Betsy A

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Betsy A

Betsy A

@alwineb

Wife, mom, dyslexia specialist, educational leader. Looking to learn more and share what excites me along the way!

Katılım Mayıs 2012
172 Takip Edilen34 Takipçiler
Betsy A
Betsy A@alwineb·
@NancyAFrench Sooo many things resonate! From Arky Arky,to the Bible bowl competitions…
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Nancy French
Nancy French@NancyAFrench·
You told me to bring a casserole to the potluck. You told me to volunteer for the church nursery. You told me to tithe. You told me you’d changed. You told me to sit down and be quiet, because God loves obedient children. /END
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Nancy French
Nancy French@NancyAFrench·
My letter to the church: You told me to sit down and be quiet, because God loves obedient children. You told me to go to church three times a week so I would “forsake not the assembly of the saints.” /1
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edutopia
edutopia@edutopia·
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Daniel Pink
Daniel Pink@DanielPink·
5 questions every manager should ask their direct reports: Link: lnkd.in/eE8TiUAt
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Daniel Pink
Daniel Pink@DanielPink·
"The courage to start. The discipline to focus. The confidence to figure it out. The patience to know progress is not always visible. The persistence to keep going, even on the bad days. That's the formula." — @shaneparrish
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Joshua Claybourn
Joshua Claybourn@JoshuaClaybourn·
British Prime Minister Margret Thatcher famously once said, “Europe was created by history. America was created by philosophy.” Nearly all European nations trace their beginning to a common ethnic kinship or a cultural characteristic, but America was created by exiles united in voluntary assent to shared political beliefs. That’s why British writer G. K. Chesterton visited the United States for the first time and remarked that America was “a nation with the soul of a church,” not because of its religiosity, but because of a common creed enshrined in “sacred texts” of the Declaration of Independence and Constitution. In 1776, a near-miraculous stew of ideas and leaders came together to form a Declaration of Independence, and 11 years later an equally miraculous gathering formed the Constitution, both centered on a belief in universal human dignity. Government does not grant you the right to free speech, assembly, religion, press, protest, or redress of grievances. We believe that these rights are inalienable and government’s role is simply to protect those rights and ensure human dignity. Government is just a tool, not a source. That’s really a remarkably profound idea we take for granted and fail to celebrate enough. Of course, the sad irony is that the very Founders who argued these ideas so frequently fell short of those same principles. Some owned slaves, and nearly all opposed equal rights for women. So it naturally caused upheaval when nineteenth century Americans increasingly adopted a view held that “All men are created equal,” including black Americans, and a few generations later it came to encompass women as well. Abraham Lincoln believed that the Declaration of Independence did not necessarily proclaim people equal in all respects. Instead, it meant that all people were created with certain equal, inalienable rights—they are ours by right of simply being human—among which are “life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.” A free society should always strive to achieve these equal rights, even if, as in the case of the Founders, it fell short of that goal in the past. The Declaration’s concept of equality is an aspiration, Lincoln said, “constantly looked to, constantly labored for, and even, though never perfectly attained, constantly approximated, and thereby constantly spreading and deepening its influence and augmenting the happiness and value of life to all people, of all colors, everywhere.” That is the genius of Lincoln’s argument: that the Constitution is concrete (at least until amended), but the Declaration of Independence is aspirational, and the American project is a move toward the aspiration. Despite its roots in American independence, the 4th of July is incomplete without understanding and celebrating Lincoln too. His unique view of the Declaration as an aspirational goal helped properly frame American independence for what it was and what it was bound to be.
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Betsy A
Betsy A@alwineb·
Learning to read is a matter of life or death. #SOR
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Betsy A
Betsy A@alwineb·
There is no quick fix for #dyslexia, it is a lifelong journey, and years of intervention. #SOR
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Betsy A
Betsy A@alwineb·
We never neglect comprehension, we listen to stories with rich vocabulary, and we learn to decode. But we continue to work on comprehension. #SOR
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Betsy A
Betsy A@alwineb·
Dyslexic students have deficits in phonology, but also have multiple struggles. #SOR
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