Sunday, July 5, 2026
Edpuzzle How To & Review
Saturday, July 4, 2026
My Year with Nike Chapter Review
As many of you know by now, I have a young daughter who just finished kindergarten. For the first time, she has been bringing new ideas and values home. Among these was Nike.
She came home asking if we can get her a pair of Nikes because she like the swoosh ... or because a friend had a pair. Either way, she asked. We said, "We'll see. Maybe later." Our default response, which time and her shifting interests ultimately answer for us. The pressure on her or us is mild at best.
I cannot imagine the pressure on Rachel Cloues, a teacher whose school's 4th grade was taken over for a year by Nike. After a persistent and targeted marketing campaign, the school allowed Nike to fund and host a bunch of activities and field trips, including trips to their corporate offices in Oregon.
The whole school was on board, except Cloues. She had misgivings about the influence of corporations on young folk and on Nike's particularly unsavory reputation for exploiting foreign workers. Still, she capitulated and didn't protest to having her class go along with all the Nike based activities.
The impression the article gives is of a lone dissenting voice overwhelmed by a single corporation's marketing agenda and the brief histeria it caused at her school. Her worry was for how her students were a vulnerable population being exploited by a powerful company.
Nike is, after all, one of the strongest brands I can think of. It has a decades-old foothold in the public eye and hard-core followers. It is one of the dozen or so coveted brands my students wear. This sort of following around a clothing company does make me cringe, at least a little.
Cloues has a good point about how powerful corporations ethically behave. Where are the regulations for this? She thinks it should be left up to the schools. She calls for schools to have policies regarding corporate relationships.
To me, especially since the corporations in question are larger, international companies, this should be something for states or the federal government to decide on. Alas.
To wrap up this post, my mother found my daughter a pair of blue Nike's at Savers for about $10. She loves them.
Thursday, July 2, 2026
Final Project Ideas
Thought Process
Please interpret the following ramble as an nebulous exploration of ideas. To take a risk and be vulnerable, I'm going to post something less edited and more stream of consciousness than I'm usually won't.
Lit Review
I perused the slide deck quickly for ideas and liked that the projects all focus on a skill or problem of a classroom and use an element of technology as a point of interjection in that, in hopes of improving student learning. I like the focus on literature and options in some.
A digital choice board sound like a good idea, but I'm dubious of its effect in my context. I have considered this in a paper version for homework a t my school. I'd like to see how this goes before considering an in class digital version.
Last year, I focused a lot on students becoming better readers. Next year, I'd like to focus on them becoming better writers. I'd like my project to focus on building this skill.
I read Adrienne's post and saw she hopes to use Canva as a tool. I applaud this, but don't know Canva well enough. Although there is merit to learning along with students. I don't mind the idea of putting something in front of them and seeing what comes of it, not knowing in advance.
Wet Cement
My concrete ideas at this time are as follows:
1. Have students collaborate to write an essay. Have a group of 4 share a google doc and instruct them to write a 5 paragraph essay in a single class block. The time crunch will make sure everyone is contributing. And it will lower the stakes a little. I'll say up front, I know the strangeness of the task, I just want to see what comes of it. Students can choose how to delegate. They can agree on a thesis, then one can grab quotes, another can start writing claims, another can outline the essay, etc.. They can see the "jobs" of essay writing.
2. Have students re-write a paper using AI. After students write a paper in a traditional way. I'd ask them to write the same paper in a short period of time using AI. This could take on a few different forms:
a. One version could be like a race: write a passable 7th grade paper the fastest.
b. One could look more challenging and sneaky: write a paper using AI that would pass through an AI checker. What prompts did you use?
c. Or it could be an exploration of prompt writing. The goal would be to share and discover useful ways to use a series of prompts to accomplish the goal.
d. A last option could focus on originality. Students could attempt to create something I wouldn't expect but technically fits the criteria the essay was asking for. Like perhaps it's written in a slam poetry voice ... I don't know.
The AI experiment option is not super appealing to me, especially after yesterday's discussion. But I may, in time, warm to it.
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