It was beautiful here most of the week, which served in part as a reminder that pandemic winter is going to suck so very much. Here are a few pieces to check out from the week.
Paul Thomas with some good insights about teaching writing and the power of redrafting.
Neoliberal Education Reformers Have Found A New Way To Scapegoat Teachers
At Jacobin, Josh Mound talks about that awful MacGillis piece (don't worry if you haven't actually seen it or heard about it) and the ways that pandemic schooling has been used to point the finger at those damned lazy teachers yet again.
A Fourth Grader Walked To School To Use Its Wi-Fi
At CNN Business, yet another variation on the story that teachers nationwide are hearing again and again and again (this time it's New Mexico).
The Cautionary Tale of Adam Neumann and WeWork
Somebody actually wrote a book about this billion-dollar fiasco, which included yet one more rich visionary's idea about how to fix school. It's a cautionary tale about how somebody so absolutely full of baloney drew so much glowing press and piles of investor money. This is the New York Times review of the book--it's not strictly about education, but the visionary entrepreneurship on display is certainly familiar.
"The global pool of capital on which free-market societies float like inflatable rubber ducks is a virtually bottomless reservoir of folly, vanity, mania and caprice."