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Category: research

March 27, 2019March 26, 2019hattiemaguire

Teaching From My Twitter Feed: Developing Messy Arguments

Last year about this time, this article from the New York Times showed up in my Twitter feed. I clicked on it because I was intrigued by the title (“Extensive Data Shows Punishing Reach of Racism for Black Boys”) but when I realized that the article was all moving data, I knew my students would […]

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March 21, 2019March 20, 2019Michael Ziegler

A Cute Argument Against Obtuse Argument

I promise the title is the last of the math-related humor in this piece. I’ve already profiled the big Narrative Journalism unit my PLC does every year, but I had an interesting experience today that made me think that maybe one element of that writing project is worth revisiting in a bit more detail.   […]

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March 7, 2019March 6, 2019hattiemaguire

Tackling the Dry Stuff aka Footnotes made Fun

Early in the school year, my Runner’s World magazine showed up in my mailbox with a new column.  It’s called “How to Be a Runner” and I think it’s incredibly clever. The bulk of the column is a two-column list where the writer highlights a choice. Treadmill or Outside? Group or Solo? Some choices are […]

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February 19, 2019February 18, 2019Rebekah O'Dell

Less is More: Teaching Inquiry before Research

When I began incorporating inquiry into my instruction early in my career, I was excited by the possibilities. It was finally a way for students to personalize learning; I could hand over the role of the question-asker to the students and guide them as they found answers to topics in which they were invested.  For […]

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