou EdD  @daveschmittou

If you are a current assistant principal/vice principal, I would love your help. I am doing some research on your importance to your school. Do you mind completing this one minute survey? https://forms.gle/tKXtWdv9cnEp7gYW8

Please share! #leadlap #LeadUpChat #PIAchat   https://t.co/xAxuHBPjVQ?amp=1  

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:  

Student Journals Could Be Primary Sources – So Write!

David McCullough, in one of his interviews on CSPAN, talks about the importance of daily writings he had access to to write his books.  If you want to influence the future, write things on paper now is essentially his advice to young people today because when the servers turn off, there goes the primary sources.  This article from MiddleWeb has some suggestions for turning your students’ journaling into the future primary sources for historians and educators.

Click the Play button below to listen to the show!

MSM 456: 123….Not the MAMSE Edition, It’s not another bumper

Jokes:

A friend stole the punctuation keys from a judge’s keyboard.

  • He’s expecting a long sentence.

I signed up for a Prophecy Class, but I’m not sure that it is a good idea. 

  • The first class was canceled due to “unforeseen circumstances”

My procrastinator’s group has been moved to next week by unanimous request.


I went to a very emotional wedding. 

  • Even the cake was in tiers.

My wife called me at work and asked, “Do you ever get a shooting pain across your body, like someone’s got a voodoo doll of you and they’re stabbing it?”

Sounding concerned, I replied, “No…”

She responded, “How about now?”

Eileen Award:  

  • iTunes:  tech.teacher

Advisory:

How Germs Spread Video

Courtesy M. Sweeten

https://www.buzzfeed.com/christopherhudspeth/this-youtubers-video-showing-how-easily-germs-spread-is

Check in with your students using Google Forms

Here’s a quick Google form to check in with your students on how they’re doing and about what kind of technology they have available for you to use with them in remote learning.  

Middle School Science Minute  

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

Middle School Science Minute: Best STEM Books

I was recently reading the March, 2020 issue of “Science Teacher,” a magazine published by the National Science Teaching Association. 

In this issue, I read the article “Best STEM Books.”  The books that appear in the list were chosen by a review panel made up of educators and other subject-area experts, all appointed by the National Science Teaching Association, and the Children’s Book Council.

They selected three books that are appropriate for grade 6-8 students.  The list includes:

“How to Become an Accidental Genius” by Elizabeth MacLeod and Frieda Wishinsky

“Save the Crash-test Dummies” by Jennifer Swanson

“Saving the Tasmanian Devil, How Science is Helping the World’s Largest Marsupial Carnivore Survive” by Dorothy Hinshaw Patent

COVID-19 Follow Up

Click the Play button below to listen to the show!

MSM 455: The Viral Edition

Jokes:

Scientifically, a raven has 17 primary wing feathers, the big feathers at the end. These are pinion feathers. A crow has 16. Know what that means? 

  • The difference between a crow and a raven is a matter of a pinion.

Hey, I was wandering through the grocery store and found some soup in the freezer. 

  • Should I just let it go?

I recently took a pole. 

  • Turns out 100% of the people were upset when their tent collapsed.

Turns out that you can’t speak poorly of aircraft. 

  • It is plane offensive.

Taking notes around text in a book is marginal at best. 


Image may contain: 4 people, people sitting, table and indoor, possible text that says 'The Eagles were right We are all just prisoners here of our own device!'

Current Situation:

  • Team 
    • Classes
    • Badges
    • Feedback (Images & GIFs)
    • Enrollment
    • Special Ed
    • Messaging through Moodle
    • Affective questions through Forums/Assignments/Tips (Send positive social media posts)?
  • Remote Learning vs Online Learning
  • Moodle
    • Sharing Courses/material
    • Co-teaching
  • Training
  • Communication
  • “Free” stuff
  • Post emergency declarations

Middle School Science Minute  

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

Middle School Science Minute: Organizing for Student Success

I was recently reading the March, 2020 issue of “NSTA Reports,” a publication published by the National Science Teaching Association. 

In this issue, I read the article “Organizing for Student Success.”  Science educators responded to a recent informal NSTA Reports poll and they were nearly unanimous (94.3%) in reporting they incorporate organizational strategies in their science or STEM teaching.

Also in the article were survey reports on “late work,” as well as educators sharing their favorite strategies for helping students organize and prioritize their work.

MSM 453: With No Objection, We Give You The Objective Builder of Joy!

Jokes:

I have a friend who has written a book. It’s on “how to fall down stairs”. 

Yep, it’s a step by step guide. 


I bought some new memory insoles for my shoes. 

No more forgetting why I walked into the kitchen.


I ordered a chicken and an egg from Amazon. 

I’ll let you know. 


What did the patient say when informed by the Dentist that he had acute gingivitis?

Thank you. 


Quick tip: If someone named “Ruth” quits, don’t go around referring to the workplace as “ruthless”. 

Advisory:

Historical Differences

3. Playing Baseball in the Street

7. Rollar Skates with a key

8. Drive-in Movies

9. Bench Seats in cars

14. Sunday drives

15. One TV in the living room

17. TV sign off message

https://archiveproject.com/21-pictures-only-baby-boomers-will-understand/?ref=fbad2&fbclid=IwAR3K3sK9vjPpEs188Mr0qrmxnuc3qe5imxDIaN-iKiXdemCKPF4LfdwhFqA#annotations:7LmYFFG6EeqVYReLSHSihQ

Middle School Science Minute  

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

Middle School Science Minute: Outstanding Science Trade Books for 2020

I was recently reading the February, 2020 issue of “Science Scope” a magazine written for middle school science teachers, published by the National Science Teaching Association. 

In this issue, they listed the Outstanding Trade Books for Students in K-12, as determined by the Children’s Book Council and the National Science Teaching Association.

In this podcast, the top 5 middle school (6-8) books are highlighted.  They include:

* The Electric War:  Edison, Tesla, Westinghouse and the Race to Light the World

* Beyond Words: What Elephants and Whales Think and Feel

* Undaunted: The Wild Life of Birute Mary Galdikas and Her Fearless Quest to Save Orangutans

* Dreaming in Code, Ada Byron Lovelace, Computer Pioneer

* The Poison Eaters: Fighting Danger and Fraud in Our Food and Drugs

From the Twitterverse:  

Typical EduCelebrity  @EduCelebrity

Do not feel guilty if a student fails your class. If admin doesn’t bump the grade up to inflate average GPA or graduation rates, the student will get the credits by taking a summer online course in which 95% of the grade is earned by successfully registering for the class.

Diane Ravitch@DianeRavitch

Susan Edelman: Bloomberg’s Test Score Con

Susan Edelman: Bloomberg’s Test Score Con

Strange as it may seem, the best education reporter in New York City works for Rupert Murdoch’s New York Post. Her name is Susan Edelman, and she regularly reports on what is happening in the…

dianeravitch.net

DoInk Tweets  @DoInkTweets

@PSD_EReichert

: This is an awesome new feature to an already excellent app! App smashes wonderfully into @Seesaw too! Hey @PennridgeSD  teachers- who wants to play?!!? https://twitter.com/doinktweets/status/1230975557158002689 #doink #greenscreen #everyonecancreate

Eric Curts  @ericcurts

Using Google AutoDraw for Sketchnotes, Infographics, Drawings, and More http://controlaltachieve.com/2017/04/google-autodraw.html #ControlAltAchieve

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:  

Timelinely

Annotate videos. (Need to compare to H5P). 

https://timeline.ly/

Resources:

3 Reasons Students Procrastinate—and How to Help Them Stop

https://www.edutopia.org/article/3-reasons-students-procrastinate-and-how-help-them-stop#annotations:l2yL3lM0EeqNOMPXWFxi1Q

Learning Objectives Builder

https://teachonline.asu.edu/objectives-builder/#annotations:c2NY0FGVEeqxkQPA-56fwg

Google Earth View

Wallpaper downloads available. 

https://www.engadget.com/2020/02/19/google-earth-view-1000-new-images/?guccounter=1

100 Most Spoken Languages

Around the world, there are more than 7,000 regularly spoken vernaculars,

https://word.tips/100-most-spoken-languages/

Web Spotlight:  

Why Sitting For Long Periods Can Affect Teens’ Mental Health

study finds that sitting still is linked to a higher risk of depression among teens, but even an hour of light physical activity every day reduces the risk of depression by 10%.

Kandola and his colleagues analyzed this data from when the children were 12, 14 and 16 years old. And they found that as these kids went through adolescence, they spent more time sitting.

https://www.npr.org/2020/02/17/806599794/why-sitting-for-long-periods-can-effect-teens-mental-health

Literacy Test

Spell backwards, forwards.

That may be a trick question. If you read it using normal syntax, you end up with the instruction to spell the word “backwards” forwards, which will give you the answer “b-a-c-k-w-a-r-d-s.” But, due to the comma, one could very reasonably read the command using a reversed syntax. In that case, the instruction would be to spell the word “forwards” backwards, resulting with “s-d-r-a-w-r-o-f.” Either answer is potentially correct — or, potentially, wrong.

https://slate.com/human-interest/2013/06/voting-rights-and-the-supreme-court-the-impossible-literacy-test-louisiana-used-to-give-black-voters.html

Gratitude and acknowledgement are more important than ever

“Dear audience members,

A couple of days ago, we commemorated the 100th anniversary of the birth of one of our greatest literary figures, Jaan Kross. In the beginning of a play staged at the Drama Theatre to mark the occasion, the author has the main character turn to the audience with the following address:

“If you really want to accomplish something in this world, start immediately! Not in the next minute, but the very instant the desire comes. Even if it’s in the middle of the night. Do it now, straight away. It doesn’t matter how – just begin. Anything started tomorrow will be completed only after you’re dead and gone.

“You don’t have to be in the theatre to imagine the crafty, playful gleam in the old master’s eyes accompanying those words. In essence, it’s the attitude of a child at play, for whom time still comes down to the here and now, with thousands of possibilities still open. Not someone in the throes of time constraints, but someone with mastery over time. Someone who is forever experimenting and examining, who rejoices in successes, who might shed some brief tears and then try, try again if at first, they don’t succeed.

Happy are those who embody this attitude.”  

https://news.err.ee/1055597/kaljulaid-gratitude-and-acknowledgement-are-more-important-than-ever

Random Thoughts . . .  

The Dities – Happy 30th Anniversary of the Restoration of Lithuanian Independence.  

Click the Play button below to listen to the show!

MSM 452: Notification! Greek Out!

Jokes:

What kind of bagel can fly?

  • A plain bagel


Why did they call it the “dark ages”?

  • There were so many “knights”.

Why do EMTs travel in twos?

  • They are paramedics.

Advisory:

 Notifications

Ziegarnik Effect

What can waiters, the TV series ‘Lost’ and the novelist Charles Dickens teach us about avoiding procrastination?

  • when people manage to start something they’re more inclined to finish it.

https://www.spring.org.uk/2011/02/the-zeigarnik-effect.php

Middle School Science Minute  

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

Why Can I See My Breath on Cold Days? (4 Minutes)

I was recently reading the January, 2020 issue of “Science & Children,” a magazine written for elementary school science teachers, published by the National Science Teaching Association.  

In this issue, I read the “Science 101” section. The title of the article, within the section was “Why Can I See My Breath on Cold Days?,” written by Matt Bobrowsky.  

Although this magazine is written for teachers of elementary students, the concept of condensation is really not introduced to students until 5th or 6th grade.  So this topic is of interest to teachers of students at the beginning of middle school. When a gas changes to a liquid, that is called condensation

From the Twitterverse:  

EL Magazine @ELmagazine

“If we create a culture where every teacher believes they need to improve, not because they aren’t good enough, but because they can be even better, there is no limit to what we can achieve.” —Dylan Wiliam ICYMI read “Take a Praise Walk!”

@barbphillips77 

Josh Chin @joshchin

A photo from Caixin reporter Ding Gang of Wuhan doctors paying respects to Li Wenliang. 100% of my WeChat feed, from dissident lawyers to Huawei employees, is raging over Li’s death. Haven’t seen China unified like this since the Wenzhou train crash.

Typical EduCelebrity @EduCelebrity

This Valentine’s Day, spend this special evening with your passion: grading, lesson planning, and curriculum writing. Remember, there is no greater love than a labor of love.

Mike Roberts @BaldRoberts

To all the teachers who are fed up with Tik Tok… Trust me – This too shall pass. Sincerely, FortNite, Minecraft, PokémonGo, SnapChat, Fidget spinners, that cup thing from “Pitch Perfect”, Crocs, Silly Bandsz, and all the members of One Direction.

Fixing Education@FixingEducation

Why Are Teachers Leaving The Profession? •Inadequate preparation for new teachers •Lack of support •Class sizes •They are worked to the bone •Low salaries •Little to no recognition •Their time isn’t respected •Better opportunities elsewhere MUST DO BETTER #EdChat

Typical EduCelebrity @EduCelebrity

I probably shouldn’t be saying this, but word is that Trump, if re-elected, will appoint me as the new Secretary of Education. I hope you factor that into your decision of how to vote in November…

Typical EduCelebrity  @EduCelebrity

If students should not have to answer questions that they can get from Google, then teachers should not have to write lesson plans that they can get from Teachers Pay Teachers.

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:

Greeking Out!  Podcast 

This podcast is creatively written to catch your middle school social studies students’ attention.  

https://www.espn.com/espnradio/feeds/rss/podcast.xml?id=27807607

The 1619 Project – Update

Princeton History professor Allen Guelzo says it “is not history; it is conspiracy theory. The 1619 Project is not history; it is ignorance”  Guelzo goes on to say that it is a polemic rather than an historical account. Chicago Public Schools has ordered 200-400 copies for distribution to schools.  

https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2019/08/14/magazine/1619-america-slavery.html

https://www.city-journal.org/1619-project-conspiracy-theory

Web Spotlight:  

Earth Day

Please spread the word to teachers that middle schools can Sign up for Earth Day. 

Since 2004, the Michigan Department of Environment, Great Lakes, and Energy, the Michigan Department of Natural Resources, and the Michigan Department of Agriculture and Rural Development have hosted the annual Earth Day Celebration at Constitution Hall in Lansing, offering conference style session rotations.  This year’s event has been modified to spotlight hands-on, interactive lessons that align with Next Generation Science Standards for middle school students.  

Schools are invited to participate in the 2020 Earth Day Event, Poster Contest and the new Environmental Service Award competition.  Visit www.michigan.gov/earthday for contest rules, deadlines, and application information.  The attached email highlights school group opportunities and registration for the event.  Schools can now register online to attend. Please see the attachment for event information and the registration link.  

We are looking forward to celebrating the 50th Anniversary of Earth Day focusing on climate action.

What do Teachers Want

The fastest-growing categories of requests are “warmth, care, and hunger,” health and wellness, and character education. 

http://blogs.edweek.org/teachers/teaching_now/2020/02/an_analysis_of_almost_2_million_donorschoose_requests_shows_funding_inequities.html#annotations:87Fz_kzhEeqXuO8piBuRTQ

Random Thoughts . . .  

Math Follow Up

Loved the example of 8% of 25 being the same as 25% of 8.  I thought this was so cool (you mentioned it previously two weeks ago) I have told others, but then I mentioned this to a math teacher.  She said, oh yes, that is the commutative property of math. It works for every pair of numbers.  

https://www.mathwarehouse.com/dictionary/C-words/commutative-property.php

She was the only one to mention it.  I don’t think any other of my friends remembered this property. 🙂  

Lotus Seed Pops

Completely random item.  They’re delicious. Wonderful snack.  Strange enough your students won’t steal them off of your desk.  Just sayin’.  

Find them here:  Lotus Seed Pops    

The Cost of Free

We are stewards of student information. Do we have a responsibility to understand why something is free? 

Click the Play button below to listen to the show!

MSM 451: 10 Star Worthy, Annotate the Sourdough

Jokes:

Just a thought, if you take six and drop the s, you get more, 9. 


If they make another Fast and Furious and don’t call it Fast 10: Your Seatbelts, someone needs to be fired. 


Why is dark spelled with a K and not a C?

  • You can’t see in the dark

I have a friend who has started a new band. The name of the band is Duvet. 

  • They’re a, wait for it, cover band.

Stephen King has a son named Joe. I’m not joking, but he is. 


How do you make a waterbed bouncy?

  • Put Spring water in it.

I never trust stairs. 

  • They are always up to something. 
  • Then they bring you down. 

8
8
Eight
Tolerate


I have a friend who tried to take a selfie in the shower. It came out all blurry. 

  • Yep, my friend has selfie steam issues. 

What has four letters, occassionally has twelve letters, 

always has six letters but never has five letters.


In a job interview, the candidate was asked can you perform under pressure? 

  • He responded, no but I’ll give Bohemian Rhapsody a go.

Advisory:

Fun Facts:

The word “helicopter” has two components. They aren’t “heli” and “copter”. They are “helico” and “pter”.

“Helico” (helix) and “pter” (wing, like with “pterodactyl”)


Words that are spelled the same but pronounced with emphasis on different syllables is actually indicative of the part of speech it is. Stress on the first syllable is a noun. Stress on the last syllable is a verb. Examples: CON-tract and con-TRACT. The former is a noun ( sign this contract) whereas the latter is a verb (the muscles contract). Same with record, address, impact, object, and a few others.


Everyone has seen shows or movies about traveling circuses, mainly in the 1930’s or 1940’s. During the Depression, running away to join the circus was a semi-reasonable option.

Many people scoff at the Florida law you must feed the meter where you park your elephant.

Those circuses had a travel season that heavily relied on summer and warmer months. They would spend the winter in Florida until the next travel season.


Potatoes didn’t arrive in Europe until the 16th century.

It’s so ubiquitous, you’d think it would’ve been a part of English culture since 10,000 BC.

I love that it took a huge scam just to get people to eat them.

French botanist and chemist Antoine-Augustin Parmentier planted a huge field full of potatoes and stationed armed military guards to protect it. However the guards were instructed to take any and all bribes. So people see this field full of potatoes under military guard and figure “they must be good if its worth protecting” and started bribing the guards to snag a few thus creating a new love of carbs.


You don’t actually bite down. You bite up because of your lower jaw.


World Wide Web contains fewer syllables than its intended short form – WWW, thus making the shorter version longer to say.


You know that old statistic that the average person eats 3 spiders in their sleep each year?

That was an intentionally made up statistic by a journalist to elicit the point that people will believe any “statistic” the media will tell them.


Percentages are reversible. 8% of 25 is the same as 25% of 8 and one of them is much easier to do in your head.


40% of all sick days taken by white-collar employees are on a Monday or a Friday. … not because people are trying for 3-day weekends, but because Monday and Friday account for 40% of all weekdays.

Middle School Science Minute  

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

Middle School Science Minute: Sourdough Citizen Science

I was recently reading the January, 2020 issue of “Science Scope,” a magazine written for middle school science teachers, published by the National Science Teaching Association. 

In this issue, I read the “Citizen Science” section. The title of the article, within the section was “Sourdough Citizen Science,” written by Jill Nugent. 

Sourdough Citizen Science provides the opportunity to learn more about microbial influences on bread, including rise and flavor.  For more information, please visit:

From the Twitterverse:  

Charles Mok 莫乃光@charlesmok

Chinese students in Australia who could not get back to Oz can’t access Google Scholar for remote school. I wonder if they objected to the Great Firewall before. Gotcha now! 【武漢肺炎】澳洲封關逾10萬中國留學生禁回澳,學生爆怒:無法瀏覽Google遙距上課!

Judy Bowling@jlbowling

Favorite new website of the day! Work with PDFs online. Great for Chromebook users. https://pdfcandy.com

@wagnerlearning@t_wallace92@jasonsiko@AnupaminMI

China Commission@CECCgov

Chairs extend their condolences to the family & friends of Dr. #LiWenliang. He was silenced by the police for raising the alarm about the #Wuhan #CoronaVirus & tragically died from it yesterday. He is rightly being hailed as a hero by the #Chinese people.  

Sotiri Dimpinoudis@sotiridi

#Breaking: Just in – Unconfirmed report of an uprising in #Kazakhstan, of insidious people in the region burning down Chinese restaurants and shops duo to the #Coronavirus.

Library Girl@jenniferlagarde

Y’all. I just learned today that the audible book for #FactVSFiction is now available on @audible– and I might be freaking out just a little bit! https://adbl.co/2vi8Jqs cc: @dhudgins #luckylibrarian

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:  

Hypothesis

https://web.hypothes.is/

Resources:

Stanford psychology expert: These are the top 3 things kids need—but most parents fail to provide

https://www.cnbc.com/2020/02/05/stanford-psychologist-3-things-kids-need-but-parents-fail-to-provide.html#annotations:WKK7SEiQEeqtEi8_Ii6_vQ

Web Spotlight:  

Alfie Kohn vs Dwight Schrute

https://www.schooltube.com/media/Alfie-Kohn-vs-Dwight-Schrute/1_qwxjq9ym

Kryptos Sculpture

https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2020/01/29/climate/kryptos-sculpture-final-clue.html

Why Innovation is Crucial in Education

https://connectedprincipals.com/archives/24283

Random Thoughts . . .  

Sightings:  

Personal Web Site  

Click the Play button below to listen to the show!

MSM 449: Like Yeah, What’s It Called? No Gewgaw here.

MSM 449: Like Yeah, What’s It Called?  No Gewgaw here.

Jokes:

***

To Whoever Stole My Copy of Microsoft Office,

I will find you. You have my Word. 

***

***

***

What do you call a mouse that swears?

***

I started reading a horror novel in braille. 

Something bad is about to happen, I can feel it. 

***

I got thrown out of the local park. I was lining up squirrels by height. 

Apparently, they didn’t like me critter sizing…

Advisory:

 Starfish

One Outfit – 100 days

https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2018/11/21/teacher-julia-mooney-sustainable-fashion-one-outfit-100-days/1917538002/

Middle School Science Minute  

Middle School Science Minute: Phases of the Moon

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 “Disequilibrium” section. The title of the article, within the section was “The Phases of the Moon,” written by Cole Entress. 

Middle-level students most commonly suggest that the phases of the moon are caused by the Earth’s shadow.  In fact, the Moon is illuminated by the Sun in much the same way as the Earth—that is, one side of it is continuously in the path of the Sun’s rays. 

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

From the Twitterverse:  

The Modest Teacher@ModestTeacher

We have a student whose name is Logan, except it’s spelled, “Login”. …like you “login” to your computer. Parents…enough with trying to be cute with your kids’ names.

Typical EduCelebrity@EduCelebrity

Some teachers buy a box of Girl Scout cookies from a student. Good teachers buy a case of cookies. Great teachers donate enough money to a student’s troop so that cookie sales are unnecessary. Elite teachers’ lessons are so fun and engaging that there’s no need for scouting.

Typical EduCelebrity@EduCelebrity

Don’t be upset if there is a shortage of subs in your building. It just means that they’re not many teachers out there on your level of awesomeness.

Dave Schmittou EdD@daveschmittou

This weekend, spend time building relational capital with those who matter most. Like a car driving through a ditch, build momentum now to help you get to the other side. Spring will be hard. Plan for success now.

Joy Kirr@JoyKirr

Replying to@SteinbrinkLaura

Glad I checked out my “feed” instead of just the hashtags and lists I like to follow… Twitter has gotten so huge; it’s gotten harder to stay connected to PEOPLE.

Will Richardson@willrich45

“There is no cure for curiosity.” —Dorothy Parker Yet, more often than not, we in schools seek a cure. “Right” answers. Limited choices. Narrow curriculum. Grades. If we really want curiosity, we need to give it more space instead of trying to cure it. #justsayin (h/t@hjarche)

Dr. Debbie Silver

Fail Chart:  

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:

Wayne State University series aims to help you refine your language

https://www.freep.com/story/news/education/2020/01/06/wayne-state-words-improve-vocabulary/2823618001/

https://wordwarriors.wayne.edu/

Michigan Department of Natural Resources has a new Shipwreck App

With about 1,500 shipwrecks in Michigan waters, this new interactive map makes it simple to explore them. It offers information on each wreck including: the level of difficulty for diving to the wreck, whether or not you can canoe or kayak to it’s location, how it sank, and a description of the ship. 

http://www.wbkb11.com/michigan-dnr-adds-interactive-map-for-exploring-shipwrecks?fbclid=IwAR2u4gBidLmWEVPl4d_2G7dvoNybPQN1muNh9r3YYKF-O0AAuRQTyeiDOAk

Trey Kennedy – Middle Schoolers Part 4

Parents and teachers will totally get it.  Not sure the kids will. Which makes it funnier.  

https://www.facebook.com/treynkennedy/videos/376632619672035/

Web Spotlight:  

TWO STATES. EIGHT TEXTBOOKS. TWO AMERICAN STORIES.

https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2020/01/12/us/texas-vs-california-history-textbooks.html

The 100 Worst Ed-Tech Debacles of the Decade

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

Articles of Impeachment

Random Thoughts . . .  

Personal Web Site  

Click the Play button below to listen to the show!

MSM 448: Privileged Moose with ketchup chips.

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!

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

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!