Drew Alexander
8.1K posts

Drew Alexander
@DTedifies
29. Son. Husband. Father. Servant of Jesus. 8th Grade ELA Teacher. Fatherhood Program Coordinator. Science of Reading Advocate. Mentor. Coffee Enthusiast.


Nobody wants to read AI-generated books.

This is a terrible way to explain things. 1. The whole game is a distraction. Students won’t be looking at the architecture or customs etc. they’ll be watching the gameplay. 2. Opportunity cost: time. The time it takes to rig this up, open it, talk about it etc is far more than just…explaining it to them. 3. It assumes that students need this to connect with other eras. They don’t. 4. It teaches them to expect this kind of window dressing every time something new needs explained. That’s a bad habit. Common responses to me would be ‘oh but if it gets one kid interested it’s worth it.’ What about the others who lost out on ten extra minutes detailed explanation and instruction? The reason I know this isn’t a good way to teach is because I used to do it like this for a while. I thought I was being kind and helpful. It wasn’t.



This is what emotionalism looks like. This is what a pop concert looks like. This is NOT what worship looks like.

Schools should go back to pen-and-paper only (and everyone knows it).

I've written an article with Sophie Winkleman on why we must save textbooks in schools. You can read it on my Substack here substack.com/home/post/p-19… or in the @spectator





The @TheWritingRevol / Hochman method is built on sentence-level instruction. Our next evolution: when students write CERs using the single paragraph outline, I am explicitly teaching them to start evidence sentences with transitional phrases and extend them with because, but, or so. This structure helps students make relationships in evidence explicit, including explanation, contrast, and cause and effect, within a single sentence. I’ll share student examples soon, as I’ve done before. The improvement in their writing has been remarkable since I began using sentence-level instruction. Most importantly, when students have clear sentence structures and strong knowledge of a topic, writing becomes far less overwhelming. I’m also seeing something unexpected: students are far more willing to write, and even enjoy it, because they now have the knowledge and sentence tools needed to express their thinking clearly.

The majority of teachers have no clue how to explicitly teach students to write. Why is nobody talking about this?










