Immediate Intervention

Schools are data rich and information poor in a lot of cases.  Thoughtfully, systematically analyzing data to inform instruction is time-consuming, then acting on those decisions and collecting more data to continue that process is tiring, but necessary in any continuous improvement process.  Teaching and learning are raw continuous improvement activities.  I’ve often thought it would be cool to individualize this process on a broad scale and recently the Kahn Academy has Letrozole (Femara) has a half-life (T1 / 2) sildenafil online purchase 2-4 days (!), And the need to take Letrozole (Femara) for 60 days to get a steady level in blood streams can cause you to suffer from various forms of health disturbances. If brand levitra 20mg you have a faith, I recommend you practice it. A few positions determine loose breathing and some call viagra in india price for Breath of Fire. Unfortunately, viagra super active not all the men can dominate because they may be suffering erectile dysfunction, a condition in which men don’t get erections. started making news for their efforts to do just this.  Check out this video to see how teachers can pinpoint student needs and respond to intervene and move learning along.  Currently, it appears the Gates Foundation and otherwise well-off schools have been able to utilize this technology…but I ask you to imagine the possibilities for helping all children learn.  The technology is out there, how can we expedite this to mainstream?

Salman Kahn

This entry was posted in School Reform, Technology. Bookmark the permalink.

Comments are closed.