1. Fast and Slow Piles. This works well as a starting or closing activity. Students sort math fact cards into fast and slow piles. This visual way of tracking facts highlights which facts come ...
"It makes my heart feel good to see the smiles on their faces when they get to pick their own books." Sixth graders at ...
The Trump administration faces deadlines on Monday to tell two federal judges whether it will comply with court orders that it continue to fund the SNAP using contingency funds during the government ...
Western debates obsess over radar shapes and engine rumors. The advantage many miss is simpler: China is building stealth ...
We need thoughtful commentary on tech’s implications for learning. John McWhorter’s shrug of an Atlantic essay was anything but.
Trump says government shutdown ends when Democrats give in Secret Service finds 17 'skimming' devices in tour of San Antonio ...
Groups of districts already working on escaping the factory model applied for grant money to work on innovative high school ...
It’s that both are trapped in a system that confuses stimulation with engagement. Teachers, desperate to reach distracted minds, now fight fire with fire: math games for short attention spans, online ...
America’s Thrift Stores has locations throughout the Southeast, and the Baton Rouge outpost stands as a testament to the fact that secondhand doesn’t mean second-rate. Walking through those doors is ...
State advocates fear the current food pantry system is stressed now and may be overrun if food stamp benefits end due to the ...
Gajilan, who has worked at Reuters for more than 14 years and was then digital news director, had been reading about ...
The premise was promising: buy something that’s worth a penny now, sell it when it’s worth a dollar later, and you’ll make 99 ...