Thursday, April 24, 2025

Comparative Judgement

 Comparative judgment is indeed a powerful tool for deepening students' understanding of quality in writing. This method has strong roots in British educational research, particularly in the work of researchers like Alastair Pollitt and his "Comparative Judgement" methodology.

The comparative approach offers several key benefits:

  1. Develops evaluative expertise: When students must decide which essay is "better" and justify their reasoning, they're forced to articulate their understanding of quality criteria rather than just recognizing them.
  2. Builds metacognitive awareness: Students must reflect on what makes writing effective, which helps them internalize those standards for their own work.
  3. Creates concrete examples: Abstract concepts like "effective source integration" become clearer when students can see two different approaches side by side.
  4. Reduces cognitive load: Sometimes it's easier to recognize quality differences between two works than to evaluate a single work against abstract criteria.

Tuesday, December 3, 2024

Helping Students Read Complex Texts

 Helping Students Read Complex Texts  By cultivating metacognitive reading habits, you can help students remain focused as they persist through challenging material.

Edutopia - summary of research of mindless reading and 8 tips for better comprehension.  7 & 8 are my favorites.

📄 Summary (2 Sentences):
This article outlines research-based strategies to help students build metacognitive awareness while reading complex texts across disciplines. It emphasizes that while attention drift is normal, students can be taught to persist through challenging reading using tools like rereading, annotation, vocabulary previewing, and self-explanation.

Longer summary: Students often lose focus while reading challenging or technical texts, but this struggle can be reduced with explicit instruction in metacognitive reading strategies. Research shows that teaching students how to monitor their understanding, recognize confusion, and apply tools like rereading or vocabulary lookups improves both attention and comprehension. Building background knowledge before reading helps students make meaningful connections and retain more information. Teachers can also boost comprehension by previewing key vocabulary with visuals and context rather than relying solely on definitions. Strategies like annotating, reading aloud, and paraphrasing key ideas in students’ own words help them stay engaged and process content more deeply. Modeling these strategies out loud while reading difficult texts can normalize the struggle and show students how to persist. Ultimately, students need a toolbox of strategies and the confidence to use them flexibly when tackling complex material across content areas.

📘 Danielson Domain:
Domain 3: Instruction – 3c: Engaging Students in Learning and 3e: Demonstrating Flexibility and Responsiveness
Also aligns with Domain 1: Planning and Preparation – 1e: Designing Coherent Instruction and 1f: Designing Student Assessments

🏷️ Keywords:
Complex texts
Metacognitive reading strategies
Annotation

Useful for cross-disciplinary PD, especially when collaborating with science, history, or CTE teachers on supporting reading in their content areas. This article can also serve as a tool to help teachers reflect on how well they model reading processes and provide scaffolds for independence. Could be repurposed into a quick teacher checklist or mini-PD on “What to do when students get lost in a text.”

Monday, December 2, 2024

David Brooks: Rethinking meritocracy

 David Brooks on Rethinking the Meritocracy

            In this article in The Atlantic, David Brooks says the American “social ideal” from the late 1800s to the 1950s was a well-bred graduate of Harvard, Princeton, or Yale – “good-looking, athletic, graceful, casually elegant, Episcopalian, and white.” These men had a smooth pathway to high-paying jobs, power, and even the White House. “People living according to this social ideal,” says Brooks, “valued not academic accomplishment but refined manners, prudent judgment, and the habit of command. This was the age of social privilege.” 

            Then a small group of college presidents, led by James Conant at Harvard, decided that if the U.S. was to prosper and lead in the 20th century, it could no longer be ruled by this narrow, inbred aristocracy. Instead, admission to elite universities should be based on intelligence, with the aim of creating a brainy elite drawn from across the nation. “At least half of higher education, I believe,” said Conant, “is a matter of selecting, sorting, and classifying students.” He and other educators trusted IQ tests to identify this cognitive elite.

            When a few selective universities adopted this mindset, says Brooks, the effect was “transformative, as though someone had turned on a powerful magnet and filaments across wide swaths of the culture suddenly snapped to attention in the same direction. Status markers changed” – and so did family life. Many parents tried to raise children who could get into selective colleges, “ferrying their kids from one supervised skill-building, résumé-enhancing activity to another. It turns out that if you put parents in a highly competitive status race, they will go completely bonkers trying to hone their kids into little avatars of success.” Most working-class parents, on the other hand, let their kids be kids, free to wander and explore.

            K-12 schools changed as well, cutting down on recess, art, shop, and home economics and spending more time on testing and Advanced Placement classes. “The good test-takers,” says Brooks, “get funneled into the meritocratic pressure cooker; the bad test-takers learn, by about age 9 or 10, that society does not value them the same way.” The upper end of the job market followed suit; a 2024 study showed that 54 percent of high-achieving lawyers, artists, scientists, business and political leaders had attended the same 34 elite colleges. Recruiters across the board were obsessed with college prestige. In short, Conant’s dream of an aristocracy of intelligence became a reality. 

            But do we have a better elite? The earlier WASP aristocracy “helped produce the Progressive Era, the New Deal, victory in World War II, the Marshall Plan, NATO, and the postwar Pax Americana,” says Brooks. “After the meritocrats took over in the 1960s, we got the quagmire of Vietnam and Afghanistan, needless carnage in Iraq, the 2008 financial crisis, the toxic rise of social media, and our current age of political dysfunction. Today, 59 percent of Americans believe that our country is in decline, 69 percent believe that the ‘political and economic elite don’t care about hard-working people,’ 63 percent think experts don’t understand their lives, and 66 percent believe that America ‘needs a strong leader to take the country back from the rich and powerful.’” 

            That’s the zeitgeist, and it’s difficult for parents to pull out of the rat race; their kids might get passed by the tiger mom’s kids next door. Teachers must teach to the tests, striving students focus on their GPAs instead of something they’re passionate about, and college admissions officers are prisoners of the U.S. News and World Report rankings. “In other words,” says Brooks, “we’re all trapped in a system that was built on a series of ideological assumptions that were accepted 70 or 80 years ago but that now look shaky or just plain wrong.” 

Here are what he considers the six deadly sins of the U.S. meritocratic ethos, each accompanied by a Brooks quote:

-   It overrates intelligence. “If you rely on intelligence as the central proxy for ability, you will miss 70 percent of what you want to know about a person.” 

-   Success in school is not the same thing as success in life. “We train and segregate people by ability in one setting, and then launch them into very different settings.” 

-   The game is rigged. “As the meritocracy has matured, affluent parents have invested massively in their children so they can win in the college-admissions arms race.” 

-   The meritocracy has created an American caste system. “As in all caste societies, the inequalities involve inequalities not just of wealth but of status and respect.” There are troubling disparities in divorce, health, longevity, opioid addiction, and loneliness.

-   The meritocracy has damaged the psyches of the American elite. “The system has become so instrumentalized – How can this help me succeed? – that deeper questions about meaning or purpose are off the table, questions like: How do I become a generous human being? How do I lead a life of meaning? How do I build good character?”

-   All this has provoked a populist backlash that is tearing our society apart. “Many people who have lost the meritocratic race have developed contempt for the entire system, and for the people it elevates. This has reshaped national politics” – not just in the U.S. but in France, Turkey, Hungary, and Venezuela. 

In short, says Brooks, “James Conant and his colleagues dreamed of building a world with a lot of class mixing and relative social comity; we ended up with a world of rigid caste lines and pervasive cultural and political war.”

            So what is to be done? Moving away from meritocracy is not going to happen, says Brooks; throughout human history, every society has been hierarchical. “What determines a society’s health,” he believes, “is not the existence of an elite, but the effectiveness of the elite, and whether the relationship between the elites and everybody else is mutually respectful… The challenge is not to end the meritocracy; it’s to humanize and improve it… The crucial first step is to change how we define merit… Having a fast mental processor upstairs is great, but other traits may do more to determine how much you are going to contribute to society.” Brooks would like us to focus more on four human qualities:

            • Curiosity – Kids between 14 months and five years old make about 107 inquiries an hour, but schools tend to stamp out kids’ natural curiosity. Why? Brooks believes it’s because of standardized tests, which push teachers to march through a test-aligned curriculum. This narrow focus produces a lifelong disadvantage, he believes. We need to allow more play and ability for children to keep being curious and pursue their passions. 

            • A sense of drive and mission – An important quality that needs to be uncovered and nurtured in the young is purpose beyond themselves. Perhaps that will be indignation at injustice, compassion for the disadvantaged, the pursuit of new knowledge, creating something beautiful.

            • Social intelligence – “In an effective meritocracy,” says Brooks “we’d want to find people who are fantastic team builders, who have excellent communication and bonding skills… players who have that ineffable ability to make a team greater than the sum of its parts.” These non-cognitive skills – listening, empathy, communication – are just as important as technical brilliance. 

            • Agility – This is the ability to size up the different aspects of a situation, see the flow of events, and make good decisions about what to do next. High-IQ experts are seldom good at this, says Brooks, but agile thinkers “can switch among mindsets and riff through alternative perspectives until they find the one that best applies to a given situation.”

            In short, says Brooks, “If we can orient our meritocracy around a definition of human ability that takes more account of traits like motivation, generosity, sensitivity, and passion, then our schools, families, and workplaces will readjust in fundamental ways.” He admires schools like High Tech High where students are immersed in project-based learning, skilled teachers act more as coaches of learning than purveyors of knowledge, and achievement is measured by portfolios of students’ best work – papers, speeches, projects – defended in face-to-face presentations to a committee of adults and peers. 

            Brooks also wants us to redefine the nation’s “opportunity structure – the intersecting lattice of paths and hurdles that propel people toward one profession or way of life and away from others.” Right now, he says, our opportunity structure is too narrow, channeling kids through one bottleneck after another to achieve elite status: high grades, good test scores, college and graduate degrees. Better to have “opportunity pluralism,” where young people have a broader range of pathways and we have not a single pyramid but a mountain range with many possible peaks of achievement. Brooks suggests four ways to achieve this:

-   Prioritize career and technical education – “Schools should prepare people to build things, not just to think things,” he says. 

-   Make national service a rite of passage after high school, which will build friendships across class lines as young people make real contributions to society.

-   Invest more in local civic groups and community organizations where young people can serve others, lead meetings, rally neighbors for a cause.

-   Support economic policies like the CHIPS and Science Act to boost the U.S. industrial sector and provide jobs for those who don’t want professional and office jobs.

Brooks’s conclusion: “We want a society run by people who are smart, yes, but who are also wise, perceptive, curious, caring, resilient, and committed to the common good. If we can figure out how to select for people’s motivation to grow and learn across their whole lifespan, then we are sorting people by a quality that is more democratically distributed, a quality that people can control and develop, and we will end up with a fairer and more mobile society… We want a meritocracy that will help each person identify, nurture, and pursue the ruling passion of their soul.”

 

“How the Ivy League Broke America” by David Brooks in The Atlantic, December 2024 (Vol. 334, #5, pp. 26-40); Brooks can be reached at dabrooks@nytimes.com

The Teaching Profession since the 1970s

 from Marshall Memo 1063 - Nov 25, 2024

The State of the K-12 Teaching Profession Since the 1970s

            In this American Educational Research Journal article, Matthew Kraft (Brown University) and Melissa Arnold Lyon (University at Albany) trace the ups and downs of the U.S. teaching profession over the last five decades, measuring prestige, interest among prospective teachers, the pipeline, and on-the-job satisfaction. “We find a consistent and dynamic pattern across every measure,” say Kraft and Lyon: “A rapid decline in the 1970s, a swift rise in the 1980s extending into the mid-1990s, relative stability, and then a sustained decline beginning around 2010. The current state of the teaching profession is at or near its lowest levels in 50 years.” 

            Teachers play a central role in shaping young people’s academic, emotional, and career trajectories and “also collectively shape the democratic ideals, social cohesion, and economic competitiveness of the nation as a whole,” say Kraft and Lyon. “But despite the central role teachers play in our society, they have long struggled to gain and maintain the status of a prestigious profession… Teachers are at once heroes and villains, saints and scapegoats. Throughout the history of the common school in the United States, reforms have repeatedly characterized teachers as both the problem and the solution to the perceived shortcomings of public education.”

K-12 schools need to fill more than 200,000 positions a year, so the perceived status of the profession is of great importance. Here’s Kraft and Lyon’s analysis of four key factors in recruiting and retaining effective teachers:

            • Occupational prestige – The Harris and Phi Delta Kappa polls have traced public regard for the profession over time. One measure is whether parents want their children to pursue a teaching career. The percentage saying yes in the PDK poll went from 75 percent in 1969 to 46 percent in 1983, rose to over 65 percent by 2011, then fell to 37 percent in 2022.

            • Adolescents’ interest in becoming a teacher – High-school and college students’ inclinations are shaped by public perceptions of K-12 teaching, family and peer influences, their own interests, and career opportunities. The rise and fall of interest in a teaching career tracks public perceptions of the prestige of teaching, falling to only 3 percent among first-year college students in the mid-2000s.

            • Those preparing to become teachers – Not surprisingly, the number enrolling in and completing education degrees also mirrors public prestige and career interest. 

            • Job satisfaction – The pattern is similar, with a high of 52 percent of teachers reporting they are very satisfied with their work in 2001, a decline starting in 2011, falling to a low of 12 percent in 2022 after the pandemic, and then in 2023 a modest uptick to 20 percent. 

            Kraft and Lyon suggest a number of hypotheses for these trends – economic, sociopolitical, educational policy, and social environment, all of which have some validity:

-   Economic hypothesis #1: Declines in funding and subsequent contractions in the teacher labor market reduced interest in the profession.

-   Economic hypothesis #2: Stagnant teacher pay has made the profession less attractive.

-   Economic hypothesis #3: Rising college costs discourage students from pursuing teaching as a career.

-   Sociopolitical hypothesis #1: The women’s rights movement opened higher-paying career opportunities in other fields, while school desegregation in the South resulted in many African-American teachers losing their jobs, which discouraged entry to the profession for decades. 

-   Sociopolitical hypothesis #2: Unionization affected occupational prestige by associating teaching with blue-collar occupations, though it also improved working conditions and pay.

-   Educational hypothesis #1: More-rigorous barriers to entry (certification, licensure requirements, and teacher tests) raised prestige but lowered the supply of new teachers (except where alternative routes to the profession have been available).

-   Educational hypothesis #2: Teacher accountability, including high-stakes “competency based” teacher evaluation, undercut teacher prestige, interest, preparation, and satisfaction by reducing teacher autonomy and job security. 

-   School environment hypothesis #1: Unfavorable working conditions make the profession less attractive and enjoyable – among them unmanageable class sizes, weak school leadership, lack of collegiality, time constraints, inadequate resources, and disruptive student behavior. 

-   School environment hypothesis #2: Safety concerns have made the profession less attractive and enjoyable – perceptions of a “blackboard jungle” in the 1960s and 70s, zero tolerance policies since the 1990s, and school shootings, which spiked in 2017. 

Kraft and Lyon sum up what they believe are the most important reasons for the current low point for the teaching profession: stagnant teacher wages, the rising cost of college, the perceived loss of teacher authority and job security, new policies and rhetoric targeting teacher unions, changing cultural perceptions about the teaching profession (for example, cover articles in Time and Newsweek about “rotten apple” teachers and campaigns to ban books and restrict discussion of race and sexuality), and most recently, teacher stress and burnout during Covid-19 school closures and backlash against teachers for resisting the reopening of schools as the pandemic waned. 

What will turn around this crisis in the teaching profession? Kraft and Lyon believe teacher pay, benefits, job security, and career ladders are important, as well as increasing teacher autonomy, professionalism, and voice in their schools. “This is not to say that teachers should be left alone in their classroom or expected to develop curricular materials on their own,” say the authors. “Such practices can lead to inconsistent instruction, professional isolation, and burnout. Instead, efforts to support teachers through coaching, professional learning communities, and peer observation and review programs might create the conditions, and develop the skills, teachers need to feel successful with their students and ensure the profession maintains high standards.” 

The authors suggest “bottom-up” collective action so teachers and unions play a greater role in school policymaking, and point to the importance of recruiting a diverse and talented pool of teachers and the need to deal with school shootings and other forms of violence. 

“Elevating the teaching profession is a generational task,” conclude Kraft and Lyon, “but one that would produce considerable benefits for both individual students and the nation. As our exploratory analyses demonstrate, the status of the teaching profession is neither arbitrary nor preordained. It is also not a monolith. Rather, it is a constellation of different localized contexts and markets that are directly shaped by education leaders, policymakers, and our society as a whole. We have the agency to make different decisions from the local to the national level by building on newly emerging bright spots amidst the worrisome evidence.”

 

“The Rise and Fall of the Teaching Profession: Prestige, Interest, Preparation, and Satisfaction Over the Last Half Century” by Matthew Kraft and Melissa Arnold Lyon in American Educational Research Journal, December 2024 (Vol. 61, #6, pp. 1192-1236); Kraft can be reached at mkraft@brown.edu, Lyon at mlyon@albany.edu

Tuesday, October 22, 2024

High Quality Discussions - Stems

 The Discussion Project

Helpful Language for High Quality Discussion  https://tinyurl.com/n2t2a5c

These are useful for BOTH instructors and students. 


Clarify

  • I have a question about ______

  • Are you saying that_____?

  • Could you clarify _______?

  • Can you point me to that in the text?

  • I want to understand what you’re saying. Can you explain________?


Seek elaboration or evidence

  • Could you say more about that?

  • Tell us more….

  • Why is __________important?

  • What makes you say that?

  • Could you explain what _______ means?

  • Could you give me an example of that?

  • How do you know that?

  • Where in the text is there support for that idea? 

  • How does _______ connect to_____?

  • Is there a way to read this differently?


Confirm

  • If I’m understanding correctly, you’re saying ______________ [then paraphrase]

  • What I hear you saying is ______________ [then paraphrase]


Build on others’ thoughts

  • I want to build off what _______ said.

  • I appreciate what ______ pointed out and now want to ask________

  • _________[person]’s idea made me wonder about __________

  • How does what you just said compare with what (a previous student) just said?


Invite others to speak

  • Does anyone want to add on?

  • We haven’t heard from ______ yet. What are you thinking?


Agree

  • I agree with _____ because _____.

  • I like what _____ said because _____.

  • I agree and I would add __________.


Disagree

  • I’m wondering about _______

  • I’m not sure I agree with __________ because of _________

  • I hear what __________ is saying, yet I think_________


Agree & Disagree

  • I agree that _______ but I disagree about ________ because

  • I agree with that point and would like to add my thoughts to it. 


Extend

  • Does anyone see this differently?

  • Can you tell us a bit more how what you just said connects to what others have been saying?

  • I was thinking ______ but now I’m wondering______

  • I’m curious about that, too. It makes me think____________

  • What would happen if_________?

  • How does ________ connect to_____?

  • Is it possible that?_________

  • How are your thoughts now different from your initial assumptions?

Thursday, October 10, 2024

Tips for Parent-Teacher Conferences

ChatGPT responses - link

Scholastic article Ten Tips

Don't believe everything you hear in the teacher's lounge. Most parent-teacher conferences are cordial, productive, and informative. If meetings do happen to go awry, what matters is getting back on track. Use these ten tips to steer clear of common pitfalls.
  1. Do some research first. Send home a Looking Forward to Our Conference Letter a couple of weeks before parent conferences, asking parents what their main concerns and questions are. Staple their responses directly to your conference notes and use them to guide your conference preparation.  from letter: The areas I/we are most interested in discussing include.... Also: do you have additional questions or comments?
  2. Use your established assessment system. Review any checklists or notes you've been using for ongoing assessment. Decide whether to have the checklist with you at the conference or use it to create a conference note form. The checklist may be unnecessarily specific for the conference, or you may not want parents to see your raw notes. If either of these is the case, create a Parent Conference Form.
  3. Organize your notes into simple categories on a Parent Conference Form. Include only the most vital and relevant standards in each curriculum area and the simplest and most useful of ratings categories — for example, Areas of Strength, Areas of Concern, and Goals. Using a grid or following a simple conference note form allows you to notice quickly whether your presentation will give the overall picture you want to convey. For example, will you sound more negative than you intend to? Do you need to find more to add to the strengths category?
  4. Ask your students how they think they're doing. Although as the teacher you have a broad and sophisticated perspective on student progress, asking students in upper elementary and middle school to reflect on their own work can be very useful. They are very likely to provide additional insights into areas of growth or challenge, or draw your attention to something you've missed.
  5. Be prepared with samples of student work. Parents should leave a conference with a clear idea and concrete examples of what's going well and what areas need work. While it's not a good idea to overwhelm parents with a whole semester's worth of written work, well-chosen samples in a portfolio will support and clarify your salient notes.
  6. Always begin with what the child does well. Without exception, human beings are more receptive to constructive criticism — even bad news — when our hard work, honest attempts, and natural talents are noticed and remarked upon. Parents identify with their children and, in many cases, experienced similar academic or social circumstances themselves when they were young. It's vitally important to them that you see their children as individuals and that you like them. In some cases, you may have to search high and low for a success story. It's worth it if you want to be heard when you recommend an evaluation, a change in reading group, or a tutor.
  7. Only say what you know. Don't feel you have to report on every area of the curriculum. Get an idea of what each family's priorities are (by sending home a notice before conference time), and discuss what seems most relevant. It's perfectly acceptable to say, "I need to do a little research on that, and I'll get back to you," if a parent asks you something you are not prepared to answer. This response, if stated confidently and unapologetically, is perfectly professional, and certainly is preferable to making something up on the spot. If a parent is disrespectful or unpleasant, don't feel you have to defend yourself. Maintain your composure by acknowledging the comment without engaging the parent unnecessarily. "Hmm. You find the homework is too easy. I'll make a note of that. Can you give me a brief example of what you mean?" Write the feedback on your notes, and then immediately regain control of the conference by returning to your agenda and your prepared materials.
  8. Avoid jargon. Using overwrought professional vocabulary or this month's educational buzzword actually makes your dialogue with parents less substantial. Instead of using catchphrases or technical terms, describe what you mean or demonstrate it with examples or concrete materials. For instance, instead of using the term "miscue" when discussing a student's reading, try "When reading aloud, Irene frequently substitutes one work for another similar-looking word. For example, on this page, she read 'understandable' instead of 'unmanageable.'" Make your written reports concise and jargon-free as well.
  9. Show that you know the child by having an anecdote ready to share. Parents deeply appreciate your knowledge of their child, above and beyond the child's academic abilities. A brief story about a comment made in a class meeting, a journal entry, or a social interaction can personalize a conference and make it more satisfying for parents.
  10. Anticipate frequently asked questions. For new teachers, as well as teachers who are new to a school or to a grade level, it's helpful to consult more experienced teachers to find out what parents typically ask about. Frequently, parents at particular grade levels may be preoccupied with testing, progress in reading, the transition to middle school, and other matters. While you don't want these concerns to overwhelm your agenda, you should be prepared to respond to them.

This article was adapted from Your Best Year Yet! A Guide to Purposeful Planning & Effective Classroom Organization by Shoshana Wolfe (© 2006, Scholastic).

2. ASCD link

Making the Most of Parent-Teacher Conferences

Parent-teacher conferences offer great opportunities to deepen your working relationship with parents. As you highlight their child's strengths, discuss academic or social concerns, and share information about child development, parents come to see you as an ally and themselves as true partners in their child's education. A little thinking and planning will help you make the most of these great opportunities.

Tips for Success
Make an outline and gather materials. A plan for how you'll divide up the time will help you stay on track. Here's a general outline for a 30-minute conference:
  • 5 minutes: Opening conversation
  • 10 minutes: Report on academic progress and concerns
  • 10 minutes: Report on social progress and concerns
  • 5 minutes: Summing up
However, you may need to put your plan aside if a parent raises an urgent issue that you weren't expecting. Remember that you can always schedule another conference!
In addition to writing an outline, you'll want to make notes for topics you want to cover and have at hand student work, assessment results, information on child development, and anything else you want to share with parents.
Offer conversation starters. Put parents (and yourself) at ease with a question or two: "What did Sam like about school last year?," "What does Tina like to do at home?," or "What are some things you'd like her to accomplish this year?"
Invite parents to share their thoughts. As experts on their children, parents can share valuable insights. And they'll appreciate your respectful recognition of their role in helping their children.
Highlight the positives. Recognize a child's strengths before discussing her struggles. You'll give parents some perspective while encouraging them to work productively with you.
Address just one or two concerns. Listing too many problems can make parents (and their children) feel defeated. Mention that you'd like to help the student with several things, but for now you'd like to concentrate on just one or two.
Let parents know if you need thinking time. It's perfectly OK to tell parents you want to think through what they've said, observe their children for a bit, consult others, or read up on an issue they've raised.

Be Prepared for Surprises
Parents sometimes surprise us with negative or personal questions or comments: "My son's teacher bullied him all last year." "My daughter's lazy. She never tries at anything." "My husband doesn't care about Mark. He never comes to these conferences." "My wife's divorcing me. Things are falling apart."
What can you do in such an instance?
  • Steer the conversation back to positives: "I'm sorry things didn't go well for Adam last year. But because our time is limited, I'd like to focus on what we can accomplish this year if we work together."
  • Focus on the child: "You seem to be going through some tough stuff right now. I wonder if that's taking Jasmine's attention away from school. What do you think we might do to help her concentrate?"
  • Listen with empathy: "That must be hard" or "You've been through a lot" can help parents feel heard without injecting your own opinion or advice.
  • Offer to get help: "You seem to be wondering what to do next. Our school counselor may have some ideas for you."

Follow Up and Follow Through
After each parent-teacher conference, send a note thanking parents for sharing time with you. If you offered to find resources, gather information, and so forth, make sure you do so—and share the results with parents.

Each parent-teacher conference can be a powerful occasion for meaningful communication with families. Thinking ahead and following some simple guidelines will help ensure that conferences are positive and productive for everyone. 

Thursday, October 3, 2024

Misconceptions about learning

 A Quiz on Misconceptions About Learning – In this Education Week article, Sarah Sparks challenges us to distinguish between correct and erroneous beliefs about learning and the brain, including brain cell connections, detecting novelty, right-brain/left-brain dominance, developmental phases, expert vs. novice thinking, brain capacity usage, learning styles, testing, native language learning, and dyslexia. Be brave – test yourself!