Move Over, ‘Stranger Danger’

Joe Keohane, writing for the Boston Globe, highlights multiple studies that emphasize the widespread fear of talking to strangers is largely unfounded and that such interactions can help young people develop critical social skills and reduce their reliance on technology:

"According to a growing number of psychologists, talking to strangers confers a host of benefits that will lessen the malaise affecting young people... studies she [Sandstrom] and others have conducted have consistently found that talking to strangers makes people happy, enhances a sense of belonging and connectedness, and alleviates feelings of loneliness, isolation, and distrust. This holds for men and women and introverts and extroverts across a wide range of ages."

Teaching & Learning through Bookend Lessons

It's so refreshing to hear teachers talking about the work that they do in schools. The "Bookend Lessons" initiative at Bay City Public Schools integrated essential skills like collaboration, communication, and agency into daily learning.

In each Bookend Lesson, students start by setting skill goals, engage in meaningful student-centered activities, and conclude with reflections on their progress to teach academic content but also fosters crucial life skills. Teachers collaborate, share strategies, and refine these lessons to align with our curriculum standards, creating a unified educational experience across all grades.

Designing Schools for Meaningful Impact

I'm grateful for the opportunity to share my journey and insights on expanding educational opportunities for students at the recent Accelerate ED convening in Houston. It was a deeply rewarding experience to engage with so many attendees who connected with my story. Finding common ground was not expected but quite appreciated!

I’m so thankful to be a part of this vital work and look forward to what’s next for the Michigan Design Team!

A Missing Element in Some Primary-Grade Reading Classes: Motivation

Seth A. Parsons and Joy Dangora Erickson, writing for Kappan

"We support the fundamentals of the science of reading... However, if we teach these components of reading without regard for motivation, we are undermining our efforts at supporting students’ literacy learning."

This makes logical sense but can get lost in practice if not explicitly called out. By integrating activities that are relevant, engaging, and collaborative, we respect students' diverse needs and interests, thereby promoting a deeper, more enduring engagement with reading.

"But There's No Time!"

Grant Wiggins, writing for ASCD in 2012:

"Decades of education research support the idea that by teaching less and providing more feedback, we can produce greater learning."

And also:

"Although the universal teacher lament that there's no time for such feedback is understandable, remember that 'no time to give and use feedback' actually means 'no time to cause learning.'"

When I was a principal, a parent complained about an art teacher not updating grades often enough. I talked to the teacher, who invited me to observe her class. What I saw sticks with me today. She constantly moved, observed student practice, and gave quick, useful feedback on their work. She wasn't focused on grades because she was helping students improve in real time. I told the parent everything was fine and never questioned the teacher’s grading practices again.

Such practices ought to extend beyond the art classroom.

Creating Clarity on Equity in Schools

Pedro & Joaquin Noguera, writing on equity leadership for ASCD:

"Based on our years of experience as researchers and thought partners with district and school leaders, we have found that leaders who have made the greatest progress in advancing equity, and who are best able to withstand political attacks, are those who are able to articulate a clear vision, devise concrete strategies, set measurable goals, and implement an action plan."

A vision for equity is more than a poster on the wall; it's a continuous conversation with the community. Leaders must regularly engage with the entire community to make sure the vision is not only clear but also actionable and aligned with collectively shared values. This isn't just a procedural step during strategic planning; it's the foundation for any meaningful effort to advance equity in our schools.

AI in Schools: More Than Just a Fad

Hadi Parvoti, CEO of code.org, on the future outlook of curriculum and instruction in a world where Artificial Intelligence and Large Language Models like ChatGPT are commonplace:

"In five years I'm quite confident that our school system will recognize not only that these tools are here to stay but that teaching kids how to be amazing problem solvers, critical thinkers, and collaborators using these digital tools is going to be a key part and reason for education."

Just as calculators revolutionized how we teach math—enabling us to go beyond basic arithmetic to explore higher-level concepts—AI is set to expand the horizons of what's possible in the classroom. It's not about sidelining teachers or making students overly reliant on technology. It's about leveraging these tools to enhance the educational experience.

What Parvoti is talking about is a shift from a knowledge-based model to a skills-based model. One where we're not ditching the classics; we're giving them a 21st-century update so that we can equip students with the skills they need to navigate a world where digital literacy isn't optional; it's essential.

Graduate Profile: How Community Engagement Can Shape the Future

This video encapsulates the collective vision we're building for Bay City Public Schools. It represents extensive community engagement—listening sessions, business summits, parent roundtables, you name it. I love how the video describes our graduate profile through voices in our community.

Leading this work has been so rewarding. It's the embodiment of what I've always believed: that when schools and communities align, magic happens. We're not just aiming for academic benchmarks; we're nurturing problem-solvers, communicators, and critical thinkers. This is about efficiency, yes, but it's also about effectiveness—about making sure our educational system is as agile and adaptable as the world our students will enter. When we listen to our community, we're not just being inclusive; we're unlocking the doors to innovation and long-term success.

The Power of Questions

Amanda Cullen, writing for Mathematics Teacher Learning and Teaching PK-12:

"The questions that a teacher asks a student and how the teacher follows up on the student’s response can support the student’s development of a positive mathematical identity and sense of agency as a thinker and doer of mathematics"

I love to see quotes like this, especially from math teachers. Teaching is not just about getting the right answer, but about nurturing students’ beliefs in their own capabilities, fostering their agency, and shaping their identity as confident problem solvers.

The American Dream is Really Faded

Economist Raj Chetty was interviewed on Steve Levitt’s People I (Mostly) Admire podcast in September 2022, where he discussed his research on intergenerational mobility in the United States. Chetty shared two stunning facts from his research, one being that of American children born in 1940, 90% would grow up to earn more than their parents, but now, 50 years later, less than half of people grow up to earn more than their parents.

Raj Chetty:

We have an enormous amount of growth over the past 30 years. And on average, we have a lot more total output. People are richer, on average, than they were 30 years ago. So, how can it be that only 50 percent of kids are doing better than their parents? And the answer is, take an extreme example. Suppose one person — say, Jeff Bezos or Bill Gates —got all of the gains in G.D.P. over the past 30 years. Then you could have a tremendous amount of G.D.P. growth and you’d still have only 50 percent of kids doing better than their parents.

Using historical IRS data, he has created an extraordinary resource at opportunityatlas.org where you can type in an address and look up children’s likelihood of earning an income that exceeds their parents at the age of 35. I lost a couple of hours on the site. Highly recommended.

I abandoned grading my students and stopped taking attendance. Here’s what happened

J. W. Traphagan, a professor at the University of Texas at Austin, abandoned traditional grading and attendance requirements, opting for a self-evaluation system that eliminated busywork and replaced grades with an assessment of participation and a score assigned by each student to reflect their performance. Here are his takeaways:

First, I often hear that students are apathetic about learning these days. This is inaccurate. Students are, in fact, excited about learning.

However, they’re indifferent to or even bothered by the educational system’s incessant emphasis on quantitative measures and assignments that seem to have little or no value. Most students want to learn, but don’t see the conventional educational approach as providing a particularly good framework for learning.

Second, many students have experienced enormous stress and anxiety. High school can be a pressure cooker focused on grades, test scores, GPAs and getting into the right college. As a result, learning seems like a side effect of education rather than the goal.

My students consistently note that when they don’t have to anticipate the expectations of their professor, they can focus on taking chances in their writing and thinking. And taking chances often leads to true learning and mastery of a topic.

Finally, this experiment has forced me to think about intellectual rigor in the classroom. Is a system designed to generate stress through piling on work and being “hard” — whatever that means — rigorous?

Or is rigor about creating an environment where students enjoy the learning process and, as a result, willingly engage in broadening their horizons and thinking about their lives?

I think it’s the latter.

Supporting Students to Ask More Questions May Narrow the Achievement Gap

Lory Hough, writing for Harvard Ed. Magazine describes the finding of a study following 103 children aged 5 to 7 as they participated in a series of virtual science lessons, with one group being encouraged to ask questions and the other to listen carefully. The study aimed to determine whether encouraging children to ask questions or listen carefully would lead to greater learning and curiosity. Unshockingly, it did.

Furthermore, practice with question-asking was more beneficial for children with lower baseline knowledge, suggesting that question-asking shows promise for enhancing children’s motivation to learn and equalizing academic disparities.

Honestly, it's frustrating that we're still having this conversation: student-centered learning should not be a novel concept in 2023. And yet, there are still those who believe that this approach only “works” in advanced classes, or that it doesn't work for all students. This could not be further from the truth.