MarieODoherty
1.8K posts

MarieODoherty
@ImMarieOD
Learner, educator, "literacy geek", and proud mom.
Katılım Ekim 2016
584 Takip Edilen337 Takipçiler

Shout out to @SouthwestAir for going getting us home before the blizzard. Alan A. and another Alan from MCO Airport worked together to get us on an earlier flight, back home to Long Island. We really appreciate them going above and beyond! ❤️💛💙
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MarieODoherty retweetledi

Here is an awesome back-to-school activity called ""Meet Our Crew"" that's perfect for welcoming new students. They can make videos to introduce themselves and see who's in their class. Teachers can do it too!
buff.ly/3xB6krD

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MarieODoherty retweetledi

Google's NotebookLM will transform your lesson prep. As a teacher, it is a must have tool for your digital toolkit. I am sharing 5 reasons to dive in and start using it today on my latest blog post.
Read the 5 Reasons: alicekeeler.com/2025/07/19/5-r…
#edtech #NotebookLM #AIinEducation

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TEXAS FLOOD TRAGEDY: I have known about this since yesterday, but with it now all over social media I decided to share this with you this morning.
One of those missing was 8 year old Sarah Marsh from Mountain Brook, a student at Cherokee Bend Elementary. Relatives have stated on social media that she did not survive. Please join me in praying for her family. 

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@tedcruz I seem to remember you and your family booked a flight out of TX last time there was a natural disaster…hopefully you’ll stay this time.
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Congratulations to Trinity Ricevuto and Ava Vadyak! Special Congratulations to Player of the Year, Olivia Moynihan! 🟣⚡️ newsday.com/sports/high-sc…
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“He didn’t knock. He stood on the porch, just breathing.”
For three years, Ella set a plate at the dinner table for her son, even though he was halfway across the world.
“Still deployed,” she’d whisper if anyone asked. But that wasn’t the full truth.
He stopped calling after his second tour.
His letters stopped after the third.
They told her it was “stress.” That it was “normal.” That soldiers sometimes “pull away.” So she waited. Set the plate. Lit a candle on his birthday. Folded his laundry even when there was none.
Her neighbors stopped asking about him.
So did the mailman.
Then one Sunday, as she stirred soup and watched the rain tap the window, she felt it. A presence.
Not footsteps. Not a sound.
Just... a knowing.
She opened the door. And there he was.
Sgt. Daniel Hart. Her baby boy. But different.
Thinner. Shoulders heavier. Eyes older.
He didn’t say a word.
He just stood there, in his uniform, soaked through, holding a single letter. It wasn’t for her—it was from her. One of the dozens she’d sent. This one was wrinkled, smudged, but in the corner he had scribbled: “Read this every night.”
They didn’t hug at first.
They just cried. Together. On the porch.
When they finally stepped inside, he paused at the table.
His plate was still there.
Clean. Waiting.
That night, they sat down together. He didn’t talk about the war. She didn’t ask.
They spoke of soup recipes. Of the cat that wouldn’t stay off the couch. Of the neighbor’s new car.
It was enough.
Over time, he healed in the quiet moments—helping her fix the roof, walking to the store, watching reruns of her favorite show.
And once, in the middle of the night, she caught him sitting at the table, tracing the edge of his plate.
He looked up and whispered, “Thanks for not giving up.”
Credit: L. Marlowe

Cresson, PA 🇺🇸 English

















