The Greatest Gift is Giving: Other Ways to Give Back
This week, we’ve collaborated with Operation: Social Santa to spread the word about the importance of giving during the holiday season, offer advice for starting a toy drive in your school or community, and celebrate the joy that comes from making sure children have something to be excited for.
We've interviewed the founder of Operation: Social Santa, Harrison Kratz, to talk to us about the importance of giving, and Makefield Element…
How Schools Give Back: An Interview with the Principal of Makefield Elementary
Yesterday, Teach.com interviewed Harrison Kratz, founder of Operation: Social Santa, to kick off our week-long series about giving back during the holidays and how teachers can organize toy drives, food donations, and service projects to teach students the importance of giving.
In our interview with Operation: Social Santa, we learne…
Engaging Gifted and Talented Students
The National Association for Gifted Children defines gifted children as “those who demonstrate outstanding levels of aptitude or competence in one or more domains.” While many public schools offer specific gifted and talented programs, a number of schools do not, especially in states where it is not mandated. Most teachers are likely to have the pleasure of teaching …
Meeting Their Needs: A Guide to Individualized Education Plans
Special education is a rewarding field, helping students with special needs reach their goals and become as independent as possible. To be an effective educator, good communication must be maintained with all of the team members and the Individualized Education Plan(IEP) must be followed at all times. IEPs are essentially the blueprint for a student’s education, so creating one is not a process to be taken lightly. Since the IEP requires careful planning, considerations and a team-based approach, here is some information on how special education teachers can help develop truly individualized educati…
Don’t Be Defined By Who You Were in High School
This blog was originally published on Finding Common Ground at Education Week by Peter DeWitt on November 22, 2012 9:53 AM.
Failure is something to learn from, not run from.
The other day I ran into a guy I went to high school with which seems to be a lifetime ago. The first thought that came to mind was that it was over twenty years ago. Then I thought about how quickly life goes by. It doesn't seem that way when we are younger. When we are young, life ticks by slowly as we wait to become old enough to drive or graduate from high school.
Although we both only live about an hour from where we grew up it was the first time I had seen him since we went to high school. It's funny how running into someone from our past…
George Lucas to Invest Star Wars Money into Education
George Lucas’s sale of the Star Wars franchise to Disney has been making major headlines. Disney paid a whopping $4.05 billion for exclusive rights to Star Wars, and according to Business Week, Lucas is receiving approximately $2 billion in cash and $2 billion in D…