District 3 Class 2A baseball FINAL: Halifax 10, Camp Hill 0.
Eli Miller allows one hit in the shutout. He retired 15 batters in a row after a leadoff double.
@WildcatsHalifax are district champs for the first time since 2005.
Instead of bringing in guest speakers to talk about teaching and inspire us with anecdotes, why not have them actually teach?
Put them in a real classroom and let’s watch the magic happen.
Let us see how they plan, how they adjust in the moment, how they respond to student questions, manage behavior, and assess understanding.
Now that’s the kind of professional development that would actually inspire me.
Two teachers can teach the same curriculum with the same activities—and get completely different results.
Because in the end, it’s the teacher who brings the curriculum to life. There’s no way around that.
Let's knock it off with the all-or-nothing hot takes.
Good teachers utilize tech ONLY when it gets them the results they want.
Foolish teachers (and schools) use tech as their blanket strategy.
And tweets like this are rage bait.
Don't advocate for bans that take tools out of the hands of teachers and students.
Advocate for more responsible instructional decisions based on pedagogy and best practice.
What if your students became museum curators?
In our new Canva Education activity, Make a Mini Museum, students research an influential historical figure and design a digital exhibition showcasing artifacts, biographies, and properly cited sources. It’s a powerful way to blend research, media literacy, ethical citation, and student voice in one ready-to-use experience.
Explore it here:
https://t.co/J7ylUiUDip
❤️ Happy Valentines Day to the best wrestling fans in the nation!
Here's a little gift from us to you!
We hope you enjoyed the show last night, we sure did! 🎇
#PSUwr
As AI becomes more common in schools, teaching discernment helps students think critically about how and when to use AI tools. @middleweb
https://t.co/xAqCeqEhKM
I will never understand why so much middle school writing isn’t built around experimentation, challenge, fun, and creativity.
Middle schoolers love to play, laugh, take risks, and test boundaries.
When we make most writing overly serious, we turn them away from what they do best: playing with language, experimenting with literary devices and vocabulary, and rising to creative challenges.