Most secondary school students have a mobile phone, and most mobile phones have a camera, MP3 player, video camera and a stopwatch. Jarrod Robinson explains why schools should stop confiscating these amazing pieces of technology, and how phones can be used to engage students in learning.
The more you know about how the brain works, the better will be your teaching, says David Sousa.
Students of all ages are encouraged to learn by the same favourable classroom conditions, as Stephen Keast and Rebecca Cooper explain.
A school can live or die on the strength of its response to a crisis, so it pays to be prepared, as Katrina Byers explains.
Effective professional development or training is about skillful teaching, but it’s also about the clever use of new technologies, says Marc Ratcliffe.
Here’s a simple question: what should we be teaching our students in science classrooms that will be of most use them? The answer, as Stephen Keast and Rebecca Cooper explain, is to teach them to think for themselves, but that’s not as easy as it sounds.
School leader Trevor Lee discusses the benefits of a student wellbeing curriculum.
If we over-inflate our students’ self-esteem, we run the risk that the air will quickly come out of the balloon when they hit the wide world, says Stephen Dinham.
Facebook
Twitter
YouTube
SoundCloud
Apple Podcasts
Spotify
RSS feed
Linkedin