Stacey Roshan

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Stacey Roshan

Goodreads Author


Born
September 16

Member Since
May 2016


Average rating: 4.27 · 93 ratings · 14 reviews · 1 distinct work
Tech with Heart: Leveraging...

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4.27 avg rating — 93 ratings — published 2019 — 2 editions
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I, Medusa by Ayana Gray
I, Medusa
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Careless People by Sarah Wynn-Williams
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The Correspondent by Virginia      Evans
The Correspondent
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Fawning by Ingrid Clayton
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Flesh by David Szalay
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The Academy by Elin Hilderbrand
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The Nvidia Way by Tae   Kim
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The Wayfinder by Adam  Johnson
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Quotes by Stacey Roshan  (?)
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“Some of our smartest students might be our quietest. How do we give them an opportunity to be vocal in classroom discussions without calling them out or making them feel uncomfortable? Some of our unsung superstars may need time to think about their answer before speaking up. How do we shift from a culture of calling on and praising the student who raises their hand first? The truth is, some of our brightest students may feel as if they aren’t measuring up because they need time to process their thoughts before responding. How can we shift from a first is best culture to one that sends the message that everyone’s voice matters—and that everyone has the potential to excel in the classroom?”
Stacey Roshan, Tech with Heart: Leveraging Technology to Empower Student Voice, Ease Anxiety, & Create Compassionate Classrooms

“There is no one-size-fits-all in education. Period. What works in my classroom works as well as it does because I feel, with all my heart, that it is the best thing to do.”
Stacey Roshan, Tech with Heart: Leveraging Technology to Empower Student Voice, Ease Anxiety, & Create Compassionate Classrooms

“My advice: Identify what you love about teaching and what you'd like to see more of in your class. From there, consider what technology could help you accomplish your goals.”
Stacey Roshan, Tech with Heart: Leveraging Technology to Empower Student Voice, Ease Anxiety, & Create Compassionate Classrooms

“I mean, It's a Wonderful Life was a box office flop in its time. If everyone who worked on that movie had known, could see how things were going to pan out in the short term, would they have even bothered to make it? And then the world would've lost out on something beautiful. Just because something doesn't make money or win awards doesn't mean it doesn't have value. Or doesn't deserve to exist. The job is alchemy. You take a hunk of rock and you try to turn it into gold, and the gold isn't even really the point."

"Right, because the goal is immortality," I joke.

"It's permanence," he says. "Not, like, having your name on the side of fucking airplane or skyscraper, or some shit like that. But bringing something intangible into the world that can live on without you. Something bigger than the person who made it. And even then, the goal is secondary to the process. The process is for us. It changes us in ways that can't be measured. At least, that's what I've always thought.”
Emily Henry, Great Big Beautiful Life

“With writing, you could always add more. More, more, more until you got to the heart of a thing, and after that, you could chip away the excess.”
Emily Henry, Great Big Beautiful Life

“Because then, suddenly, they’re incredibly proud, but they’re proud of the accomplishment, not of the work. So you feel like you have to keep accomplishing instead of just creating. It affirms the idea that the value in what you do is how people react to it, and not just in the making of it.”
Emily Henry, Great Big Beautiful Life

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