Let’s Make Math Feel Personal and Powerful for Our Students
by Crystal Watson | 12.16.22
As educators, we know that one of the keys to promoting student growth is making learning feel accessible and meaningful for our students.
by Crystal Watson | 12.16.22
As educators, we know that one of the keys to promoting student growth is making learning feel accessible and meaningful for our students.
by Jennifer Karydas | 12.9.22
As an educator, there’s one phrase I always come back to: “Students don’t care until they know how much you care.”
by Emily Francis | 11.30.22
As a longtime ELL teacher and inclusion co-teacher I work alongside content-area teachers to develop more welcoming experiences for our ELL students.
by Claribel González | 10.11.22
Like many of our students, I’m not just a Latina during Hispanic Heritage Month – I’m a Latina 12 months a year, and representative curricula is important to me all school year long.
by Ramia Richmond | 9.28.22
Last school year, my students completed a project where they planned a series of cross-country road trips. In small groups, they mapped out their routes, managed their budgets, worked through
by Vera Ahiyya | 9.22.22
When I was an ELL teacher in Massachusetts, I had a classroom in which 10 different languages were represented. I wanted to make sure every student saw themselves reflected in our classroom library.
by Chey Cheney | 9.15.22
As a longtime middle school teacher, I’m a big fan of daily check-in activities. My students have shown me that when they walk through my door, the most powerful thing I can do to promote a day of growth is create opportunities for them to reconnect with me, their peers and our community.
by Eniola Ajayi | 8.29.22
At the beginning of the school year, just to get the pulse of my classes, I always ask students to complete the sentence, “Math is _______.”
by James Hammer | 8.25.22
All of us, here, in this moment, are meeting at the intersection of this classroom. But the reality is that we’re not coming alone. We are bringing so many other “things” with us.
by Andrea Biro | 8.22.22
When I first start with a brand-new set of math students, I show them a little cartoon. It says, “How to be a math person. Step 1: Do math. Step