Adam Werley (@mrwerleywaukee) 's Twitter Profile
Adam Werley

@mrwerleywaukee

Your story matters.
Stuff can be two things.
Learning 🔄 Growth
Father, learner, reader, educator, White Sox enthusiast.
He/him/his
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ID: 1949962021

calendar_today09-10-2013 19:23:06

2,2K Tweet

333 Followers

618 Following

James A. Furey (@jamesafurey) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Teachers, Use your summer wisely: Rest, recover, and prepare your argument for banning phones. The classroom you want doesn’t exist until they’re gone.

Appalachian Wood Homestead (@appwoodhome) 's Twitter Profile Photo

MartinCothran As annoying as lesson planning can be, being handed everything from a “curriculum department” and being told you had to use it would be even worse.

Derek Thompson (@dkthomp) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Yes. Writing is not a second thing that happens after thinking. The act of writing is an act of thinking. Writing *is* thinking. Students, academics, and anyone else who outsources their writing to LLMs will find their screens full of words and their minds emptied of thought.

Yes. 

Writing is not a second thing that happens after thinking. The act of writing is an act of thinking. Writing *is* thinking.

Students, academics, and anyone else who outsources their writing to LLMs will find their screens full of words and their minds emptied of thought.
Sarah Trone Garriott (@sarahforiowa) 's Twitter Profile Photo

They are eliminating IPERS, the most important tool for recruiting public employees (including local law enforcement)
meanwhile not a word about the over $300 million per year wasted on private school vouchers for the wealthiest.

dr. alicia andrzejewski (she/her) (@aliciaandrz) 's Twitter Profile Photo

I just read a student paper that was insightful & distinct but grammatically clumsy (a ton of sentences with coordinating conjunctions). my first thought was, “I can help them with this. no big deal.” grammar matters but if you grade for grammar I think you’re missing the point.

Monte Syrie (@montesyrie) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Funny how we still think we’re going to somehow finally arrive at a place of objective purity with grading, like some new arithmetical (or alphabetical) alchemy will gild for good our mark of measure, “golding,” if you will, our standard. A fool’s errand for fool’s gold.

Monte Syrie (@montesyrie) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Until. Until it’s their kid. Many on the outside talk a big game about tough love and high expectations (“teaching responsibility”) in the classroom, bemoaning the “coddling” of kids with grace. Until it’s their kid who needs the grace, and then all the sudden, it is our job.

Monte Syrie (@montesyrie) 's Twitter Profile Photo

It’s a reckoning. At some point in every teacher’s career comes the realization that grades aren’t necessary for learning. But, too, comes the reality that the world outside can’t fathom such a thing. And so, we are forced to live out an existence of doing the unnecessary for

Monte Syrie (@montesyrie) 's Twitter Profile Photo

1)Maybe their apathy is our apathy. No, hear me out. For 30 years now, I have worked in a system where I’ve believed that we can do better than we’re doing, but we won’t because we can’t get away from what we’ve always done. And we are forced to accept what we can’t accept.