- Quote for the Week
- Want to Keep Your Best Employees From Leaving? Ask Them These 5 Questions by Marcel Schwantes
- How the Federal Government’s Charter School Program Went Wrong by Jeff Bryant
- Effects of Inequality and Poverty vs. Teachers and Schooling on America’s Youth by David Berliner
- Writing in Education: The Art of Writing for Educators by Elizabeth Chase
- Principal supervisors a ‘key’ but sometimes untapped resource by Naaz Modan
- Gifted programs provide little to no academic boost by Jill Barshay
- 4 Tips to Make Presenters More Effective for Any Audience by Rob Carey
- 11 Myths About Decision-Making by Cheryl Strauss Einhorn
- If You Regularly Use These 5 Words, You’re a Better Leader Than You Think by Jason Aten
- ‘Learning Loss, in General, Is a Misnomer’: Study Shows Kids Made Progress During COVID-19 By Sarah Schwartz
- ‘We Need To Be Nurtured, Too’: Many Teachers Say They’re Reaching A Breaking Point by Kavita Cardoza
- How Leadership Influences Student Learning by the Wallace Foundation
- 6 Leadership Paradoxes for the Post-Pandemic Era by Paul Leinwand
- During Pandemic, More Parents Come To Appreciate Teachers and Understand Teaching by Larry Cuban
- How to Do Hybrid Rightby Lynda Gratton
- The Weekly HML Post Index for 2021 (January through April)
Author: jack_mckay@csd49.org
Articles for the May 4, 2021 Issue:
- Quote for the Week
- Teacher Appreciation Week: What Teachers Make by Taylor Mali
- Taking Over for a Bad Leader? Follow These Steps by Andrew Blum
- Stop Asking for Feedback by Amantha Imber
- How to Come Out of a Speech with Your Head Held High by Gary Genard
- 10 Proactive Questions Every Board Member Should Be Asking by Andrew White
- 4 Tips on How to Run an Efficient Meeting by Brian Hamilton
- Regulating student speech in the Snapchat era by Robert Kim
- A Lively Supreme Court Argument Over a Cheerleader’s Vulgar Rant by Adam Liptak
- School Superintendents Are Superstressed By Kate Taylor
- Nested Organizations: Public Schooling Is Complex by Larry Cuban
- Grit: The Power of Passion and Perseverance by Angela Duckworth
- “Grit: The Power of Passion and Perseverance” with Ben Fried and Angela Duckworth
- The Weekly HML Post Index for 2021 (January through April)
- Cartoon of the Week
- Horace Mann League Officers, Directors, and Past Presidents
Sample “Letter to the Editor”
The indisputable truth: Strong public schools build strong communities by Becky Glover on the Meridan Star site.(Editor’s note: This “Guest Editorial” about an upcoming school board election might provide you with some ideas about writing an editorial for your local media.)
The challenges in our community are plentiful and significant. Local leaders’ support for and understanding of what is needed to create high-quality public schools should be at the top of the list because they are foundational to building a strong community.
The impact public schools have on their communities is deep, wide, long, and powerful. Well-educated citizens fuel their community’s economic growth and tax revenues. In turn, well-educated people want to live where they can get the best return on their educational investment in the form of plentiful, well-paying jobs, along with other amenities, and an excellent quality of life.
If we want community to improve in any one of these areas: economic growth, more and better-paying jobs, individual and collective wealth and health, better property values, tax base growth, decreased crime, or better overall quality of life, then strengthening and improving our public schools is key.
Each of these community attributes is enhanced when public schools are supported not only by parents but also by the community and elected officials. Such support leads to more children being educated well and equitably.
When those well-educated children become adults, they contribute to their community in multiple ways over the course of their lifetimes so the cycle of success continues as long as public schools are supported effectively.Public schools are the training ground for life. Educators know firsthand that it takes more time, money, and effort to educate a child who comes from a home of poverty. In Meridian, almost 80% of our school-age children get their first 12-15 years of life training in our public schools and most of these children come from economically disadvantaged homes.
Research shows that there is a direct relationship between socio-economic levels, test scores, and school accountability ratings. Our own student achievement data shows that poor children are struggling, but the data also shows that they can learn and that many are succeeding despite the gauntlet of challenges that come with being born into an impoverished family.
Vibrant communities are ones where more folks work together consistently to improve their public schools. When elected officials understand the unique and significant value of their public schools, they are more likely to use their leadership role to contribute to that value.When voters understand the critical nature of electing leaders who recognize the value of their public schools in their community’s capacity to succeed, they are more likely to vote for leaders who will engage with them in the good and necessary work of strengthening their public schools. (Learn more.)
HML Post for October 6, 2020
Articles and other Things
- What Teachers Make by Taylor Mali.
- Teacher Talk About Student Ability and Achievement in the Era of Data-Driven Decision Making by Amanda Datnow
- Pandemic could spur new school staffing approaches by Kara Arundel
- 5 Dos and Don’ts for Virtual Event Success
- 5 Ways to Use Videoconferencing by Mariana Aguilar
- After-school programs struggle by Shawna De La Rosa
- The Art of Communicating Risk by Ann Cleaveland
- Bring Your Breakthrough Ideas to Life by Cyril Bouquet
- Teacher leadership: Prospects and promises by Barnett Berry
- Who are the real experts in your school system?by Joshua Starr
- 5 Books to Read If You Want to Understand the Future of Work by Jessica Stillman
- Cartoon of the Week
HML Post for October 13, 2020
Articles and other Things
- 100 school leaders identify the biggest challenges this year by Mara Rodriguez
- Social Studies Instruction and Reading Comprehension: Evidence from the Early Childhood Longitudinal Study by Adam Tyner and Sarah Kabourek
- Here’s Why I Wouldn’t Teach Less Reading to Improve Social Studies by Tim Shanahan
- A response to Tim Shanahan on “Social Studies Instruction and Reading Comprehension” by Adam Tyner
- To Succeed in a Negotiation, Help Your Counterpart Save Face by Joshua N. Weiss
- Three Lessons That 2020 Has Taught Every Leader by Michael T. Nietzel
- A Qualitative Exploration of Relational Leadership in Three Full-Service Community Schools by Mavis G. Sanders
- If You Listen, We Will Stay by Davis Dixon and Ashley Griffin
- A PRACTICAL GUIDE TO ADVANCING COMMUNITY SCHOOLS STRATEGIES on the Community School site.
- A Framework for Rebuilding Initial Certification and Preparation Programs in Educational Leadership: Lessons From Whole-State Reform Initiatives by Joseph Murphy
- Based Learning is Transforming Remote Learning by Kyle Wagner
- Federal policy and push to privatize education by Patricia Burch
- Type Less, Talk More by Amit Kumar
- A Failure to Disrupt: Why Technology Alone Can’t Transform Education by Justin Reich
- What Teachers Make byTaylor Mali.
- Cartoon of the Week
HML Post for October 20, 2020
Articles and other Things 7 Tips for Remote Teaching The Digital Divide Starts With a Laptop Shortage Stepping Up to the Challenge 9 Words and Phrases You’re Probably Using Wrong Find the Coaching in Criticism A Framework for Leaders Facing Difficult Decisions. Let Them Read, Please The Essential Traits of a Positive School Climate 5 Ways to Make Your Presentations Memorable! How to Be a Good Board Chair Chair and Member Roles: The Nuance of Effective Leadership of a School Board Some Witty One Liners for all Occasions William Frantz Public School: A Story of Race, Resistance, Resiliency, and Recovery in New Orleans Type Less, Talk More A Failure to Disrupt: Why Technology Alone Can’t Transform Education What Teachers Make Archive of 2020 HML Post Articles, click here. Archive of 2019 HML Post Articles, click here. |
HML POst for November 3, 2020
- Congratulations to Dr. Laurie Barron
- Quote for the Week
- Administrator support essential to maintain teacher morale by Matt Zalaznick
- Successful Decision-Making During Uncertainty by Thomas Arnett and Bob Moesta
- As more students head back, here’s what we now know (and still don’t) about schools and COVID spread by Matt Barnum
- Staff Meetings Get a Needed Makeover During the Pandemic
- Successfully Taking Offline Classes Online by Catlin R. Tucker
- How deeply will digital learning transform K-12 long-term? by Roger Riddell
- The schools teachers choose by Jeremy Glazer
- How the Best Leaders Answer “What Are We Here for?” by Margaret Heffernan
- Give Your Remote Team Unstructured Time for Collaboration by Barbara Z. Larson
- 8 Questions About Planning Safe In-Person Events on the Meeting site
- Avoid This Common Mistake Most Speakers Make in Virtual Meetings by Carmine Gallo
- Politics, Not Science, is Driving School Reopening Decisions by Kevin Mahnken
- Linking Social-Emotional Learning to Long-Term Success by C. Kirabo Jackson
- Does Start Time at High School Really Matter? Studying the Impact of High School Start Time on Achievement, by Emelina Minero
- What It Takes to Lead Through an Era of Exponential Change by Aneel Chima and Ron Gutman
- Managing the Virtual and Hybrid Teaching Workload by Beth Pandolpho
- School choice programs at public expense harm the public good by William L. Phillis
- Quotations for Leaders edited by Jack McKay
HML Post for November 10, 2020
- The Virtual Meeting – A Summary of Article – edited by Jack McKay
- Make Remote Learning More Effective by Angela Duckworth
- Teaching Young Students Remotely by Wendy L. Ostroff
- The 6-Step Guide to Strategy Implementation by Tom Wright
- Strategies for Helping Students Succeed Amid COVID-19 by Cecilia Cruse
- Universal Preschool Could Be a National Model by Claire Cain Miller,
- Labeling Students Then and Now (Part 1)by Larry Cuban
- Labeling Students Then and Now (Part 2) by Larry Cuban
- Building Racial Equity Through Trauma-Responsive Discipline by Micere Keels
- How to Be a Star in Your Next Video Conference by Gary Genard
- Improve the Quality of Their Video Instruction by Matthew X. Joseph
- Crisis Management During COVID-19: A Roadmap for Principals by Jim Dunn
- Don’t Get Blindsided by Your Blind Spots by Amy C. Edmondson and Aaron W. Dimmock
- Quotations for Leaders edited by Jack McKay
HML Post for November 17, 2020
- School Reopening 2020: The Surge That Never Happened by Alexander Russo
- 5 Powerful Ways to Motivate and Inspire Your Audience by Gary Genard
- Biden’s Education Department Will Move Fast to Reverse Betsy DeVos’s Policies by Erica L. Green
- Pandemic Sparks Fears That Without Sports and Other Activities, Students Will Disengage from School by Greg Toppo
- A New Education Vision for a New Administration by Sasha Pudelski, Noelle Ellerson, and Chris Rogers
- Sticky schools: How to find and keep teachers in the classroom by Anne Podolsky, Tara Kini, Joseph Bishop, and Linda Darling-Hammond
- The Virtual Meeting – HML Post Articles edited by Jack McKay
- We Must Teach Students to Recognize Misinformation by Diane Ravitch
- Whatever Happened To Cursive Writing? by Larry Cuban
- The Difference Between Good Leaders and Great Ones by James R. Bailey
- Rethinking schools, rethinking learning by Maxine McKinney de Royston
- Reinventing Your Career in Uncertain Times by David Lancefield and Dorie Clark
- Quotations for Leaders edited by Jack McKay
HMLPost for November 24, 2020
- The Horace Mann League’s 2021 Awards
- 6 Exercises to Get to Know Your Students Better—and Increase Their Engagement By Nora Fleming
- Superintendents must be willing to take the heat by Joshua P. Starr
- Things That Make a Difference in Remote Learning by AJ Juliani
- The Upside of Your Public Speaking Jitters by Allison Shapira
- Is Self-Sabotage Burning You Out? by Kandi Wiens
- Why online education can’t replace brick-and-mortar K-12 schooling
- Why Reopening Schools Has Become the Most Fraught Debate of the Pandemic by Rachel Cohen
- Overconfidence Is Contagious by Joey T. Cheng
- Dead horse theory and Agile by Daniel Gullo
- Make Mindfulness a Habit by Matthias Birk
- How to Lead Your Audience to Your Important Message by Gary Genard
- The Virtual Meeting – HML Post Articles edited by Jack McKay
- Articles on Leadership Edited byJack McKay