In his fascinating and quick Anything You Want, thinker Derek Sivers tells a story to explain a lesson he learned about delegation. (And yes, I understand that you and I are teachers, and that most of us lack assistants to delegate to. But there are key parallels. More after the story.) The story goes like […]
Three Prescriptions for Thinking More Clearly about Teaching, Part 3: Write More
All right, here’s the ground we’ve covered so far: Clear thinking yields better teaching and better living and wiser choices. We want to be clear thinkers. But it doesn’t come automatically. It’s not the kind of thing that a degree confers. It’s won through practice, and we can always improve it. To start, we can […]
Three Prescriptions for Thinking More Clearly about Teaching, Part 2: Consume More Costly Things
Last time, I explained that thinking clearly is a huge promoter of our own flourishing. And since flourishing teachers tend to do better work and enjoy their lives more than frustrated teachers do, this is no small matter. It’s at the root of our mission to make teaching better. So the first step is to […]
Three Prescriptions for Thinking More Clearly about Teaching, Part 1: Consume Fewer Urgent Things
When you think clearly about teaching, you: Analyze issues in the classroom more quickly and skillfully Depersonalize setbacks and failures so that you can grow from them rather than be crushed by them Design simpler, more powerful lessons Do fewer things, but far better Go home with energy left for your loved ones Enjoy the […]
Looking Back on 2018’s Work Outside the Classroom
I’ve written before on the work, the gap, and the mission of this blog, but the summary is this: This blog exists to promote the long-term flourishing of students, particularly by means of promoting the long-term flourishing of teachers. So, how did we do, in terms of the mission? A brief history of the blog […]