On the Rabbit Trail
Sunday, March 29, 2026
Book Review: Learning Habits by Richard Wheadon
Sunday, March 22, 2026
Untangling the Knots (or Better Yet, Preventing Them)
My nephew and his wife are expecting, so I am in the midst of a crochet project for the baby. As any needleworker knows, there is a point in each skein of yarn where there is a tangle. It's not the fault of the crafter; it's a design flaw in the way yarn is produced, which is why it happens every time. Caught early enough, it's an amusing few moments of trying to figure out which direction the yarn is facing, but more often that not, it isn't found that early; and it tightens into a stubborn knot.
I had one of those this week, and it was particularly gnarly, containing multiple catch points. As I pulled from one direction and pushed in another, I kept saying to the yarn, "I know there is an origin to this knot somewhere, but I just can't see where it is."
There were points where I could loosen it just enough to make a little progress on the project, but I knew I would eventually pay for that. Loosening it in one spot tightens the knot further down the line, but that's a problem for later me to deal with as I want to feel like I can move forward now.
Eventually, though, the piper must be paid. I got to a point where I had to fight with the yarn. Cutting it is an option, but I am determined to out-stubborn the yarn. I'm a little sister, so I don't give up easily. After half an hour of fighting with it and a few under-my-breath curses at the manufacturer, I did eventually free the yarn.
This happens in our classrooms too. The knot, in this metaphor, is a misconception. Caught early, misconceptions are easily corrected, but we don't often know they are there until further down the line. At some point, a student surprisingly stops making progress. We try to keep going, but the confusion only seems to tighten. The invisible misconception is preventing the student from going any deeper into the content because they keep running into wrong thinking.
When this happens, it is important to track down the center of the knot. Back up to the beginning of the explanation. Re-explain step one and ask some questions. If they are good there, move on to step 2. At some point, you find the tangle and can fix it. After that point, the student says, "Oh, I get it now. This is much easier now."
But of course, this only works if we take the time to find and out-stubborn the confusion. Depending on how far down the line you have gotten from the initial hiccup, this could take serious time.
Some knitters are proactive. They begin their project by unspooling the skein of yarn and winding it into a ball. It takes time and doesn't look like progress, but it ensures they find the tangles early when they easy to unravel and allows the project to proceed smoothly.
In your classroom, you can't untangle the knots ahead of time. Some of them came to you from a previous class (much like the yarn comes with an inbuilt problem), but you don't know what they are. Some arise during your teaching because you know what you said, but you don't necessarily know what they heard. So you can't necessarily prevent the tangles entirely, but you can take steps to prevent them from tightening by using formative assessment. Pausing your lesson to check for understanding can feel like it is taking time from your lesson, but it saves you time in the long run.
There are a lot of ways to check for understanding, but the way we commonly do it, asking a question and then calling on a student with his or her hand up, is probably the least effective. You probably aren't finding the knots because students who raise their hands are usually confident they will be right. The misconceptions of the quiet go unnoticed, and the knots tighten as you move forward.
In my class, the use of a mini-whiteboard by every student simultaneously was the game changer. I could get an answer from every student in the amount of time it took me to scan the room. When six out of twenty four kids had the same wrong answer, I knew I had found a tangle. It was a simple fix as I asked, "Did you put that because you thought . . . ?" When they answered yes, I said, "Okay, I can see why you thought that, but it is is actually . . ." It's not the only way, but I do recommend finding a method that allows you to get an answer from ALL students.
The thing you DON'T want to do is to keep going in the hopes that the knot will untangle itself. This almost never happens. Deal with it now or deal with it later, but you will have to deal with it.
Sunday, March 15, 2026
Lessons We Should Have Learned From Lockdown - But I'm Not Sure We Did
Six years ago today, I was at school, but my students weren't.
Two days prior, we had learned that we would be transitioning to a virtual learning environment as part of the "slow the spread" phase of the Covid-19 pandemic. The IT team was entering every class into the student Google calendars to create as little friction as possible for them to join. Teachers were learning to share our screens and brainstorming how we might still "see" students while we were doing that (turns out you can can use your projector as a second monitor). Students were at home, half nervous and half excited by the newness of all this.
We then taught 40 days fully virtual and two years in a hybrid situation (only the first one was officially that, but let's not kid ourselves).
We learned so many things - much of which I blogged about at the time and on last year's anniversary.
There are also things that we should have learned, and based on what I am hearing and seeing in the world, I'm not sure we did.
Screens are not replacements for teachers - It's harder to learn from a screen than it is from a live person. I'm not saying there aren't some high quality videos and online courses out there. But a video can't make eye contact with you. It can't see a confused expression on your face or sense the squirminess in a room. It can't tell when your working memory is overloaded or know that you aren't absorbing well because you missed breakfast this morning. More importantly, it can't adapt to any of those things.
For all the years I have taught, administrators have told us to get away from "lecturing" and make lessons more interactive. Whether they were talking about high quality direct instruction or discovery learning, they directive was that it shouldn't just be the teacher delivering information in one direction. Video is the ultimate in one way delivery. I'm not suggesting we never use them, but they are supplements, not replacements.
Why do I say we haven't learned that lesson? Because in spite of all of the negative consequences, I still see "implement virtual instruction" in school improvement plans. It was one thing to have that on your website before Covid, but if I were a parent, it would make me choose a different school. I have sat in meetings with people who think the solution to limited instructional time is for teachers to make video and assign them for asynchronous learning. And, of course, there are those who think AI is the solution to everything; we get naive with every new piece of tech. While I grant that AI may be able to adapt based on performance, it will not be able to diagnose the reason and address that.
External motivators matter - For years prior to the pandemic, one of the raging debates on EduTwitter was about whether grades motivated students. As with most things, we were having a binary argument on something that doesn't have a binary answer. There are some students who are highly motivated by grades. Those of you who have seen my font like handwriting may know that my first "bad grade" was in penmanship, and I made sure that would never happen again. Others couldn't care less about their grades, but they do care about what the grades get them (getting into college, eligibility to play a sport). There's not a yes or no answer on something with a spectrum of attitudes.
However, a comparison of schools during lockdown showed one thing - not having grades was definitely demotivating. My school continued to take attendance, give assignments, give tests in whatever way we could. And we graded those assignments and tests. (We were likely a bit more lenient in the grading than we had previously been, but we were still grading.) Public schools in my county did not grade - that is to say, the grade couldn't go down. So, if a teacher graded something and it kept the student's grade the same or increased it, they put it in the gradebook. Otherwise, they didn't count it. They told kids they should still attend class for the sake of learning, but . . . class attendance in those schools plummeted to nearly zero, and very little was turned in. One boy I know attended two of his classes because he needed to get his grade up and knew they would give easy work so he could, but he did not attend his other four because he "already had an A and it couldn't drop." (NOTE: This is NOT a criticism of those schools. It is my personal policy not to judge the decisions made by any school during the spring of 2020 since exactly no one knew what the right the thing to do was.)
Why do I say we didn't learn this lesson? People are pushing "no zeros" policies again. A kid doesn't turn something in; he gets a 50%. I objected to this the first time around, writing a letter to the editor of my local newspaper, if that tells you how long ago it was. Their logic is that a zero is too hard to recover from; mine is that something hard to recover from should motivate you to turn something in. I don't want a generation of workers believing that doing NOTHING is the same as doing half of their job. We have people pushing feedback only assessment without grades attached. I'm not saying it can't work, but our culture would have to change dramatically for that to succeed.
I'm not saying it has to be the exact grading system we use now, but without some kind of external motivator, many, if not most, students will not work. Let's be honest; how many adults would go to work without a paycheck, no matter how much we love our jobs? External forces motivate much of what we do for most of our lives. Why would we believe students would be any different?
Sunday, March 8, 2026
Growing Requires the Right Conditions
I took this picture 3 years ago, but it doesn't do it justice.
This photo was taken just after I put it in the ground, when it seemed it could be saved. It couldn't be.
What's the lesson here? The spot wasn't perfect. It was just perfect for that azalea. It didn't work at all for the hydrangea.
Schools are built for the majority of children. Just as most plants have similar needs for the range of water, drainage, and sun exposure, most kids have similar needs that can be met by the regular school system.
And, just like some plants need more water or less direct sunlight to thrive, some kids need fewer choices or more individual attention to thrive. They might benefit from a different placement - an alternative school, a small Christian school, a military academy, or homeschool might be the right choice FOR THEM.
Because humans love to oversimplify, when a student finds success in an alternative placement, we credit the placement. We decide that model must be the best one since it reached "even that kid." We assume that model would be good for everyone. Let's build all schools with that model.
But life is just more interesting than that.
Sunday, March 1, 2026
That Mr. Beast Video - I Have Thoughts
"There is no neurological reason we should be taught differently. Our brains work exactly the same way our grandparents' brains did." While neuroplasticity is real, it creates only minor differences in our brains - strengthening some connections while weakening others. It does not change the basic architecture of our brains. We all learn basically the same way - encoding through our senses, spaced retrieval coupled with feedback, rinse and repeat as needed. The encoding may come from a variety of sources, from live teacher to video to book to podcast, none of it sticks without the retrieval and feedback process (more on that in the next point).
Sunday, February 22, 2026
The Post Teachers Need in February
It's February, y'all. It's hard to explain why this means teachers are exhausted more than any other time of year, but they are. So, I'm going to keep this post short and happy.
Getting through the February doldrums requires you to have something positive and future focused to think about.
So here it is.
Look at your students. They are not the same people you met in August.
- The boy who needed his schedule to be re-printed on the first day of school because he kept losing it is now helping a new kid find his way around.
- The girl who wouldn't wear her glasses or contacts and then used "not being able to see the board" as an excuse for poor attention is now focused and listening.
- The kid who failed your first two tests is working hard and pulling a solid C.
- Someone who came in at the beginning of the year saying, "I don't like math" has found the idea of limited infinity fascinating and now realizes math is more interesting than they thought.
- A new kid who was quiet and separating from the group at the start of the year is now laughing with her friends in the lunchroom.
- The kid who couldn't stand you at the beginning of the year dislikes you less now. (Let's face it, these aren't all going to be 180º turns.)
- All of your students are working more independently than they were at the beginning of the year, and they all have acquired content knowledge. Even the one who is failing tests has learned SOME things.
Sunday, February 15, 2026
Reframing - Learning is Satisfying
"Good afternoon, Beth. Enjoy your workout."
When I first joined the Y, getting a greeting like this was very helpful. And it wasn't because they knew my name, which pops up on the computer when a member scans in. It was the word "enjoy." It had been a long time since I had done any workouts other than walking, and while I was excited to try new things, I also knew it was likely to be uncomfortable. Framing the workout as something to enjoy changed my outlook on what I was about to do. While that was only a small part of how the Y changed my life, it was an important part.
Often, in school, we give in to a negative view of work - student work anyway. Then, we take one of two approaches at either end of the attitude spectrum.
- Make everything super fun, even if it sacrifices the actual learning or takes longer than the curriculum pace would allow for. We hope turning everything into a game or relay race will distract kids from the fact that learning is work. Fun is what matters because it is motivating! And, if we need to trade in some content for the time it takes to tally game points, so be it.
- Adopt a "suck it up and do it anyway" attitude. This technique is employed most with high school students. We tell them that the "real world" is filled with things they won't want to do but still have to do, and this is good training for that. I'm here to teach you, not entertain you. Who cares if you are motivated or not.
- They are joyful. This is not the same as making activities fun. It's an attitude they communicate. I have had instructors for this class that take it (and themselves) so seriously you cannot focus on anything but the number of reps left. That makes for an awfully long class. I have also taken it with an instructor that just makes everything silly, singing along with every song to the extent that you can't know what you are supposed to do next. Matt and Dana are neither of these. They are joyful about the workout. They make some jokes, but the class isn't about the jokes. They create a community spirit by knowing who likes certain songs or certain movements. "We're doing planks just for your today, Dan." or "I know Kamryn is going to like the Rhi-Rhi bicep track today" or "Beth's favorite - shootouts." Planks, shootouts, and biceps are just as challenging, but they are now framed as someone's favorite, so others might find joy in them too.
- They focus on the satisfaction of the outcome. While I have never heard the phrase "no pain, no gain" in my time at the Y, the sentiment is still there. The payoff of the discomfort you are feeling in the moment or the soreness you will have tomorrow is in the satisfaction of the outcome. So, while you are doing a sumo squat with a weighted bar on your back, Matt tells you which muscles you are strengthening. While you are clenching your upper thigh in Barre, Dana says, "It's your free butt lift, courtesy of the YMCA."
Book Review: Learning Habits by Richard Wheadon
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