SEARCH

Tag: issue 17

Improvement isn’t just a method. It’s culture.
In April, I had the great pleasure of moderating a “crossover” panel that spanned the Deeper Learning Conference and the National Summit on Improvement in Education. 
Four fourth grade classes researched a community group, carried out fieldwork, and took school-wide action in that role.
Seniors at HTHI wrote and produced Western genre films highlighted by their camping trip to film in the Alabama Hills
Seventh graders used proportional reasoning and scale factors to build accurate, scaled papier-mâché models of their ocean species.
Deeper learning and continuous improvement are answers to different halves of the same question. The future of schooling, and the future of our communities, depends on our willingness to reintegrate things we have allowed to drift apart
How a New York City network used weekly 1:1 attendance check-ins to cut chronic absenteeism — and why pizza parties miss the students who need help most.
Sixth graders partnered up eight local, small businesses in North County to make documentaries and Lego models for them.
Borders and Belonging explores the history and present-day realities of immigration policy in the United States in order to better understand immigration enforcement practices shaping the country today.
Many schools and districts have responded to this challenge by ramping up attendance incentives such as prizes, parties, or special privileges intended to draw students to school. These approaches often withhold a positive experience until an absent student behaves differently, reflecting a common belief that the right reward will motivate students to attend more consistently. Unfortunately, research points to a mismatch between this solution and the nature of the problem.
Skip to content