The Best Articles in Education
The most useful articles and videos in Education from around the web, curated by thought leaders and our community.
Refind focuses on timeless pieces and updates the list whenever new, must-read articles or videos are discovered.
Top 5 Education Articles
At a glance: these are the articles that have been most read, shared, and saved in Education by Refind users in 2024 so far.
Videos
Watch a video to get a quick overview.
The Biggest Myth In Education
You are not a visual learner — learning styles are a stubborn myth. Part of this video is sponsored by Google Search.Special thanks to Prof. Daniel Willingha...
We're Taught Education Can End Poverty. Here's the Truth.
Text by Nicholas KristofAround the world we talk a good game about the importance of education, but we rarely act as if we mean it.Here’s an unlikely excepti...
Reshma Saujani Smith College Commencement Speech 2023
Imposter syndrome is not your problem to solve.
How to restore trust in colleges and universities
As part of Aspen Institute’s In Focus: Strengthening Trust series, S. David Wu, PhD, President of Baruch College of The City University of New York, discusse...
What is ...?
New to Education? These articles make an excellent introduction.
An Introduction to the Flynn Effect
Researchers studying the Flynn effect have found that scores on IQ tests have actually increased over time.
What Is Culturally Responsive Teaching?
Here's what it means to be a culturally responsive teacher and where critical race theory ties in—or not.
«While more than half of public school students are students of color, most schools are organized around the mainstream culture of white Americans. The culture that many students experience at home and in their communities is not always represented at school—or is represented in a stereotypical way.»
What Is Question-Based Learning?
Question-based learning is a type of inquiry where the learner is guided by forming and refining a guiding question (or questions).
«Questions are not only a driving force behind inquiry but can be used as a powerful assessment strategy, too.»
How to ...?
How to Retain What You Learn
Listen now (13 min) | A science-based framework for learning retention
«Spaced Repetition is a scientifically-proven method for enhanced retention. It’s a method in which information is consumed at increasing intervals until it's committed to long-term memory»
How to Create the Right Environment for Students to Develop a Growth Mindset
We can't expect students to cultivate growth mindsets if the school culture doesn't support them.
How to Make Learning Stick
A blog about digital leadership, pedagogy, learning, and transformative change in education.
«Cognitive overload inhibits learning. Too much information results in stress that prevents students from assimilating information effectively (Waddington, 1996).»
How to Engage Students’ Memory Processes to Improve Learning
Strategies like connecting new information to students’ prior knowledge guide them to store what they’re learning in long-term memory.
How To Apply the Stages Of Learning (With Free Worksheet)
Want to learn faster and smarter? Discover the 3 stages of learning and skyrocket your learning skills into a whole new hemisphere.
Trending
These links are currently making the rounds in Education on Refind.
Teachers are using AI to grade essays. Students are using AI to write them
teaching ChatGPT best practices in her writing workshop class at the University of Lynchburg in Virginia, said she sees the advantages for teachers using AI tools but takes issue with how it can be…
Students Are Likely Writing Millions of Papers With AI
Turnitin, a service that checks papers for plagiarism, says its detection tool found millions of papers that may have a significant amount of AI-generated content.
New York teacher fulfills promise first made to 1978 class and throws eclipse party
Patrick Moriarty brings together about 100 former students of his to watch solar eclipse from his driveway in Rochester
Meta wants to put students and teachers in Quest VR headsets
Facebook is pushing the Quest VR headset as an educational tool for grade schoolers.
Short Articles
Short on time? Check out these useful short articles in Education—all under 10 minutes.
How to talk to boys so they grow into better men
Counteracting the Andrew Tate effect isn’t just the purview of parents and teachers.
Design Ah! (デザインあ) · learning the fun of design
A gem of an educational show from Japan about design.
The Curious Case of Cursive
A string of states have reintroduced the mandatory teaching of cursive, most recently California and New Hampshire, Chloe Gordon looks at the evolution of cursive in society and design.
How to Be More Alive: Hermann Hesse on Wonder and the Proper Aim of Education
“While wandering down the path of wonder, I briefly escape the world of separation and enter the world of unity.”
«But while we are born wakeful to wonder, our cultural conditioning and indoctrination — what we call our education — often schools us out of it. A century before scientists came to study the vitalizing psychology and physiology of enchantment, a century before our so-called liberal arts education had become the factory farming of the mind, Hesse laments:»
Is public school as we know it ending?
Private school vouchers lost a lot of battles, but they may have won the war.
Long Articles
These are some of the most-read long-form articles in Education.
100 things I know
Tidbits I've learned that have made my life better
«If you never learned how to dance at parties/weddings/clubs, you can teach yourself by watching videos of Motown and girl groups of the 60s.»
The obsessive tormentor who made professors’ lives miserable
It didn’t matter if she knew you — if you were a professor and Asian American, you were a potential target.
Your IQ isn't 160. No one's is.
Stratospheric IQs are like leprechauns, unicorns, or mermaids
The diversity myth by Peter Thiel
Peter Thiel on multiculturalism as misdirection.
Notes from Grief Camp
Every summer, more than a hundred kids spend a weekend at Camp Erin swimming and canoeing. They also learn to deal with death
Thought Leaders
We monitor hundreds of thought leaders, influencers, and newsletters in Education, including:
What is Refind?
Every day Refind picks the most relevant links from around the web for you. Picking only a handful of links means focusing on what’s relevant and useful.
How does Refind curate?
It’s a mix of human and algorithmic curation, following a number of steps:
- We monitor 10k+ sources and 1k+ thought leaders on hundreds of topics—publications, blogs, news sites, newsletters, Substack, Medium, Twitter, etc.
- In addition, our users save links from around the web using our Save buttons and our extensions.
- Our algorithm processes 100k+ new links every day and uses external signals to find the most relevant ones, focusing on timeless pieces.
- Our community of active users gets the most relevant links every day, tailored to their interests. They provide feedback via implicit and explicit signals: open, read, listen, share, mark as read, read later, «More/less like this», etc.
- Our algorithm uses these internal signals to refine the selection.
- In addition, we have expert curators who manually curate niche topics.
The result: lists of the best and most useful articles on hundreds of topics.
How does Refind detect «timeless» pieces?
We focus on pieces with long shelf-lives—not news. We determine «timelessness» via a number of metrics, for example, the consumption pattern of links over time.
How many sources does Refind monitor?
We monitor 10k+ content sources on hundreds of topics—publications, blogs, news sites, newsletters, Substack, Medium, Twitter, etc.
Who are the thought leaders in Education?
We follow dozens of thought leaders in Education, including Education Week, The Chronicle of Higher Education, The Hechinger Report, POLITICO, Colin Wright.
Missing a thought leader? Submit them here
Can I submit a link?
Indirectly, by using Refind and saving links from outside (e.g., via our extensions).
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When you’re logged-in, you can flag any link via the «More» (...) menu. You can also report problems via email to hello@refind.com
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