Sentences with phrase «hear from teachers who»

We frequently hear from teachers who want to assign Study Island as homework and record the results in the program.
I would love to hear from teachers who have already had transgender students in their classes.
In the US, we frequently hear from teachers who become too involved in their students» lives, who take too much work home with them, and who suffer from emotional burn out as a result.
(PS: I would love to hear from any teachers who have managed to create a PBL project from a seemingly difficult math standard.
This finding echos the anecdotal reports I've heard from teachers who complain that classroom behavior worsens after children consume sugary or nutritionally «empty» meals.
We were excited to hear from a teacher who had noticed Science Buddies in her streams at Pinterest.
At a time when many people are asking how we can get more students interested in STEM fields, we are hearing from teachers who have found making to be a great way to get students excited and engaged in their classrooms.
We also heard from a teacher who led her school to adopt a process that included students in the writing of their own IEPs.
Helmick said she's heard from teachers who have been told to strip 42 stickers from their cars, delete pro-42 posts from their Facebook pages, and refrain from sending personal emails supporting 42.
I have also heard from teachers who are using the audio for listening practice.

Not exact matches

With fall education programs getting under way and Sunday school teachers beginning another year of teaching, it may be disconcerting to hear this reading from James: «Not many of you should become teachers, my brothers and sisters, for you know that we who teach will be judged with greater strictness.»
Which is why it's a shame that your knowledge of Hitler and stalin stems from what someone who heard it from someone else and possibly half asleep in school and not from a homeschool teacher who used the term «home schooling» as an unintended euphemism.
Citing Donniel Hartman's «Putting God Second,» — A teacher of mine used to love to tell the story of a famous Hassidic master who was walking along a cobbled street in Eastern Europe some two hundred years ago, when he heard the cry of a baby coming from his student's house — a cry that pierced the night.
We have gathered around ourselves teachers who tell us what our itching ears want to hear, and we ignore and silence the prophetic voices who tell us what we need to hear because these prophetic voices come from those many Christians love to hate.
... I can tell the very place where the blessed Polycarp used to sit [note the posture of the bishop as teacher or preacher upon his cathedra] as he discoursed, his goings out and his comings in, the character of his life,... the discourses he would address to the multitude, how we would tell of his conversations with John and with the others who had seen the Lord, how he would relate their words from memory... and I can testify before God that if that blessed and apostolic presbyter had heard the like [the Gnostic vagaries], he would have cried aloud and stopped his ears and said, as was his custom: «O good God, for what sort of times hast thou kept me, that I should endure these things?»
Even more gratifying is hearing from parents and teachers who've told me how much their kids liked watching it — and that they clearly understood the message about healthful eating.
«Sadly, we have heard today from teachers of a consequent rise of employers who are singling out disabled teachers for bullying and discrimination.
For months, we've heard from teachers, superintendents, and parents who oppose Governor Cuomo's reform efforts.
We've heard from Mike Mulgrew and Karen Magee — teacher union leaders who say the Governor has gone too far.
Then, it heard from two moms who buried sons and a suburban teacher who has attended 15 wakes for former students.
Avella, who received 53.17 percent of the turnout, or 25,864 votes, said he has not heard from Padavan, who got 22,781 votes, since the election, which Avella said he won in part because of support from the United Federation of Teachers as well as an effective campaign operation that included knocking on 7,000 doors.
She believes that her deafness made mathematics an appealing subject: understanding it relied much less on hearing than other subjects did, and she benefited from good teachers who encouraged her natural mathematical curiosity.
I have read and heard accounts from yoga teachers who talked about how their practice didn't change that much throughout their pregnancy.
I heard it from my teacher Gary Kraftsow who had studied with Sri Krishnamacharya.
It all began with a phone call 10 years ago from David Duchovny's manager who'd heard about Kundalini Yoga and wanted a teacher.
I heard about her from my BFF, a certain Ms. Moore, high school teacher extraordinaire who told me about one of her favorite students who has since graduated, who had the best fashion sense.
And, while some of them can certainly help you out of difficult situations, sometimes you don't want a teacher, you just want to hear from a sympathetic friend who has also been in the trenches.
Another response sprinkled with humor that I heard from a teacher: «You need to learn this because some day when you have a child who asks you for help and you can't help because you don't know it, you won't feel stupid.»
Similarly, teachers can leave audio feedback for students who benefit from hearing input multiple times.
RV: We then heard from Dr Linda Hobbs, who spoke about the idea of transition for early career teachers.
But I also hear from parents who, rightly, worry about too much testing, and from teachers who feel so much pressure to teach to a test that it takes the joy out of teaching and learning, both for them and for the students.»
RV: We then heard from Coral Campbell who spoke about school culture and the impact it has on beginning teachers when they first begin out - of - field teaching.
Today we hear from Anna Bennett, who runs workshops for early career teachers which focus on equipping them with the tools and skills required in the classroom.
Alvarez heard about the Lots of Power design competition from her teachers at Science Leadership Academy, who knew she was interested in art and architecture.
A student who is having a very difficult time understanding math or does just not find it interesting, for example, can feel threatened by hearing regularly from a teacher how important math is to his or her future.
Recommended for anyone but especially new teachers, who can learn a lot from hearing these educators reflect on their successes and failures.
Brenda Frazier, a K - 12 psychologist in the Williamsport (Pennsylvania) Area School District who attended the conference, said she has heard concerns from teachers about making adjustments for explosive children.
Just as every virtual student is expected to contribute to discussions, teachers who have taught online expect to hear from every student in the 3 - D world.
We are excited about doing it again next year, and we have already started hearing from additional teachers and students who plan to participate.
(I also hear from many teachers who manage to elicit enormous gains for which they don't get any credit because the kids are still behind some standards or pacing guides.)
Explore some of the student - friendly Dickens Web sites we found and hear from some of the teachers and Dickens fans who created them.
Twelve - year - old Manuel heard about the program from his sixth - grade literature teacher who suggested that Citizen Schools could help him improve his grades.
EDUTOPIA: What questions do you hear most often from teachers who are new to place - based education?
Viewers will also hear from Melinda Gates, who will have the latest news from the work on teacher effectiveness supported by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.
«We hear a lot of anecdotal stuff from teachers who say that they've seen playing Scrabble improve students» spelling, teamwork, and interest in reading,» according to Williams.
We want to hear from everyone — teens, parents, teachers, and others with great ideas who want to improve the world.
In the St. Louis area, school districts tend to be divided along racial lines, and a New York Times reporter covering the story of the transfers heard from white parents in receiving districts who expressed concern that troublemakers will be among the transfers, and that teachers may have to slow down to allow the students from struggling districts, which are predominantly black, to catch up.
I am too young to have known Coleman personally as a scholar, but I have heard from numerous scholars who did know him that he commenced the EEOS thinking that it would demonstrate, among other things, the importance of school inputs: teacher characteristics, class size, and the like.
«We have heard from so many teachers who are really struggling» to navigate the current climate, Costello says.
Teachers who seek to affect policy, should keep in mind that policy makers usually want to do the right thing but that they often don't know how their policies are playing out in real world, and are eager to hear from practitioners who show up with practical ideas and workable solutions.
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