Larry Ferlazzo’s Websites of the Day…

…For Teaching ELL, ESL, & EFL

June 5, 2011
by Larry Ferlazzo
2 Comments

The Best Language Learning Games (That Are Not Online)

I’ve previously written about my favorite language-learning games that I use in the classroom (see Games Students Play: Using Classroom Games To Teach And To Learn).

Last month, I asked readers to share their favorites, too. Here are their contributions (feel free to leave additional ideas in the comments section of this post):

Yoon:

This is a popular game in my country. I used to play it in Malay and English when I was in school, but I am not sure if children now are still playing. I personally think this is a good game because I looked for map and dictionary when I was free in order to win! This game can be played by more than one person, or in big groups.

1. Divide a piece of paper into 6 columns.
2. Column 1-Name, Column 2- Country, Column 3-Animal, Column 4-Fruit, Column 5- Thing and Column 6-Points
3. The first player choose an alphabet. Everyone then fill up the columns with an answer which starts with the chosen alphabet. For example, alphabet ‘M’ is chosen, I write Mark, Malaysia, Monkey, Mango, Mat.
4. Award 10 points for each correct answer. However, if more than one person give the same answer, the players with the same answer get 5 points (half).

I don’t know what is the name of this game. I called it Name & Country (Nama & Negeri in Malay). I played this game with my students and they got particularly excited when alphabets like ‘Q’ and ‘X’ were chosen.

Eva Porson:

1: Pass the Bomb. Cut out slips of paper with topics on them (e.g. nouns starting with s, things found in a circus, verbs, American presidents, genres of fiction….). Divide students into groups of four, and give each group a set of topics. Each group also has a small item (e.g. an eraser or a pencil) that can be passed around between them. Start the timer on your cell phone and call out ’start’. A student in each group now pics up a topic from the pile and says one word connected to this topic. As soon as a relevant word has been said, the student passes on the small item to the student next to him/her. This student now has to say a new word, pass on the item and so on. The student with the item in his/her hand when you call out ’stop (after appr. 30-45 seconds), gets a point, and in this game, you don’t want to get points. This works great with vocab-recap.

2: I have the answers, you have the questions. Another great way of practicing vocab is to write a pile of words or phrases you want students to revise. Cut of the words and group students in fours. They pair up within the group. Student A now has to pick a slip of paper with a word on it, and create a questions that will make student B say the exact phrase that is on the slip of paper.

For example, a slip of paper might say ‘milk’, and A’s question would be ‘what do you put on your cornflakes in the morning’. A pair gets appr. one minute to try to ‘win’ as many of the pieces of paper as possible. After that, the other team gets a go with the remaining words. Continue till all the paper slips have been guessed. The winning team in the pair with most paper slips.

Danielle:

I love using games, and have compiled quite a few on my blog. My fav is “caterpillar,” and you can read a detailed description of it here.

A 2nd game that my students currently love playing is “hot or cold” as a pronunciation activity – while one student is outside, hide something somewhere in the classroom then invite them in. The rest of the students have to chant a word, phrase or sentence (focusing on correct pronunciation). They get louder when the searcher gets nearer the item, and softer when the searcher is more distant – you do need to be prepared for quite a bit of noise though!

Walton:

I love Taboo where students have to describe a word but they can’t use the word or any related keywords. The other student has to guess the word. Helps practice vocabulary and also talking over a vocab gap.

Another great game vocab/logic game is False Definitions. Students are given cards with a (hopefully) unknown word and 3 definitions only one of which is correct. Students have to guess which definition is correct. One variation is to have one student who knows which definition is correct read all three definitions to the other and try to bluff the other student.

Naomi Epstein:

It is particularly challenging for teachers to find games suitable for one-on-one situations. “Baseball” (on blackboard or paper, played with a die) is one my favorites, works with all ages. Good for classes too. You can learn details here.

Clare Seccombeon:

I like playing simple games with flashcards. This one is a firm favourite of all my primary classes:
Guess which card / Beat the teacher: Hold the pile of flashcards with the pictures facing you, carefully concealing the pictures. Students have to guess which one is at the top of the pile. They have to listen carefully to each others’ guesses to eliminate wrong answers and work out what the right answer is.

The children also enjoy having mini-sets of the flashcards together with word cards and inventing games to play with them.

More on my blog.

Kevon:

My favorite is making up a story with the students, the younger ones get really excited as the story grows and we use new vocabulary.

Doug Moore:

“La batalla de familias” (Family Feud). divide the class into families (groups), givr them a large sheet of papare.call out a category,( colors, ar verbs, furniture items, etc) then they have 2 minutes to come up with as many words possible for that topic. I have each member of the group write their own word and pass the paper when they are done. Then they count the words and i tabulate the results the team with the most words wins. I collect the papers to verify the answers.

Martina Salluzzoon:

For a quick revision of the new vocabulary – I like playing tic-tac-toe in which I put beginning letters of the new vocab.in focus.
One student is on the board, two other represent two groups and play against each other. Each group has a posibility to ask “joker” from another member of the same group.

Fran Loon:

How about the card game Apples to Apples? It puts adjectives and nouns together in creative ways – generates a lot of conversation and laughter.

Thanks to everybody for their contributions!

June 5, 2011
by Larry Ferlazzo
0 comments

Tiananmen Square Protest Anniversary

Yesterday was the twenty-second anniversary of crackdown of the Tiananmen Square protesters in China. I’m adding these resources to The Best Sites For Learning About Protests In History:

Remembering Tiananmen Square is a CNN video:

22nd Anniversary of Tiananmen Square Crackdown is a slideshow from The Washington Post.

Remembering Tiananmen Square (SLIDESHOW) comes from The Huffington Post.

June 5, 2011
by Larry Ferlazzo
0 comments

This Week’s “Links I Should Have Posted About, But Didn’t”

I have a huge backlog of resources that I’ve been planning to post about in this blog but, just because of time constraints, have not gotten around to doing. Instead of letting that backlog grow bigger, I regularly grab a few and list them here with a minimal description. It forces me to look through these older links, and help me organize them for my own use. I hope others will find them helpful, too. These are resources that I didn’t include in my “Best Tweets” feature because I had planned to post about them, or because I didn’t even get around to sending a tweet sharing them.

Here are This Week’s “Links I Should Have Posted About, But Didn’t”:

18 Charts Reveal All You Need to Know About Facebook is from The Atlantic. I’m adding it to A Beginning List Of The Best Resources For Learning About Facebook.

Global food crisis – interactive is from The Guardian. I’m adding it to The Best Sites To Learn About World Food Day.

LinkCloud is a new tool to create homepages. It’s got a lot of excellent features, but it might be a little too complicated for some. I’m tentatively adding it to The Best Personal Home Page Creators.

Trulia has created an impressive interactive crime map showing neighborhoods in different cities around the United States. Unfortunately, Sacramento isn’t one of the cities included in their list yet. It could be helpful to our annual Lesson Highlighting Community Assets — Not Deficits activity — if and when they add our city. You can read more about the tool at Read Write Web.

19 Pencils is a beta site that offers the promise of being able to easily create quizzes, share online content, create class websites, and track student content. However, many of the features are not yet activated. It’s certainly worth a look, but I’m not ready to place it on any “The Best…” lists yet. Maybe soon, though. I learned about the site from David Kapuler and Kelly Tenkely.

Freedom Riders remember is a slideshow from The Washington Post. I’m adding it to The Best Resources For Learning About The “Freedom Riders.”

Here are some other regular features I post in this blog:

“The Best…” series (which now number 691)

Best Tweets of The Month

The most popular posts on this blog each month

My monthly choices for the best posts on this blog each month

Each month I do an “Interview Of The Month” with a leader in education

Periodically, I post “A Look Back” highlighting older posts that I think are particularly useful

The ESL/EFL/ELL Blog Carnival

Resources that share various “most popular” lists useful to teachers

Interviews with ESL/EFL teachers in “hot spots” around the world.

Articles I’ve written for other publications.

Photo Galleries Of The Week

Research Studies Of The Week

Regular “round-ups” of good posts and articles about school reform

June 4, 2011
by Larry Ferlazzo
0 comments

Good New Resources On HIV/AIDS

Here are the newest additions to The Best Web Resources For Learning About HIV & AIDS:

AIDS Treatment: Search For The Elusive Cure is an Associated Press interactive.

The fight against AIDS, 30 years on is a chart from The Economist.

Emory University has introduced AIDSVu, an interactive map that provides a detailed view of the number of people living with an HIV diagnosis in the United States by state and county

June 4, 2011
by Larry Ferlazzo
0 comments

Today’s “Round-Up” Of Good School Reform Articles & Posts

Here are some recent good school reform-related articles and posts that I’m adding to various “The Best…” lists:

Value-Added In Teacher Evaluations: Built To Fail comes from The Shanker Blog. I’m adding it to The Best Resources For Learning About The “Value-Added” Approach Towards Teacher Evaluation.

The Offensively Defensive Ideology of Charter Schooling is from School Finance 101. I’m adding it to The Best Posts & Articles Analyzing Charter Schools.

Where have all the KIPPsters gone? is by Caroline Grannan. I’m adding it to The Best Posts About Attrition Rates At So-Called “Miracle” Schools. I’m also adding A question about Memphis school Obama chose, which was published in The Washington Post, to the same list.

Don’t Believe Critics, Education Reform Works by Jonathan Alter is an absolutely awful column — it’s more of a rant than a column, and it’s targeting Diane Ravitch. It’s examples of arrogance are too numerous to mention, but the column, and responses to it, just have to be added to The Best Posts Discussing Arrogance & School Reform. They quickly closed-off comments on the site itself, but you can read several excellent early ones there. In addition, you can read Alice Mercer’s With due respect, your argument is moronic…, along with a piece from Salon questioning Alter’s conflict of interest in writing it.

June 4, 2011
by Larry Ferlazzo
0 comments

Bye Bye, PostRank? I Hope Not…

PostRank, the impressive social media tracking service, has just been purchased by Google. Many bloggers, including me, have been using PostRank as a tool to measure how “engaged” readers are with our posts. I publish a monthly list of my most popular posts based on their analysis, and have a widget on my sidebar that is constantly updated.

Google does not have a good track record of keeping their new acquisitions going and, since they’ve announced that PostRank is not accepting any new registrations, this could be a sign that the same might be true here.

You can read more about the acquisition at TechCrunch and ReadWriteWeb.

June 3, 2011
by Larry Ferlazzo
0 comments

Here’s A Video On Self-Control I’m Showing My Students First Thing Next Week

There are five full days, and five half-days, left of school, and some of our students are beginning to “lose it” a bit — some fights, suspensions, and reverting to throwing wads of paper.

As I was driving home today, I was thinking it was time for a refresher on our self-control lessons (see My Best Posts About Helping Students Develop Their Capacity For Self-Control). You can find the complete lesson plans in my new book. I was trying to figure out, though, what might be something new we could do on the topic.

I was also listening to the PBS News Hour on NPR, and right at that moment they began running a segment on…..self control and young people.

It uses financial literacy as an initial hook, but it’s mainly about the famous marshmallow test and a recent updated study. None of it is new information to regular readers of this blog — you can see my posts on the previously mentions “The Best…” list. However, for teenagers, a short video like this will make for the perfect refresher.

I’ve embedded it below:

Watch the full episode. See more PBS NewsHour.

Speaking of self-control, a recent Jonah Lehrer column also shares a refresher on the marshmallow experiment (where young children were shown one marshmallow, but told if they could wait they would receive two — learn more about it on my “The Best…” list). He very succinctly summarizes its findings:

Mischel’s conclusion, based on hundreds of hours of observation, was that the crucial skill was the “strategic allocation of attention.” Instead of getting obsessed with the marshmallow—the “hot stimulus”—the patient children distracted themselves by covering their eyes, pretending to play hide-and-seek underneath the desk, or singing songs from “Sesame Street.” Their desire wasn’t defeated—it was merely forgotten. “If you’re thinking about the marshmallow and how delicious it is, then you’re going to eat it,” Mischel says. “The key is to avoid thinking about it in the first place.”

What Mischel’s data demonstrates is that attention isn’t just about information. Instead, it’s also what allows us to blunt the urges of our errant emotions, allowing us to look past the desire to stuff that yummy marshmallow into our mouth. While we can’t always control what we feel – many of our urges are ancient drives, embedded deep in the brain – we can control the amount of attention we pay to our feelings. When faced with a tempting treat, we can look away.

June 3, 2011
by Larry Ferlazzo
0 comments

Refugee Resources

World Refugee Day is coming-up on June 20th. You might be interested in The Best Sites For Learning About World Refugee Day.

This is a new video I’m adding to the list. It’s called “Lost and Found” and has closed captioning.

Following the lives of four refugees and how separation from loved ones has shaped their existence, “Lost and Found: The Story of Refugees United” is a journey into the hardships so many families must endure as they seek to reconnect. See the project at http://mediastorm.com/clients/lost-and-found-for-refugees-united

June 3, 2011
by Larry Ferlazzo
1 Comment

Chogger Looks Like A Nice Comic-Creation Tool

Chogger lets you easily create a comic, with no registration required. What’s particularly nice about it is that you have a choice of drawing it or searching the Web for images you can insert.

I’m adding it to The Best Ways To Make Comic Strips Online.

I learned about it through Jennifer Stern and Joyce Kasman Valenza, who have just published their own list of comic-creators.

June 3, 2011
by Larry Ferlazzo
0 comments

Say Good-Bye To The Pyramid, Say Hello To My Plate

The United States Agriculture Department has now replaced the Food Pyramid with “My Plate.”

You can read about the change at The Christian Science Monitor. More importantly, you can access online interactive tools and printables at the My Plate site. You can also see an interesting Wall Street Journal slideshow documenting the history of the government’s efforts to help the public learn about nutrition.

I’m adding all these resources to The Best Sites For Learning About Nutrition & Food Safety.

June 3, 2011
by Larry Ferlazzo
0 comments

The Best Short Summary I’ve Seen Of Daniel Pink’s Book, “Drive”

I’ve written quite a bit about Daniel Pink’s book, Drive, here on this blog (see My Best Posts On “Motivating” Students) and in my new book.

I recently saw what I think is the best short description and summary of the book’s key points. Check-out the post “What really motivates us?” at the Barking Up the Wrong Tree blog.

June 2, 2011
by Larry Ferlazzo
2 Comments

Why Have Some Researchers Just Learned That Cooperative Learning Works?

Hot on the heels of a widely publicized study last month that found cooperative learning to be more effective than lecturing (see Surprise, Surprise! Study Says Cooperative Learning Is More Effective Than Lectures), another similar study was unveiled today with great fanfare.

Interactive Learning Closes College Science Achievement Gap–On a Shoestring Budget is the headline of a Scientific American article about the report, which reached the same conclusions.

As I mentioned in my post about last month’s report, there’s already tons of research documenting this fact. And I always welcome research that supports my beliefs :) (maybe a  little confirmation bias here?). I wonder, though, why are people making such a big deal about these new studies now?

June 2, 2011
by Larry Ferlazzo
1 Comment

I Think educaplay Is A Winner!

educaplay looks like a great free (as far as I can tell, at least) tool where you can easily create a ton of different kinds of educational interactives that you can link to or embed in your site. These include:

•Riddles
•Crosswords
•Wordsearch Puzzle
•Fill in the texts
•Dialogues
•Dictations
•Jumbled Word
•Jumbled Sentence
•Matching
•Quizzes
•Maps

For at least some of the them, including dictation, it provides the ability to record audio.

If I’m missing some negative here, please let me know. I’m adding educaplay to three “The Best…” lists:

The Best Sites For Making Crossword Puzzles & Hangman Games

The Best Websites For Creating Online Learning Games

The Best Ways To Create Online Tests

June 2, 2011
by Larry Ferlazzo
0 comments

Another Special Edition Of “Links I Should Have Posted About, But Didn’t”

(NOTE: I usually publish this kind of post once-a-week. However, even more links than usual have accumulated during our annual field trip where we take one hundred students to San Francisco, and then during my subsequent recovery time. So, here’s a collection to get them “out of the way.”)

I have a huge backlog of resources that I’ve been planning to post about in this blog but, just because of time constraints, have not gotten around to doing. Instead of letting that backlog grow bigger, I regularly grab a few and list them here with a minimal description. It forces me to look through these older links, and help me organize them for my own use. I hope others will find them helpful, too. These are resources that I didn’t include in my “Best Tweets” feature because I had planned to post about them, or because I didn’t even get around to sending a tweet sharing them.

Here are This Week’s “Links I Should Have Posted About, But Didn’t”:

Fantastic foodscapes is an MSNBC slideshow of some pretty strange artistic uses of food. I’m adding it to The Best Examples Of “Unusual” Art.

Food contamination: E. coli outbreak in Europe is an Associated Press interactive. I’m adding it to The Best Sites For Learning About Nutrition & Food Safety.

Julia Gillard’s American Holidays is a slideshow from TIME Magazine. I’m adding it to The Best Websites For Learning About Multiple Holidays & Anniversaries.

The Greatest Adventures of All Time is a pretty neat feature from TIME Magazine.

Income Inequality Ignorance is a YouTube video I’m adding to The Best Resources About Wealth & Income Inequality:

Tornado! is a useful infographic. I’m adding it to The Best Resources For Learning About Tornadoes.

Revolution: The First 2000 Years of Computing is a presentation from the Computer History Museum. I’m adding it to The Best Sites For Learning About The History Of Technology.

Washington’s pregnant panda? is a Washington Post slideshow. I’m adding it to The Best Sites To Learn About Pandas.

June 2, 2011
by Larry Ferlazzo
1 Comment

The Best Resources On Students Using Gestures & Physical Movement To Help With Learning

I’m a big fan of encouraging students to accompany learning with gestures and physical movement, particularly, though not exclusively, with English Language Learners.

I thought I’d begin a short “The Best…” list on the topic, and ask readers to contribute additions.

Here are my choices for The Best Resources On Students Using Gestures & Physical Movement To Help With Learning:

Total Physical Response (TPR) is a mainstay of many ESL/EFL instructors. Teacher Joe has a nice short description of it, and here’s a much more TPR guide from the English Language and Literacy Center.

Here’s a study on how gestures improve memory.

What’s a quick and easy way to improve learning? is about a similar study.

Brief training with co-speech gesture lends a hand to word learning in a foreign language is yet another study.

I’ve previously written a post titled Using Gestures In Teaching & Learning.

The Secret Code Of Learning: Our body language can reveal more about what we know than our verbal language is by Annie Murphy Paul at TIME and provides a good overview of research on the topic.

Learning a language may come down to gestures is a Washington Post report on a new study. Thanks to The Center for Applied Second Language Studies for the tip.

Study: Gestures help language learning is another report on the same study.

High Fluid Intelligence, Gestures, and Simulation is from the Eide Neurolearning blog. It reports on recent research on gestures and learning.

This is obviously not a complete list, and I hope readers can suggest more resources.

If you found this post useful, you might want to consider subscribing to this blog for free.

You might also want to explore the nearly 700 other “The Best…” lists I’ve compiled.

June 1, 2011
by Larry Ferlazzo
2 Comments

Shortcuts, School Reform & Private Foundations

Author Bob Sutton recently wrote about a report commissioned by the Annie Casey Foundation that examined one of its major funding initiatives related to school reform (the report is titled The Path of Most Resistance).

Here is an excerpt from Mr. Sutton’s post:

This weekend, I read an old (1993) but excellent study commissioned by the Casey foundation on what it takes comprehensive school reform in large school systems. I was taken with its counter-intuitive title “The Path of Most Resistance”….[the authors] argued that taking the easy way out — expecting instant results; not taking the time to engage with parents, students, administrators, local politicians and other key crucial actors; doing it on the cheap; expecting everything to go smoothly– and a host other “easy solutions — simply weren’t realistic or wise for would-be change agents. The examples of successful large scale change they examined all took pretty much the opposite approach — there was a lot of patience and a long term perspective, time was taken to involve major constituencies, lots of resources were devoted to the effort, and a host of other tactics that entailed doing things the hard way rather than the easy way.

Ah, if only foundations, including Casey, took these lessons to heart (see Private Foundations Have A Place (And Have To Be Kept In Their Place)). Though I obviously don’t know about every foundation grant ever given anywhere, in my very direct experience with foundations during my twenty-year community organizing career, and my growing familiarity with education-oriented foundations over the past eight years since I’ve become a teacher, I only know of one — yes, just one — major foundation initiative that reflected those lessons. It was called The Central Valley Partnership for Citizenship and was a strong and successful effort to encourage active citizenship by immigrants and others throughout California’s Central Valley.

I’m happy to be enlightened if someone, other than a foundation staffperson, contacts me with information on another major foundation program that did not push for “shotgun marriages” between groups in the name of “collaboration”; did not lead with the belief that the foundation had the best ideas of what and how a strategy should be implemented and, instead, reacted to the ideas recommended by community-based organizations; did not push for immediate results and instead emphasized supporting long-term organizational sustainability; and actively encouraged candid pushback on the foundation’s ideas.

I wish funders like the Gates Foundation and other members of what Diane Ravitch calls the “billionaire boys club” would learn all the lessons in the report — not just the one about needing to contribute massive resources to an effort –as well as others. They need to learn that, as successful organizers know, often the best solutions for problems come from those who are most affected by the problem, not from foundation program staff or those who are providing the foundation’s funds.

The root of the word “foundation” means “discovered.” It would be nice if foundations learned that their job was to discover solutions to school problems by asking the people most affected by those problems — K-12 educators, teachers, and students — instead of trying to invent and push their agenda on the rest of us.

More information on this topic can be found at The Best Resources For Learning About The Role Of Private Foundations In Education Policy.

June 1, 2011
by Larry Ferlazzo
3 Comments

Interview Of The Month On The Save Our Schools March

As regular readers know, each month I interview people in the education world about whom I want to learn more. You can see read those past interviews here.

Today, I genuinely feel honored that two educators I have long admired have agreed to answer questions about the upcoming Save Our Schools March and Call To Action — July 28th to the 31st. Nancy Flanagan has been sharing important insights for years at her blog at Education Week, Teacher In A Strange Land, and I have often shared her posts here. Sabrina Stevens Shupe is a Colorado teacher who has been sharing her own thoughtful insights at her blog, Failing Schools, and at The Huffington Post. Both are key organizers of the March.

Can you tell a little about yourselves — your connection to education, why you became teachers, where you’re based, etc.?

[Nancy] I am a music teacher–now retired–and spent my entire 31-year career teaching in Michigan. I’m a National Board Certified Teacher and was Michigan’s Teacher of the Year in 1993. Those two experiences pushed me into a passion for pursuing teacher leadership on a bigger stage. In America, we continuously make education policy without asking for serious input from the people who actually do the work.

[Sabrina] I am a relatively new urban elementary school teacher in Colorado, who’s taken this year off from the classroom to focus on advocacy and activism. I went into education for a number of reasons, but mainly because I see teaching as a way to affect change in society. I want to help children in low-income communities have the same kinds of empowering educational experiences students receive in wealthier/private school communities. Right now, though, our education reform movement is set up to give them the exact opposite.

What is the Save Our Schools March and why is it being organized?

[Nancy] A national march is an audacious thing to do, isn’t it? It’s become increasingly clear that the policies that shape the work of educating our next generation are headed in the wrong direction. Parents hate narrowed curriculum and over-emphasis on testing. School leaders hate having the federal government take apart programs that have yielded good results. And teachers feel maligned when their efforts to reach every child are denigrated by the media and the government.

[Sabrina] Exactly. Overall, no matter what kind of public school stakeholder you are—parent, teacher, student, community member—the trend right now is that people far outside of the hardest-hit public schools are the ones defining the problem and the “solutions,” not the people who actually know what these schools are facing. As a result, a lot of the “reforms” we see are incredibly counterproductive. And when we speak out against that, we’re dismissed. The March is about saying no to that dismissal. It’s about the true stakeholders coming together to assert our right to set the course of education reform and policy in our communities.

What are you hoping might result from the March?

[Nancy] The March is just a first step, the kick-off of a long-term campaign to reclaim and strengthen public education. None of us who are planning the March see it as anything more than an opportunity to capture the public’s attention and imagination. We hope it might come as a wake-up call to policy-makers: We can’t legislate our way out of a wildly inequitable public education system. We need full participation from parents and professional educators to rebuild our system–but it’s worth the effort and expense.

What are the best ways people can participate in SOS activities?

[Nancy] Everyone can participate. While we’re hoping for a great turnout in Washington D.C. on July 30 for the Rally and March–and the pre-conference on July 28 & 29 for those who would like to learn more and network–we know that a trip to Washington D.C. isn’t feasible for everyone. Several states and cities are planning their own live events. But simply joining the conversation–at our website, through social media, in local newspapers and in the staff lounge–is something everyone can do.

Is there anything I haven’t asked you that you’d like to share?

[Nancy] This is truly a grass-roots movement. The majority of our donations come from small donors– teachers and parents who are fed up with what NCLB has done to their schools and children, giving $5 or $20 at a time. We are not a powerful organization with media consultants and clients to satisfy. We’re just a group of diverse citizens who are enormously unhappy with what’s happening to one of America’s best ideas: a free, high-quality public education for every child.

[Sabrina] Agreed. I think it’s important for people to understand that. There are a lot of Astroturf organizations popping up in education, that make lots of good-sounding statements but their agendas will hurt public education more than help it. They don’t really give regular people a voice; you’re there to make their agenda look like it has popular support. That’s not how we do things.

But not having corporate money and political connections means that we—regular, ordinary people—have to step up and do the work. We all need to be a lot more active and engaged than many of us have been in the recent past, if we’re going to make a real and positive difference for our public schools. It’s definitely not easy, but it’s incredibly important.

Thanks, Nancy and Sabrina!

June 1, 2011
by Larry Ferlazzo
0 comments

Most Popular Posts Of The Month

I regularly share my picks for the most useful posts of each month. I also have tried publish a list of the month’s most popular posts, based on the number of times they are “clicked-on.” I’m very behind on that one, though.

I also share a list of Post Rank’s analysis of each month’s top posts. Post Rank uses a variety of ways to measure level of “engagement” that readers have with specific blog posts. I have a constantly updated “widget” on my blog’s sidebar that lists these posts, but I thought a monthly post would be helpful/interesting to subscribers who don’t regularly visit the blog itself.

Here are their rankings for the month of May:

  1. “What Can You Do To Stay Positive During The Last Seven Weeks Of School?”

  2. Yale Makes 260,000 Images Available Online — With No Limitations On Their Usage

  3. Wow, This Is A “Must-Read” Article On The Brain & Learning!

  4. New Study Says Homework Has No Impact…Except In Math

  5. The Best Resources For Learning About Osama bin Laden

  6. What Does Learning From Mistakes Do To Your Brain?

  7. Why Is It Important For Students To Learn About Bloom’s Taxonomy?

  8. The Best Resources For Adapting Your Textbook So It Doesn’t Bore Students To Death

  9. Surprise, Surprise! Study Says Cooperative Learning Is More Effective Than Lectures

  10. Oh, New Yorker Magazine, How Could You?