TEACHING THE SOUL PEDAGOGY and EDUCATION: Just what is it that needs to be REFORMED in our schools? |
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After
volunteering and teaching in public schools for almost twenty years, I
think I've finally begun to see why more public
funds aren't dedicated to schools, to teaching, and to teachers. First,
the ruling class doesn't really want to have an educated, innovative,
critical thinking
populace in our country, because it perceives that it might
threaten its, or its children's, power. Meanwhile, the ruling class
can afford to send its kids to private/independent schools that don't
use nationally-mandated
standardized tests and standards designed to cripple a good teacher's
creativity and discredit her perceptions of what her students need
most. Accordingly, many public school classrooms have been reduced
to mere conditioning cells for the children of the middle and under
classes.
• Take a look at this bone-chilling discovery for teachers and anyone who loves education: Poor Child Left Behind. • Who benefits most from NCLB? Who's behind the NCLB Act? |
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| Please
enjoy this insightful (and hilarious) twenty minute speech by Sir Ken
Robinson, an author and speaker on creativity in education and business. How can we teach so we don't squash our children's creativity, but nurture it, expand it, channel it, and allow it to flourish? The ingenuity and needs of our ancestors helped to create the millions of artistic and cultural dances, stories, songs, sculptures, homes, tools, languages, and customs that exist today. How were those ancestors trained? How did they learn from the land and the spirits of the land to work playfully and play intently? The Making History Project is one of the many curricular units I have designed to integrate the spirit of discovery, innovation, and creative play into education. They used to be inseparable... |
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Making History is a classroom humanities simulation wherein students, grades four and up, undertake the challenge of building a rich culture or civilization from scratch. Each simulated society begins with relatively few technological skills, similar to the way early humans lived tens of thousands of years ago. During the four to seven month duration of the project, the simulation traverses thousands of years of cultural complexity and brings some of the civilizations into a bronze age. The challenge of the simulation is to cooperate as a team: to create and develop a rich culture; to work with specific and limited natural resources; to trade and interact with other societies; and to research, invent, and document the whole development in journals. The students celebrate their achievements and conclude the project with a presentation of traditional foods, stories, dances, and ceremonies developed by their truly unique societies. • Read about the history of Making History. |
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LANGUAGE ARTS TEACHING RESOURCES FROM ME, TO YOU, FOR FREE • Download the latest copy of my Style Guide for Middle School Students writing in English here, as a pdf. • The
"Golden Page" of transition
words and classical word elements to keep on file, or in
memory, through college. |
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ORIGINAL, AND VERY FUN, PLAYGROUND GAMES Download the rules to Pogo, a high-speed foursquare game I played as a kid, and now teach kids to play. the handwritten rules for the Insiders/Outsiders (a.k.a., Sieze the Castle) one-flag version of Capture the Flag here, as a pdf. |
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