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Steve Haberlin is an assistant professor of education at Wesleyan College in Macon, Georgia, and author of Meditation in the College Classroom: A Pedagogical Tool to Help Students De-Stress, Focus, and Connect. His work focuses on the use of mindfulness and meditation practices in both k-12 and higher education settings. His workshop, "Mindfulness for Teachers," helps educators develop a personal practice to help with stress and anxiety and to be more present in their teaching and personal lives. Steve is also available for higher education workshops to help professors use brief meditation activities in class and for keynote presentations on mindfulness and meditation-related topics. For more information, contact Steve at [email protected].
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Recent Posts By This Blogger

In last week’s post, I covered the four authority bases that teachers use to influence student behavior. This week, I will further the discussion by presenting three different models of classroom discipline. By learning and understanding these three...
As a teacher, have you ever expected students to listen to you just because you’re the teacher? They’re supposed to listen to the teacher, you think. Or maybe you expect them to pay attention because you know your content so well. You have a master’...
I definitely wasn’t ready to meet the needs of my first-ever self-contained class of gifted fifth-graders. Twenty-something intellectually advanced, highly creative –and often misbehaved—students spending the entire day with me. After teaching...
I was tested for gifted in the first grade and placed in a pull-out program, where the teacher came (maybe once per week, don’t remember) to work with me and another student. According to my parents, shortly after, school officials canceled the...
“Giftedness is a greater awareness, a greater sensitivity, a greater ability to understand and transform perceptions into intellectual and emotional experiences”                                                              Annemarie Roeper, 1982...
Before you refer that student for ADHD testing, read this blog. Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) is the most common childhood behavior disorder, occurring in 3-7 % of school-aged children. The challenge is that...
Differentiation has served as a major buzz word in education. Curriculum and instruction should meet the needs of individual students—meet them where they are, so to speak. Regardless, differentiation will remain a constant need for the gifted and...
Several years ago, I taught a highly gifted child, who simply didn’t fit the current educational system. He had unusual ideas about a variety of topics. He questioned, well, just about everything. He found much of the curriculum, for lack of a...
Have you ever told your child to “chill out” but never explained to them how? That’s kind of like when teachers tell children to “think harder” but do not provide cognitive strategies. If you’re parent to a gifted child, you have...
  As a teacher of the gifted for many years, I’ve seen gifted kids stress out. I remember the time a student began crying and screaming, saying her “parents were going to kill her” because she didn’t get all A's on her report card. One child would...

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