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Errors arising from inattentiveness are different from those arising from misunderstanding, and they must be addressed differently.

Vague and incomplete answers must be questioned in the classroom.

William James' First Principle of Perception: “Whilstvpart of what we perceive comes through our senses from the object before us, another part (and it may be the larger part) always comes out of our mind.”

“Exploration and creativity is a right.” Hmmm... Yeah, this seems to make sense, but it may have some unforeseen consequences.

So much we want and need to become is grounded in curiosity. Think about that when planning your lessons.

Philanthropy is fine. Paying taxes is better.

One sure way to make a "data person" freak out is to ask about the potential sources of error in their measurements.

We should be embarrassed as a nation that so many must turn to Donor’s Choose.

Formative assessment has 6 syllables... feedback has 2. Let’s be clear about what we are doing. Give feedback.

The least important thing we do with computers is accessing information. Interacting with it is far more interesting.

Technology became a part of classrooms before we understood its place in teaching and learning. Yeah, that seems about right.

De Tocqueville wrote: “The habit of inattention must be considered the greatest defect of the democratic character.”

Agreement on the problem is the first (and often most difficult) part of solving it.

Groups comprising diverse members with differing experience, perspective, and skill are more effective than less diverse groups.

This is true regardless of what leaders say.

I always say my first “lesson plan” is a guess... I can’t really plan until I know students... and even then, they ruin my plans by being themselves.

“Many instructors are unfamiliar with the impact cognitive load has on learners.” Yeah, that might be a good place to start.

If your “lesson planning” isn’t iterative, then it isn’t really planning. It was planned, and had been degrading ever since.

Habituation... the idea that one does not attend to situations too familiar... may explain students’ inattentive behavior.

Each child brings their whole self to classrooms.

Yes. Yes, they do.

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