Bringing Ohio History to Life: Teaching the Great Flood of 1913 - Ohio History Connection

Learn the history of the Great Flood of 1913 & bring it into your classroom with this primary sources analysis activity.

Ohio History Connection

Endlessly fucking pissed right now and on the verge of voluntarily blacklisting myself from an entire school.

Two years ago, I accepted a substitute teaching job labelled as “elementary education”. It was, in fact, a violent behavior isolation room, dubbed “E.S.P.” (unsure for what it stands). To summarize: I came out physically and mentally bruised and battered, never willing to take that job again.

A month or so ago, I went to that same school—at which I’m a frequent sub—for a third-grade position. When I arrived, the (vice?) principal pulled me aside and told me that they “figured it out”, and that the interventionist was covering that class: ergo, they said they’d be putting me in the E.S.P. room since there wasn’t coverage that day. I was on the verge of walking out, but I’ve been on a tight budget since my wife’s job loss and thus medical insurance loss in April led to high credit card debt. The highlight reel: I was once again assaulted in the groin, this time with two wooden chairs zip-tied to each other—which was *supposed* to prevent them from being used as a weapon.

Last night, I got a phone call from SmartFind, the automated absence-reporting and sub-finding system, telling me that my job today was cancelled. It just happens sometimes: appointments get rescheduled, teachers end up not being sick, et cetera. I got some more calls, but they were for days later in the month. Again, it happens: not every day I get a job.

This morning, I was confused as to why I wasn’t getting any calls. Usually, SmartFind starts calling as early as 4:30 A.M. for urgent, same-day sub jobs, but… I didn’t get any at all. I checked the online portal to make sure I didn’t accidentally mark myself as unavailable, or maybe accidentally block calls for twenty-four hours—and what do I find? A job for that E.S.P. room. I was confused, since I know I’d never knowingly accept that position.

I called the school and explained the situation, asking the secretary if they entered in that job manually. They did. I politely told them to cancel it—five minutes *after* I was supposed to be there—because of “the nature of the job”. I tried to hide it, but I was beyond livid. I had no job for today—$165, gone.

If the county office tries to penalize me for a no-show (or whatever they deem this), I’m fucking quitting and moving district. Job swaps like this are NOT in my contract.

#teaching #substituteteaching #elementaryeducation #rant

Inspiring Second Grade: A Sub’s Journey of Learning & Growth #ElementaryEducationhttps://ift.tt/dl87jzS
Matthew Kenslow

Inspiring Second Grade: A Sub's Journey of Learning & Growth #ElementaryEducation #TeachingLife https://www.youtube.com/shorts/1764HVLWIAs via Matthew...

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Awesome activity today: class meeting greeting. StandUpHandUpPairUp and the. come up with a cool new handshake. Hilarity and razor-like focus ensued. #elementaryeducation #teacher

Kinda maybe parents rights / parents choice folks should spend more time at school board meetings asking how their children's math and literacy scores can be improved rather than screaming to ban masks and install the Ten Commandments. Oh, and while they're at it, maybe push for gun reform to make schools safer, rather than fortify schools and put guns in classrooms.

Couldn't hurt to try.
https://www.pbs.org/newshour/show/nations-report-card-paints-bleak-picture-of-education-in-aftermath-of-the-pandemic
#NAEP #ElementaryEducation #NationsReportCard

Nation's Report Card paints bleak picture of education in aftermath of the pandemic

American students continue to struggle in both reading and math, and the gap between the highest and lowest performing kids is widening to historic levels. Data from the Nation's Report Card shows test scores are still below pre-pandemic numbers. Amna Nawaz discussed more with Gov. Jared Polis of Colorado and chair of the National Governors Association.

PBS News
A Bill to Kill the Education Department Is Already Filed. Here's What It Says

The bill represents another attempt at a long-term Republican goal.

Education Week
Encouraging Self-Reliance In Upper Elementary

Self-reliance is crucial for academic and social perserverance throughout a child's academic career. Our team highlights key aspects of self-reliance.

Kids on the Yard | Articles , Blog, Resources
Spent the bulk of this week in my classroom prepping for a new year of 3rd graders. Teachers aren’t officially back (meaning getting paid) til next Wed, but these kids deserve my best offering, so it’s worth it. #elementaryeducation #teacherlife

What world is this we live in where a 9 year old is anxious at night because he took *two seconds* too long on a reading comprehension test????

This week is standardized testing week here and man, I wish I could yeet them into the void.

#StandardizedTesting #testing #assessment #education #ElementaryEd #ElementaryEducation #elementary #kids #parenting #CITO

Commentary: Arts-integrated learning is good for students and their teachers

A summer program that integrated artistic activities into learning enhanced student engagement and created a more positive mindset among those who participated, says Elaina Gomez-Alcala, a Baltimore City Public Schools teacher.

The Baltimore Banner