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A storytelling project focused on changing the narrative about the teaching profession.

Read more about the article Jessica Lander | Teaching history and civics to immigrant students

Jessica Lander | Teaching history and civics to immigrant students

I have the honor and joy of teaching U.S. history and civics to recent immigrant and refugee students. My students come from more than 30 countries: from Colombia, to the Democratic Republic of the Congo, to Cambodia. Most of my students have been in the U.S. for less than five years.

Continue ReadingJessica Lander | Teaching history and civics to immigrant students
Read more about the article Margi Bhansali | The importance of play in learning

Margi Bhansali | The importance of play in learning

I went to school to be a journalist. My financial aid package required that I take on a work-study job. So during my first year of school, I worked with Jumpstart, an AmeriCorps program where they put college kids in Title I preschools.

Continue ReadingMargi Bhansali | The importance of play in learning

“Your calling is way beyond content.”

I think it was the first time that I realized how much impact teachers have. The experience that you give the learners in your classroom can change the paths that they walk for the rest of their lives.

Continue Reading“Your calling is way beyond content.”
Read more about the article Francis Pina | Math, life skills, and Black male role models

Francis Pina | Math, life skills, and Black male role models

I wanted to work at the Boston Federal Reserve and go to the London School of Economics. But I graduated in 2009, and there were no jobs available, due to the housing crisis and Great Recession. So I started working at a local public charter school.

Continue ReadingFrancis Pina | Math, life skills, and Black male role models
Read more about the article Dana Guenterberg | Outdoor learning and helping students feel seen

Dana Guenterberg | Outdoor learning and helping students feel seen

I was pretty close with my brother. He ended up going to jail when I was in fourth grade. We were having morning meeting at school, and the question that day was, ‘How are you feeling?’

Continue ReadingDana Guenterberg | Outdoor learning and helping students feel seen
Read more about the article Tamika Fluker | Community and containment drills

Tamika Fluker | Community and containment drills

I was working at The Bridge Home at St. Mary's Women and Children's Center. It’s a shelter for infants to 12-year-olds. If the Department of Child and Family Services pulled a kid from their home, we housed and counseled them.

Continue ReadingTamika Fluker | Community and containment drills
Read more about the article Dan Shutes | How teaching is like coaching

Dan Shutes | How teaching is like coaching

The bulk of my fifth graders are just excited to see me. They want to talk to you in their downtime. They want to sit by you at lunch, and they want you to come to recess with them. That feeling is the driving force that made me become a teacher.

Continue ReadingDan Shutes | How teaching is like coaching
Read more about the article Ashley Kannan | “Teaching is about the presence of a soul”

Ashley Kannan | “Teaching is about the presence of a soul”

I grew up in Oak Park in the 1980s. People were all about the melting pot. The idea was that everyone is the same and nobody looks different — we're all part of this collective homogenous blob. One of the drawbacks to that was that I was never really seen.

Continue ReadingAshley Kannan | “Teaching is about the presence of a soul”
Read more about the article Amy Traynor | A school led by teachers

Amy Traynor | A school led by teachers

Early on in my career, I was more afraid of talking to parents. But I had a principal who said, ‘If you're not calling them first with a positive, then when you call them with a negative, it's going to be harder.’ So I tried to do that. And I have had great success with parents trusting me and knowing that I have their kids’ best interests at heart.

Continue ReadingAmy Traynor | A school led by teachers
Read more about the article Pam Gresser | Love, logic, and finding your marigold

Pam Gresser | Love, logic, and finding your marigold

Teaching runs in my family. The bell was my grandma’s. She was the last teacher at a one room schoolhouse in Cold Spring, Wisconsin. Because she was the last teacher, they gave that bell to her. She wrote on that card that both her mother and her aunt also taught in that school.

Continue ReadingPam Gresser | Love, logic, and finding your marigold
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