And the Board of Directors has just about figured out this Christmas thing and twigged onto the notion that presents are coming (but why not right now). I am going to try not to think constantly about all the family and children and grandchildren that I am not seeing this week, because that sucks. In the meantime, here's some reading from this week.
The Logjam that Awaits Biden's education secretary
Derek Black at CNN, with hard dose of reality therapy for everyone imagining that a new administration will bring dramatic change. What a grinch. Okay, he may have some points, too.
How to assign writing when you don't teach writing
Paul Thomas with some great thoughtful practical advice for assigning writing when that's not really your lane.
For Black educators when school systems aren't doing enuf
Dena Simmons at ASCD with some powerful personal reflections for the times.
Reaganland: Public education and America's right turn
Have You Heard talks to Rick Perlstein and takes us back to the seventies. Really interesting stuff about how schools became a target in the culture wars.
Black students most likely to be going to school remotely
Samantha Fields at Marketplace looks at an emerging trend. Safety and trust seem to be the issues (and not that they are dupes of the teachers unions).
Testing students this spring would be a mistake
Can't say this enough, but this time it's not me, but testing expert Lorrie Shepard at EdWeek.
Fifty years of trickling down didn't work
Not directly related to education, exactly, but important validation for what everyone already knew.\
How teachers are sacrificing student privacy to stop cheating
From Vox, one more article pointing out that surveillance software is a bad idea, and schools should knock it off.
The 2020 snow day is here. It must include "sleducation."
Okay, I wish Joshua Goodman at Education Next had the courage to write sleducation without the quotation marks, but still a nice little piece.
A rural school under pressure to stay open
This is how ugly it's getting in places like rural Idaho, where the 'rona is still a big hoax and people are too tough to mask up. Kirk Siegler at NPR.
Sen. Jon Tester on Democrats and rural voters
Tester has some thoughts, including the novel idea of standing up for public education. From New York Times.
Florida lets voucher schools hire dropouts as teachers--and keep it secret
The Orlando Sentinel has been a great source of watchdogging the Florida shenanigans. You may or may not be able to scoot past the paywall, but if you can, this story is amazing. You will not believe how bad it is down there.
As the gap between students and teachers of colors widens in PA, Black families demand change
Sojourner Ahebee reporting for WHYY, Philly's NPR station. This is a great piece of reportage, with plenty of nuance and detail for a difficult topic. If you don't read anything else this week...
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