Lessons Learned In Combat

#Whatif? Gets Personal

If you haven't been living under a rock, you are aware of the Twitter hashtag #whatif that almost immediately went viral after Secretary of Education (sic) Arne Duncan tweeted this question on December 30: https://twitter.com/arneduncan/status/550014511084609539 Two days later, on January 1, Valerie Strauss of the Washington Post highlighted some of the most compelling #whatif tweets in… Continue reading #Whatif? Gets Personal

Education, Lessons Learned In Combat

The Value(?) of Worksheets

I used to pat myself on the back when I would make the worksheets I subjected my students to rather than use the pre-made blackline masters I'd find in the backs of my Scholastic teacher's guides. This was years after the mimeograph held its odiferous reign in copy rooms across the country, and years before… Continue reading The Value(?) of Worksheets

Education, standardized testing

Newsweek Gives ORHS Props. I’m Less Than Excited.

Great news! Oyster River High School, the high school just four miles from my home, the high school my two daughters will attend in just a few short years, has made Newsweek magazine's 2014 list of America's Top High Schools! Woo-hoo! Awesome, right? Well...no, not really. Not at all, as a matter of fact. Before you… Continue reading Newsweek Gives ORHS Props. I’m Less Than Excited.

Education, Illustration, Literacy

The Mystery of the Disappearing Visual

When I would sit on my Grammy's porch reading my Nancy Drew books, the soft summer breeze wafting through the screens, the scent of my Pop's lawn clippings mixing with the mildewy odor of my beloved mysteries, I remember how frequently I would peek forward to the next Rudy Nappi illustration, would use that next sketch of the… Continue reading The Mystery of the Disappearing Visual

Lessons Learned In Combat

No More Language Arts and Crafts

Wise words from Donalyn Miller, who is not afraid to write what many of us feel. We can do better. We must do better.

donalynm's avatarDonalyn Miller

I’ll admit that I hold my children’s teachers to a higher than reasonable standard. Would you want my kid in your English class? As a parent, I could be a burr in your saddle. I get that.

I’m not a harassing parent, I promise. Most of my children’s teachers have no idea who I am, other than Celeste and Sarah’s mom. That’s how it should be.

On the other hand, my children’s teachers don’t know who Penny Kittle is. They don’t know who Kristin Ziemke is. They don’t know who Kelly Gallagher is.

Heck, my children’s teachers don’t know who Nancie Atwell and Lucy Calkins are. It doesn’t matter if they’ve read my books about teaching reading, but it does matter when my children’s teachers haven’t read a book or article about teaching reading in 20 years.

A line divides parents who know a lot about reading and their children’s…

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Education, Lessons Learned In Combat, Literacy

An Important and Magnificent Day

Today is an important and magnificent day. Today marks the day that Ms. Wright, kindergarten teacher extraordinaire, launches writer's workshop with her students. The scene is expertly and purposefully set. Reams of paper sit patiently, waiting to be filled with swirling colors, bold lines, and grand ideas. Brand-new markers gleam. Pencils capped with bright pink erasers lean… Continue reading An Important and Magnificent Day