DM
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The “Southern Surge” is the education story of the year An underreported aspect of it are the discipline bills that accompanied the literacy reforms My co-author and I compared the state discipline laws between a handful of red and blue states city-journal.org/article/missis…

The more time students spend on screens, the less they learn. Ed tech does not belong in schools (until it is thoroughly tested & proven to help). Excerpt from Jared Cooney Horvath's excellent new book, The Digital Delusion, in @TheFP thefp.com/p/we-gave-stud…

A generation ago, adults tended to rely on plain descriptors. A kid was shy. A kid was disruptive. Now we reach more quickly for clinical language. The shy child becomes a case of anxiety. The disruptive child becomes someone with ODD. The behavior hasn’t necessarily changed, but the frame around it has. The bigger issue is why we have moved so decisively toward medicalizing these traits. Traditional labels were imperfect, but they left room for growth. Calling a child shy suggests something malleable. Calling that same child “anxious” in the clinical sense suggests a condition that might shadow them for years. A diagnosis carries the weight of permanence. It can imply that a child has been marked by an authority in a way that is difficult to escape. That shift, I think, risks disempowering the very kids we’re trying to help.





NEW POST The Radiologist Link in reply - hope you enjoy it and please share if you can 🙏🙏














