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6 January 2017

A Letter to Michael Clay Thompson from Grateful Parents

“I have no doubt that every child would benefit from what you have to offer. For our particular child, though, this connection to the world of ideas…I do not mean to overstate it, but this has been a lifeline for her.” – parents of a child taking one of Michael’s courses at Royal Fireworks Online Learning

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15 October 2016

Doing Four-Level Grammar Analysis Is Like Practicing the Piano

“Why do students have to keep doing four-level analyses in every level of the MCT curriculum once they know how to do it? This is a good question. But four-level analysis is different because it is an expansive inquiry into language; it is investigating something that is not concrete or simple but that is essentially bottomless.” – Michael Clay Thompson

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30 September 2016

The Interdisciplinary Concept of the MCT Vocabulary Program

“My central concept for ‘The Word Within the Word’ is that it is a profoundly interdisciplinary vocabulary curriculum, interweaving the vocabulary of science, mathematics, history, literature, art, and more into a great vocabulary fabric that will make students better in every subject and prepare them for the future like no other curriculum ever has.” – Michael Clay Thompson

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1 September 2016

Transforming Gifted Education from a Dream to a Goal

“From time to time, it is healthy for us, as educators devoted to optimizing differentiated education for gifted children, to reexamine our most fundamental assumptions. The assumption I would like to discuss can be expressed in a question: Is gifted education a dream or a goal?” – Michael Clay Thompson

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22 August 2016

Lewis Carroll, the Original Mathematical Novelist

“Whenever I give a presentation on my Mathematical Nights books, there’s one name that I always mention: Charles Lutwidge Dodgson. You may know him better by his pen name: Lewis Carroll. As a writer, he often blended his mathematical skills with his whimsical style—sometimes in obvious ways and other times in ways that are harder to find.” – Robert Black

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15 June 2016

Giftedness Is Not Something You Outgrow

“For more than thirty years, I’ve written and spoken about the difficulties gifted kids and their families face in a world that doesn’t recognize their differences or, if it does, offers little to help them accept and cope with, let alone take joy in, those differences. It can still be difficult for such a child to believe, ‘It’s okay to be me.'” – Stephanie Tolan

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11 May 2016

The Importance of Philosophy

“I want philosophy to be a lifelong friend for my children—and for all of their friends, and for all of their friends’ friends, and for the whole next generation. As they venture into civilization, philosophy will be their defense against me and all of the teachers, role models, bosses, and societal influences who, well-meaning or not, give too many suggestions and with too heavy a hand.” – Dr. Sharon Kaye

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11 April 2016

We Must Advocate for Real Reading

“We must advocate for real reading. There is nothing else in education—nothing—that is as educational as reading. By reading serious literature, both fiction and nonfiction, students experience the full range of intellectual experience. They grow in their reading power and can read better and deeper, with more comprehension and enthusiasm for important stories and ideas.” – Michael Clay Thompson

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30 March 2016

The Life-Changing Moments that Resulted in the MCT Curriculum

“In my life, no teacher had ever told me that I could write—not in elementary or middle or high school, not in college or university. It took Julie Long—with her immovable, fierce brain—to push me in a direction that would make me happy. She believed in me years before I did.” – Michael Clay Thompson

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13 January 2016

Why Math Fiction?

“For many people, learning math mostly involved working a seemingly endless set of exercise problems. Such drills have their place, but if that’s all students do, they’re missing a big part of what math is about. In fact, they’re missing the most important part: the opportunity to see math as a creative, collaborative experience, full of possibilities for exploration and discovery.” – Robert Black

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2 November 2015

Do We Still Need Black History Month?

“Black History Month is a celebration of important people and events in the history of African-Americans and is commemorated in the United States in February. But both black and white critics raise the question: Is Black History Month still needed?” – Richard Beck

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16 October 2015

The Relevance of Walden Today

“A teacher of high school honors English, I had always enjoyed the lively discussions related to my students’ reading of Henry David Thoreau’s ‘Walden.’ Everything about Thoreau’s life intrigued them. But there was one big downside: Thoreau’s layered, dense, nineteenth-century language, with all its subtleties, was hard for them to penetrate. They ‘got’ him, but his writing was quite another matter.” – Anne Faigen

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17 August 2015

The Problem of Evaluation

“As a classroom teacher, I always tended to have high standards, and to give enormous assignments and challenges, but to be generous about grading. I think, deep down, the generosity was based partly on appreciation and admiration of the work the students were doing, but also on deep concerns about the reliability and validity of evaluation. And yet—here’s the thing—we have to do it.” – Michael Clay Thompson

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14 June 2015

Why Learning to Read Is Difficult for Some Children

“Between 2% and 20% of schoolchildren have some type of reading problem. Educators are starting to recognize the importance of the visual system and eye-tracking skills for reading, but these skills must be trained before a child with reading problems can be successful..” – Dr. Kenneth A. Lane

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