Angela Pascopella

K12 district leaders are collaborating with entire communities and using new curricula to help combat the opioid crisis sweeping the nation. For instance, middle school students at Norwin School District in Pennsylvania are among the first to pilot a new curriculum that offers a science-based approach to how drugs affect the brain. Read more>>

Sponsored by Bursari

It’s time to rethink “how we’ve always done it.” At 6:30 a.m., families want to make fast, easy and convenient online payments—not to write a check or find cash for school field trips, fees and other expenses. The digital payment revolution is here. Is your school ready? Read more>>

The Beverly Review

Participation in high school sports continues to rise—and ideally, those athletes are participating in more than one sport. It teaches young athletes how to adjust to different roles. And on a local level, it’s exciting to watch a player star in a sport and then quickly adjust to becoming a role player in another. It’s a valuable life lesson. Read more>>

Sponsored by LearnZillion

To date, our mental model for curriculum has been the textbook. In contrast, Curriculum-as-a-Service, or CaaS, takes a system-focused approach to curriculum. Instead of thinking of curriculum as a physical thing, we think of it as a tool for getting a series of jobs done. Read more>>

The Mercury News

It’s essential to give students opportunities to analyze, address and ultimately have a hand in solving complex issues that are important to them and those around them. Research findings correlate high-quality civic learning to increased academic achievement, student engagement and reduced dropout rates. Read more>>

Sponsored by Penguin Random House

Because of Mr. Terupt is an award-winning novel about one year in the life of a fifth grade class at Snow Hill School. It features seven narrators, each with a unique story and a different perspective on what makes their teacher so special. Request an exam copy. Read more>>

The Record

In 2011, New Jersey enacted a tough anti-bullying law. Yet despite that new law, bullying has not waned in the state. But it is through a digital, ethically challenged jungle that children walk every day. Laws go only so far. It takes enforcement and education. It takes action on the part of all of us—children and adults—to avoid remaining passive when they see bullying. Read more>>

Published by District Administration