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A note from an IT insider: Listening to you say multiple times "I really don't want to add more to your 'to do' list" during a meeting often takes more time than it will take to do what you want. Just be clear and skip the apologies!

I’ve concluded ethics must be deeply embedded into every learning activity.

When you cannot question an initiative without raising indignation that uses the language to make you look indefensible...

(e. g. “What? You want to leave children behind?” when criticizing NCLB in the early 2000’s)

... you can be sure the initiative is intended for other purposes.

Learning makes you a different person both internally(what you say to yourself, how you say it, what you perceive) and externally (how you act and react to your environment, especially the social environment).

Technology is not neutral; it actively influences human cognition, social organizations, and societal norms.

"Technology is dominated by two types of people: those who understand what they do not manage and those who manage what they do not understand." - Archibald Putt was right

When an individual owns knowledge, it is fully integrated into their thought process, leading to a literal change in how they perceive the world.

If you do not see the world differently, then you didn't really learn anything.

A crucial insight from the MIT article: the data given "the least space in the paper is the most important"—interviews about essay writers' "sense of ownership." This shifts the focus for educators.

If you can use “deliver” and “teach” interchangeably, you do not understand learning.

Is transmitted, discovered, experienced? Your answer tells us much about you as a .

“Writing” and “replacing words so it sounds good” are different activities.

Test scores are useful for measuring the variation of learning in a large population. For individuals, it can only estimate their value.

Can we stop treating individuals’ scores as precise and meaningful?

Your daily reminder that if you are the smartest person in the room, you are in the wrong room... and you are probably wrong.

“Make all plans in pencil,” is really sound advice right now.

“If you’re going to mandate it, at least own it.” Is the best leadership advice I have read in a long time.

Yeah... I just ignore business people who complain they can’t hire qualified people in one sentence, then say “ the market won’t allow higher wages” in the next.

Data is fine... in just isn’t that interesting. Explaining data... that’s the interesting (but overlooked) bit.

When a see/ hear an educator with all of the answers, I walk the other way.

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