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Keep the Focus on the Learning on Digital Learning Day

Posted by Michael Milone, Ph.D.

Wed, Feb 10, 2016 @ 01:31 PM

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For those of us who have been around for a while, Digital Learning Day (or DLDay), happening February 17, has special significance. I fall into the “around for a while” category because I had both a TRS-80 and an Apple II. How cool is that? I also had long, blond hair, but let’s not dwell on the past.

The special significance of DLDay for us is that so many of our dreams are coming true. Blended learning is a great example. For many years, the technology aspect of education was a little standoffish. Because of limitations of hardware and software, it was challenging to use technology in the ways we thought were most effective.
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Topics: General Education, Educational Technology, Intervention

Ladies and Gentlemen … Calling Students to Distinction

Posted by Antavia Hamilton-Ochs

Wed, Feb 3, 2016 @ 11:50 AM

AntaviaCharacter_FINAL_300pxHow One Teacher is Working Her Magic to Help Struggling Students Reclaim Their Education, Part 2 of 2

As is my usual style, my little ideas quickly take on a life of their own and turn into BIG magic!

Since I was already pulling out all the stops for Lham, as described in last week’s blog post, I scoured my roster for others like him. These students were caught up in a political Groundhog Day from which they could not escape. There was a lot of identifying and re-identifying of the problems, without any real plan to remediate the issues.

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Topics: Literacy, Positive School Climate, Educational Technology, Parental Involvement, Intervention, Struggling Students

The Magical Ms. H and the Comeback Kid: One Student's Empowerment

Posted by Antavia Hamilton-Ochs

Wed, Jan 27, 2016 @ 02:00 PM

Lham on LANGUAGE! LiveHow One Teacher is Working Her Magic to Help Struggling Students Reclaim Their Education, Part 1 of 2

Things are moving fast these days in this magical universe. It’s been raining pink glitter ever since I published my first blog post. I’ve been moving quickly from dream to idea to plan to action. Recently, I turned my attention to at-risk students on my roster.

A problem that has always perplexed me (and many of my colleagues) is when students fall through the cracks year after year. The names change, but the basic M.O. is the same: lacks foundational skills, a rap sheet of petty trouble, attends school just long enough to be suspended again, generally disengaged … but bright. That’s what continually stumps me; they are always so incredibly intelligent!

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Topics: Literacy, Educational Technology, Intervention, Struggling Students

Why a Dual Topic Instructional Approach Works in Math

Posted by John Woodward, Ph.D.

Wed, Jan 20, 2016 @ 02:19 PM

Defining a High-Standards Math Curriculum for Struggling Students, Part 2 of 2

I made the case in my previous blog that adjusting the pace of instruction for struggling students in a high-standards curriculum is imperative. We all have different aptitudes for a given endeavor—from music to mathematics—and it is unrealistic to expect that all students can learn the same set of complex ideas in the same, fixed period of time.

Adjusting the pace of instruction does not mean that we should teach topics like fractions or integers in “twice the time” as much as it means that we need to sequence carefully the flow of concepts within these topics. It also means trade-offs such as not teaching every standard. There is little reason to believe that every standard is equally weighted in its importance, particularly if time is an issue.

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Topics: Math, Common Core, State Standards, Common Core Math, NCTM Standards, Struggling Students

New Year’s Resolution: Know Your Students, Be the Change

Posted by Michelle George

Wed, Jan 13, 2016 @ 12:00 PM

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The holiday divinity and fudge are just about gone, and the heart-warming Christmas movies seem to have been replaced by weight-loss commercials. I’ve made more than my share of New Year’s resolutions, and rarely have I stuck to the calorie-counting, mile-running regimens that I have planned.

This year, rather than set some lofty goals that I will most likely fail to achieve, I plan to stop trying to find who or what is to blame for the problems with education today. Instead I want to purposefully do everything I can to effect positive changes for my students, get to know them better as individuals, and connect their learning to content that they find valuable and relevant to their own lives.

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Topics: General Education, Educational Technology

How Teacher Talk Affects Student Vocabulary Growth

Posted by Louisa Moats, Ed.D.

Wed, Jan 6, 2016 @ 01:20 PM

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Rather than focusing on text reading this month, let’s turn our attention to one of the critical components of language necessary for comprehension: vocabulary.

Educators often point to the importance of expanding students’ vocabularies, but how is verbal learning acquired? A new line of research has confirmed, not surprisingly, that the way the teacher talks and how the teacher uses language directly affect student vocabulary growth.

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Topics: Literacy, Educational Technology, Intervention, Struggling Students, Dyslexia

Happy Holidays from Voyager Sopris Learning

Posted by EdView360 Blog

Wed, Dec 23, 2015 @ 11:29 AM

Thank you for being part of the EdView360 community this year. We hope that our blog has helped and inspired you in some small way as you continue to enrich the lives of our youth.

Enjoy a well-deserved break, and we'll see you back on the blog in 2016!
 

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Topics: General Education

Top 10 Tips for Traveling with Students

Posted by AshaLee Ortiz

Wed, Dec 16, 2015 @ 01:30 PM

How to Plan a Stress-Free Field Trip

In the digital age, we have the world at our fingertips. However, nothing truly compares to experiencing something firsthand. If experience is the best teacher, then there is a strong rationale for field trips.

With the holiday season upon us, groups from schools across the nation will be performing in parades or at Bowl games. Spring break is just around the corner, and is a prime time to travel with students.

Despite this knowledge, I have been hesitant to provide my students with the same types of rewarding experiences I had on field trips in my youth. Sure, I would take my classes to district festivals, and last year even planned a rewards trip with a partner teacher to the local amusement park, but the idea of planning a larger experience for my students seemed daunting. Where would I begin?

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Topics: General Education, Parental Involvement, Classroom management

MISSION: LITERACY ... Empowering and Engaging Students As Agents

Posted by Antavia Hamilton-Ochs

Wed, Dec 9, 2015 @ 01:30 PM

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Year after year, I struggled with students who claimed to hate reading. They didn’t like to read. They told me so, over and over again. I have a stock response: “You know, every time you say that an English teacher cries.”

Handing out reading assignment packets or calling for volunteers to read aloud was consistently met with gut-wrenching groans. I am an unusually peppy person, but I was deflating. Must I hear this every time? We hadn’t even started the reading yet.

I had to end this cycle of abuse on innocent texts. They weren’t to blame. The curriculum, teachers’ interests, accessibility, and availability were all factors in killing reading for our students. Alas, poor little packets of photocopied words take the bulk of the wrath for students being told over and over again “Reading is FUN!” as they gaze down, bracing themselves for one more double-sided, black-and-white chore.

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Topics: Literacy, Educational Technology, Intervention, Struggling Students

Staying Grounded in Reading Realities

Posted by Louisa Moats, Ed.D.

Wed, Dec 2, 2015 @ 12:10 PM

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A Better Approach for Struggling Readers

At the end of October, I attended and spoke at the annual International Dyslexia Association (IDA) meeting in Dallas. IDA remains the best interdisciplinary conference for all professionals, advocates, and families concerned with reading, writing, and language difficulties. IDA meetings, over the past three decades, are where I’ve obtained my real education.

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Topics: Literacy, Educational Technology, Intervention, Struggling Students, Dyslexia

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