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Archive for the 'Education' Category

I don’t normally waste my time mocking people, but sometimes, it has to be done. My motto in this area is pretty simple: I’m willing to let a person take the first couple of swings at me, and I give him fair warning that it’s time to knock it off and/or leave before making […]

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Dear Dumb,
Visitors to this site are welcome to their opinions; however, comments (such as yours) demonstrating a complete lack of control of the English language will be removed to spare other readers from suffering unnecessary idiocy.
As a repeat offender, you have been banished: I laugh at you and your ignorance, and you can’t do a […]

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We’re in the midst of week ten of a sixteen week semester, and last week was midterm time, so over the weekend, the last significant wave of drops took place.
For the better part of yesterday, I had the feeling I was teaching at the Twilight Zone’s main campus.
Several of the students in my classes this […]

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I have a hard time reconciling where I stand when it comes to technology in education, and I blame my students.
I see the benefits of many technological advances; however, much of the positive is outweighed by students’ failing to take appropriate advantage of the tools at their disposal.
Here are a few examples:
E-mail:
When I was in […]

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Yeah Team!

Back in the beginning of October, Christina Mallon, a teacher at Williams Field High School in Gilbert, Arizona, was placed on paid administrative leave for performing a cheerleading routine during one of her classes.
The performance was captured by a student on his camera phone video recorder, and the student subsequently uploaded the video to YouTube. […]

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Welcome to my contribution to Blog Action Day!

What’s it about?
On October 15th, bloggers around the web will unite to put a single important issue on everyone’s mind - the environment. Every blogger will post about the environment in their own way and relating to their own topic. Our aim is to get everyone […]

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I’m not sure why other people teach, and there are days I don’t know why I do, but I’m willing to bet none of us does it as a means to undermine the success of students.
There is very little joy derived from students who don’t succeed, and even if the lack of success is completely […]

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I used to try to hold regular class meetings on the days formal writing assignments were due, but I’ve learned how foolish it is to expect the average (i.e. procrastinating) student to finish up a paper and read something for a class discussion.
I’ve come up with a few ways to solve this issue:

The quick meeting: […]

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Grading essays is such an odd task: it combines evaluation with instruction, but each message is often lost on its audience. Marking papers is a time consuming and exhausting process, and not getting paid to do it only becomes more frustrating when I consider the effort is probably going to be ignored by the […]

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I collected my students’ first formal written assignment yesterday, and I’ll begin the grading process later this evening.
One the positive side, I had a show-up rate of about 90% which is very high on the day an assignment is due, and the first reads I did yesterday evening showed promise.
On the negative side, the death […]

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