Tag: weekly links
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Links I Loved This Week: A Round-Up of Online Reading 6/15/18
Julia Torres wrote a beautiful love letter to her graduating seniors about the lessons in love, compassion, and truth she has learned from her students. Just in time for summer break: Anne Vogel explains why fake breaks only make us feel more rushed and frantic and argues for the real break that truly refreshes. John…
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Links I Loved Last Week: A Round-Up of Online Reading 1/15/17
Reading While White has a terrific interview with professor and blogger Laura Jimenez about her critical work on graphic novels, YA literature, and issues of diversity and representation. Design of the Picture Book analyzes Radiant Child, my favorite nonfiction picture book of 2016. What happens when an English teacher reads and love a new YA…
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Links I Loved Last Week: A Round-Up of Online Reading 1/8/17
I stopped grading years ago, and my students work harder and more meaningfully than ever. The Paper Graders has a terrific post to help you #StopGrading. Jonathan Hunt considers the Newbery merits of Jason Reynolds’s two 2016 titles, Ghost and As Brave As You. Comments are also very interesting. Laura Jiminez challenges us to read…
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Links I Loved Last Week: A Round-up of Online Reading 1/1/17
Betsy Bird’s 31 book lists to round out 2016 have caused my own TBR list to explode. Be sure to check out her list of Best Picture Books of 2016. Just in case you don’t have quite enough reading to do, Carrie Gelson’s list of 16 Favorites from 2016 is full of wonderful titles. And…
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Links I Loved Last Week: A Round-Up of Online Reading 12/18/16
I am so excited about Teen Librarian Toolbox’s theme for 2017: Social Justice! Check out the social justice themed book display they created with no slogans or headings to announce the topic. College basketball player Bronson Koenig, one of just 40 Native American students playing basketball at D-1 colleges, reported from Standing Rock earlier in…
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Reflections on #NCTE16: A Round-Up of Recent Online Reading
I’m still putting together my own learning reflections from #NCTE16. Here are other learning reflection posts I’ve enjoyed this week. Inspired by their thinking and learning at #NCTE16, Three Teachers Talk plans to focus their blogging on the four key elements teachers need to make decisions about learning in their classrooms. (I’m also feeling demoralized about…
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Post-Election Redux: A Round-Up of Online Reading
Jacqueline Woodson shares her answer to the question I keep asking myself, How Do I Comfort My Frightened Son After the Election? Liel Leibovitz urges us to take Trump at face value and assume the worst, as his grandfather did about Hitler in 1930s Vienna: “Refuse to accept what’s going on as the new normal.…
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Post-Election Round-Up of Online Reading
David Remnick’s powerful New Yorker piece, An American Tragedy, considers the full implications of a Trump presidency: “this is surely the way fascism can begin.” John Pavlovitz explains why so many of us are grieving: “It isn’t a political defeat we’re lamenting, it’s a defeat for Humanity.” Jess Lifshitz movingly explores what is at stake for…
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Links I Loved Last Week: A Round-up of Online Reading 10/2/16
I’ve been working my way through the archives of my favorite podcast, Radiolab. This week, my favorite episode was Speedy Beet, about how Beethoven may have intended his symphonies to be played: fast. Very fast. SLJ does some research into banned books and discovers one thing they have in common: many of them feature diverse…
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Links I Loved Last Week: A Round-Up of Online Reading 9/25/16
The Marshall Project has a fascinating and disturbing piece on how rookie cops are assigned to Chicago’s challenging neighborhoods (thanks to Joy the Baker for the link). I appreciate the Indiana Fever basketball players who all took a knee during the National Anthem before their recent play-off game. Ninety-six-year-old New Yorker correspondent Roger Angell explains…