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Famous Teacher Quotes

Famous Teacher Quotes. Students of PLN 5 – Informational Reading and Writing February, 2010. “When students develop the questions, rather than the teacher, the students have more of an innate need to find the answer.”. B. Ion.

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Famous Teacher Quotes

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  1. Famous Teacher Quotes Students of PLN 5 – Informational Reading and Writing February, 2010

  2. “When students develop the questions, rather than the teacher, the students have more of an innate need to find the answer.” B. Ion

  3. “…there are so many different types of text that to just teach one comprehension strategy is not enough.” L. Skritch

  4. “PLN 5 seems to be a lot of common sense given a name.” D. Moore

  5. “…I generally think of a text as: ‘the kids really like this,’ ‘they are going to hate this’ or ‘this is super easy,’ ‘this is going to be challenging’ and haven’t really thought of them as working together. J. Martin

  6. “As a teacher, I wish I could find that spark in many of the students to enjoy reading, for them to recognize that it is something they will be doing forever and if they read more it will become easier.” W. Hile

  7. “The most important point…is that teachers use round robin, student reading aloud and ‘popcorn’ reading too much.” B. Shawley

  8. “If we read one section of the text and another source words things differently, they struggle to see the connection. ” L. Earon

  9. “Text-mapping allows you to really dig into the dirt of the information, sifting through the material you may not need to find the treasure underneath.” L. Hoy

  10. “As I observe my students, I notice that this makes them feel more comfortable when they know what is expected. The prompts give them a guideline to follow.” V. Eggler

  11. “…I realize that many of my students struggle with informational text and need specific help and tips to improve.” J. Temple

  12. “…it is imperative that the educators of today recognize the levels of informational text and how to best present them to the ever-changing student population.” P. Dale

  13. “These journal entries almost write themselves.” D. Winslow

  14. “How can teachers know what to do when?” C. Janerella

  15. “They [students] must have more instructional time and be taught several different strategies that would enable them to practice.” T. Ankney

  16. “…-bribery sometimes works.” N. Miller

  17. “I can’t believe the German Shepherd didn’t take best in show!!” C. McKivison

  18. “If my students are enjoying a book I hesitate and try to refrain from stopping to answer questions. … I realize I have to stand back and get out of the way!” L. Higgins

  19. “Then when she talked about the text-mapping strategy I thought she was crazy.” H. Moore

  20. “Masquerading as a normal person day after day is exhausting.” E. Hines

  21. “Teaching reading and writing has now become the job of all educators in public schools no matter which content area they are certified.” L. Rhine

  22. “We also tend to suck the passion out of reading because we go about it all wrong.” K. Deems

  23. “This scrolling crap works.” K. Marquardt

  24. “I sometimes wish there were an easy diagnostic menu which told teachers the remedy to poor comprehension. For example, if students are showing A, and they are missing B, scroll down and letter C should work in a jiffy!” J. Gentzyel

  25. “My students need to see bits and pieces and sometimes are overwhelmed when it comes to handouts, reading assignments, or notes. Finding a way to give them small doses of material at a time is crucial to their development and frustrations.” R. Veltri

  26. “It takes only a few sentences before they are confused and overly frustrated with their lack of understanding.” R. Broughton

  27. “…we pickup on visual cues all the time and adjust our approaches. Students let us know when they are experiencing text that is too difficult.” Wisely stated by the amazing R. Dilley!

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