MSM 302:  Tweet, tweet #rockin’robin! We’re in Kahoots! with Spring!

Jokes You Can Use:

What did the tired chess player do?

He took the knight off

 

Phil had just joined a club after his friend had recommended it (being a member for quite some time). They were sitting in the clubhouse when someone yelled “21” and there was a small uproar of laughter. A few minutes later someone else yelled “34” and another roar of laughter rose up. Phil, confused about this asked his friend “Why is everyone laughing at the numbers being called out” His friend said, well we’ve been telling the same jokes for so many years that we just numbered them all and if you want to tell a joke you just call out a number” Phil nodded and said “Can I try?” His friend nodded and Phil called out “121” and everyone in the club roared with laughter and it didn’t die down for at least another 15 minutes after. “Why did everyone laugh so hard at that joke?” Phil asked. His friend said with a small chuckle “We haven’t heard that one before.”

A man asked his wife what she’d like for her birthday. “I’d love to be eight again.” she replied. On the morning of her birthday, he arose early, made her a nice big bowl of Coco Pops, and then took her off to the local theme park. What a day! He put her on every ride in the park: the Death Slide, the Wall of Fear, the Screaming Monster Roller Coaster, every thing there was. Five hours later she staggered out of the theme park. Her head was reeling and her stomach felt upside down. Right away, they journeyed to a McDonald’s where her loving husband ordered her a Happy Meal with extra fries and a refreshing chocolate shake. Then it was off to the movies: the latest Star Wars epic, a hot dog, popcorn, all the Coke she could drink, and her favorite M&M’s. What a fabulous adventure! Finally she wobbled home with her husband and collapsed into bed exhausted. He leaned over his precious wife with a big smile and lovingly asked, Well, Dear, what was it like being eight again?” Her eyes slowly opened and her expression suddenly changed. “I meant my dress size!!!!!!!

 

The moral of the story: Even when a man is listening, he’s gonna get it wrong.

 

Things to do @ Wal-Mart while the significant other is taking his/her sweet time:

 

  • Get cans of cat food and randomly put them in people’s carts when they don’t realize it.
  • Set all the alarm clocks to go off at ten minute intervals throughout the day.
  • Walk up to an employee and tell him in an official tone, “I think we’ve got a Code 3 in house wares,” and see what happens.
  • Tune all the radios to a polka station; then turn them all off and turn the volumes to “10.”
  • Challenge other customers to duels with tubes of gift wrap.
  • Move “Caution: Wet Floor” signs to carpeted areas.
  • Set up a tent in the camping department; tell others you’ll only invite them in if they bring pillows from Bed and Bath.

Why do fish sing so poorly?  You can’t Tuna Fish!

Advisory:

Players Leave Court to Confront Bullies

A group of middle school basketball players walked off the court in the middle of a game when they heard bullying coming from the stands directed at cheerleader, Desiree Andrews, who has Down syndrome.

http://www.foxnews.com/us/2015/03/13/players-leave-court-mid-game-to-confront-bully-cheerleader-with-down-syndrome/

 

Evolution of Girl Baby Names

4 minute YouTube video. Bubbles indicate popularity.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qVh2Qw5KSFg

 

Popular Baby Names

Vast resources on Baby names. Searchable by Decade, Name, State, etc.

http://www.ssa.gov/OACT/babynames/index.html

Disney

http://lifehacker.com/walt-disneys-best-career-lessons-1692510355

 

Middle School Science Minute

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

 

Safety on the Move

 

I was recently reading the January, 2015 issue of “Science Scope,” a magazine written for middle school science teachers, published by the National Science Teachers Association.

In this issue, I read a safety article written by Ken Roy, entitled “Safety on the Move.”  He explains that the number of force and motion activities at the middle school level is endless.  However, the potential for injury is also high.

http://k12science.net/Podcast/Podcast/Entries/2015/3/17_Middle_School_Science_Minute-Safety_on_the_Move.html

From the Twitterverse:

Joy Kirr ‏@JoyKirr

@ADressander Pick a tab for your grade level here: http://www.livebinders.com/play/play/829279?tabid=6f5c8753-5bbe-2533-6eef-45ce567ba965 … Passionate teachers blogging about #geniushour! @thenerdyteacher

Erin Klein ‏@KleinErin

A Helpful Resource to Support Close Reading in the Classroom via Snap!Learning –> http://www.kleinspiration.com/2015/03/a-helpful-resource-to-support-close.html … #edchat #macul15 #ascd15 #mra15

Quartz ‏@qz

All the reasons why emotionally intelligent people are so happy at work http://qz.com/360917

JoEllen McCarthy ‏@JoEllenMcCarthy

“Love of learning is more important than test scores.” Amen! Love these quotes on this #ascd15 swag bag.

Wired Educator ‏@WiredEducator

New Post: “The Best Chromebook is… an iPad” http://wirededucator.com/the-best-chromebook-is-an-ipad/ …

#mschat every Thursday at 8:00 pm Eastern Standard Time.  And as Troy says, “The Twitter never stops!”

 

Resources:

The Price of Freedom: America at War

http://amhistory.si.edu/militaryhistory/exhibition/flash.html

 

Ultimate Guide to Free Resources

You may not realize it, but if you use Google to find an image and then use it in a project, you’re likely breaking the law. Unless you’ve been given permission to use the image by its creator, then you cannot legally or ethically use it.

Happily, there’s an easy way to find images on Google that you can use, plus a slew of other sources for high-quality images that won’t cost you a dime—either up front or later on in a lawsuit.

http://www.macworld.com/article/2899637/the-ultimate-guide-to-finding-free-legal-images-online.html

Kahoot

A GAME-BASED CLASSROOM RESPONSE SYSTEM

FOR SCHOOLS, UNIVERSITIES, & BUSINESSES

https://getkahoot.com/

https://kahoot.it

Tagboard

Follow hashtags across multiple platforms.

https://tagboard.com/

 

Tchat.io

Best way to use Twitter at a conference

http://www.tchat.io/

Web Spotlight:

Learnteria

Aiming to be the Yelp! of education.

https://learnteria.com/

Random Thoughts . . .

Personal Web Site

Moodle Presentation at MACUL

 

MSM 300:  Firefox says, “Hello!” to a Teacher’s Day.

Jokes You Can Use:

A man got hit in the head with a can of Coke, but he was alright because it was a soft drink.

 

A man gets pulled over by the police for speeding. The cop walks up to the car and says to the driver, “Sir, did you know that you were going 60 miles an hour?” The driver says, “Officer, there is no way I could have been going 60 miles an hour!” The cop says, “Really! Why is that? The driver replies,” I could not have been going 60 miles an hour because I’ve only been out driving for 25 minutes.”

 

Q: What do you call a line of rabbits walking backwards?

A: A receding hairline!

 

Officer to driver going the wrong way up a one way street. “And where do you think you are going?”

Driver: – “I’m not sure, but I must be late as everyone else is coming back.”

 

Did you hear about the red ship and the blue ship that collided?

The survivors were marooned.

A fellow was telling his buddies that in the evenings, he goes out and drinks and carries on with women, but always goes back home by 8:00 O’clock.

He describes it as “sin till 8 ting”

 

Eileen Award:

  • Twitter: Keith O’Neil, Rob Actis

 

Advisory:

Dan Pink Videos

A variety of videos.

https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLivjPDlt6ApSiVoVJVXswIQYCfEj-UEDR

 

Diets Around the World

15 people and the food they eat for a day.

http://twentytwowords.com/diets-from-around-the-world/

 

Middle School Science Minute

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

Deforestation

 

I was recently reading the January, 2015 issue of “Science Scope,” a magazine written for middle school science teachers, published by the National Science Teachers Association.

 

In this issue, I read an article written by Robert Liftig, Adjunct Professor, Department of Ethics, Fairfield University, Fairfield, Connecticut.  He shares his thoughts on deforestation and how we can instill in our students a sense of collective responsibility to work toward conservation, restoration, and preservation of species, habitats, and resources.

http://k12science.net/Podcast/Podcast/Entries/2015/2/13_Middle_School_Science_Minute-Deforestation.html

 

From the Twitterverse:

Melinda D. Anderson ‏@mdawriter

Debunked: Those delicious-looking photos of school lunches from around the world are totally fake http://www.motherjones.com/tom-philpott/2015/02/school-lunch-around-the-world-photos …

WeAreTeachers ‏@WeAreTeachers

Test prep tips for vocabulary plus flash-card templates! http://ow.ly/Jrv6h  #30daysvocab #edchat

Scorebusters ‏@Scorebusters

David Knuffke: How Do Other Nations, States Evaluate Their Teachers? http://dianeravitch.net/2015/02/25/david-knuffke-how-do-other-nations-states-evaluate-their-teachers/ … @DianeRavitch
https://medium.com/@davidknuffke/who-rates-teachers-this-way-e1758db02655

Yong Zhao ‏@YongZhaoUO

New Research Shows That Teaching Preschoolers More and More, at Ever-Younger Ages, May Backfire http://www.slate.com/articles/double_x/doublex/2011/03/why_preschool_shouldnt_be_like_school.html?wpsrc=sh_all_dt_tw_top … via @slate

MiddleWeb ‏@middleweb

MWSmartBrief: Curr Dev in CC states; 58 Reasons for teachers to write; making personal connections w/Ss. http://r.smartbrief.com/resp/gyxCCdwpfbCNpbxeCidWgdCicNhDVG?format=standard … @amle @naesp

Secondary Principals ‏@massp

Can students opt-out of standardized testing? @LuskAlbertson | Michigan Association of Secondary School Principals http://mymassp.com/content/opting_out_standardized_testing …

#mschat every Thursday at 8:00 pm Eastern Standard Time.  And as Troy says, “The Twitter never stops!”

 

Strategies:

9 Guaranteed Ways To Become A Public Speaking Master

http://www.lifehack.org/articles/work/9-guaranteed-ways-become-public-speaking-master.html

http://www.friedtechnology.com/2014/12/updated-student-choice-continuum.html

Movie Trailer Listening Lessons

I think movie trailers are an amazingly powerful media for use in the classroom. They are dramatic, motivating and short enough for intensive practice and assuring that students don’t get bored/lost.

Here’s one really easy and standard way to use movie trailers in your classroom.  Took me all of 10 minutes to put this lesson together – honestly!”

http://ddeubel.edublogs.org/2015/02/19/movie-trailer-listening-lessons/

 

Resources:

FireFox “Hello”

As easy as saying hello

Meet Firefox Hello, the easiest way to connect for free over video with anyone, anywhere.

https://www.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/hello/

 

WeVideo

“WeVideo is the leading online video creation platform for video editing, collaboration, and sharing across any device.”

Use WeVideo on all devices – mobile, tablets, laptops, Chromebooks & desktop computers. Students can create from computers both at school and at home … as well as on their smartphone from anywhere.

https://www.wevideo.com/

A Teacher’s Day

A teachers day is like no others. Having worked in the business world prior to going into teaching I understand this but doubt few who have never taught can imagine just how different a teachers day is to that in any other industry.

http://sweattoinspire.com/2015/02/23/a-teachers-day/

Google Science Fair

Due: May 19.

https://www.googlesciencefair.com/en/

https://www.googlesciencefair.com/en/how-to-enter?id=insert_how-to-enter_1

 

Web Spotlight:

Google Docs Update

Better Headers/Footers. Better page numbering.

https://plus.google.com/+GoogleDocs/posts/TovBH2EPCpL

 

Why would students feel valued at school?

Without having seen the exact survey questions, here are some quick reactions Dr. McLeod has to these data…

  • Why on earth would students say they feel valued at school? In most schools, students are told what to do nearly every minute of every school day, are generally treated as passive recipients of whatever adults foist on them, have their thoughts and opinions routinely and blatantly ignored or dismissed when it comes to day-to-day operations, and are punished whenever they deviate from organizational compliance structures. The number of schools in which students have significant input into things that actually matter is miniscule. But, hey, it’s all about the kids and we care.
  • Kids are bored. Gallup boredom data reinforce the Quaglia boredom data, as do the tidal waves of anecdotes from anyone you want to ask about their school experience. But we don’t seem to care enough to do anything about it.
  • Everyone’s a learner, everyone’s a teacher. Online we exist within interconnected, interdependent webs of learning and teaching. But not in school.

http://dangerouslyirrelevant.org/2015/02/why-would-students-feel-valued-at-school.html

 

Random Thoughts . . .

Personal Web Site

 

MSM 299: Silly Pie Charts, Bein’ a Rube-ric, and Advisory, Advisory, Advisory!!

MSM 299: Silly Pie Charts, Bein’ a Rube-ric, and Advisory, Advisory, Advisory!!

Jokes You Can Use:

The teacher said; “Take a pencil and paper, and write an essay with the title ‘If I Were a Millionaire.’” Everyone but Joe, who leaned back with arms folded, began to write feverishly.

“What’s the matter,” the teacher asked. “Why don’t you begin?”

“I’m waiting for my secretary,” Joe replied.

What's Wrong with this picture?

What’s wrong with this picture?

Toilet Sign

Well, this narrows it down!

 

After a hard day of drilling, the drill sergeant let the troops go. “All right, you idiots, report to the mess hall.” Everybody walked away, sweating and their heads down, thankful for the end of the hard day. Only one private remained. He looked at the officer and sincerely said, “Boy, there sure were a lot of them, huh, serge.”

 

There once was a dog named Tax. I opened the door and income Tax.

 

 

Eileen Award:

  • Twitter: Luke Iorio
  • Google+:  Jennifer Lipson
  • Email:  Sierra Bishop

 

Advisory:

3D Drawing

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4pabS7JpDPo

 

10 Famous Failures Who Turned Out OK

http://www.lifehack.org/articles/communication/10-famous-failures-that-will-inspire-you-success.html

 

Neuroplasticity

Watch video. Have students reflect on how they have changed a habit. Have each student develop a list of habits that they would like change/develop. Then have them pick one habit to actually change and develop a plan.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ELpfYCZa87g

 

Stacked Ball Drop

Replicate in your school.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2UHS883_P60#t=22

 

The 60 Silliest Pie Charts

http://twentytwowords.com/ultimate-list-of-funny-pie-charts/

 

Kids try breakfast from around the world

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JGjeaHe7GkY#t=13

 

Middle School Science Minute

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

HAND AND POWER TOOL SAFETY

 

I was recently reading the December, 2014 issue of “Science Scope,” a magazine written for middle school science teachers, published by the National Science Teachers Association.

 

In this issue, I read an article entitled “Scope on Safety” which includes the Science Safety Question of the Month.  The article is written by Ken Roy, Director of Environmental Science for the Glastonbury, Connecticut Public Schools.  This month’s question is:

“I have little experience in working with hand and power tools but have been assigned a STEM class that requires their use.  Is there a resource available to help me review hand- and power-tool safety?”

 

http://k12science.net/Podcast/Podcast/Entries/2015/1/23_Middle_School_Science_Minute-Hand_and_Power_Tool_Safety.html

 

From the Twitterverse:

John Spencer ‏@edrethink

Q2: What are things that teachers can do to get through the February slump? #randomedchat (btw you can’t answer “drink whiskey”)

Jennie Magiera ‏@MsMagiera

YouTube to launch kid-friendly Android app on Feb. 23 http://mashable.com/2015/02/20/youtube-kids-android/#:eyJzIjoidCIsImkiOiJfN3B2eWNydWQyaTZ4ZjVmZyJ9 … via @mashable

Diane Ravitch ‏@DianeRavitch

Indiana Superintendent to Parents: Home-School Your Children During Testing Week http://wp.me/p2odLa-9FU

Education Nation ‏@educationnation

Cabin Fever? Activities to Keep Kids Busy While Stuck Indoors via @TODAYshow & the Parent Toolkit

WBEZeducation ‏@WBEZeducation

PARCC arrives at the South Side school we’re visiting today. Principal: I wonder if that means we’re taking it.

PARCC Testing

Terie Engelbrecht ‏@mrsebiology

How I Learned Differentiation http://j.mp/1AffTpq  Nice thoughts on what true differentiation is. #edchat

#mschat every Thursday at 8:00 pm Eastern Standard Time.  And as Troy says, “The Twitter never stops!”

 

Strategies:

Sabermetrics of Effort

The fundamental premise of Moneyball is that the labor market of sports is inefficient, and that many teams systematically undervalue particular athletic skills that help them win. While these skills are often subtle – and the players that possess them tend to toil in obscurity – they can be identified using sophisticated statistical techniques, aka sabermetrics. Home runs are fun. On-base percentage is crucial.

Old-fashioned effort just might be the next on-base percentage.

The wisdom of the moneyball strategy is no longer controversial. It’s why the A’s almost always outperform their payroll,

However, the triumph of moneyball creates a paradox, since its success depends on the very market inefficiencies it exposes. The end result is a relentless search for new undervalued skills, those hidden talents that nobody else seems to appreciate. At least not yet.

One study found that baseball players significantly improved their performance in the final year of their contracts, just before entering free-agency. (Another study found a similar trend among NBA players.) What explained this improvement? Effort. Hustle. Blood, sweat and tears. The players wanted a big contract, so they worked harder.

…despite the obvious impact of effort, it’s surprisingly hard to isolate as a variable of athletic performance. Weimer and Wicker set out to fix this oversight. Using data gathered from three seasons and 1514 games of the Bundesliga – the premier soccer league in Germany – the economists attempted to measure individual effort as a variable of player performance,

If a player runs too little during a game, it’s not because his body gives out – it’s because his head doesn’t want to.

So did these differences in levels of effort matter? The answer is an emphatic yes: teams with players that run longer distances are more likely to win the game,

As the economists note, “teams where some players run a lot while others are relatively lazy have a higher winning probability.”

There is a larger lesson here, which is that our obsession with measuring talent has led us to neglect the measurement of effort. This is a blind spot that extends far beyond the realm of professional sports.

Maximum tests are high-stakes assessments that try to measure a person’s peak level of performance. Think here of the SAT, or the NFL Combine, or all those standardized tests we give to our kids. Because these tests are relatively short, we assume people are motivated enough to put in the effort while they’re being measured. As a result, maximum tests are good at quantifying individual talent, whether it’s scholastic aptitude or speed in the 40-yard dash.

Unfortunately, the brevity of maximum tests means they are not very good at predicting future levels of effort. Sackett has demonstrated this by comparing the results from maximum tests to field studies of typical performance, which is a measure of how people perform when they are not being tested.

As Sackett came to discover, the correlation between these two assessments is often surprisingly low: the same people identified as the best by a maximum test often unperformed according to the measure of typical performance, and vice versa.

What accounts for the mismatch between maximum tests and typical performance? One explanation is that, while maximum tests are good at measuring talent, typical performance is about talent plus effort.

In the real world, you can’t assume people are always motivated to try their hardest. You can’t assume they are always striving to do their best. Clocking someone in a sprint won’t tell you if he or she has the nerve to run a marathon, or even 12 kilometers in a soccer match.

With any luck, these sabermetric innovations will trickle down to education, which is still mired in maximum high-stakes tests that fail to directly measure or improve the levels of effort put forth by students.

After all, those teams with the hardest workers (and not just the most talented ones) significantly increase their odds of winning.

http://www.jonahlehrer.com/blog/2015/2/13/the-sabermetrics-of-effort

 

Resources:

New Paired Reading

http://www.readworks.org/rw/new-paired-texts-question-sets

 

If You Teach At-Risk Kids, You Need This Book (Hint: It’s not Ruby Payne)

Culturally Responsive Teaching and The Brain is not just a “bag of tricks” teachers can pull from to make their at-risk students do better. It is a thoughtful, holistic, brain-based approach to teaching the whole child.”

http://www.cultofpedagogy.com/closing-achievement-gap-hammond/

 

 

Rubrics

  • Holistic Rubrics
  • Analytic Rubrics
  • Single-Point Rubrics

http://www.cultofpedagogy.com/holistic-analytic-single-point-rubrics/

 

Quizzity

http://david-peter.de/quizzity/

 

Web Spotlight:

Is Your First Grader College Ready?

Matriculation is years away for the Class of 2030, but the first graders in Kelli Rigo’s class at Johnsonville Elementary School in rural Harnett County, N.C., already have campuses picked out. Three have chosen West Point and one Harvard. In a writing assignment, the children will share their choice and what career they would pursue afterward. The future Harvard applicant wants to be a doctor. She can’t wait to get to Cambridge because “my mom never lets me go anywhere.” The mock applications they’ve filled out are stapled to the bulletin board.

“It’s sort of like, if you want your kids to be in the Olympics or to have the chance to be in the Olympics,” said Wendy Segal, a tutor and college planner in Westchester County, N.Y., “you don’t wait until your kid is 17 and say, ‘My kid really loves ice skating.’ You start when they are 5 or 6.”

What do sixth graders do on a tour?

If there’s one thing about college that children struggle to grasp, it’s sleeping at school — with strangers.

Young children simply cannot understand what college is, according to Marcy Guddemi, executive director of the Gesell Institute of Child Development. “You may as well be talking about Mars. It’s totally meaningless.”

http://www.nytimes.com/2015/02/08/education/edlife/is-your-first-grader-college-ready.html

 

Success in the New Economy

Citrus College supported the production of “Success in the New Economy” to help a broader audience begin to understand preparation today for tomorrow’s labor market realities. The end result is a compelling case for students to explore career choices early, make informed decisions when declaring their college education goal, and to consider technical skill acquisition, real-world application and academics (career technical programs) in tandem with a classic education. This balanced approach to life and learning results in a well-educated and employed workforce.

Leveraging his expertise in higher education and Career & Technical Education, Kevin Fleming adapted conference presentations and research to create this data-driven explanation. And award winning film creator and producer Brian Y. Marsh brought the data to life through animation.

The complete transcription of the video with data references is available here: http://www.citruscollege.edu/academics/cte/Documents/Success-in-the-New-Economy.pdf

Success in the New Economy from Brian Y. Marsh on Vimeo.

https://vimeo.com/67277269

 

Random Thoughts . . .

Personal Web Site

MSM 296:  Doin’ Some Reading.  Not Much, Just a Spritz!

MSM 296:  Doin’ Some Reading.  Not Much, Just a Spritz!

Jokes You Can Use:

 

Q: Why do little melons have to have big weddings?

A: Because they “cantelope.”

 

It was an extremely rough English Channel crossing from Weymouth to Jersey, and one wretched green-faced passenger was hugging the rail when a steward approached him.

“Lunch, sir?” asked the tactless steward.

“No, thanks,” groaned the passenger. “Just throw it overboard and save me the trouble…

This door opens outwards please do not stand directly in front of doors. (Also in braille).
This door opens outwards please do not stand directly in front of doors. (Also in braille).

 

It’s hard to see, but the same thing is written in Braille at the bottom of the sign.  The Law of Unintended Consequences just waiting to happen here . . .

Paraprosdokians

http://www.economicnoise.com/2011/09/05/182-paraprosdokians/

Eileen Award:

  • iTunes:  BWPennyS

 

Advisory:

Nice Guys Finish First

*Warning, Tit for Tat is a phrase that is used.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rr6lsTgZKAQ

Middle School Science Minute

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

 

Baking Bread

I was recently reading the November, 2014 issue of “Science Scope,” a magazine written for middle school science teachers, published by the National Science Teachers Association.

In this issue, I read an article entitled “Scope on Safety” which includes the Science Safety Question of the Month.  The article is written by Ken Roy, Director of Environmental Science for the Glastonbury, Connecticut Public Schools.  This month’s question is:

“I am having students bake bread and test factors that affect how it rises.  Can students eat the bread after they have completed the activity?”

http://k12science.net/Podcast/Podcast/Entries/2015/1/6_Middle_School_Science_Minute-Baking_Bread.html

 

 

From the Twitterverse:

Skype Classroom ‏@SkypeClassroomTeachers, bring the magic of @BBC’s Enchanted Kingdom into your classroom with Skype! http://sk.ype.ms/iwfO1Y  #projectbasedlearning
Alice Browning ‏@atbrowningHeadbandz en français! @THS_UpperSchool @AATFrench

FrenchHeadbanz

Jonathan Byrne ‏@jbteachermanRolls Royce: Phantom Menace #DriveThruMovieTitle #freep

Alpha Romeo and Juliet #DriveThruMovieTitle #freep

Flight of the Navigator #DriveThruMovieTitle #freep

Mercedes Benz-Hur #DriveThruMovieTitle #freep

A Land Rover Before Time #DriveThruMovieTitle #freep

Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Film Festival #DriveThruMovieTitle #cheating

(Harrison Ford) Escape From Alcatraz #DriveThruMovieTitle #freep

Scott McLeod ‏@mcleodGrading New York Teachers – When the Formulas Lie | @nytimes http://nyti.ms/1yUqfvZ
Monte Tatom retweeted APPS and EDTECH @AppsEdTech  ·  Jan 21

A list of 27 teacher-reviewed #FETC #edtech tools on @EdShelf http://ow.ly/HIPMR  #FETC15 #satchat #FETC2015 #edchat

#mschat every Thursday at 8:00 pm Eastern Standard Time.  And as Troy says, “The Twitter never stops!”

 

Follow Up:

When we share “MY NASA DATA” and go to the Live Action Server (LAS), teachers and students can access information at a basic, intermediate, and advanced level:

http://mynasadata.larc.nasa.gov/live-access-server/

When we share “Skeptical Science” with teachers, the information in things like the “Climate Myths” provides science at a basic, intermediate, and advanced level:

http://www.skepticalscience.com/climate-change-little-ice-age-medieval-warm-period.htm

or

http://www.skepticalscience.com/solar-activity-sunspots-global-warming.htm

These are great sites, but they give teachers the opportunity to “tailor” the use of data to the appropriate needs of the students.

 

 

Strategies:

 

Spritz

Spritz is the best way to engage with content in the digital age.

We deliver a focused reading experience and help readers get their

content faster, with less effort and across any device or screen size.

http://www.spritzinc.com/where-can-i-experience-spritz/

Let the kids have fun:

http://www.lucymovie.com/spritz/

 

Readsy

Readsy is a tool to help you skim large amounts of text by focusing your eyes on one word at a time without having to move them. It is powered by Spritz – you can read more about it here. To register for higher speeds, click “Login” on the top right of the Spritz box, and create an account with Spritz.

Akash Jain is a 3rd year undergraduate at Princeton University majoring in Computer Science. The code for the site is hosted on GitHub here and the logo was designed by the talented Matteo Kruijssen.

http://www.readsy.co/

 

 

Spreeder

Spreeder.com is a free online speed reading software designed to improve your reading speed and comprehension.

Spreeder is a free service provided by 7-Speed-ReadingTM.

http://www.spreeder.com/

Resources:

Every Kid Needs a Hero

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SFnMTHhKdkw

 

Introduction to Forgotten Books

“WELCOME to Forgotten Books, the world’s largest online library with 484,473 books available on demand. This website has been designed using the very latest technologies to provide our members with many features never seen before.

Our flagship technology Intelligent Bookshelf™ is a world leader in book recommendation and uses artificial intelligence to determine exactly the books you’d most like to read from our vast library.

More than just books; Forgotten Books also features advanced analytical data. Every single word, page and image inside each and every one of our 484,473 books have been analyzed, indexed and classified. With this valuable research information, we can tell you virtually anything about anything, from the most commonly used word in fiction books published in 1765, to the book with the most images of cats in the first 20 pages. Or perhaps some more useful information, such as a list of every word in the English language in order of usage frequency.”

 
Offers Free and Paid memberships. Free membership comes with a book a day (or not, you can skip that).

http://www.forgottenbooks.com/

 

Web Spotlight:

Police Investigate Family for Letting Their Kids Walk Home Alone. Parents, We All Need to Fight Back.

Danielle and Alexander Meitiv explicitly ally themselves with the “free range” parenting movement, which believes that children have to take calculated risks in order to learn to be self-reliant.

http://www.slate.com/blogs/xx_factor/2015/01/16/maryland_parents_investigated_by_the_police_for_letting_their_kids_walk.html

http://www.washingtonpost.com/local/education/maryland-couple-want-free-range-kids-but-not-all-do/2015/01/14/d406c0be-9c0f-11e4-bcfb-059ec7a93ddc_story.html

 

Random Thoughts . . .

Personal Web Site

 

 

MSM 292:  Riddle Me This Sherlock, We’re done for this year.  

Jokes You Can Use:

An elderly woman walked into the local country church. The friendly usher greeted her at the door and helped her up the flight of steps. “Where would you like to sit?” he asked politely.

 

“The front row please.” she answered.

“You really don’t want to do that”, the usher said. “The pastor is really boring.”

“Do you happen to know who I am?” the woman inquired. “No.” he said.

“I’m the pastor’s mother,” she replied indignantly.

“Do you know who I am?” he asked.

“No.” she said.

“Good,” he answered

 

Why did the 3-legged dog go back to Dodge City?

To see who shot his “paw.”

 

Q: An electric train is traveling South and the wind is blowing East. Which way is the smoke blowing?

A: There is no smoke it’s an electric train.

 

It was the end of the school year, and a kindergarten teacher was receiving gifts from her pupils. The florist’s son handed her a gift. She shook it, held it overhead, and said, “I bet I know what it is. Flowers.” “That’s right!” the boy said, “But, how did you know?” “Oh, just a wild guess,” she said. The next pupil was the sweet shop owner’s daughter. The teacher held her gift overhead, shook it, and said, “I bet I can guess what it is. A box of sweets.” “That’s right, but how did you know?” asked the girl. “Oh, just a wild guess,” said the teacher. The next gift was from the son of the liquor store owner. The teacher held the package overhead, but it was leaking. She touched a drop off the leakage with her finger and put it to her tongue. “Is it wine?” she asked. “No,” the boy replied, with some excitement. The teacher repeated the process, tasting a larger drop of the leakage. “Is it champagne?” she asked. “No,” the boy replied, with more excitement. The teacher took one more big taste before declaring, “I give up, what is it?” With great glee, the boy replied, “It’s a puppy!” SURPRISE!

 

Eileen Award:

  • Twitter: Sandy Cameli, Leigh Ann Eck, Todd Bloch
  • Email: Camilla Elliot

 

Advisory:

Riddles

http://www.lifehack.org/articles/communication/answer-these-riddles-and-you-will-find-the-answers-life.html

 

House Misconceptions

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xF62VeRsjvU

 

How to Build your Confidence

http://lifehacker.com/how-to-develop-your-charisma-and-become-more-likable-1673988208

 

How to Read People Like Sherlock Holmes

http://www.bakadesuyo.com/2014/12/how-to-read-people/

 

Great Questions

http://storycorps.org/great-questions/

 

 

Middle School Science Minute

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

 

Hazardous Glues

 

I was recently reading the October, 2014 issue of “Science Scope,” a magazine written for middle school science teachers, published by the National Science Teachers Association.

 

In this issue, I read an article entitled “Scope on Safety,” written by Ken Roy, Director of Environmental Health and Safety for the Glastonbury Public Schools in Glastonbury, CT. Within this article is the “Question of the Month.”  This month’s question is, “Are some glues hazardous to use?”

 

BTW, I liked the comment on podcasting being the new radio.  It has been like that for me, for quite a while.  I hardly ever listen to radio in the car, it is always podcasts.  My son has finally jumped on the bandwagon.  It was funny hearing his share items he heard on a podcast, with me the other day.  

 

Have a great Christmas,

Dave

 

 

From the Twitterverse:

Rovy Branon ‏@rovybranoniPads are Replacing Waiters in Airport Restaurants | Digital Trends
Scholastic Teachers ‏@ScholasticTeachWe applaud these 9 celebrities who are self-proclaimed #booknerds & champions of #literacy! #sharepossible
Mary Appleget ‏@teachtothebrainYep…the brain likes that 🙂 TY!“@Fashions_life: A good laugh and a long sleep are the two best cures for anything. ”
TED Talks ‏@TEDTalks7 TED Talks to watch on your holiday travels: http://t.ted.com/KCB4fco
Silke Yardley ‏@SilkeYardley@Joe_Mazza: Latest Post – Principals’ 15 Point Winter Break Inspection  http://www.leadlearner.com/principals-15-point-winter-break-inspection/
Collette Reynolds ‏@ColletteRIt made me laugh! #christmas #funny

Christmas Group Therapy

Scott McLeod ‏@mcleodComparison Chart: Backchannel / Informal Assessment Tools | @rmbyrne
Larry Ferlazzo ‏@LarryferlazzoStatistic Of The Day: The Myth Of Data-Driven Instruction http://larryferlazzo.edublogs.org/2014/12/27/statistic-of-the-day-the-myth-of-data-driven-instruction/ …

Ian Jukes ‏@ijukes Cape Town, South AfricaThe 27 Characteristics Of Highly Effective Teachers http://www.edudemic.com/2013/06/the-27-characteristics-of-highly-effective-teachers/ …

27 Ways to be an Effective Classroom Teacher
#mschat every Thursday at 8:00 pm Eastern Standard Time.  And as Troy says, “The Twitter never stops!”

 

Strategies:

Travel by Drone

http://travelbydrone.com/

 

Teach using graphics

http://www.coolcatteacher.com/links/how-to-write-a-letter/

 

Digital Workstations

As children rotate through a series of stations throughout the week, I am free to work with small groups on differentiated needs, offering personalized instruction. In a way, I’ve cloned myself. Now, there are two of me teaching at the same time!

http://www.scholastic.com/teachers/top-teaching/2013/12/how-set-digital-workstations

 

Resources:

How It Happens

Understand the science behind the headlines in How It Happens, which combines simple explanation and elegant animation to reveal the inner workings of the physical world.

http://www.nytimes.com/video/how-it-happens/

 

 

15 Uses for a Swivl

http://www.coolcatteacher.com/15-uses-swivl/

 

3 Timers

http://www.freetech4teachers.com/2014/12/three-handy-timer-tools-for-teachers.html#.VJ7GosAA

 

 

Word Usage Through History

Type in a word or two and see a graph of how often it has been used.

http://chronicle.nytlabs.com/?keyword=civil%20rights

https://books.google.com/ngrams

Web Spotlight:


29 Ways to Stay Creative

Random Thoughts . . .

 

Happy New Year!!  See you next year!

 

Personal Web Site

 

 

 

MSM 290: The Eleven, Twelve, Thirteen, Fourteen Show.

 

Jokes You Can Use:

An optometrist was instructing a new employee on how to charge a customer. “As you are fitting her glasses, if she asks how much they cost, you say ‘$150.’ “If her eyes don’t flutter, say, ‘For the frames. The lenses will be $100.’ “If her eyes still don’t flutter, you add, ‘Each.’”

 

An out-of-towner drove his car into a ditch in a desolated area. Luckily, a local farmer came to help with his big strong horse named Buddy.

He hitched Buddy up to the car and yelled, “Pull, Nellie, pull!” Buddy didn’t move.

Then the farmer hollered, “Pull, Buster, pull!” Buddy didn’t respond.

Once more the farmer commanded, “Pull, Coco, pull!” Nothing.

Then the farmer nonchalantly said, “Pull, Buddy, pull!” And the horse easily dragged the car out of the ditch.

The motorist was most appreciative and very curious. He asked the farmer why he called his horse by the wrong name three times.

The farmer said, “Oh, Buddy is blind and if he thought he was the only one pulling, he wouldn’t even try!”

 

A motorist was unknowingly caught in an automated speed trap that measured his speed using radar and photographed his car. He later received in the mail a ticket for $40 and a photo of his car. Instead of payment, he sent the police department a photograph of $40. Several days later, he received a letter from the police that contained another picture, this time of handcuffs. He immediately mailed in his $40.

 

 

Eileen Award:

 

  • Twitter: Mike Reading, Jason Katcher, Jenna Dixon, Brandon Ouellette, Chris Wherley
  • Email: Sierra Bishop

 

Advisory:

 

Choice

Is the American obsession with individual freedom really such a great idea? What other cultures know about how to make good choices.

http://ideas.ted.com/2014/10/21/how-cultures-around-the-world-make-decisions/

 

36 Life Changing Poems

http://www.buzzfeed.com/krystieyandoli/life-changing-poems-everyone-should-read

 

How to fold the world record paper airplane

How to fold the world record paper airplane. John Collins design, Suzanne, broke the Guinness World Record for distance in 2012. The New World Champion Paper Airplane Book contains the world record paper airplane design and instructions.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EDiC9iMcWTc&app=desktop

 

5 Steps to Internet Safety

5 Steps to Internet Safety

http://www.docstoc.com/docs/12135939/5%20Steps%20to%20Internet%20Safety

 

 

Mr. Farrer – you inspire us.

Bruce would be the first person to tell you he’s just your regular, average teacher. More than 20 years after taking his class, his students will wholeheartedly tell you otherwise. We can all learn something from Mr. Farrer. His ability to leave such a profound and long-lasting impression is truly something to be admired. We hope his story is as inspiring to you as it is to us. Thank you, Bruce.

http://www.aboveandbeyond.ca/bruce-teacher-letters-students/

 

How juries are fooled

Oxford mathematician Peter Donnelly reveals the common mistakes humans make in interpreting statistics — and the devastating impact these errors can have on the outcome of criminal trials.

http://www.ted.com/talks/peter_donnelly_shows_how_stats_fool_juries?language=en

Middle School Science Minute

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

 

Model Synergy

 

I was recently reading the October, 2014 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, “Model Synergy,” written by David Kujawski. In the article, he combines classic modeling practices and digital simulations to augment deeper conceptual understanding.

http://k12science.net/Podcast/Podcast/Entries/2014/11/7_Middle_School_Science_Minute-Model_Synergy.html

 

 

From the Twitterverse:

Richard Byrne ‏@rmbyrnePresent and Share Your Prezi Presentations Remotely via Free Technology for Teachers – Earlier … http://tinyurl.com/qfmveec
Sue Gorman ‏@sjgormanLesson plan for a flipped classroom with Book Creator – Book Creator app @BookCreatorApp http://www.redjumper.net/blog/2014/12/lesson-plan-for-a-flipped-classroom-with-book-creator/ … #edtech #iosedapp #edchat
Smhearty ‏@SmheartyThe evolve-D(earborn) theme keeps getting better! Great work Chris. You can check it out for FREE #moodle http://buff.ly/1A1v9DC
Smhearty @Smhearty  ·  Dec 8Richard Byrne posts great stuff. iPad Apps to create visual representations. http://buff.ly/1G5cfiL  #teach
Luann ChristensenLee ‏@stardiverrUsing student test scores to evaluate teacher prep programs; a lesson in tort law for Arne. http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/answer-sheet/wp/2014/12/02/the-concept-education-secretary-duncan-has-entirely-missed/ …
Lindsay Nowak ‏@LindsNowak Dec 10#engagemath approaching problem solving from a different angle creates a deeper understanding! @BergsEyeView, enjoy!

Ian Jukes ‏@ijukes  Durban8 TED Talks That Promote Creativity http://www.eschoolnews.com/2014/12/10/december-ted-creativity-893/print/ … https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EjSuaeVfE9I …
Christopher Weiss ‏@ChrisWeissCTLove it!“@ipadqueen2012: @bradmcurrie Support group for the amount of ed acronyms thrown down the pipeline #satchat

Karen Bosch ‏@karlybComic Book app free today only! Great app to use with students for digital storytelling! #iosedapp #ADEdu
Karen Bosch ‏@karlybFun Free Creative Christmas apps! http://blogs.southfieldchristian.org/elemapptitude/free-christmas-apps-for-creativity/ … #iosedapp #ipaded
#mschat every Thursday at 8:00 pm Eastern Standard Time.  And as Troy says, “The Twitter never stops!”

 

Strategies:

The Real Revolution in Online Education Isn’t MOOCs

Data is confirming what we already know: recruiting is an imprecise activity, and degrees don’t communicate much about a candidate’s potential and fit. Employers need to know what a student knows and can do.

 

Even the latest hoopla around massive open online courses (MOOCs) amounts to more of the same: academics designing courses that correspond with their own interests rather than the needs of the workforce, but now doing it online.

It’s called online competency-based education, and it’s going to revolutionize the workforce.

Online competency-based education is the key to filling in the skills gaps in the workforce.

They include measurable learning objectives that empower students: this person can apply financial principles to solve business problems;

Competencies themselves are nothing new. There are schools that have been delivering competency-based education offline for decades, but without a technological enabler, offline programs haven’t been able to take full advantage of what competencies have to offer.

The key distinction is the modularization of learning.

Here’s why business leaders should care: the resulting stackable credential reveals identifiable skillsets and dispositions that mean something to an employer. As opposed to the black box of the diploma, competencies lead to a more transparent system that highlights student-learning outcomes.

College transcripts reveal very little about what a student knows and can do. An employer never fully knows what it means if a student got a B+ in Social Anthropology or a C- in Geology.

Most colleges measure learning in credit hours, meaning that they’re very good at telling you how long a student sat in a particular class — not what the student actually learned.

Competency-based learning flips this on its head and centers on mastery of a subject regardless of the time it takes to get there. A student cannot move on until demonstrating fluency in each competency.

Major companies like The Gap, Partners Healthcare, McDonald’s, FedEx, ConAgra Foods, Delta Dental, Kawasaki, Oakley, American Hyundai, and Blizzard are just a few of the growing number of companies diving into competencies by partnering with institutions such as Brandman, CfA, and Patten.

https://hbr.org/2014/10/the-real-revolution-in-online-education-isnt-moocs/

 

 

Resources:

Clarisketch

from: Richard Byrne

Clarisketch allows you to add your voice and drawings to pictures or to a blank canvas. While you are talking about your picture you can draw on it to highlight sections of it. Completed projects are shared as links to the video file hosted on Clarisketch. You can share the link to your Clarisketch video and have it play on nearly any device that has a web browser.

Available for Android and as a Chrome App.

http://www.freetech4teachers.com/2014/10/create-instructional-videos-on-your.html#.VIxYEorF-PN

https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.handlix.clarisketch&hl=en

 

200 Free Kids Educational Resources: Video Lessons, Apps, Books, Websites & More

This collection provides a list of free educational resources for K-12 students (kindergarten through high school students) and their parents and teachers. It features free video lessons/tutorials; free mobile apps; free audiobooks, ebooks and textbooks; quality YouTube channels; free foreign language lessons; test prep materials; and free web resources in academic subjects like literature, history, science and computing. This newly-released list is a work in progress.

http://www.openculture.com/free_k-12_educational_resources

 

Flubaroo

Flubaroo is a free tool that helps you quickly grade multiple-choice or fill-in-blank assignments.

I designed it for my own classroom, and want to share it with other teachers… for free!

More than just a grading tool, Flubaroo also:

  • Computes average assignment score.
  • Computes average score per question, and flags low-scoring questions.
  • Shows you a grade distribution graph.
  • Gives you the option to email each student their grade, and an answer key.
  • Lets you send individualized feedback to each student.

http://www.flubaroo.com/

 

Google Drawings – Templates

Below are Google Drawings to be used as fill-in templates or pre-made activities for graphic organizers.  These Drawings are view only so you will need to make your own copy of each (open the Drawing, click File, then click Make a copy). You will then have your own copy of the Drawing that you can edit.

http://www.appsusergroup.org/resources/drawings-templates

 

Introduce Word Problems to Students Sooner, Studies Say

Earlier exposure found to boost learning

By Sarah D. Sparks

If Ms. Smith’s 8th grade algebra class works through 10 word problems in an hour, and Ms. Jones’ class works through 10 equation problems during the same time, which class is likely to learn more math concepts by the end of class?

http://www.edweek.org/ew/articles/2014/11/19/13mathwords.h34.html?cmp=ENL-EU-NEWS2

 

Web Spotlight:

Unsplash

Free, totally free, royalty free, copyright free images.

https://unsplash.com/grid

 

Random Thoughts . . . 

Personal Web Site

 

 

 

MSM 289:  Upcoming Vacation, Back to the Future – Grammar, and Election (Signs)

Jokes You Can Use:

 

A skeleton walks down empty Main Street. Suddenly he sees another skeleton carrying a gravestone. “Hey, what are you doing?” the other skeleton answers “Just strolling”, “Why do have the gravestone, buddy?”, “Because I always want to have some ID”.

 

A crying, three-legged dog walks into a ice cream and says, “I’m looking for the man who shot my paw.”

 

A mother mouse and a baby mouse were walking along, when all of a sudden, a cat attacked them. The mother mouse goes, “BARK!” and the cat runs away.

“See?” says the mother mouse to her baby. “Now do you see why it’s important to learn a foreign language?”

 

During a recent password audit by a company, it was found that an employee was using the following password:

“MickeyMinniePlutoHueyLouieDeweyDonaldGoofySacramento”

When asked why she had such a long password, she rolled her eyes and said: “Hello! It has to be at least 8 characters long and include at least one capital.”

 

Eileen Award:

  • Twitter: Dan Balestrero

 

Advisory:

Halloween Candy

http://mentalfloss.com/sites/default/files/styles/insert_main_wide_image/public/candyx600_103014.png

 

Idioms

http://www.hotelclub.com/blog/idioms-of-the-world-infographic/

 

Back to The Future Grammar

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DXIZoaD8NBg#t=119

 

10 Greatest Changes of the past 1,000 years

http://www.theguardian.com/books/2014/oct/30/10-greatest-changes-of-the-past-1000-years

 

Octothorpe

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HEVOM0VycMI

 

Middle School Science Minute

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

 

 

Lakes Alive!

 

I was recently reading the October, 2014 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, “Lakes Alive,” written by Karla Eitel, Frank Wilhelm, Ross Parsons, and Jan Eitel. In the article, the authors explain how they used the 5E Learning Cycle to engage their students in authentic field-data collection of the conditions for life under lake ice in winter.

 

http://k12science.net/Podcast/Podcast/Entries/2014/10/28_Middle_School_Science_Minute-Lakes_Alive!.html

 

 

From the Twitterverse:

EdTechFam ‏@EdTechFamCould This Chicago Teen’s App Put an End to Cyberbullying? http://buff.ly/1szrcjA  #Edtech
Chris Kesler ‏@iamkeslerI’ll go on record and say I agree w/ a lot if this RT: Much of what we believe about teaching science is wrong http://zite.to/1DFPGOJ
Chris Sousa ‏@csousanhCommon Core and the End of History http://m.huffpost.com/us/entry/6050456 … #nhed #ccchat
Apple Plaza ‏@ApplePlazaCops Can Force You To Unlock Phone With Apple Touch ID, Judge Rules http://www.snsanalytics.com/Ultry0
Mark Barnes ‏@markbarnes19Let Them Play: Enhancing Student Motivation Through #Simulations http://goo.gl/fb/sLC1GZ  #pbl #strategy #gaming
Bill McShane ‏@billmcshaneNew post: “Leaving The Church Of Data” http://ift.tt/1DEDzBs
Ian Jukes ‏@ijukes Auckland City25 Things Skilled Learners Do Differently http://www.innovationexcellence.com/blog/2014/10/16/25-things-skilled-learners-do-differently/ …
Mark Hess ‏@MarkHess98The “Really Loves Signs” Party http://chzb.gr/1wGePGO

He really loves signs.
#mschat every Thursday at 8:00 pm Eastern Standard Time.  And as Troy says, “The Twitter never stops!”

 

Strategies:

Counter Factuals

Given the perilous political circumstances in some regions of our world today, understanding what could have been, may in fact help us better understand what might be.

http://www.newrepublic.com/article/119357/altered-pasts-reviewed-cass-r-sunstein

http://www.nytimes.com/2014/10/27/opinion/history-without-hitler.html?smid=nytcore-ipad-share&smprod=nytcore-ipad&_r=0

 

Resources:

6th – 8th Grade Paired Text Question Sets

http://www.readworks.org/rw/6th-8th-grade-paired-text-question-sets

 

 

Yummy Math

http://opencurriculum.org/user/yummymath/

 

 

NASA Library of Space Sounds

http://createdigitalmusic.com/2014/10/nasa-posts-huge-library-space-sounds-youre-free-use/

https://soundcloud.com/nasa

 

 

Socrative Quiz List

One of the nice administrative aspects of Socrative is the ability to share quizzes with colleagues and import quizzes that are shared with you. This morning on the Socrative Facebook page I found their massive spreadsheet of more than 1,000 shared quizzes. The spreadsheet is arranged by subject and grade level. You can find a quiz by opening the filter menu and selecting a subject. Once you have found a quiz you can import it into your Socrative account. Click here for directions on that process.

http://www.freetech4teachers.com/2014/10/access-more-than-1000-socrative-quizzes.html#.VFTVdlPF94U

https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1dtoP6ivVNJtqTw0d6OSKLEq5WlZZ7ak9onjU1kph0Co/edit#gid=20451944

 

Election Day Resource

www.electoral-vote.com

 

 

Teacher & Student Assessment

http://larryferlazzo.edublogs.org/2014/10/26/here-are-forms-my-students-are-using-to-evaluate-themselves-me/

 

 

 

Web Spotlight:

Gifted & Talented…and Afraid

http://eduguideblog.wordpress.com/2014/10/29/gifted-talented-and-afraid/

 

50 Great Teachers: Socrates, The Ancient World’s Teaching Superstar

Today, NPR Ed kicks off a yearlong series: 50 Great Teachers.

We’re starting this celebration of teaching with Socrates, the superstar teacher of the ancient world. He was sentenced to death more than 2,400 years ago for “impiety” and “corrupting” the minds of the youth of Athens.

 

http://www.npr.org/blogs/ed/2014/10/29/359325963/50-great-teachers-socrates-the-ancient-worlds-teaching-superstar

 

Random Thoughts . . .

 

Personal Web Site

eCommunity

 

 

MSM 288:  Search, Forms, Images, PhotoMath- Your Life on Earth.

Jokes You Can Use:

What is the difference between a cat and a comma?

One has the paws before the claws and the other has the clause before the pause.

 

What’s the best or fastest way to tune a banjo?

With wirecutters.

 

What could you call the small rivers that flow into the Nile?

Juveniles.

 

Heard about the math teacher with constipation?  Worked it out with a pencil.

 

A chicken walks into a library, goes up to a librarian and says, “Book book book.” The librarian decides that the chicken wants a book so he gives the chicken a book and the chicken walks away. About ten minutes later the chicken comes back with the book, looking a bit agitated, saying, “Book book book.” The librarian decides the chicken wants another book so he takes the old book back and gives the chicken another book. The chicken walks out the door. Ten minutes later the chicken comes back again, very agitated, saying, “Book book book!” so quickly it almost sounds like one word. The chicken puts the book on the librarian’s desk and looks up – waiting for another book. This time the librarian gives the chicken another book and decides that something weird is happening. He follows the chicken out the door and into the park, all the way to the pond. In the pond is a frog sitting on a lily pad. The chicken gives the book to the the frog, who then says, “Reddit, reddit.”

 

Q: Why did the pig leave the costume party?

A: Because everyone thought he was a boar.

 

Q: How do astronomers organize a party?

A: They planet.

 

Q: What do you call a Filipino contortionist?

A: A Manila folder.

 

 

Eileen Award:

  • Twitter: Trevor Mattea

 

 

Advisory:

 

Reader


Star College athlete’s take on reading.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uPLwQm2y83E#t=132

FROM: http://www.teachingquality.org/content/blogs/bill-ferriter/what-growth-mindset-looks-action

 

 

How to do nothing

…being alone with a screen is not quite being alone at all, so the art of taking joy in one’s own company slips further and further out of reach.

http://www.brainpickings.org/2014/10/24/how-to-do-nothing-with-nobody-all-alone-by-yourself/

 

 

Your Life on Earth

Enter some data to see how the person and the world has changed. This could be done with students or with historical figures.

http://www.bbc.com/earth/story/20141016-your-life-on-earth

Middle School Science Minute

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

 

 

MIDDLE SCHOOL SCIENCE MINUTE-CAUSE AND EFFECT

 

I was recently reading the September, 2014 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 “Editor’s Roundtable: Cause and Effect,” written by Inez Liftig, Editor of Science Scope. In the roundtable, she shares her thoughts and the research which supports that the teaching of cause and effect cannot be an afterthought in instruction; it must be considered an integral part of lesson planning integrated seamlessly with other dimensions of a lesson.

 

 

From the Twitterverse:

Tracie Cain ‏@TracieGCainRT @skimbriel: Use Aurasma to create presentation on historical figure in lieu of living wax museum #edcampdallas #leapesc11
Russel Tarr ‏@russeltarrCSI Web Adventures – Lessons in Forensic Science: http://tinyurl.com/4xrgc5u
Dr. Justin Tarte ‏@justintarteHow to make that redo/retake policy actually work! http://goo.gl/JYHlHD  #edchat #unionrxi #sblchat
Susie Highley ‏@shighleyMy fav resource from #sljsummit so far: @livebinders by @jlgdeborahford Booktalks to go http://www.livebinders.com/play/play?id=1198808 … #tlchat
Paul Bogush ‏@paulbogushDoc for “Assessments that don’t stink” http://goo.gl/l9FsOf  #edcampseacoast
Clay Shirky ‏@cshirkyI just heard little Chinese girls belting Let It Go. It’s their London Calling, a signal flare of rebellion, the global punk of girlhood.
Karen Bosch ‏@karlyb30 Techniques to Quiet a Noisy Class | Edutopia http://www.edutopia.org/blog/30-techniques-quiet-noisy-class-todd-finley …
Real Life English ‏@RealLifeEng[New Podcast] Learn how to express all of your favorite body noises with the newest episode of RealLife Radio. http://ow.ly/Dj8Mg
Jennifer Dorman ‏@cliotechCheck out TED-Ed’s awesome interactive periodic table, with videos for every one of the 118 elements! http://ed.ted.com/periodic-videos  via @TED_ED
Brenda Dyck ‏@bdyck@millerg6: Technology And Video Games Make Kids Think Differently About Old Questions #educ23253 #eder679 http://zite.to/1nROWkF
Sue Waters ‏@suewaters Sep 3For more free image sources check out The Ultimate Directory of Free Image Sources http://www.theedublogger.com/2014/07/09/the-ultimate-directory-of-free-image-sources/ …
#mschat every Thursday at 8:00 pm Eastern Standard Time.  And as Troy says, “The Twitter never stops!”

 

Strategies:

Google Search Tips

Can be useful for students and you.

http://static.googleusercontent.com/media/www.google.com/en//educators/downloads/Tips_Tricks_85x11.pdf

 

 

Resources:

Try the New Add-ons for Google Forms

Applications for Education

The Form Limiter Add-on mentioned above is useful for delivering timed assessments. Form Limiter can also be used to close the form when you a designated number of submissions have been made. That option is useful when you’re using Google Forms to create capped registration lists.

 

gMath for Google Forms is another that teachers will find useful. gMath allows you create and insert graphs and mathematical expressions into your Google Forms. That feature is one that math teachers have wanted for years.

http://www.freetech4teachers.com/2014/10/try-new-add-ons-for-google-forms.html#.VEmfD5PF_5k

 

PhotoMath

PhotoMath reads and solves mathematical expressions by using the camera of your mobile device in real time. It makes math easy and simple by educating users how to solve math problems.

https://photomath.net/

 

ReadWorks

Contains lessons and units K-6. This also includes Standards alignment. Additionally, they have resources that are aligned to grade level/strategy. These can be printed.

http://www.readworks.org/

 

Random Thoughts . . .

Personal Web Site

 

 

 

MSM 287:  If Siri can answer, don’t take the bet or the bribe!

Jokes You Can Use:

 

Everybody should pay their taxes with a smile, said Bob. “I tried it but they wanted cash.”

 

Wife: “There’s trouble with the car. It has water in the carburetor.”

Husband: “Water in the carburetor? That’s ridiculous.”

Wife: “I tell you the car has water in the carburetor.”

Husband: “You don’t even know what a carburetor is. Where’s the car?”

Wife: “In the swimming pool.”

 

A girl walks into a supermarket and asks the clerk,” Can I have a turkey for my grandma?” the clerk responds,” Sorry. We don’t do exchanges.”

 

CHICAGO CUBS VIRUS: Your PC makes frequent mistakes and comes in last in the reviews, but you still love it.

AT&T VIRUS: Every three minutes it tells you what great service you are getting.

MCI VIRUS: Every three minutes it reminds you that you’re paying too much for the AT&T virus.

PBS VIRUS: Your programs stop every few minutes to ask for money.

ELVIS VIRUS: Your computer gets fat, slow and lazy, then self destructs; only to resurface at shopping malls and service stations across rural America.

PAUL REVERE VIRUS: This revolutionary virus does not horse around. It warns you of impending hard disk attack—once if by LAN, twice if by C:>

 

A butcher saw a Lawyer passing by his shop one day, and asked him: Atty., what would you do if a dog came in and stole your meat? Lawyer replied: why? of course, I’ll make the owner pay for it! The butcher said: If that is so, now you owe me $15 because it is your dog. The Lawyer replied: very well, just deduct the $15 from the $25 you owe me for the advice, I’ll collect the remaining $10 the next time I pass by here.

 

 

Eileen Award:

  • Twitter: Jenny Lee, Amy Rugg

 

Advisory:

 

10 Amazing Bets


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A4sapsEXKpQ#t=92

 

 

Middle School Science Minute

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

 

MIDDLE SCHOOL SCIENCE MINUTE-CUSTODIAL SCIENCE TRAINING

 

I was recently reading the September, 2014 issue of “Science Scope,” a magazine written for middle school science teachers, published by the National Science Teachers Association.

 

In this issue, I read an article entitled “Scope on Safety,” written by Ken Roy, Director of Environmental Health and Safety for the Glastonbury Public Schools in Glastonbury, CT. Within this article is the “Question of the Month.”  This month’s question is, “Do custodians need safety training prior to cleaning the floors in a science lab?”

 

http://k12science.net/Podcast/Podcast/Entries/2014/10/10_Middle_School_Science_Minute-Custodial_Science_Training.html

 

 

From the Twitterverse:

Lucy Gray ‏@elemenous  12m12 minutes ago

American Schools Are Training Kids for a World That Doesn’t Exist | WIRED http://www.wired.com/2014/10/on-learning-by-doing/ …

juandoming ‏@juandoming  26m26 minutes ago

List of 20+ #Apps and Extensions for Chromebookers – #EdTechReview™ (ETR) via @jtoufi http://sco.lt/845uFt

HP Storage@HPStorage  Oct 15

Add highly available shared storage to virtualized #Intel servers. Get your free 1TB of HP #storage to get going.

Ms. Diem ‏@GetTeaching  33m33 minutes ago

Homework conversation in full swing! #edcampou (Hint: if Siri can answer all your HW questions, it’s not good HW!)

Todd Bloch ‏@blocht574  46m46 minutes ago

Want to know more about #michED https://docs.google.com/presentation/d/1tfeVBvTSQwzza8SwQVbR3rX1qcPsqrwGESt0-FDWqI8/edit?usp=sharing … This might help! #edcampAMI #edcampNoMI  #edcampou

Scott McLeod ‏@mcleod  1h1 hour ago

The State of Educational Blogging 2014 | @edublogs #edtech

Jennifer L. Scheffer ‏@jlscheffer  42m42 minutes ago

5 key elements of effective PD via @MaineSchoolTech #edscape

http://images.pearsonassessments.com/images/NES_Publications/2002_08Dunne_475_1.pdf

Erin Klein ‏@KleinErin  10m10 minutes ago

Why It Is So Important to Visit Other Schools (and how to do it right) via @ajjuliani

Monte Tatom @drmmtatom · 20h20 hours ago

Here’s the link for the #K12online14 Conference: http://k12onlineconference.org/  / #fhuedu642 Advanced Technology http://moi.st/6897c01

#mschat every Thursday at 8:00 pm Eastern Standard Time.  And as Troy says, “The Twitter never stops!”

 

Strategies:

BoomWriter

http://www.freetech4teachers.com/2014/10/halloween-themed-writing-lessons-from.html#.VEJ-_JPF_Kg

 

A veteran teacher turned coach shadows 2 students for 2 days – a sobering lesson learned

 

http://grantwiggins.wordpress.com/2014/10/10/a-veteran-teacher-turned-coach-shadows-2-students-for-2-days-a-sobering-lesson-learned

 

Resources:

 

Schools told: cash bribes ‘fail to improve GCSE grades’

 

Schools are wasting thousands of pounds each year attempting to bribe pupils to try harder in exams, according to government-funded research.

In the biggest study of its kind, it was claimed that promising children cash rewards in exchange for higher levels of attendance, behaviour and homework led to increased effort in the classroom.

But the use of incentives had little “direct impact” on pupils’ ability to learn and failed to actually improve their GCSE scores in core academic subjects, it emerged.

The conclusions raise serious questions over tactics employed by schools across Britain that spend tens of thousands of pounds each year on elaborate reward schemes.

One popular scheme – Vivo Miles – allows pupils to accumulate points for good work and behaviour before cashing them in for rewards such as iPods, iTunes vouchers, digital watches, bike equipment and clothes.

It is used by around 500 secondary schools in the UK, with more than nine-in-10 saying it has aided academic performance and improved student motivation and behaviour.

Many parents also make similar promises, with a survey this summer suggesting that 38 per cent of pupils were offered cash incentives by mothers and fathers. This includes those promised laptops, holidays and even cars.

“The study suggests that while incentives can increase effort in the classroom, their direct impact on learning is low. “

 

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/education/educationnews/11135444/Schools-told-cash-bribes-fail-to-improve-GCSE-grades.html

 

Web Spotlight:

 

Online Conference

The Pre-Conference Keynote is up today, Monday, 10/13/2014.

This online conference is a little different in that the sessions have already been taped and will be opened on the day of the presentation.

Here is the link to today’s Keynote and introductions to upcoming sessions: http://k12onlineconference.org/

Here is the link to the various topics being presented over the two week period: http://k12onlineconference.org/?page_id=2480

Dr. Tatom’s Presentation:

My presentation is scheduled for Friday, 10/24/2014.  It will be available at 8:00 AM, EDT.

 

Why I now Friend Student via Social Media

I tell my students that if they choose to friend me, I will friend them back but they need to know that I’m relating to them as a teacher. Anything they communicate to me is as if I am at school.

They can unfriend me at any time and refriend me — just as they wish, no questions asked. If they communicate anything to me, I keep screenshots (with time and date stamps.)

http://www.coolcatteacher.com/videos/now-friend-students-social-media/

 

8th-grader Writes Hilariously Epic Algebra Problem. JJ Abrams Would Be Proud…

When Cody Swanek was told by his math teacher to take a certain algebra problem and convert it into a story, the 8th-grader dug deep into his knowledge of the Star Wars universe and wrote the most epic possible math question.

http://twentytwowords.com/8th-grader-writes-hilariously-epic-algebra-problem-jj-abrams-would-be-proud/

 

A surprising new argument against using kids’ test scores to grade their teachers

When a teacher whose students do well on tests moves to a school where test scores were improving the previous year, and average scores continue improving after that teacher arrives, it is hard to know how much of that continued improvement is due to the new teacher and how much to other factors.

This dispute is just one example of the mathematical acrobatics required to isolate the effect of one teacher on their students’ test scores, when so many other factors inside and outside the school’s walls affect how students perform.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/wonkblog/wp/2014/10/13/a-new-argument-against-using-kids-test-scores-to-grade-their-teachers/

 

Random Thoughts . . . 

Personal Web Site

MSM 286:  It’s International Day of the Girl, Homework, and Muting the Messenger . . .

Jokes You Can Use:

 

Little Johnny was at football practice one day and the coach said

“Who here thinks they can jump higher than the goal posts”

Immediately little Johnny said, “Ooh me sir me”

The coach then said, “But Johnny you are the worst in the team!”

Then Johnny said, “I know, but goalposts can’t jump!”

 

A school teacher asked her primary six class to construct sentences with the words: defeat, detail, defense.

There was a pause before a pupil raised his hand and said he could make a sentence with them; “The cow jumped over defense and detail went over defeat.”

 

 

A distraught older woman is looking at herself in the mirror and crying. Her voice shakes as she says to her husband, “I’m so old. I’m so fat. I look horrible. I really need a compliment.”

Her husband, determined to quickly give his beloved the comfort she needs, exclaims, “Well, you have good eyesight!”

 

I intend to live forever – so far, so good.

 

In Australia, a race was proclaimed, with a huge payoff for the winner. The one stipulation was that only ostriches were allowed to run the race. A fellow decided to enter, but not having an ostrich, and hearing that the fastest ostrich in the world was the mascot of the local police department, he stole the bird and entered the race. As luck would have it, when the pistol shot went off to start the race, the ostrich buried its head in the sand and the fellow lost the race.

Moral:

Eileen Award:

  • Twitter: Julie Tanner (@julietanner07), Vocab Sushi, That School App,

Advisory:

Radiooooo

http://beta.radiooooo.com/

 

Does My Voice Really Sound Like That?

Take it from an expert: It’s weird to hear how your voice really sounds. But why does it sound different to you than everyone else. Hank explains — in a deep, resonant voice.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L2wThQljxcY&feature=youtu.be

 

16 Shakespearean Insults

*Warning the *H* word is used.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P_Uej8LJ48Q#t=49

 

Breakfast

Children all over the world eat cornflakes and drink chocolate milk, of course, but in many places they also eat things that would strike the average American palate as strange, or worse.

“The idea that children should have bland, sweet food is a very industrial presumption,” says Krishnendu Ray, a professor of food studies at New York University who grew up in India. “In many parts of the world, breakfast is tepid, sour, fermented and savory.”

http://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2014/10/08/magazine/eaters-all-over.html

Middle School Science Minute

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

 

I was recently reading the September, 2014 issue of “Science Scope,” a magazine written for middle school science teachers, published by the National Science Teachers Association.

 

In this issue, I read an article entitled “Moving Ahead With Alternate Conceptions,” written by Aaron Isabelle, Rosemary Millham, and Thais da Cunha. In the article, they explain how alternate conceptions are also referred to as misconceptions, which are deeply ingrained, scientifically inappropriate ideas about something in the physical or natural world.  In the article, they state 11 alternate conceptions correlated with the NGSS.  An example of an alternate conception is that dinosaurs and cavemen lived at the same time.

 

http://k12science.net/Podcast/Podcast/Entries/2014/10/1_Middle_School_Science_Minute-Alternate_Conceptions.html

 

From the Twitterverse:

+AnibalPachecoIT ‏@AnibalPachecoIT  2m2 minutes ago8 Tips to Create a Twitter-Driven School Culture – via @edutopia  #NT2t
Sheryl NussbaumBeach ‏@snbeach  42m42 minutes agoConsider joining #plpnetwork team for #ce14. Help us reach the unconnected in your school. https://www.crowdrise.com/plp2014/
Emily Vickery ‏@ehvickery  48m48 minutes agoPay Attention: Breaking Down Learning Barriers Through the Better Use of Time http://ow.ly/CAzQV  #leadership #edchat #ADEchat
Larry Ferlazzo ‏@Larryferlazzo  1h1 hour ago: Part 3 in my @educationweek series “7 Strategies For Working With Student Teachers” http://blogs.edweek.org/teachers/classroom_qa_with_larry_ferlazzo/2014/10/response_seven_strategies_for_working_with_student_teachers.html …
William Chamberlain ‏@wmchamberlain  2h2 hours agoThe next time you condemn a teacher for not getting kids to love their subject remember how many subjects you don’t love. #schoolishard
Kyle Pace ‏@kylepace  19h19 hours agoWhy the Growth Mindset is the Only Way to Learn http://www.edudemic.com/growth-mindset-way-learn/ … #r7efa
MiddleWeb ‏@middleweb  2h2 hours agoRT @ElizabethLStein: Educator shares 7 principles for co-teacher collaboration http://sbne.ws/r/qtKZ  #mschat @amle #elemchat
Pilar Pamblanco ‏@englishteach8  12m12 minutes agoTop story: How To Burn Yourself Out As A Teacher http://www.teachthought.com/teaching/signs-of-teacher-burnout …, see more http://tweetedtimes.com/englishteach8?s=tnp …
Monte Tatom @drmmtatom · Oct 1Need More Storage Space? Google Drive for Education Has You Covered http://feedly.com/e/LLY4evZ4  ~ #fhuedu642 #tn_teta #ISTEAPLN @MSMatters
julietanner07 @julietanner07 · 16h16 hours agoAmerican Proverb~ A tree never hits an automobile except in self defense.
#mschat every Thursday at 8:00 pm Eastern Standard Time.  And as Troy says, “The Twitter never stops!”

 

Strategies:

Homework

 

  • A brand-new study on the academic effects of homework offers not only some intriguing results but also a lesson on how to read a study — and a reminder of the importance of doing just that:  reading studies (carefully) rather than relying on summaries by journalists or even by the researchers themselves.
  • First, no research has ever found a benefit to assigning homework (of any kind or in any amount) in elementary school.  In fact, there isn’t even a positive correlation between, on the one hand, having younger children do some homework (vs. none), or more (vs. less), and, on the other hand, any measure of achievement.  If we’re making 12-year-olds, much less five-year-olds, do homework, it’s either because we’re misinformed about what the evidence says or because we think kids ought to have to do homework despite what the evidence says.
  • Second, even at the high school level, the research supporting homework hasn’t been particularly persuasive.
  • It’s easy to miss one interesting result in this study that appears in a one-sentence aside.  When kids in these two similar datasets were asked how much time they spent on math homework each day, those in the NELS study said 37 minutes, whereas those in the ELS study said 60 minutes.
  • it was statistically significant but “very modest”:  Even assuming the existence of a causal relationship, which is by no means clear, one or two hours’ worth of homework every day buys you two or three points on a test.
  • There was no relationship whatsoever between time spent on homework and course grade, and “no substantive difference in grades between students who complete homework and those who do not.”
  • The better the research, the less likely one is to find any benefits from homework.
  • you’ll find that there’s not much to prop up the belief that students must be made to work a second shift after they get home from school.  The assumption that teachers are just assigning homework badly, that we’d start to see meaningful results if only it were improved, is harder and harder to justify with each study that’s published.
  • many people will respond to these results by repeating platitudes about the importance of practice[8], or by complaining that anyone who doesn’t think kids need homework is coddling them and failing to prepare them for the “real world” (read:  the pointless tasks they’ll be forced to do after they leave school).

http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/answer-sheet/wp/2012/11/26/homework-an-unnecessary-evil-surprising-findings-from-new-research/

 

 

Three critical questions students should keep in mind–any subject, any grade–when reading NF:

3 Questions for reading Non-fiction

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

https://twitter.com/KyleneBeers/status/515988759171829760/photo/1

Resources:

How Teacher’s Learn

How Teachers Like to Learn Their Tech

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

http://thelearningcounsel.com/repository/teachers-as-tech-learners.jpeg

http://thelearningcounsel.com/archives/How-Teachers-Learn

 

National Cyber Safety Month

National Security Awareness Month

https://plus.google.com/photos/+google/albums/5940699556055522273

 

 

ScratchJR

Coding is the new literacy! With ScratchJr, young children (ages 5-7) can program their own interactive stories and games. In the process, they learn to solve problems, design projects, and express themselves creatively on the computer.

Download for the iPad.

http://www.scratchjr.org/index.html

Web Spotlight:

 

Mute the Messenger

When Dr. Walter Stroup showed that Texas’ standardized testing regime is flawed, the testing company struck back.by Jason Stanford Published on Wednesday, September 3, 2014, at 8:00 CST

  • “Rigor” was the new watchword in education policy.
  • Testing advocates believed that more rigorous curricula and tests would boost student achievement—the “rising tide lifts all boats” theory. But that’s not how it worked out.
  • Texas Education Commissioner Robert Scott, long an advocate of using tests to hold schools accountable, broke from orthodoxy when he called the STAAR test a “perversion of its original intent.”
  • To his credit, Committee Chair Rob Eissler began the hearing by posing a question that someone should have asked a generation ago: What exactly are we getting from these tests?
  • Stroup sat down at the witness table and offered the scientific basis behind the widely held suspicion that what the tests measured was not what students have learned but how well students take tests.
  • his testimony to the committee broke through the usual assumption that equated standardized testing with high standards. He reframed the debate over accountability by questioning whether the tests were the right tool for the job. The question wasn’t whether to test or not to test, but whether the tests measured what we thought they did.
  • Stroup argued that the tests were working exactly as designed
  • Stroup had caught the government using a bathroom scale to measure a student’s height.
  • The scale wasn’t broken or badly made. The scale was working exactly as designed. It was just the wrong tool for the job. The tests, Stroup said, simply couldn’t measure how much students learned in school.
  • Rep. Jimmie Don Aycock (R-Killeen) brought Stroup’s testimony to a close with a joke that made it perfectly clear. “I’d like to have you and someone from Pearson have a little debate,” Aycock said. “Would you be willing to come back?”
  • “Sure,” Stroup said. “I’ll come back and mud wrestle.”
  • Stroup had picked a fight with a special interest in front of politicians. The winner wouldn’t be determined by reason and science but by politics and power.
  • Pearson’s real counterattack took place largely out of public view, where the company attempted to discredit Stroup’s research. Instead of a public debate, Pearson used its money and influence to engage in the time-honored academic tradition of trashing its rival’s work and career behind his back.
  • standardized tests have become the pre-eminent yardstick of classroom learning in America, and Pearson is selling the most yardsticks.
  • Stroup started asking after he thought he found a way to use cloud computing to expose poor, minority children to basic math concepts using calculus.
  • The same kids branded as failures by the state tests embraced the project, using the cloud technology collaboratively to learn basic math concepts. This was the breakthrough that everybody—Kress, Perot and lawmakers in Austin—had been looking for.
  • However, the students’ scores rose only 10 percent, a statistically valid variance but hardly the change that he had observed in the classroom.
  • Using UT’s computing power, Stroup investigated. He entered the state test scores for every child in Texas, and out came the same minor variances he had gotten in Dallas. What he noticed was that most students’ test scores remained the same no matter what grade the students were in, or what subject was being tested. According to Stroup’s initial calculations, that constancy accounted for about 72 percent of everyone’s test score. Regardless of a teacher’s experience or training, class size, or any other classroom-based factor Stroup could identify, student test scores changed within a relatively narrow window of about 10 to 15 percent.
  • Stroup knew from his experience teaching impoverished students in inner-city Boston, Mexico City and North Texas that students could improve their mastery of a subject by more than 15 percent in a school year, but the tests couldn’t measure that change. Stroup came to believe that the biggest portion of the test scores that hardly changed—that 72 percent—simply measured test-taking ability. For almost $100 million a year, Texas taxpayers were sold these tests as a gauge of whether schools are doing a good job. Lawmakers were using the wrong tool.
  • The paradox of Texas’ grand experiment with standardized testing is that the tests are working exactly as designed from a psychometric (the term for the science of testing) perspective, but their results don’t show what policymakers think they show.
  • Stroup concluded that the tests were 72 percent “insensitive to instruction,” a graduate- school way of saying that the tests don’t measure what students learn in the classroom.
  • After correcting what Pearson interpreted as the mislabeled column, Way wrote, the tests were “only 50 percent” insensitive to instruction.
  • This alone was a startling admission. Even if you accepted Pearson’s argument that Stroup had erred, here was the company selling Texas millions of dollars’ worth of tests admitting that its product couldn’t measure half of what happens in a classroom.
  • A student in the third grade did as well on a math test as that same student did in the eighth grade on a language arts test as the same student did in the 10th grade on a different test. Regardless of changes in school, subject and teacher, a student could count on a test result remaining 50 to 72 percent unchanged no matter what. Stroup hypothesized that the tests were so insensitive to instruction that a test could switch out a science question for a math question without having any effect on how that student would score.
  • “teachers account for about 1% to 14% of the variability in test scores,” largely confirming Stroup’s apparently controversial conclusion.
  • If it’s true that the test measured primarily students’ ability to take a test, then, Stroup reasoned to the House Public Education Committee in June 2012, “it is rational game theory strategy to target the 72 percent.” That means more Pearson worksheets and fewer field trips, more multiple-choice literary analysis and fewer book reports, and weeks devoted to practice tests and less classroom time devoted to learning new things. In other words, logic explained exactly what was going on in Texas’ public schools.
  • we end up with adults and professionals spending most of their time gaming the system.”
  • Rep. Eissler never called another hearing to have the debate between Stroup and a Pearson representative as Rep. Aycock had suggested. Eissler retired from the Legislature and now lobbies for Pearson.
  • Tax law allows corporations to establish charitable foundations. What tax law doesn’t allow is endowing a nonprofit to supplement the parent corporation’s profit-driven mission. Last December, Pearson paid a $7.7 million fine in New York state to settle charges that the Pearson Foundation “had helped develop products for its corporate parent, including course materials and software,” reported The New York Times.

 

http://www.texasobserver.org/walter-stroup-standardized-testing-pearson/

 

Random Thoughts . . .

 

Personal Web Site

 

Book

deliberate [sic] Optimism:  reclaiming the JOY in education by Dr. Debbie Silver, Jack C Berckemeyer, and Judith Baenen.

 

“Recharge the optimism that made you an educator in the first place!  School is where students and staff should feel safe, engaged, and productive – and choosing optimism is the first step toward restoring healthy interactions necessary for enacting real change.”