Kevin Snyder, Ed.S.

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Kevin Snyder, Ed.S.

Kevin Snyder, Ed.S.

@KevinSnyder71

#Educator, #Teacher, #History, #ComputerScience, #EdTech, teacher, former admin & curriculum director. Views are my own. RT's not an endorsement.

Lancaster, OH Katılım Aralık 2009
1.3K Takip Edilen1.3K Takipçiler
Matthew H
Matthew H@MattH_4America·
So, what did 13 Americans die for exactly?
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Kevin Snyder, Ed.S.
Kevin Snyder, Ed.S.@KevinSnyder71·
@FixingEducation It would be different if this were a very small number of kids. It is, in fact, a large number of kids who do not care. Their home environment is not supportive. This is HUGE societal problem that schools cannot fix alone.
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Fixing Education
Fixing Education@FixingEducation·
A 6th grade student misses over 30% of the school year and puts in almost no effort…and the school’s solution is to pass them along to the next grade. Hmmm, I wonder how they will do next year. 😐
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Kevin Snyder, Ed.S.
Kevin Snyder, Ed.S.@KevinSnyder71·
@0Beanie05923291 The thing I don’t like about PBIS is that average kid who just shows up, does most of his work, doesn’t cause any trouble, and does average work is totally neglected. Meanwhile, the class disrupters were given rewards on the occasion they acted average.
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beanie0597_2.0
beanie0597_2.0@0Beanie05923291·
Positive Behavioral Interventions and Supports (PBIS) sets the bar really low for behavioral expectations. It rewards students for behavior that they should be doing simply because it is the general expectation of the school and because they live in a civilized society. It also presents those who don’t care about positive feedback with the option to behave in uncivilized ways and forgo any praise or reward if they feel like it. Schools that set clear expectations when it comes to behavior, teach and practice the expected behaviors, and issue consistent negative consequences for not meeting the expectations don’t need PBIS. It’s appropriate to occasionally thank students for being prepared for class or respectfully listening and responding to classmates, but schools shouldn’t be fawning over students for normal behavior as if it’s the exception rather than the rule. PBIS benefits and rewards the few students who see rules and expectations as optional. Meanwhile, it sacrifices the safe, calm, orderly learning environments that the majority of students who follow and appreciate the rules deserve. PBIS is another education acronym that needs to be ditched and schools need to return to high behavior expectations and consistent consequences.
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David W Pippy
David W Pippy@DWPippy·
What ever happened to the Republican health care plan?
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Kevin Snyder, Ed.S.
Kevin Snyder, Ed.S.@KevinSnyder71·
@GlennHefferan @NCAA Also, stop letting players play who are not enrolled in a bachelors or graduate degree program at the university. These guys still playing but not taking classes needs to stop.
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Kevin Snyder, Ed.S.
Kevin Snyder, Ed.S.@KevinSnyder71·
@GlennHefferan @NCAA The NCAA is stupid. Give players five years to play five. Allow one free transfer without sitting out a year. If the head coach leaves they can another transfer option. If they graduate with their bachelors then they get another transfer option.
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Glenn Hefferan
Glenn Hefferan@GlennHefferan·
Once again, the @NCAA misses the mark. A five-year eligibility clock is reasonable, but this proposal overlooks two predictable consequences. First, athletes and their advisors will adjust high school graduation timing so the eligibility clock starts later, pushing graduation closer to age 19. Second, this creates a disincentive for academically advanced student-athletes who currently graduate at 17 and begin college coursework early while continuing their athletic development. Policies should encourage academic acceleration, not discourage it. There also does not appear to be any grandfather clauses. By the way, ncaa hockey players are among the highest graduation rates and academic success.
Yahoo Sports@YahooSports

The NCAA is giving "serious consideration" to a five-year age-based eligibility concept, per @RossDellenger Division I Cabinet members will meet today to discuss further.

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Kevin Snyder, Ed.S.
Kevin Snyder, Ed.S.@KevinSnyder71·
@ODOT_EastCenOH How many people need to die and how many crashes are needed to make you guys get on the ball? It is so dangerous yet nothing is done about this. Living in Zanesville is very dangerous now.
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Pete Moe II
Pete Moe II@Petermoe20·
TRANSFER PORTAL Pete Moe II | 6’9” | 235 lbs | Forward National Park College 22 PPG | 8 RPG | 5 APG 60% FG | 51.5% 3PT | 77% FT Led NJCAA Region 2 in total points (636) #11 in JUCO (Total Points) #12 in JUCO (PPG) NJCAA Region 2 All-Region Former Division I Player
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Recruits Zone (Blake Smith)
Recruits Zone (Blake Smith)@recruitszone·
Miami of Ohio transfer Eian Elmer is one of the most lethal spot up shooters in the portal currently. Finished the season shooting 44.2% FG in catch & shoot situations & with a 66.3% EFG%. Does a majority of his damage in spot up & transition opportunities. Elmer has such a smooth jump shot & displays lots of fluidity in his game. Really like his jumper mechanics. Was a hero for the Redhawks in their March Madness First-Four game against SMU, where he finished with 23 PTS (8/11 FG, 6/9 3PT).
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Nathan Christensen
Nathan Christensen@NathanC_AD·
The current market in college basketball is far from “fair market value.” I fully support student-athletes being compensated, but as an industry, we have to get a better handle on this. The system has lost its way, and to be clear, that’s not on the student-athletes.
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Jeff Goodman
Jeff Goodman@GoodmanHoops·
One high-major head coach to me: “This has become a joke. We got guys who averaged 3 points a game asking for a million dollars. It’s completely out of control.”
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Pete Moe II
Pete Moe II@Petermoe20·
6’9” 230 lbs Forward
22 PPG | 8 RPG | 5 APG NJCAA REGION 2 ALL-REGION I have officially entered the transfer portal- (2 years remain NCAA Eligible) Former D1 Player (Marshall University) Represented by Edge Sports Agency Keith Kreiter Highlights: youtu.be/G5dYM0MXkfo?si…
YouTube video
YouTube
Pete Moe II tweet media
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Kyle Wagner
Kyle Wagner@GowagsKyle·
"Jack Nicklaus had the greatest career ever but the greatest golfer ever and the greatest golf that's ever been played and it's not even close was Tiger Woods." - @chambleebrandel
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Jeff Goodman
Jeff Goodman@GoodmanHoops·
The officiating crew has 17 Final 4's between them: Jeffrey Anderson (8), James Breeding (5) and Kipp Kissinger (4).
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Ronald Ussery Jr, Esq.
Ronald Ussery Jr, Esq.@ronaldusseryjr·
For decades, nobody pushed for federal regulation while athletes generated billions without compensation. The urgency to "save college sports" only arrived once players started seeing some of the money, and that framing tells you a lot.
Mit Winter@WinterSportsLaw

As @JayBilas correctly points out, there’s a lot of hypocrisy in college athletics right now. It’s only when athletes begin to get paid that it’s necessary to have a federal law to “save college sports.”

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Pete Thamel
Pete Thamel@PeteThamel·
Sources: North Carolina intends to hire longtime NBA coach Michael Malone as the school’s next basketball coach. He’s an NBA Championship coach with the Denver Nuggets from the 2022-23 season and has won 510 games as an NBA head coach.
Pete Thamel tweet media
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