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🐴 Parents as curators, not classroom instructors
🐴 Parents as curators, not classroom instructors
🐴 Parents as curators, not classroom instructors
IN THIS EDITION:
🍎 How a failed teacher became DC's education reformer
🍎 "Parent-Curated Education" emerges as the new model
🍎 Access 1,000+ teacher training courses from home
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💡 1 THOUGHT
FROM CHAOS TO CONTROL
"I am not gonna let eight-year-olds run me out of town. This is ridiculous."
After a disastrous first year teaching 36 of Baltimore's most challenging second-graders, Michelle Rhee faced a choice: quit or transform. Instead of giving up, the future DC Schools Chancellor spent her entire summer planning. She partnered with another teacher. The next year, they combined their 60 students and played to their strengths—one taught reading, the other math.
The results? Students who started at the 13th percentile reached grade level in two years.
The lesson for every overwhelmed parent-educator: When you've lost control of your ‘classroom,’ don't go it alone. Find your teaching partner (whether that's another parent, online resources, or a co-op). Lean into your strengths. And remember—real transformation takes time.
Learn how Michelle turned chaos into success on the latest OpenEd podcast.
📊 2 TRENDS
1. WHAT DO YOU CALL THE NEW HOMESCHOOLING? - Leo Linbeck III says we need to retire the term "homeschooling." Today's parents mostly aren't teaching at kitchen tables—they're curating from Khan Academy, microschools, online academies, and local co-ops. He calls it "Parent-Curated Education." We call it Open Education. Whatever the name, the shift is real: parents as educational architects, not classroom instructors. Read more
2. MICHELLE RHEE SEES A "PERFECT STORM" FOR ED TECH - The former DC Schools Chancellor turned venture capitalist is betting big on VR and AI. "I started asking parents about VR," Rhee shared on our latest episode. "Every single parent said either 'Yes, they have a headset' or 'They're bugging the crap out of me for one.'"
Combined with AI's rapid advancement, Rhee believes we're approaching what she calls "the perfect storm" for education transformation. After years of cynicism about education reform, she's found renewed optimism: "Every day I meet with founders who feel like they are going to change the world through what they're building." Listen at 42:04
🔨 3 TOOLS
1. Waiting for "Superman" Documentary - See Michelle Rhee in action in the groundbreaking 2010 documentary that launched the education reform movement. Watch Michelle Rhee tackle DC's worst-performing schools alongside other reformers. Available on Apple TV+, Amazon Prime, or free here. Essential viewing for understanding the systemic challenges Rhee discusses.
2. SimpleK12 - Professional Development for Teachers (and Parents!) - This teacher training platform offers 1,000+ expert-led courses across 40+ trending topics that homeschool parents can access too. From "AI at Your Service: Smarter Lesson Planning Made Simple" to "The Science of Reading," these bite-sized courses (30-60 minutes each) help parent-educators master everything from behavior management to differentiated instruction. Originally designed for classroom teachers, it's becoming a secret weapon for homeschool parents who want professional-grade teaching strategies without the education degree.
3. Homeschool Teaching Resources Hub - The Home School Legal Defense Association offers a comprehensive collection of teaching resources specifically designed for homeschooling parents, including:
- Customizable lesson plan templates
- Subject-specific teaching guides
- Learning style assessment tools
- Record-keeping systems
- Community connection opportunities
Their "Quick Start" guides are particularly helpful for parents new to homeschooling or adding new subjects.
Got suggestions for blogs or resources to be featured? Email Charlie at cdeist@opened.co.
That’s all for this week!
– Charlie (the OpenEd newsletter guy)
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