Blue Serials (August 30th, 2015)

You may have noticed that I’ve been a bit perturbed by bureaucracy and its silly ilk recently. No surprise, then, that this struck me as amusing when I rediscovered it this weekend:

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Hope springs eternal, however, thanks largely to these golden word-gatherings you may have missed this past week: 

Just One Day At A TimeLife As A Sleeper was one of the first blogs of which I was really aware. Blue Cereal didn’t exist and most of my social media activity involved hockey. Audrey is a fellow Dallas Stars fan and knows her stuff – with fervor and attutide, just the way I love it. The first time my wife and I visited Dallas for a game, she was part of a small group who let us hang and made us feel welcome. We walk in very different worlds, but as I became aware of her blog back in the day, I was struck by the balance between how very real she was able to be while still writing well and looking professional. I am now blessed to know many of you for whom this is the norm, but it was new to me. She made quality blogging seem like something real people could do. She was the person I first asked about the logistics, the difficulty, etc., and while I doubt she even remembers who I am, her willingness to answer my stupid questions and encourage my audacity still amazes me. I love this piece. Follow Audrey at @lifeasasleeper on the Twitters.

No Enemies – I was unfamiliar with Mr. Rad’s Neighborhood before this week. Tulsa Supt. Deborah Gist tweeted out a link to this post, I happened to see it, and… the magic happened. Mr. Rad here laments our tendency as a profession to seek out enemies and arguments and ditches in which to die when when we have more than enough on our mental and emotional plates already. Perhaps once we’ve defeated ignorance and swept away pedagogical wickedness in high places, we can go back to bickering over whether that kid from TFA working her *** off in the room next door is the devil in flats and sensible accessories. I have a new #educrush on Mr. Rad and will be following him on his Tumblr, er… thing (I’m old – I don’t know how to do the Tumblr or say its things) and on the Twitters at @MrTomRad – you should, too. 

The Drive, Episode #6: Equity – Math and #edtech guru Scott Haselwood continues one of the quirkiest #oklaed series of which I’m aware, as he, well… drives around and talks about what’s on his mind this week. I don’t really do podcasts or vlogs, but this one has drawn me in for reasons I can’t quite put into words. Sure, I started because I like Haselwood and his regular blog, but I don’t normally silently stare at men in dark glasses for 10-12 minutes at a time as they discourse. In this installment, he considers the digital divide in its many gradients, and while he refuses to pontificate, asks some very reasonable questions regarding possible solutions. Convoy with Haselwood on the Twitters at @TeachFromHere – and use the restroom before we go. You know how he hates to stop right away. 

First Day ExperimentJennWillTeach is CHARTER #11FF from back in the day, so you know wisdom flows from her loins like golden flakes fly from Midas’s fingertips. As she returns to the classroom, she risks and reflects by – get this – WANTING THINKING AND LEARNING ON THE FIRST DAY. More importantly, though, she turns to #BlueCereal Education for wisdom and inspiration. I will never lead you astray, children – I am old, I am wise, I am blue. Follow @JennWillTeach on the Twitters.

And one of my favorites from many years months gone by – quite deserving of another read (perhaps even memorization, or a nice engraving of some sort)…

On Teacher Well-Being: An Introduction – Dan is the real deal. One of the most gracious people with whom I’ve had the pleasure of interacting. Those of you who know me in person have a hard time imagining even a remote connection between my personality and ANYTHING with ‘Zen’ in the title, but I read it – I hear it – I own it – I love it. Sometimes I even calm down for a few minutes. Impressive, no? In this post, The Zen Teacher lays out how and why teachers simply MUST look out for and take care of one another. Turns out this is a tough gig. Follow @thezenteacher on the Twitters.

Keep being amazing, children. You are more than you can possibly imagine. 

Spiritual Gorilla

Blue Serials (August 23rd, 2015)

The school year is rolling for most of us – a time of renewed optimism combined with that lingering fear that perhaps we should have paid greater heed to warnings regarding mollycoddling:

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Be Strong, My #11FF – Here, To Help You In Your Journey, Are A Few Essentials You Might Have Overlooked This Past Week…

What They Want Is Our Time – Rebecka Peterson at Epsilon-Delta talks about priorities, perspective, and gratitude as we press forward. I’m beginning to grow rather fond of these math teacher bloggers. I had no idea numerical, calculative types could show such touchy-feely-ness, but they certainly do – they just present it more… logically. TheYou can follow Rebecka on the twitters at @RebeckaMozdeh.

A Fallacy About Teacher Learning – Ilana Horn at Teaching/Math/Culture draws crucial distinctions between ‘actions’ and ‘behavior’, calling us out a bit on the usual quality of ‘Teacher PD’ along the way. Short and poignant, this one will register with far too many people. If you want to be a better person, follow Ilana at @tchmathculture

On Misreading: The Critical Need to Step Back and See Again – The always challenging P.L. Thomas at The Becoming Radical talks about how easily we perceive whatever fits our existing preferences rather than what’s actually there – whether we’re discusing poetry or talking about edu-policy and kids. And yes, I’m linking to a blog that slams ‘growth mindset’ the same week I defended it myself. That’s what makes it a discussion, right? Otherwise one of us could do all the typing and thousands of others would only need to nod and retweet. What we all SHOULD agree on is following @plthomasEdD on the twitters.

And one of my favorite blasts from the past, worthy of a second (or third, or fourth) look…

Good Luck to the Graduates of Waldo High School – Rob Miller at A View From The Edge, takes up his reciprocating saw of insight to cut through #edreform rhetoric and lambast the cult of standardization. If for some strange reason you don’t already, you simply MUST follow Rob on the twitters at @edgeblogger. Trust me on this one – I’m old and wise. 

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Blue Serials (August 16th, 2015)

It’s that time. Much scrambling, preparing, starting, and just… DOING. The school year is upon us!

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At such times, it can become difficult to keep up with so many wonderful edu-blogs. There are rumors some of you have even fallen behind reading THIS one! 

Fear not, #11FF – I bring you highlights from this past week or so, just in case you missed them…

At Any Given Moment, We Have The Power To Stop The Hate of Reading – Pernille Ripp of Blogging Through The Fourth Dimension reminds us that while there may be much we can’t control, we can certainly take another look at the way we handle assigned reading in our classroom. Heads up – she sounds a bit frustrated. There was one point where I think sarcasm may have been utilized; it was hurtful. No wonder I loved it. Follow @pernilleripp on the Twitters – seriously, you really should. 

Watching the Computer

Are You A Committed Sardine? – Rob Miller claims he’s been blogging lite this summer over at A View From The Edge, but he sure keeps hitting the proverbial nail on the rhetorical head and driving it right through the two-by-four of inertia and into the, er… particle board of poor assumptions with his… um… pithy hammer of truth. It probably works so well partly because he doesn’t try to overwork his analogies like some people I know. Instead, he’s inculcating a rebellious spirit through a study in sardines. You can (and should) find him on Twitter as @edgeblogger.

The Great Desk Debate – Jennifer Williams, Twitter’s infamous @JennWillTeach, has finally joined the blogosphere at JennWillTeach.com. This week she tackles an issue I didn’t think I even cared about, but in a way that represents so much of the silliness of our ‘silver bullet’ mentality in #edreform. Spoiler Alert – Jenn doesn’t think getting rid of your desks is that single glorious switch, that magical adjustment, that revolutionizes the impact of public education in the worlds of all children, everywhere.  

Three Traits of the Best Principals – I’m generally suspicious of anything whose titles include ‘Always’, ‘Never’, ‘Best’, ‘Must’, or Numbered Lists (even my own), but this brief reflection by Bill Ferriter, the Tempered Radical, is well-worth the few minutes it will take you to read it. I actually find it rather encouraging, as it reminds me how fortunate I am to have the admins I do. (Let’s, um… let’s just keep that last part between us – I don’t need them getting too cocky about it.)

And just to wrap things up nicely, here’s a blast from the past worthy of a second (or third, or fourth) look…

Closing the Educator Equity Gap (May 2015) – “Here’s a classroom with no roof over it. Maybe it collapsed and nobody wanted to fix it. Maybe we saved money by never building it in the first place. But every time it rains, the water pours right into the classroom and the teacher and the students get soaked. ‘Well, there’s your problem,’ says some bureaucratic wizard. ‘The students are wet because the teacher is wet. Get a dry teacher in there and everything will be super-duper.'”

If for some strange reason you don’t follow Peter Greene and Curmudgucation, you need to get on that. Otherwise, you totally don’t even love the children, the future, or America. 

Have an amazing week.

Strictly Ballroom