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Due to my strong personal convictions, I wish to stress that this image in no way endorses a belief in the “JIF” pronunciation.
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“That’s what teaching is, the art of explanation: presenting the right information in the right order in a memorable way.”— Taylor Mali in What...
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Doing anything amazing turns out to be really hard. Incredibly hard. In the startup world sometimes we thought there were instant successes when...
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That was my time for my first official timed 5k yesterday.
It was a fundraiser for my school, so I was super nervous to be in front of...
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Let's agree that we're in agreement about the climate and move on
An international team of scientists recently surveyed almost 12,000 climate...



![6 Expert Tips for Flipping the Classroom
A great list. Here’s one of my favorites:
3) Step aside and allow students to learn from each other. “Pre-class, my students access digital readings using a web-based, collaborative PDF annotation tool called NB, which was designed by MIT,” says Mazur. “I have been truly impressed by the energy with which my students dive into the readings. I thought I would need to give much more extrinsic motivation [for them] to do that, but the answer is no, not at all.
“Within a couple of weeks, my 35 students created 2,000 annotations in their text, discussing the readings asynchronously with each other. Their discussions were incredibly thorough, exciting, and in-depth. Yet, every time I participated in the NB annotations, I killed the discussion among the students, because I was seen as the authority. It stopped them from working it out on their own and finding the solution. [Now] I participate only if there is a situation where they are completely and utterly stuck.”](http://24.media.tumblr.com/2fb1fad2dfdd55e40ffba9ed3bfcb765/tumblr_mleitgVPdD1qbr8m0o1_400.jpg)



