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Lead. Learn. Grow.

Leslie Kinard, Ed.S.

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lmkinard

Leslie is an educational leader in the Piedmont Triad region of North Carolina. She works with administrators, teachers, and students to promote academic growth for all students. She is passionate about education, leadership, and social justice. She has dedicated her life to learning and continuing to grow as an individual and contributor to her community and the world.

The Educator with a Growth Mindset: A Staff Workshop

A great idea for staff development.

We Are What We Do by @TeacherToolkit

From Your New Assistant Principal: What you need to know about me…

Today, I rejoined the ranks, I stepped foot on the grounds of our high school, as assistant principal. It felt amazing. Filled with mixed emotions, I woke up way before my alarm and furiously began jotting down notes. I am... Continue Reading →

Making Success Tangible for All Students

I've been doing a lot of reflecting on my practice, leadership, and goals. In all those things, my greatest desire is that it's less about me and more about others - mainly my teachers, students, and their families. In our age... Continue Reading →

We’re up and out of the box! Join us at specialedleadership.wordpress.com

Are you willing to pay the cost of silence?

I just started reading Crucial Conversation (I know I'm behind). I haven't even made it through the first chapter and my thoughts are already whizzing around in my head. Within the first few pages, I've challenged myself to grapple with... Continue Reading →

My Legacy: Lead. Learn. Grow – What’s your legacy?

When I first started blogging it was for professional exploration. I was giving a presentation to teachers about professional learning networks, and I wanted to talk specifically about the benefits of blogging (not knowing that I would learn to love it).... Continue Reading →

Getting it right: The value of observations by @TeacherToolkit (Part 2/2)

What a great way to begin the conversation about our professional contributions to our schools and most importantly our students. What makes a good teacher and how others know you're a good teacher?

Before You Assign a Reading Log

Pernille Ripp's avatarPernille Ripp

photo (22)

I dig through Thea, my 5-year old’s backpack, after her first day of Kindergarten.  After all, her new teacher told us to check ever night and I want to be a good parent.  Notes from the PTO, fundraisers, book orders all turn up as I dig and then it happens.  My eyes glance at the sheet in my hand and my heart drops.  A reading log…No, no, no, please not a reading log.  Not in kindergarten, not yet, not now.

I have written about reading logs before; how I used to use them, how I had to use them, what to do instead.  I knew there would be a possibility that Thea would have one at some point.  Never had I thought that time would be now.  Never had I thought that I would have to be “that teacher parent” already.  And so I read it; 15 minutes a…

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