Education Reform

Introduction to Education Technology and Education Reform

Introduction to Education Technology and Education Reform The impact of educational technology on education reform is still in play as the system clings to a paradigm ill-suited to the 21st century. Over 20 years ago, Trilling and Hood (1999) advised educators to “remember education in the U.S. is firmly lodged in a political

By |2022-09-21T20:18:06+00:00December 21st, 2021|Education Reform|Comments Off on Introduction to Education Technology and Education Reform

Community Schools: Achieving Whole-School Equity

As US educators struggle with how to achieve equity for all students, full-service community schools continue to rise to the top of solutions that demonstrate evidence of breaking the barrier to achievement. The Coalition for Community Schools estimated in 2018 that there are more than 5,000 community schools. The impetus to grow the number

By |2022-09-02T00:28:57+00:00October 27th, 2021|Education Reform|Comments Off on Community Schools: Achieving Whole-School Equity

No Child Left Behind Act: The 2001 Reauthorization of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act

Background: Elementary and Secondary Education Act (ESEA) To understand No Child Left Behind (NCLB), it’s necessary to quickly review its history as a reauthorization of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act (ESEA) signed into law in 1965 by President Lyndon B. Johnson. ESEA was a significant part of President Johnson’s War on Poverty

By |2022-09-02T00:52:06+00:00October 25th, 2021|Education Reform|Comments Off on No Child Left Behind Act: The 2001 Reauthorization of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act

5 Easy Tips to Support & Retain New Teachers

44%+ teachers leave education within their first five years (Council of Exceptional Children [CEC], 2021). What can you do to make them want to stay? Here are 5 easy tips on how to support and retain your new teachers this school year. Tip 1: Welcome the innovation your new teachers bring. Yes,

By |2022-09-22T00:36:31+00:00October 5th, 2021|Education Reform|Comments Off on 5 Easy Tips to Support & Retain New Teachers

3 Keys to Successful Professional Development with Let’s Go Learn

By Christina Barragan and Onowa Bjella, M.Ed Determine how Let’s Go Learn fits into school and district initiatives Let’s Go Learn will support you with your district initiatives with real-time reports, granular data, and personalized learning. Your data will be stored year over year so that you can easily monitor progress towards

By |2022-09-02T01:00:45+00:00July 21st, 2021|Education Reform|Comments Off on 3 Keys to Successful Professional Development with Let’s Go Learn

Getting Staff Back to School

During the first week of February this year, new CDC Director Dr. Rochelle Walensky said there is growing evidence that schools can re-open safely. Not coincidently, her statement came at the same time COVID-19 vaccines were beginning to role out en masse. Some states, like Oregon, put educators in the top Phase of vaccine

By |2022-09-02T01:10:39+00:00March 16th, 2021|Education Reform|Comments Off on Getting Staff Back to School

The Power of Positive Emotion in Personalized Learning

Numerous research studies have shown that emotion plays a critical role in learning. Fortunately, this is intuitive: negative emotions often hurt a child’s ability to learn while positive emotions generally help. This is true in all types of learning, whether in person or online. And it has been validated that online learning in

By |2022-09-02T01:20:39+00:00July 1st, 2020|Education Reform|Comments Off on The Power of Positive Emotion in Personalized Learning

The History of LetsGoLearn

Let’s Go Learn began as an effort to bring an academic reading model to the digital age. With the World Wide Web reaching mass market in the late 1990s, Dr. Richard McCallum of UC Berkeley took his reading and literacy development program and partnered with technologist Richard Capone to create a web version

By |2022-09-08T20:22:07+00:00April 9th, 2020|Education Reform|Comments Off on The History of LetsGoLearn
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