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For the term "%EC%95%88%EC%82%B0%EC%83%81%EB%A1%9D%EC%8A%AC%EB%A1%AF%EB%A8%B8%EC%8B%A0%E3%80%90trrt2-com%E3%80%91%20%EC%95%88%EC%82%B0%EC%83%81%EB%A1%9D%EB%B8%94%EB%9E%99%EC%9E%AD%20%EC%95%88%EC%82%B0%EC%83%81%EB%A1%9D%ED%99%80%EB%8D%A4%EB%B0%A9%E2%9C%BE%EC%95%88%EC%82%B0%EC%83%81%EB%A1%9D%ED%99%80%EB%8D%A4%EB%B0%94%E3%8A%A0%EC%95%88%EC%82%B0%EC%83%81%EB%A1%9D%EB%8B%A4%EC%9D%B4%EC%82%AC%EC%9D%B4%20EnP/".

Not Light, But Fire: Talking Race in Class

Reading “Not Light, But Fire” inspired Sarah Cooper to change the way she frames conversations about current events and history – which very often involve race, ethnicity, religion, politics and other incendiary topics – to build understanding, not emotion.

What You Can Do With Fragments of Class Time

Make the most of those minutes of fragmented class time that testing schedules, assemblies and pre-holiday half-days can create. Megan Kelly shares some of her own cross-curricular ideas to promote fun and active learning whether you have five minutes or five hours to fill.

Be the Change: Teach Social Comprehension

Educator Sarah Cooper finds herself gravitating to teaching books that call our social consciences awake, as Sara K. Ahmed’s Being the Change does as it asks teachers to be even more human in the classroom and thus impel your students to share their humanity with you.

3 Ways to Help Students Analyze Visual Texts

Kids love visual texts such as art and photographs, but as with written texts, they often don’t know where to begin when asked to look at the works critically. Author and NBCT Marilyn Pryle finds that if given specific doorways, her students have much richer discussions.

How to Be Heard Worldwide from Your Classroom

Whatever you know, sharing it outside school walls can inform policymakers, journalists, the public, other teachers, researchers, and professors – who can use your classroom discoveries to better serve students. Educator and writer Jenny Grant Rankin shows how.

Teaching Poetry for Social Justice

If every elementary, English and history teacher did even one of the book’s activities each year, our understanding of our students would deepen immeasurably, as would their appreciation of their families and their communities, both local and global, writes Sarah Cooper.

3 Collaboration Tools for Middle Level Classrooms

Collaboration doesn’t always come naturally (or calmly) for middle level students. Teacher Michael McClenaghan shares his success with three edtech tools (Soundtrap, WeVideo and the free G Suite) in facilitating meaningful teamwork and higher levels of student engagement.

Microprocessing Fun in Middle School Science

Museum educator Christa Flores shares a summer STEM partnership that introduced middle schoolers to programmable microprocessors that can perform a variety of lab-oriented tasks. Flores, a former MS teacher, says it’s time to include computer skills in science classrooms.