Bio-punk. Weird literature. A sci-fi fantasy that is frighteningly real. Split Second Solution is a dystopian urban novel set in New York City in 2022 that predicted the rise of Trump (the Ginger Tom) and anticipates his fall.
Read MoreDavid Joseph Kolb is a journalist and author. Devil Knows: A Tale of Murder and Madness in America’s First Century is his first published work of fiction.
Read MoreIn a major AI experiment, China has elementary school students “begin their lessons not by opening textbooks, but by putting on headbands” so their brain waves and “focus” can be monitored by computers. Students are then encouraged to compete with each other to be the most focused.
Read MoreWe’ve become so obsessed with these scores – a set of discrete numbers – that we’ve lost sight of what they always were supposed to be about in the first place – learning.
Read MoreNominated for a pulitzer prize and a finalist in the USA Best Book Awards in the historical fiction category, “Devil Knows: A Tale of Murder and Madness in America’s First Century” is a mystery-in-the-archives thriller written with great charm and cinematic flair.
Read MoreClasses in Chicago’s public schools were canceled starting Oct. 17 as more than 25,000 teachers in the nation’s third-largest school district went on strike in what they’re calling a fight for “justice and equity” for their students.
Read MoreCan a teacher challenge the wealthiest man in the world? This is the question Garn Press asked when Anthony Cody’s The Educator And The Oligarch was first published. The answer is a resounding “Yes!” Anthony Cody not only challenged Bill Gates but also received the NCTE George Orwell Award, which recognizes writers who have made outstanding contributions to the critical analysis of public discourse.
Read MoreOur decreasing social distance to other people in the world may also facilitate the spread of misinformation and fake news, especially when it captures our emotions or imaginations. But, it also rewards us with serendipitous discoveries of connectedness.
Read MoreIt’s common knowledge that liberals and conservatives live in different places. After all, the idea of “red states” and “blue states” is based in reality. But preferences are much more local than that.
Read MoreIf we want kids to have the best chance possible to adapt to a constantly changing environment then we must nurture their creativity. Merging the arts with social emotional learning and academic learning helps create students who care about the world in which they live.
Read MoreThis is a first-person essay in response to recent PublicSource stories on the racial achievement gap in Allegheny County school districts.
Read MoreDiane Ravitch provides remarkable insights into her seminal thinking on public education, and on the dangers to democracy of treating parents as consumers, students as products, and teachers as compliant followers of commercial scripts.
Read MoreOn this episode, Gideon and Richard talk to Denny about her work in Family Literacy, her involvement with UN, and a number of the major issues facing society today relating to education, technology, and climate change. They also discuss two of Denny’s books; Rosie’s Umbrella, a book inspired by Denny and her mother’s own experiences of life in the Welsh mining towns of the early 20th century.
Read MoreHistorically and currently, public education—as well as charter schools and private schools—serve well the students with the most race, class, and gender privileges and mis-serve inexcusably the most vulnerable students. Accountability does not and cannot address that gap.
Read MoreTry not to get distracted. You may well not end up exactly where you envisioned at the start, but with luck and skill and effort and good partners and carefully applied expertise, you can end up someplace great and wonderful and rewarding.
Read MoreActive learning is not a specifically defined teaching technique. Rather, it’s a spectrum of instructional approaches, all of which involve students actively participating in lessons.
Read MoreBetsy DeVos rarely makes a statement without referring to her idea of Education Freedom. She is, of course, referring to school vouchers. But as education secretary she has been more about denying students true education freedom. DeVos stands for the opposite of educational freedom.
Read MoreScholars in the humanities interpret human history, literature and imagery to figure out how people make sense of their world. Humanists challenge others to consider what makes a good life, and pose uncomfortable questions – for example, “Good for whom?” and “At whose expense?”
Read MoreThe false curtain of objectivity we’ve set up in our assessments may also be hiding from us what authentic learning is taking place and it may even hinder such learning from taking place at all.
Read MoreClimate activists walked out of classrooms and workplaces in more than 150 countries on Friday, Sept. 20 to demand stronger action on climate change. Mass mobilizations like this have become increasingly common in recent years.
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