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Just purchased e-book (easier for work comsumption and use)! Looking forward to reading!
Love these! Use them each year with new teachers!
"Progression of Talk" infographic made with colored sticky notes on a file folder. In order of progression: Say anything, Say something relevant, Say something back, Say something to clarify, Say something better, Say something to revise, Say something to provoke, Say something to extend
From educator @gwenblumberg.bsky.social : “Whose voices are heard the most in our classrooms? Teacher voices? Kid voices? The same kid voices? Talk is an art & we can teach kids to grow this skill like any other.”
#EduSky #SEL #ElementaryTeacher
Gamify it with a leaderboard for peers doing walkthroughs. Have a shout-out board in a common teacher area or a digital whiteboard. Focus on growth instead of compliance-additional points for growth on successive walkthroughs.
Ep. 268 | 3 Things To Do at the End of the School Year (That Future You Will Thank You For)
Recorded while sipping a chocolate, peanut butter, and banana smoothie, this episode gives you three teacher-tested actions to wrap up the school year with clarity. Reflect, brain-dump, and write a note to…
@all4ed.bsky.social Warwick HS Gov Health Sciences Academy lead teacher leverages @Canva.bsky.social to create interactive and engaging slides for direct instruction. She integrates hands-on exploration with #mergevr cubes. #CTE #DLDay
@all4ed.bsky.social Warwick HS Gov Health Sci Academy teacher Ms. Flinn uses #ChatGPT to increase engagement and create student-centered lessons! #DLDay #CTE
Mary Jackson graduated from the Hampton Institute in 1942 with a double degree in Mathematics and Physical Science. She worked as a teacher, receptionist, and Army secretary before joining NASA’s Langley Research Center in 1951. Jackson became NASA’s first Black female engineer, analyzing wind tunnel and real-world flight data in the Theoretical Aerodynamics Branch of the Subsonic-Transonic Aerodynamics Division at Langley. “Sometimes they are not aware of the number of Black scientists and do not even know of the career opportunities until it is too late.” Ms Jackson #BlackHistoryOurHistory
1 of 3 Mary Jackson graduated from the Hampton Institute in 1942 with a double degree in Mathematics and Physical Science. She worked as a teacher, receptionist, and Army secretary before joining NASA’s Langley Research Center in 1951. #BlackHistoryOurHistory
Can't wait to see everyone! Excited for new learning after!
Getting ready to present with @mrsadamstech.bsky.social at @VSTE #vstelive #vsteconference24.
Agreed. Hide the work bag with the laptop. Don't look at school email. RELAX.
How did you know I needed this, this morning? LOL
This is an awesome guide, @debbieohi.com! Thanks! Sharing!