Nancy M

496 posts

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Nancy M

Nancy M

@BetterEd4all

Raising awareness about Delaware's education disaster and to advocate for better school boards and reforms. "Wisdom seldom comes from the highly educated."

Delaware 가입일 Nisan 2023
231 팔로잉114 팔로워
고정된 트윗
Nancy M
Nancy M@BetterEd4all·
@ChadAldeman just dropped a great article about a high poverty school district in MD that has found the secret to teaching ALL kids to read proficiently. His piece is a Cliff’s Notes version of how to lift up all students – low-income, special needs, and everyone else. Determined leadership, a focus on high-quality core instruction (+ lots of practice) for each and every kid, and strong partnerships with parents. If any school in Delaware is taking the same approach, I'd love to hear about it. If not, why not? #EducationForAll the74million.org/article/the-ma…
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Nancy M
Nancy M@BetterEd4all·
This is truly something to feel joyful about because this is an example of a few people changing the trajectory of academic harmful trend. This is the antidote to restoring kids' mental health. I, for one, am glad to see it.
Jonathan Haidt@JonHaidt

The Anxious Generation was published two years ago today, in a very different world. Back then, the most common objection I got was resignation: "The train has left the station." "You can't put toothpaste back in the tube." "It's how the kids connect today." Today, the world looks very different. It turns out that if our kids were all on a train and we learned it was heading toward a collapsed bridge, we'd find a way to stop it and bring them safely back to the station. That’s what’s happening now. After the historic verdicts in Los Angeles and New Mexico, today is a great day to reflect on the capacity of people in democratic societies to take action, even when opposing some of the most powerful corporations in history. We're getting access to the courts. We're getting phone-free schools. We're seeing whole neighborhoods letting kids out to play, unsupervised, which is what we older folk all remember as the best part of childhood. So I want to recognize: --The mothers (and, right behind them, fathers) who rose up by the millions and powered the movement. --The farsighted governors and legislators in red states and blue states who have been innovating on policy solutions. --The leaders of a dozen of nations, who are raising the age to 16 for opening social media accounts (with a special shoutout to Australia, for going first). --The teachers and school administrators who had their classrooms disrupted for 15 years, and who are now eager to think through new solutions as screens have taken over and obstructed learning. --The grassroots organizations who have been dedicating their efforts to advocate for all of the above in their local communities. --The millions of members of Gen Z who have been rising up, demanding agency over how they spend their lives in the digital era, and finding better ways to connect in real life. And one final group: the survivor parents--the ones you saw in those pictures of people embracing on the front steps of the LA courthouse. I have met many over the years. I am in awe of their courage and tenacity, their willingness to tell their stories of loss, over and over again, to different audiences, in the hope that no other parent would have to endure what they have endured. At long last, juries and legislatures are hearing you, and are acting. Together, we are calling the train back to the station. Together, we are rolling back the phone based childhood and reclaiming life in the real world. The work continues. If you’re not already involved, join us: anxiousgeneration.com/join

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Nancy M
Nancy M@BetterEd4all·
@marcportermagee I see the value of children playing competitive sports, but in moderation. Maybe one practice, one game a week. So long as parents 'play the game' it won't stop. Wish I could get some of them to have their kids read books instead.
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Nancy M
Nancy M@BetterEd4all·
@TheFigen_ This video brought to mind one of my favorite books as a kid: "The Incredible Journey" about a lost Labrador retriever, bull terrier and Siamese cat who brave the elements to find their way home.
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The Figen
The Figen@TheFigen_·
This movie has written itself. 7 stolen dogs break free from their captors and walk 17km all the way home - led by one brave little Corgi across busy highways and open fields.
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Nancy M
Nancy M@BetterEd4all·
School Boards sometimes rely too heavily on activity as a proxy for impact. Meeting more often, approving more items, or launching more initiatives does not necessarily translate into improved student outcomes. The 'activity' trap is most prevalent in superintendent reports. What they need to focus on is insights they gained from those activities.
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Nancy M
Nancy M@BetterEd4all·
Seven school districts in Delaware will hold school board elections on May 12. That's 44% of all seats up for election. The 2025 national average was 64%.
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Marc Porter Magee 🎓
Marc Porter Magee 🎓@marcportermagee·
“Children are blank slates” — Ignores temperament, talent and the child’s own agency “Education reform as a moonshot” — Applies technocratic solutions to a social process “Digital natives” — Assumes growing up with technology will assure it is well used
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Marc Porter Magee 🎓
Marc Porter Magee 🎓@marcportermagee·
“Teachers are coaches” — Coaches train for competition and a clear bar for winning “Teachers are facilitators” — Facilitation implies the knowledge is already in the room “Every child is a genius” — Dignity shouldn’t require extraordinary claims
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Nancy M
Nancy M@BetterEd4all·
It's not been a fruitful year for citizen interest in running for school board. It seems as if most (not all) of the candidates are incumbents, educators, activists or in the mental health field. Not so much business people, who would look at how education is delivered differently. Filing deadline is March 6 by 4:30 pm.
Nancy M tweet media
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Nancy M 리트윗함
Hedgie
Hedgie@HedgieMarkets·
🦔 A neuroscientist who testified before the Senate says US schools weren't broken until tech companies convinced them they were. Jared Cooney Horvath found that test scores in Utah started declining right when schools implemented mandatory digital infrastructure in 2014. The US has spent $30 billion putting laptops and tablets in classrooms since 2002. According to international data, more time students spend on computers correlates with worse scores, not better. Gen Z is the first generation to score lower than their parents on standardized assessments. Now the same cycle is repeating with AI. A Pew survey found more than half of US teens use AI for schoolwork. Teachers report students can't reason, think, or solve problems independently. Horvath argues that tools experts use to make their lives easier are not the tools students should use to learn how to become experts. My Take The "transfer problem" goes back to the 1950s. Students learn to master the tool but not the subject matter. Pressey and Skinner ran into this with teaching machines 70 years ago, and we're running into it again with AI. The tech changes but the outcome doesn't. I think Horvath has it right. Learning requires friction. You have to struggle with a problem to actually understand it. AI removes that friction, which feels like help but functions as dependency. An expert can use AI effectively because they already know enough to evaluate the output. A student using AI to skip the hard part never builds that foundation. We're watching an entire generation learn to operate tools instead of developing the skills the tools are supposed to augment. The productivity gains go to the platforms, not to the kids. Hedgie🤗
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Dale Chu
Dale Chu@Dale_Chu·
Oh-no-klahoma. From 21st ➡️ 48th.
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Nancy M
Nancy M@BetterEd4all·
Our society can’t succeed if its citizens can’t think for themselves. And that starts with reading literature that use engaging stories and language to explore more complex themes. Classics endure over time for a reason. They’re way better than any TikTok video.
Nancy M tweet media
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Nancy M
Nancy M@BetterEd4all·
@educatedandfree @0Beanie05923291 I think both of you agree! Most states that have retention policies already in place do it to flag early interventions to raise reading skills for those who need it. In most cases, this approach works.
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Dissident Teacher
Dissident Teacher@educatedandfree·
@0Beanie05923291 Unless they get targeted support, holding them back doesn’t do much good. Thats why it’s seen as a punishment.
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beanie0597_2.0
beanie0597_2.0@0Beanie05923291·
Some say that holding 8-year-olds back a grade because they can’t read will negatively impact their “self-esteem”. What about the “self-esteem” of students when they become 18-year-olds who graduate from high school illiterate because they were just moved through the system?
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Nancy M
Nancy M@BetterEd4all·
I hear many educators and school board members discount the validity of 'testing' because students don't 'take it seriously.' It sounds like a weak excuse. Mastery of knowledge areas is the job of educators. Everything else flows from it.
Tiffany Hoben@taoneal

Tests should assess what students are expected to learn. 🧵👇 That principle isn’t controversial. It’s the foundation of how standards, curriculum, and assessment are supposed to work in any serious education system.

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Nancy M
Nancy M@BetterEd4all·
@MrDanielBuck We use to call that 'introverted' or 'shy'. It was pretty normal - not considered a disease.
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Nancy M
Nancy M@BetterEd4all·
School Board superintendent reports too often are about activity rather than progress made in achieving their goals (as set by the board). Not only could a list of activities be an email, it doesn’t clarify whether students are actually improving.
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Nancy M
Nancy M@BetterEd4all·
@edudissenter They aren't even that curious about what other states in this country are doing right!
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Dissident Teacher
Dissident Teacher@edudissenter·
Why aren’t American teachers curious about other countries’ education systems? Do they really think we have nothing to learn?
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Nancy M
Nancy M@BetterEd4all·
Doesn't appear to be any interest in running for school board to improve Delaware's education system, with a focus on ensuring kids can read, write, do math and think critically. Only 2 1/2 weeks until March 6 filing deadline. Help me understand...
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Nancy M
Nancy M@BetterEd4all·
So true. Public school board meetings rarely give insight to parents or the community about academic achievement challenges and progress, safety in schools, or how they are spending hard-earned taxpayer dollars. If the public attended these meetings, they will notice.
National School Boards Leadership Council@nsblc4ed

A school board seat isn’t a rubber stamp. If a board member approves every proposal without asking tough, thoughtful questions, our district loses valuable oversight. We need candidates who show up informed, prepared, and ready to think critically. #SchoolBoardMembers #SchoolBoardTraining #EducationLeaders #nsblc4ed

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