
Daniel Day Begins as Superintendent of Leslie County Schools
I’m very proud of Leslie County. It’s humbling to lead the district that raised me. I grew up in these schools and later came back to teach here.
I am a strong supporter in keeping the focus on what’s really important: my students. If student motivation and increased interaction is actually the chosen end game, then we must adapt right along with t our students in our classrooms. Our classroom setting should be encouraging to problem solving, creativity, collaboration and critical t…Read More
As an educator I, like many others, am always researching for and implementing the best practices to promote high levels of student engagement. Over the years, I have observed and experienced the difficult task of competing for my students’ attention and interaction. No matter the issue causing the distraction, it typically ends in my attempts t…Read More
Coding the Literary Future
Children within the Head start classroom show little interest, and very little engagement in the writing center. The children are using this center freely, with a blend of intentional teaching by the teacher, to improve each child’s literacy skills. The students find this method of teaching lack luster, and boring. The s…Read More
Title: Can a combination of Kagan Cooperative learning driven by science labs improve the success rates of Exceptional Students in traditional classrooms?
Project Overview: Exceptional students within the traditional science classroom will be grouped in Kagan Cooperative learning groups and work within the structures during lab driven science…Read More
Project Title: Flipping and Swiveling in 6th
Project Overview:
The goal of the Flipping and Swiveling Project in my 6th grade mathematics classroom is to enhance student learning and achievement by reversing the traditional teacher-centered model of a classroom to a Flipped Learning model, focusing class time on student-centered active learning…Read More

I’m very proud of Leslie County. It’s humbling to lead the district that raised me. I grew up in these schools and later came back to teach here.

In 1992, a young teacher walked onto the Dessie Scott campus in Pine Ridge and started what would become one of the most quietly influential