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Thinking Forward
A student stares at the page. No rubric. No checklist. No “right answer” waiting at the back of the book. The discomfort is immediate. The question comes quickly: “What exactly are we supposed to do?” From kindergarten through grade 12, students are often conditioned to expect clarity before action. They are taught to wait for directions, to follow steps, to search for certainty. Yet life rarely offers that kind of structure. The most meaningful work, the deepest thinking, an
Catherine Addor
May 283 min read


Thoughtful Thursday
“The test of good teaching is not how much students know, but how much they want to know.” ~Dr. Catherine V. Addor This idea reframes what we look for when we walk into a classroom. It is easy to measure what students know. We can check for correct answers, completed tasks, and performance on assessments. Those indicators feel concrete, visible, and immediate. What is harder to see, and far more important, is what students want to know. Curiosity does not always show up on a
Catherine Addor
May 211 min read


Who are they becoming?
Too often, students move through lessons completing tasks without fully understanding how they are meant to engage as learners. Clarity around the student role shifts learning from compliance to purpose and transforms classrooms into spaces of active thinking and ownership. Defining the student role is not about labeling participation. It is about positioning students as thinkers, creators, problem-solvers, and contributors within the learning process. When the role is intent
Catherine Addor
May 83 min read


Hoot and the Truth About Student Agency
A boy notices something others ignore. A construction site. A disturbance. A question that will not let go. In Hoot, Roy Eberhardt does not wait for permission to care. He does not raise his hand and ask if he is allowed to act. He sees an injustice, endangered burrowing owls, and chooses to do something about it. That is student agency. Not compliance. Not participation. Not engagement framed by adult direction. Agency is ownership. It is identity. It is action rooted in pur
Catherine Addor
Mar 273 min read


The Difference Between Freedom and Free-For-All in the Classroom
In highly effective classrooms, learning doesn’t always look quiet or teacher-directed. When students are genuinely engaged, you may see movement, collaboration, laughter, experimentation, and curiosity unfolding in real time. To an untrained eye, it may appear unstructured, but in reality, it is purposeful, intentional, and grounded in shared routines and ownership. I learned this lesson early in my career. One Friday, while teaching 4th grade, we were reading a chapter book
Catherine Addor
Jan 93 min read
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