teacher
All about teachers and the world of teaching; teachers sharing their best and worst interactions with students, best teaching practices, the path to becoming a teacher, and more.
The Class that Kicked my Ass
The most difficult undergraduate course I took was Linguistics, and the most difficult graduate school course for me was History and Theory of Rhetoric. The language of language was difficult to learn; it’s dense, it has its own symbols. Diagramming and scansion are only the tip of the iceberg. Gaining a basic understanding of inflection and the difference between inflected and uninflected language was an easy threshold, as were consonance and asonance (we’ll go in-depth with those very soon). When we got down to phonemes and their meanings, I was out of my depth. I’m returning to the text now, hoping to gain passage through thresholds previously impenetrable.
By Harper Lewis2 days ago in Education
Education Reform for the 21st Century. AI-Generated.
Friends, have you ever watched a bright teenager like Priya in Mumbai sit through another day of rote memorization, her eyes dimming as high-stakes exams sucked the joy out of learning? She once told me she loved science but felt trapped in a system built for another century. That moment hit me hard because Priya’s story echoes across continents. In our world of rapid AI growth, climate crises, and shifting job markets, education must evolve from industrial-era factories into vibrant spaces of discovery. Research from UNESCO, OECD’s PISA, and the World Economic Forum shows the gap is widening, yet reform offers real hope. Together, we can build systems that prepare every child for the skills of the 21st century.
By Arjun. S. Gaikwad2 days ago in Education
The Use and Abuse of Cliff's Notes
Honest or Dishonest Education? Commentary There is something dishonest about Cliff Notes; however, it's not in terms of cheating. The yellow-and-black, annotated booklets are great guides for developing reading comprehension skills for a complex novel. It seems to work well after a student has read a chapter in a book and uses the booklet to get a clearer understanding of the story's plot. Also, teaching methods such as anticipatory reading (getting to know what's going to happen in the story before you actually read it) seems to work well with some of the questions it offers.
By Dean Traylor3 days ago in Education
Teachers vs. Society's Perception
Love them or Hate Them: Teachers are Important Members of the Community It was the late 1990s and the economy was good. Everybody had money in their pockets and felt no qualm about spending. I, on the hand, never had to pull out money at the local bar and grills. All I had to do was mention I was a public school teacher and nearly every patron was willing to buy me a drink.
By Dean Traylor4 days ago in Education
THE POST- ONTOLOGICAL THOUGHT AND THE ABYSS OF NOTHINGNESS — ALEXIS KARPOUZOS
The meta-ontological thought of Alexis Karpouzos is constituted at a level where the traditional distinction between ontology and nihilism collapses. The nothing, as it appears in this context, is neither the opposite of Being nor its limit, but the groundless condition of its appearance. It is a nothing that is not conceived metaphysically as lack, negation, or absence, but corresponds to the mathematical zero: neither positive nor negative, non-polar, and at the same time capable of encompassing all possible values without identifying with any of them. This nothing does not negate the world; it makes possible its indeterminate genesis.
By alexis karpouzos5 days ago in Education










