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Seems time for a reminder: If your solution is simple, you do not understand the problem.

Good science happens when scientists change their ideas as needed; quackery happens when advocates cling to bad ideas.

There is comfort in the problems with known solutions.

Without , are empty-physically, culturally, contextually, pedagogically. The idea one can meaningfully plan a class before meeting the students seems disingenuous.

Teachers find the space between what students know and what they don’t know and help them fill that gap... if requires the active intervention of both.

I was asked once why I stopped teaching in the middle of a lesson during which I was observed by a principal in the back of the room. “Because they appeared to be thinking,” I said. He told me I had wasted several minutes of teaching time.

Can one both advocate for social justice in our schools and administer tests and other instruments rife with prejudice?

Educators often face uncomfortable situations when philosophically opposed to school initiatives. Should we always follow, or sometimes challenge?

Another concerning initiative: replacing valuable coding and computer explorations with "time to practice for standardized tests." Is this progress?

A school administrator, asked about grading system changes, responded: "I can do what you want... Proficiencies? Traditional grades? I can do that too." Flexibility or lack of conviction?

It's unfortunate school leaders trust advice from politicians, philanthropists, and business people over their own knowledge. Educators know education best.

I’m only familiar with the this is ... do opinions get cited as evidence in other fields as well?

I added some cryptic items to my “to do” list last evening at about 6:30. I have no idea what I’m supposed to do. How long do I wait until I just scratch it off?

Yes, I can tell you really want it to be true. No, I’m sorry that doesn’t make it true.

When quacks get a platform and dupe an audience... bad things happen.

If you are “BS-ing” your answer, we can tell... and we trust you and your decisions less than if you had just said, “I don’t know.”

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