Saturday, October 31, 2015

Election 2016- One Year and Counting



It is approximately one year until the crucial 2016 Presidential election. For the first-time in eight years we have no incumbent running for office and there is a broad field of candidates from both parties. Teachers of civics, social studies and political science should be preparing now for this event by researching activities that will be both engaging and informational for their students, from the conventions this coming summer to the fall campaigns to Election Day 2016. Regardless of your personal political affiliation, a Presidential election represents teachable moments for your students.  Below are a number of web sites that you can search to obtain information for 2016.

The Republican National Convection will be held in Cleveland, Ohio from July 18-21st. Check out this site www. 2016.republican-convention.org.

The Democratic National Convention will be held in Philadelphia, PA from July 25-28th. Go to www.phldncc.com.

There is a national Presidential news website that has information about the primaries, conventions and the elections. This can be located at 222.uspresidential-news.com.

For more general information, facts and figures about all upcoming elections, view the site www.politics1.com.

Teachervision has lesson plans for school students about the Presidential election process. Go to teachervision.com.


All of the major medias networks will also be developing links for information about the election, so take your choice (NBC, ABC, CBS, FOX and CNN). Also check out the C-Span web site.

Of course teachers can get information about the current residents of 1670 Pennsylvania by accessing the site www. whitehouse.gov.

There will be more sites available as Election Day draws near. A good Google search will get you on the right course.

Ps. Don’ forget to register and vote!

c.2015 J.Margolis


Thursday, October 22, 2015

Helicopter Parents or Drones?




As teachers, counselors, and school administrators we have seen the extremes in parental responsibility. On one end are parents that are never seen. They do not come to school activities. They neglect to attend parent-teacher conferences. They have little to do with their children’s’ schooling. On the other end are those parents who challenge every grade below an A, question every decision made by a coach and at every turn run interference for their children’s’ school lives. While they believe that that are helping ensure their sons and daughters success in school, they are, in fact hampering their children’s ability to make decisions or to deal with adversity.

In a recent Washington Post article, the dean of freshmen at Stanford University observed that “overhelping” has provided students with a disability that could hamper their success in life. Reports are surfacing that show an increase in depression, suicides, and mental disorders from children of helicopter parents. At some point, parents need to let children learn to think and succeed on their own. (Although some parents have gone as far as going with their children to their first job interview).

Those of us in the education profession need to learn how to deal with helicopter parents, trying to convince them that while it important to be engaged in the success of their children, hovering too much or too often can have negative effects.



C.2015 J. Margolis

Wednesday, October 14, 2015

Pedagogical Content Knowledge (PCK)



Content matter and pedagogy are not mutually exclusive notions that need to be addressed separately by teaching professional. So states Professor Les Shulman of the Sanford University Graduate School of Education.  Shulman has created a hybrid theory of sorts, which he has dubbed Pedagogical Content Knowledge or PCK. The theory suggests that the two entities should be combined and that educators need to know curriculum knowledge as well as knowledge of educational contexts.

Those who have examined PCK   believe that the strategy deals with concept formulation, teaching techniques, as well as the knowledge as to what makes a curriculum concept either easy or difficult for school students to learn.

Classroom teachers need to know not only the material to be taught but also the techniques and strategies that will enable students to grasp and acquire the content.  Over the years there has been a great deal of discussion of whether coursework taught in our nation’s colleges of education were critical in the preparation of teachers. State alternate route certification programs as well as organizations like Teach for America believed that the desire to teach children as well as content expertise were all that was required to be successful in the classroom. Shulman, as well as others, would argue otherwise. Even if you single out grade levels, the HOW to teach, has at least as much relevance in the process of being a successful teacher as does the content knowledge.

In today’s classroom PCK must also be integrated with technology as both an access point to obtain a vast amount of information as well as a teaching strategy. Todays classroom teaches must be both mindful of PCK and be able to adapt strategies for use in a diverse classroom.


c. 2015 J. Margolis

Tuesday, October 6, 2015

Stop the Insanity !



In the Sunday New York Times last week, there was an article about the Texas state legislature passing a law to allow guns on state college campuses. On the same day in an interview on CNN, a member of the gun lobby suggested that if students at Umpqua Community College were permitted to have guns on campus, someone would have been able to stop Christopher Harper-Mercer. According to reports, there have been thirteen mass shootings in the United States since the massacre at Columbine High School in Colorado, and to my knowledge, no one had a gun to be able to stop the perpetrator.

There has been this disconnect between those who hold the Second Amendment sacred and those who want to protect our children. Schools (and colleges for that matter) are supposed to be safe places. They provide a nurturing environment. They offer free lunch to students who cannot afford it. They offer health care and psychological services to those who need them. Students often turn to schools when things are not so safe at home. It’s no wonder that an increasing number of parents want to home school their children. But even with that extra cautionary step, it did not stop Jared Loughner in Arizona (2011) from killing a child and severely injuring former Congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords. Nor did it stop James Eagan Holmes in a movie theatre in Aurora, Colorado in 2012.


A graphic posted on a national news program last week indicated that during the last ten years about 300 Americans were killed from acts of terrorism and over 300,00 were killed by gun violence. As long as we continue to do nothing and as long as we continue to cave in to the likes of the NRA, these tragedies unfortunately will continue. I encourage all readers to contact their state and federal legislators and help stop the insanity.

Thursday, October 1, 2015

Let Girls Learn!




For the past four years this blog has been a forum for current issues in American public education. We have looked a federal education laws, curriculum development, changes in technology, teacher professional development and social issue in education. There is one issue, of a more global nature, that we have not discussed, until now. Recent statistics indicate that are over 62 million girls, worldwide who are presently being denied the right to an education merely because they are female. “ When girls aren’t given the chance to realize their potential, the whole world loses out.”  In 2012, the World Bank reckoned that Kenya’s illiterate girls, if educated, could boost that country’s economy by $27 billion in the course of a lifetime. (From a Washington Post article I March 2013)
 Now in an effort supported by First Lady Michelle Obama and the Peace Corp, a new initiative called Let Girls Learn is being promoted in places like Columbia, Rwanda, and elsewhere, to give young women the opportunity to receive an education and achieve their aspirations.

Let Girls Learn strives to expand access to education for adolescent girls around the world. The program is based on three pillars:
1 Empowering Leaders
   Working Hand in Hand with Communities
   Increase impact of the Peace Corps volunteers

Public attention was drawn to this issue with the 2013 publication of the book “ I am Malala,” written by a then 15 year old Milala Yousafzai who was shot by the Taliban for standing up for her rights to receive an education. Now with the endorsement of both President Obama and the First Lady, this issue is receiving more attention here in the United States.

For more information about this project or find our how you can participate check out these web sites. www.letgirlslearn.peacecorps.gov or www.62milliongirls.com.


C.2015 J. Margolis