I remember vividly
my days as an elementary school principal trying to get my technology program off the ground.
Not exact matches
Walking in Their Shoes: What I Learned
as Principal for a
Day Milton Chen describes his day as a PFAD at the Chinese Education Center, a San Francisco elementary school for 175 newly arrived Chinese studen
Day Milton Chen describes his
day as a PFAD at the Chinese Education Center, a San Francisco elementary school for 175 newly arrived Chinese studen
day as a PFAD at the Chinese Education Center, a San Francisco
elementary school for 175 newly arrived Chinese students.
In urban
schools learning is offered in disconnected jolts.The work of the
day is unconnected with the work of preceding
days or subsequent ones.Life in urban
schools is comprised of specific periods and discrete
days each of which is forced to stand entirely on its own.If homework is not done, or books not taken home (behaviors which are universal for males and almost so for females by the completion of the upper
elementary grades), everything students are taught must be compressed into isolated periods of «stand alone»
days.Teachers and
principals,
as well
as students, survive one
day at a time.
Great article that my
principal had us ESL teachers just read - thank you for your no nonsense outspokenness, and no, Mr Shanahan, ESL will not pull during teacher direct instruction in the content areas until small groups break out - only 30 minutes then - but it's a packed schedule to do it - 8 groups a
day 5
days a week to pull for listening / reading and speaking / writing per WIDA some of your comments appreciated much
as a former
elementary homeschooler and advocate of of ED Hirsch and his cultural literacy - which I've preached since I returned my kids to public
schooling in middle
school 17 years ago....
I am enjoying Valentine's
Day... as an elementary school principal it can be a great day or a realllllly bad o
Day...
as an
elementary school principal it can be a great
day or a realllllly bad o
day or a realllllly bad one!