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Dave Stuart Jr.

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Archives for October 2016

The Four Academic Mindsets: How 25 Words Decimated the 1000s I’ve Written on Student Motivation

October 29, 2016 By Dave Stuart Jr. 1 Comment

Recently, I proved to Alexis that her ability and competence could improve with effort. On her first world history test, she did poorly on the map portion and, during our first practice session in study hall following the test, did not improve much even when I walked her through a basic retrieval practice technique. (In other words, […]

The Consortium Framework in 400 Words

October 25, 2016 By Dave Stuart Jr. 2 Comments

What follows is my abbreviated summary of the central structure of Camille Farrington et al.’s Teaching Adolescents to Become Learners. The report is over 80 pages long, so really, this is super abbreviated, probably past what is prudent. My hope with this post is to give you enough of a look at the Consortium Framework to realize the […]

Predicting Success: Dialing Long-Term Flourishing Back into Things We Might Affect This Year

October 22, 2016 By Dave Stuart Jr. Leave a Comment

If our ultimate goal is less than the long-term flourishing of kids, student motivation doesn’t matter much. English teachers want kids to become lifelong readers because we want them to flourish; science teachers aim at teaching a methodical way of thinking and viewing the world because such thinking is instrumental to a flourishing life; physical education exists […]

Why Does Student Motivation Matter? And Whose Job Is It, Anyway?

October 18, 2016 By Dave Stuart Jr. Leave a Comment

In the coming weeks, I’ll be sharing the results of a “Research Sprint” that I conducted in August 2016. I wrote a fairly detailed account of the sprint in my last post, but the gist is that I read three books and 15 references within those books for a single element of the Non-Freaked Out Framework […]

How to Use the Non-Freaked Out Framework for Personal PD: A Case Study

October 15, 2016 By Dave Stuart Jr. 4 Comments

The array of professional development resources available to teachers today is as overwhelming as it is incoherent. Every month, dozens of books and hundreds of articles and thousands of tweets are published. Yet for most of us, this overabundance is more a source of stress or apathy than it is a source of professional growth. This […]

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