A new study came out yesterday that was covered by NPR, and you can read about it at Socioeconomic factors are becoming 'biologically embedded' in children's brains. It documents the harm that poverty can have on children's cognitive abiltiies. I've ...
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  1. The Best Resources On What Poverty Does To Children’s Brains – And What We Can Do About It
  2. “Kids Tales” Looks Like A Good Free Site For Beginning Readers
  3. June 12th Would Be Anne Frank’s 97th Birthday – Here Are Related Teaching & Learning Resources
  4. Video: Official World Cup Song Would Be Great For ELLs – & All Other Students, Too!
  5. This Short Piece On Student Engagement Is Worth Reading & Would Be Worth A Faculty Discussion
  6. More Recent Articles

The Best Resources On What Poverty Does To Children’s Brains – And What We Can Do About It

 

A new study came out yesterday that was covered by NPR, and you can read about it at Socioeconomic factors are becoming ‘biologically embedded’ in children’s brains.

It documents the harm that poverty can have on children’s cognitive abiltiies.

I’ve published quite a few posts over the year sharing similar studies, and I’ll post links to them all here.  So the connection isn’t new.

 

What’s more important, of course, are practical strategies teachers can implement to try and counteract these harms.  I’ll start off this list with links to those ideas:

“How Income Affects The Brain” & What We Can Do About It

I Like The New Science Of “Positive Childhood Experiences” & The Role Educators Can Play In Them

New Study Finds That Teachers Can Provide Positive Experiences To At Least Partially Counteract Student Trauma

The Best Ways For Responding To Student Trauma – Help Me Find More

 

Here are links to past studies making similar connections to the ones the research highlighted by NPR found:

The Brain & Poverty — Upcoming New & Potentially Useful Study

No Surprise Here: Poverty Can Affect Young People’s Brains

Quote Of The Day: Children, Poverty & Brain Size

Another Study Finds That Poverty Causes Cognitive Challenges, Not The Other Way Around

Excellent Piece On How Poverty Can Affect “Cognitive Bandwidth,” But It Has A Pretty Bad Title

“Author Interview: ‘Helping Students Reclaim Cognitive Resources’ Lost to Poverty and Racism”

 

You might also be interested in:

The Best Posts On The Nature/Nurture Debate

The Best Resources For Showing Students That They Make Their Brain Stronger By Learning

     

“Kids Tales” Looks Like A Good Free Site For Beginning Readers

 

Kids Tales has a ton of free “talking” books for early readers.

The audio narration is a pretty robotic one, but still workable.

I’m adding it to The Best Websites To Help Beginning Readers

     

June 12th Would Be Anne Frank’s 97th Birthday – Here Are Related Teaching & Learning Resources

bernswaelz / Pixabay

 

June 12th would be Anne Frank’s 97th birthday.

You might be interested in The Best Sites To Learn About Anne Frank.

 

     

Video: Official World Cup Song Would Be Great For ELLs – & All Other Students, Too!

The new official World Cup song would be a great one for English Language Learners – and for all other students, too.

It’s about doing your best and perseverance. Having ELLs listen to it, sing, and then discuss the lyrics’ meaning and how they could relate it to their life would be a nice lesson, and English proficient students could certainly benefit from doing that last part, too.

You can find the lyrics here and here.

I’ve embedded three videos below – the official World Cup music video, a “lyrics video” of the song showing the words as they’re sung (which is my preferred way of teaching with songs), and a lyrics video of a song I use in similar ways – “You Can Do It If You Really Want.”

I’m adding this info to The Best Resources For Teaching & Learning About The 2026 World Cup.

 

 

 

     

This Short Piece On Student Engagement Is Worth Reading & Would Be Worth A Faculty Discussion

 

Student engagement – what it looks like, why it’s important, and how it can be measured – is a topic of understandably constant attention by educators.

I have a lengthy “Best” list on it – The Best Posts & Articles On Student Engagement – and have shared how I have measured it in my classrooms (Intriguing New Study On “Student Engagement” & How To Define It).  By the way, another study recently came out with a different measurement instrument that might be worth looking at….

Student Engagement Is Critical to Student Success is a recent post appearing at the USC EdPolicy Hub.

It gives a good overview of the topic, and includes lots of great links.

Even though it only briefly touches on practical solutions, if I was still teaching, I’d propose it as something we’d read and discuss as faculty.

     

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