Books, Education, RattleBag and Rhubarb

School Choice: Hogwarts or Diffendoofer?

The best parts about the Harry Potter books are all the reminders of the traditional British school story and a childhood spent haunting the children’s library. Hogwarts – like Greyfriars, St. Jim’s, Linley Court, St. Clare’s, Malory Towers and all the rest – is a direct descendant of the early Victorian Rugby School of Tom Brown’s Schooldays. Each school has…

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RattleBag and Rhubarb

Tom Peters: Educate for a Creative Society

He’s not as funny as Ken Robinson but here is (creative and enterprising) business guru Tom Peters on a rant about the lack of creativity in schools. One piece of advice for employers: Never hire anyone with a 4.0 average.

Books, RattleBag and Rhubarb, WW1

Regeneration

This July marks the ninetieth anniversary of the start of third Ypres – better known as the battle of Passchendaele . It was an offensive designed to break out of the stalemate of the salient – the bump in the line that bulged around the Flemish town of Ieper, known in French as Ypres and to the thousands of English…

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RattleBag and Rhubarb

Teachers at Work: Making Eyes Shine

Is classical music dead? Or does everyone love classical music? Does it matter what we say? What does it mean to play the piano with one buttock? Is anyone actually tone deaf? What is success? Can your life be transformed? Here is a master teacher – conductor Benjamin Zander – and his TEDtalks answers to all that and more. Like…

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RattleBag and Rhubarb

Three Questions

Marc Prensky is a New Yorker but here he is in Auckland, New Zealand giving a keynote address at the 2007 Leading Edge Conference for educators. Marc has lots to say about 21st century students and how it might be a good idea to figure out how to educate for this century before its over. He asks three questions: Who…

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RattleBag and Rhubarb

Summer School

The morning glories and lilies are in bloom in the courtyard garden. The thistles bloom at the edge of the woods where the blackberries are ripening. The soccer pitch is silent and no-one is cheering from the bench. The flag droops in the heat and the car park behind Kenyon is empty. It is summer at school. But the owl…

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Books, RattleBag and Rhubarb

Nuts! A Tale of Morality and Medicine

Do you like eating nuts? You do? And so do squirrels, but even squirrels can eat too many. Tippety Nippet was a squirrel and he was VERY fond of nuts; but once he ate far too many, as you shall see. (Uh oh! Moral lesson about to be delivered.) And he had to admit to himself that the awkward feeling…

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RattleBag and Rhubarb

College Disorder

You may have seen this article in this week’s New York Times: Colleges Join Forces on a Web Presence to Let Prospective Students Research and Compare This is good news. It’s encouraging to see colleges taking the initiative to do something about the ranking obsession aspect of ACD. (Acquired College Disorder – a pernicious disease that is highly contagious and…

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RattleBag and Rhubarb

Connect Joy to Neuroscience

In their zeal to raise test scores, too many policymakers wrongly assume that students who are laughing, interacting in groups, or being creative with art, music, or dance are not doing real academic work. The result is that some teachers feel pressure to preside over more sedate classrooms with students on the same page in the same book, sitting in…

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RattleBag and Rhubarb

Moving up: Words of Wisdom

When you have an idea don’t keep it inside you. Speak up and say what you have to say. Even if you don’t think it’s a good idea, it might be to others once they hear it – Clare If you eat your veggies at dinnertime you get dessert – Mark While you’re working you get more done when the…

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RattleBag and Rhubarb

Strategic Plan delivered

There was no fanfare of trumpets or marching band but the PDS Strategic Plan arrived on Monday. Victoria accepted delivery of the bound copies for distribution to the Board of Trustees. The Board unanimously approved the plan at its meeting on Monday. This plan represents months of community-wide discussion and data gathering and an intensive period of hard work by…

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