If you are interested in getting the latest news from the academic world and gaining valuable advice from your role models, then you will be interested in my article Educational News to Follow on Twitter for Professors, Teachers, Instructors and Lecturers.
Harvard and Caltech now Require Test Scores.
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American kids learn similar math as kids in Asian countries, but it's not as early or intense.
Curriculum is solid but less aggressive.
Still, they cover algebra and geometry in 3rd grade.
#EdChat#TwitterTeacher#HelpInHomework
@FixingEducation What America needs is federal funding for numeracy like we have for literacy.
There are dozens of grants available to everything from libraries to community colleges when it comes to literacy but few if any for numeracy.
@TattedMiscreant I think it's more apparent in education because it's an inherently social occupation.
But I think there are jerk in every profession, they just don't get the same opportunity to show that they're an jerk. #edchat
@letsquitteachin Take creative writting lessons. Being a good storyteller is akin to being a good teacher. Every lesson is a story. Also imho the best teacher of all time taught through stories.
Be structured. Have a plan for every moment of every lesson of every day.
@letsquitteachin Great points.
Take voice lessons. Having a powerful voice is an amazing tool to have in your belt.
Take acting lessons. Being able to pretend to be happy, sad, or angry convincingly is another powerful tool to have.
@erickalenze Districts lay out tons of money for professionals to come do PD but then ask teachers to develop and run a school wide PD based on what they use in the classroom for free.
@tomwhitby Teachers write grant requests every year and always excited when They get a new set of books or whatever.
But... what if they could just focus on building their students reading abilities?
@tomwhitby Lack of funding. Public school teachers should have general supplies on hand for all students to use from pencils to computers and meals included for all of them.
Instead kids come to school hungry and without a backpack. #EdChat
Sometimes you know perfectly well how to solve a problem but, in the heat of the moment, your brain gets seized up.
It's not whether or not you can instantly answer a question, it's how you react when you're faced with something that you can't immediately answer. #twitterteacher
Years ago, a lesson I was trying to teach on simplifying algebra expressions blew up in my face in front of a group of thoroughly confused, and somewhat angry, 7th graders. In the aftermath after the bell had rung, I sat on a desk at the front of the room, looking at the problems on the board and wondering what had gone so horribly, horribly wrong. In a moment of clarity, I thought of what algebra must look like to someone who's seeing it for the very first time, and immediately several obvious sticking points jumped out at me. The next day, still gun-shy from the day before, I decided to try to re-teach the lesson, this time adjusting for the sticking points. The students didn't make a sound as I worked my way through to the end of the first problem, and this seriously unnerved me. Fearing the worst, I turned to face my fate. The most vocal of the peeved and perplexed pupils from the day before simply looked at her classmates and said, "I forget. What was confusing about this?"
When teaching beginners, start at the beginning.