I have always had a gut-level aversion to acronyms. Why do I hate these so? I love silent sustained reading, but I hate SSR. I agree that it's useful to survey a text, ask questions to predict before you read, the recite (or summarize) after read, and then review by trying to answer your initial... Continue Reading →
Growing a joyful education revolution through research & reciprocity
“An educator in a system of oppression is either a revolutionary or an oppressor.” Lerone Bennett Jr. The new superintendent of the school district where I work and where my children attend school shared this revolutionary quotation when he spoke to district administrators earlier this month. I am so eager to learn how our new... Continue Reading →
Curriculum implementation with community: Re-centering fidelity to humans
Recently while working with teachers on curriculum implementation, I've been thinking a lot about why the phrases "implementation with fidelity" and "implementation with integrity" have always confused or annoyed me at best and enraged me at worst. Confused: "To whom or what do you want to me to be faithful?" Annoyed: "Who decides if I... Continue Reading →
Five questions to ask before hiring an educational consultant
Whether it's a back-to-school keynote address, a series of trainings to support a department's new curriculum, or a long-term contracts for school or district-wide initiatives, there are so many valuable educational consultants available to help educators consider new perspectives and implement new practices. The best consultants bring research and theory alive while engaging educators in... Continue Reading →
‘Tis the season to confront institutional malaise
In my last post, I wrote about educational scarcity and how small wins keep me going—but also how depressing these small wins can be when I consider how far we have to go in pursuit of just, humanizing schools. In that post, I focused on the possibility of progress—even minor progress—to energize. But now, I... Continue Reading →
To be or not to be patient
“Don’t be patient. Don’t ever be. This is the way a new world begins.” When I read this quote near the conclusion of N.K. Jemisin's amazing Broken Earth trilogy this year, it spoke to me: Yes, change happens when we're not static, complacent, or passive. And sometimes that requires a certain relentlessness that can be...a... Continue Reading →