+413 658 7907
mike@leadinggreatlearning.com
Login
No apps configured. Please contact your administrator.

Login with your site account

No apps configured. Please contact your administrator.

Lost your password?

Mike Anderson ConsultingMike Anderson Consulting
  • Home
  • About
    • Brief Overview
    • Curriculum Vitae
    • Testimonials
  • Books
    • Rekindle Your Professional Fire
    • Tackling the Motivation Crisis
    • What We Say and How We Say It Matter
    • Teacher Talk that Matters
    • Learning to Choose, Choosing to Learn
    • The Well-Balanced Teacher
    • The Research-Ready Classroom
    • The First Six Weeks of School, 2nd Edition
    • What Every Teacher Needs to Know Series
  • Consulting
  • Online PD
  • Resources
  • Blog
  • Contact
Back
  • Home
  • About
    • Brief Overview
    • Curriculum Vitae
    • Testimonials
  • Books
    • Rekindle Your Professional Fire
    • Tackling the Motivation Crisis
    • What We Say and How We Say It Matter
    • Teacher Talk that Matters
    • Learning to Choose, Choosing to Learn
    • The Well-Balanced Teacher
    • The Research-Ready Classroom
    • The First Six Weeks of School, 2nd Edition
    • What Every Teacher Needs to Know Series
  • Consulting
  • Online PD
  • Resources
  • Blog
  • Contact

Self-Care as a Professional Responsibility

  • By Mike Anderson
  • In Audio, Blog, Great Academic Work, Health and Balance, Homework, In the Media, Interviews, Mike's Blog, Social and Emotional Learning, Student Choice, Teacher Talk, Work Life Balance
A Conversation with Mike Anderson, Little Things First This is part 3 of a four-part series on how to support educators in the midst of the coronavirus pandemic.   In this conversation with the Little Things First podcast hosts, Tracy
Read More
  • Share:

Podcast Interview: Language, Choice, and Balance

  • By Mike Anderson
  • In Uncategorized
A Conversation with Steve Tucker In this podcast author and consultant, Mike Anderson and NHASCD President/Laconia School District Superintendent, Steve Tucker discuss the challenges of self-directed learning during the COVID-19 crisis. How do we support true self-direction (not simple compliance)
Read More
  • Share:

Start Planning with Your “Why” Instead of Your “What” and “How”

  • By Mike Anderson
  • In Blog, Great Academic Work, Mike's Blog, Motivation, Student Choice
A high school math teacher is recording short lessons on his phone in his basement, using a dry erase board and marker as he explains new math concepts. He posts the videos and then offers one-on-one and small group coaching
Read More
  • Share:

Stay Healthy as You Work from Home

  • By Mike Anderson
  • In Health and Balance, Mike's Blog, Professional Development, Work Life Balance
Remember those days in the classroom when you thought, “I have friends who work from home. Wouldn’t that be nice?” Well, here you go! COVID-19 is giving you a chance to try it out. No doubt, there are some upsides
Read More
  • Share:

Maintaining School Momentum as Learning Moves Home

  • By Mike Anderson
  • In Equity, For Parents, Homework, Mike's Blog, Motivation, Social and Emotional Learning, Student Choice, Teacher Talk, Teaching Strategies
You’ve spent the whole year building a community of learners. You’ve established rules and routines to help learners manage themselves and work well with each other. Now, with schoolwork potentially moving offsite, you still want to support your students as
Read More
  • Share:

Aligning Words and Intentions

  • By Mike Anderson
  • In Audio, In the Media, Interviews
We all have good intentions, don’t we? It’s also true that we all have to fall into habits when it comes to the way we talk with students. There’s also no doubt that we all end up in some
Read More
  • Share:

Is It Time to Try Something Different?

  • By Mike Anderson
  • In Homework, Mike's Blog, Motivation, Teaching Strategies
Is it time to try something different with your students? Is there something you’ve been trying over and over again that just isn’t working? One year, I remember it taking me way too long to realize that I needed to
Read More
  • Share:

Should Elementary Teachers Specialize in Content?

  • By Mike Anderson
  • In Mike's Blog, Professional Development, Social and Emotional Learning
A school-based content coach wrote to me because her K-5 school is considering moving toward content specialization. This means that at each grade level, teachers would focus on specific content areas and kids would change classes throughout the day. She
Read More
  • Share:

Can Teachers Offer Choice in the Midst of Scripted Programs?

  • By Mike Anderson
  • In Mike's Blog, Motivation, Professional Development, Student Choice, Teaching Strategies
The Dilemma You want to offer students choices about what they learn or how the learn it. Engagement would be higher and you could offer differentiated options to meet the needs of various learners. However, you’re saddled with a scripted
Read More
  • Share:

Are You Struggling with PBIS Reward Systems?

  • By Mike Anderson
  • In Mike's Blog, Motivation, Social and Emotional Learning, Teaching Strategies
A teacher recently reached out to me about PBIS (Positive Behavior Intervention & Supports) and reward systems. It’s a question I’ve been hearing a lot as I work with teachers across the United States.  I am in a district
Read More
  • Share:

Inequities Hidden in Plain Sight: Traditional Grading Practices

  • By Mike Anderson
  • In Equity, Mike's Blog, Teaching Strategies
Is there a more controversial issue in schools right now than grading? If it’s not at the top of the list, it’s certainly close. As many schools move away from traditional grading practices and toward standards-based (proficiency-based or competency-based) ones,
Read More
  • Share:

How Do You Promote Intrinsic Motivation at School When Kids Get Extrinsic Motivators at Home?

  • By Mike Anderson
  • In Homework, Mike's Blog, Motivation, Social and Emotional Learning, Teacher Talk, Teaching Strategies
A teacher recently wrote me an email asking for some advice about student motivation. She graciously agreed to let my answer morph into a blog post. I just finished listening to your ASCD webinar about language.  I found your presentation thoughtful,
Read More
  • Share:

Inequities Hidden in Plain Sight: Homework

  • By Mike Anderson
  • In Equity, Homework, Mike's Blog, Teaching Strategies
There is much debate about what kind of role homework should play in schools. Research on the topic is mixed. It has negative impacts on the achievement of younger children, positive impacts at the high school level, and mixed results
Read More
  • Share:

Inequities Hidden in Plain Sight: Incentive Systems

  • By Mike Anderson
  • In Equity, Mike's Blog, Social and Emotional Learning, Teaching Strategies
Are incentive systems used in your school? Do kids get handed tickets or fake money (to be spent at the school store) for walking quietly in hallways? Are gem and marble jars used to motivate kids to raise their hands
Read More
  • Share:

Inequities Hidden in Plain Sight: School Supplies

  • By Mike Anderson
  • In Equity, Mike's Blog
Do you care about equity in your school? Do you believe that all children should have a fair chance at school success? It’s common for grade levels or departments to create long lists of supplies that students are expected to
Read More
  • Share:

Inequities Hidden in Plain Sight: Introduction

  • By Mike Anderson
  • In Equity, Mike's Blog
Do you care about equity? Do you want all of your students, regardless of their socioeconomic status (SES), to have a real chance for success? Of course you do. Most teachers consider themselves fiercely protective of students who come
Read More
  • Share:

Success in School and Beyond

  • By Mike Anderson
  • In Articles, In the Media
This article, published through the UNH Extensions blog, highlights a workshop I taught in northern, NH. It was an energizing and exciting day! https://extension.unh.edu/blog/success-school-and-beyond
Read More
  • Share:

Should Teachers Call Students “Friends”?

  • By Mike Anderson
  • In Mike's Blog, Teacher Talk
What do you think–should teachers call students “friends”? Educators at William H. Rowe School in Yarmouth, Maine are engaged in an exploration of teacher-talk. They’re using What We Say and How We Say It Matter: Teacher
Read More
  • Share:

Avoid the “If-Then” Trap

  • By Mike Anderson
  • In Articles, Classroom Management
We want students to be more than compliant, don’t we? In addition to doing the right things, we want them to do so for the right reasons. We want students to pick up trash to keep the room clean, to be
Read More
  • Share:

Getting Consistent with Consequences

  • By Mike Anderson
  • In Articles, Classroom Management
Consequences are complicated. You can’t have an effective approach to discipline without them, yet they can’t be the focus of discipline either. In schools, there are often many different opinions about what appropriate consequences are and how they should be
Read More
  • Share:

Do You Have a Challenging Student? Read “The Caring Teacher”

  • By Mike Anderson
  • In Mike's Blog
Have you ever had a student you struggled to connect with? How you ever felt a twinge of guilt as you recognize that there are a couple of students in your class who are harder to like than others? I
Read More
  • Share:

Hugging Porcupines: Building Meaningful Relationships with Our Toughest Students

  • By Mike Anderson
  • In Mike's Blog, Motivation, Social and Emotional Learning
We know about the power of relationships. We’ve heard (and believe!) the old adage, “Kids don’t care what you know until they know that you care.” So how do we build and cultivate those all-important relationships…with some of our toughest
Read More
  • Share:

The First Weeks of School: The Beginning of the Story Your Students Will Tell

  • By Mike Anderson
  • In Mike's Blog, Social and Emotional Learning, Student Choice, Teacher Talk, Teaching Strategies
Tell a story that you would want your students to tell about your class at the end of the year. This compelling challenge was posed by Bena Kallick on a recent video interview I had with her and Allison Zmuda.
Read More
  • Share:

Educators Increasingly Struggle with Moral Injury

  • By Mike Anderson
  • In Articles, In the Media, Interviews, Teaching Strategy
In this article published in District Administration, I share some thoughts about the challenges some educators face when they feel that district policies around discipline are at odds with their own core values.
Read More
  • Share:

Student Choice as a Lever for Personalized Learning

  • By Mike Anderson
  • In In the Media, Interviews, Video
In this lively chat with educators Allison Zmuda (personalized learning guru) and Bena Kallick (co-creator of The Habits of Mind framework), we discuss how to move beyond simply giving students choices about their learning. To really leverage the power of
Read More
  • Share:
  • <
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • …
  • 10
  • >

Get Mike’s Newsletter

Subscribe to Mike's Blog

Receive email notifications for Mike's blog posts.

Contact Mike

1.413.658.7907

mike@leadinggreatlearning.com

USEFUL LINKS

  • About Mike
  • News
  • Contact
  • Testimonials

Social Links

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Linkedin

Newsletters

Subscribe to get updates right in your inbox. We promise to not send you spam.

© 2020 - Mike Anderson Consulting

  • Home
  • About Mike
  • Consulting
  • Contact