How AI and Other Tech Tools Might be Used to Strengthen Family-School Partnerships is from Ed Week.
12 points of advice from a college advisor to parents of college students: "1. Your teens need to learn how to solve problems on their own."https://t.co/GpNKiuNjCc
— Daniel Willingham 🦆 (@DTWillingham) June 19, 2023
Here are some expert-recommended strategies on how to get your kid to take care of things without having to constantly remind them https://t.co/TBxAwKtbh8
— Vox (@voxdotcom) June 18, 2023
The key is to figure out which activities give your child the ‘just right’ of dopamine. To do that, pay attention to how your kid feels after the activity stops.@FoodieSciencehttps://t.co/e7xN0n3dJJ
— MindShift (@MindShiftKQED) June 21, 2023
"Five members of Parent Warriors, an advocacy group that is part of Families In Schools, spoke about unprecedented challenges, their eagerness for parent engagement, and Carvalho’s future — which they hope prioritizes a seat at the table for them."https://t.co/LeWyRPO0hU
— Alexander Russo (@alexanderrusso) June 21, 2023
How Community Schools Can Transform Parent Involvement for the Better https://t.co/dYqOvCvTMV
— Peter Greene (@palan57) June 21, 2023
Why Do Some People Love Reading? – The Atlantic
A lot rides on how parents present the activity to their kids.https://t.co/P1YaDvcVE7— Alexander Russo (@alexanderrusso) June 23, 2023
Half of adolescents say their parent or caregiver is distracted by their cell phone when they're trying to have a conversation with them. @scienceofkids https://t.co/kv9A1coerQ
— MindShift (@MindShiftKQED) June 24, 2023
Public health experts have sounded alarms over the potential risks of social media for teens. If you’ve already given your child full access, here’s how to cut back. https://t.co/jhSGeIJxez
— The New York Times (@nytimes) June 29, 2023
While teachers want to work with parents to meet the needs of the student, some requests are not always best for their child’s educational experience. @mrs_frommert @_RoadToAwesome_https://t.co/YLHfb1H2a3
— MindShift (@MindShiftKQED) June 29, 2023
How teachers can handle difficult requests from well-intentioned parents is from MindShift.
Teaching your child to read doesn’t require complicated lessons, writes @MayaSmart. “Do what works for you, and do it a little at a time.” @Avery_Books https://t.co/ErJnsLDyKV
— MindShift (@MindShiftKQED) July 4, 2023