Patty Carpenter

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Patty Carpenter

Patty Carpenter

@_THErealPC

teacher/learner

Присоединился Ağustos 2014
252 Подписки279 Подписчики
Patty Carpenter ретвитнул
Brandon Luu, MD
Brandon Luu, MD@BrandonLuuMD·
Students who took notes by hand scored ~28% higher on conceptual questions than laptop note-takers. Writing forces your brain to process and compress ideas instead of copying them.
Brandon Luu, MD tweet media
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Patty Carpenter
Patty Carpenter@_THErealPC·
Not surprising to be honest. Teachers are being micromanaged by admin, textbook companies, testing companies, and politicians who have never managed a large group of diverse children, let alone teach a child to read. It might help if teachers were given a bathroom break.
Steve Magness@stevemagness

In 2008, 62% of teachers said they were very satisfied with their job. In 2022, that dropped to 12%. We've got a serious problem brewing in education...

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Dana Palubiak
Dana Palubiak@DanaPalubiak·
A child who reads twenty minutes a day encounters millions of words in a year. That exposure builds vocabulary, background knowledge, and language patterns. No worksheet can compete with that. Reading widely is one of the most powerful learning engines we have.
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Brian Tolentino M.Ed
Brian Tolentino M.Ed@TolentinoTeach·
If you haven’t taught in a classroom post-Covid, you don’t know what it is like to teach the modern student. The students have changed. Teaching has changed. You have to be in the classroom daily to understand what I mean.
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Steel City Star
Steel City Star@steelcitystar·
OTD in 1980…. The Joe Greene Coca-Cola commercial airs during Super Bowl XIV Although it debuted earlier that season, the ad reaches new heights with a Super Bowl audience, eventually elevating it to one of the most memorable ads in sports history.
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Beth Moore
Beth Moore@BethMooreLPM·
I don’t know what to make of prolific people on social media who appear to never have mixed feelings. Who take a certain side, defend a certain position down the line no matter what has occurred. I mean, nothing ever happens to make a person cry foul on their own team? Nothing?? Is there no point when our side has gone too far? I can’t comprehend it. Seems to me that is putting way too much confidence in humans. Nobody’s always right. The thing about straight lines drawn by human hands is how prone they are to get crooked.
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Patty Carpenter ретвитнул
𝐁𝐫𝐚𝐝 𝐉𝐨𝐡𝐧𝐬𝐨𝐧
When a 2nd-grade math word problem is written at a 4th-grade reading level, it’s not really about the math anymore. It’s about reading above grade level. Reading belongs in math. Kids have to make sense of problems. But when the language is harder than the math, the outcome is predictable. Students can understand the math. They can know how to solve it. And still fail — because of how the question is written. This isn’t an accident. International comparisons (PISA and TIMSS) show that U.S. math assessments are often longer, wordier, and more linguistically complex than those used in many higher-performing countries — even when testing the same math concepts. In other words, testing companies design questions that make it easier to miss the math. If we want math scores to mean something, grade-level math needs grade-level language.
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Patty Carpenter
Patty Carpenter@_THErealPC·
It’s called “parenting”
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Pittsburgh Pirates
Pittsburgh Pirates@Pirates·
REPOST THIS now for a chance to win a signed jersey from 2025 NL Cy Young Award winner, Paul Skenes!
Pittsburgh Pirates tweet media
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Ms. Benison-
Ms. Benison-@BenisonMrs·
Ms. Benison- tweet media
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Robert Bortins
Robert Bortins@TheRobertBshow·
Public schools: "Memorize these 1,000 sight words and guess the rest from pictures!" Classical homeschoolers: "Here are 44 phonemes. Now you can read anything in the English language." One creates dependent readers. One creates independent thinkers. Choose wisely.
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Patty Carpenter
Patty Carpenter@_THErealPC·
Wow! Just Wow! I feel your heart. ❤️
Travis Akers 🇺🇸@travisakers

A message from a Kindergarten teacher: After forty years in the classroom, my career ended with one small sentence from a six-year-old: “My dad says people like you don’t matter anymore.” No sneer. No malice. Just quiet honesty — the kind that cuts deeper because it’s innocent. He blinked, then added, “You don’t even have a TikTok.” My name is Mrs. Clara Holt, and for four decades, I taught kindergarten in a small Denver suburb. Today, I stacked the last box on my desk and locked the door behind me. When I started teaching in the early 1980s, it felt like a promise — a shared belief that what we did mattered. We weren’t rich, but we were valued. Parents brought warm cookies to parent nights. Kids gave you handmade cards with hearts that didn’t quite line up. Watching a child sound out their first sentence felt like magic. But that world slowly slipped away. The job I once knew has been replaced by exhaustion, red tape, and a kind of loneliness I can’t quite describe. My evenings used to be filled with construction paper, glitter, and glue sticks. Now they’re spent filling out digital reports to protect myself from angry emails or lawsuits. I’ve been yelled at by parents in front of twenty-five children — one filming me with his phone while I tried to calm another child mid-meltdown. And the kids… they’ve changed too. Not by choice. They arrive tired, anxious, overstimulated. Their tiny fingers know how to swipe a screen before they can hold a crayon. Some can’t make eye contact or wait in line. We’re expected to fix all of it — to patch the gaps, heal the trauma, teach the curriculum, and document every move — in six hours a day, with resources that barely fill a drawer. The little reading corner I once built, full of soft beanbags and paper stars, was replaced by data charts and “learning metrics.” A young principal once told me, “Clara, maybe you’re too nurturing. The district wants measurable results.” As if kindness were a weakness. Still, I stayed. Because of the small, holy moments that no spreadsheet could measure — a whisper of, “You remind me of my grandma.” a shaky note that read, “I feel safe here.” a quiet boy finally meeting my eyes and saying, “I read the whole page.” Those tiny sparks were my reason to keep showing up. But this last year broke something in me. The aggression grew sharper. The laughter in the staff room turned to silence. The light went out of so many eyes. I watched brilliant teachers — my friends — vanish under the weight of burnout, their joy replaced by survival. I felt myself fading too, like chalk on a board that’s been wiped one too many times. So today, I began my goodbye. I pulled faded art off the walls and tucked thirty years of handmade cards into a single box. In the back of a drawer, I found a letter from a student from 1998: “Thank you for loving me when I was hard to love.” I sat on the floor and cried. No party. No applause. Just a handshake from a young principal who called me “Ma’am” while checking his notifications. I left my rocking chair behind, and my sticker box too. What I carried with me were the memories — the faces of hundreds of children who once trusted me enough to reach out their hands and learn. That can’t be uploaded. It can’t be measured. It can’t be replaced. I miss when teachers were partners, not targets. When parents and educators worked side by side, not in opposition. When schools cared more about wonder than numbers. So if you know a teacher — any teacher — thank them. Not with a mug or a gift card, but with your words. With your respect. With your understanding that behind every test score is a heart that cared enough to try. Because in a world that often overlooks them, teachers are the ones who never forget our children.

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