You have never known weird until you have watched a student-made video project. While teaching To Kill a Mockingbird in 9 th grade English, I was about as unenthusiastic as my students for a ...
Determining whether students learn better with in-person classroom learning or online is a multifaceted question. Both modalities offer unique advantages and challenges, impacting student engagement, ...
For generations, pressure has been treated as a normal almost necessary part of a child’s academic life. Parents often believe that a little fear, strictness, or push will “motivate” children to study ...
It’s 2026, and if you’re still trying to learn anything (exam prep, coursework, a new skill, whatever) the way you did even a couple of years ago, I have just one thing to tell you: you’re doing it ...
The question of whether students learn better online or in a classroom setting is a multifaceted debate, encompassing considerations of individual learning styles, access to resources, social ...
Talking to yourself feels deeply human. Inner speech helps you plan, reflect, and solve problems without saying a word.
Scroll through Netflix’s library of films or Amazon Video’s exhaustive trove of movies and you would be hard-pressed not to find one that features an uplifting film about a teacher inspiring a student ...
Let’s face it—most of us are glued to our devices. Whether it’s checking TikTok, scrolling through memes, or binging YouTube videos while we “study,” screens are a huge part of student life. But what ...
You spent over a decade in classrooms memorizing facts, cramming for tests, and highlighting textbooks. Yet nobody ever taught you how to actually learn. The education system focused on what to learn ...
Of course, many people go back to college or grad school mainly for the piece of paper. But it’s an awful lot of money and time just for a piece of imitation sheepskin. You might as well extract as ...