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Photos for Class - StoryboardThat
Grades
K to 12tag(s): copyright (42), creative commons (28), images (266)
In the Classroom
Include a link to Photos for Class on student computers and your class website, along with other free image sites such as Pixabay, reviewed here and Unsplash, reviewed here. Find additional resources on the TeachersFirst Free Image Resources Special Topics Page, reviewed here. Use images for any purpose, including multimedia projects created with Canva Docs, reviewed here and Sway, reviewed here. Use the included citations to teach students about the ethical use of digital resources.You must be registered and logged in to add items to your favorites.
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Animal Humane Society - Animal Humane Society
Grades
K to 12In the Classroom
Students can use Vmaker, reviewed here to make a public service announcement on how to care for animals. Students can virtually interview a veterinarian. Students can look at the service projects, such as a bake sale or car wash, to help the Animal Humane Society.Add your comments below (available only to members) | Become a Member
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Name Selection Tool
Grades
K to 12tag(s): classroom management (135), Teacher Utilities (214)
In the Classroom
Use the tool to randomly call on students during discussions so everyone has an equal chance to share ideas. Ask a fun or reflective question, such as "What is one goal for today?" or "What is one thing you learned yesterday?" Then use SkyFrost to select the students who will respond. Let the tool choose team leaders, helpers, or presenters for activities, review games, or classroom jobs to keep things fun and unbiased.Add your comments below (available only to members) | Become a Member
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CoGrader - Gil Quadros Flores and Gabriel Adamante
Grades
2 to 12tag(s): artificial intelligence (300), feedback (15), Teacher Utilities (214)
In the Classroom
Teachers can use this tool to help grade essays and tailor responses to their students. Students can use the rubrics to grow as learners by applying the feedback provided. Use CoGrader to scaffold learning before assigning a long writing project. For example, have students write just the introductory paragraph and thesis statement for an essay. Run these through CoGrader to provide rapid feedback on hook, context, and thesis clarity before they write the rest of the paper.Add your comments below (available only to members) | Become a Member
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10 Free Printable Goal-Setting Worksheets to Stay Organized - Parade
Grades
5 to 12This site includes advertising.
tag(s): organizational skills (89), thinking skills (116)
In the Classroom
Set up stations with different types of worksheets (SMART goals, habit trackers, reflection sheets). Students can rotate through the formats, sample each, and choose the one that best fits their personal or academic goals. Have students complete a worksheet at the start of the week and revisit it on Friday. They can reflect on progress, challenges, and next steps to build accountability and self-management skills. Students can create a short presentation with Aha Slides, reviewed here showing their goal, action steps, obstacles, and outcomes.Add your comments below (available only to members) | Become a Member
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AI Starter Kit for Teachers - Tech & Learning
Grades
K to 12This site includes advertising.
tag(s): artificial intelligence (300), assessment (144), Formative Assessment (47), multimedia (62), professional development (318), quizzes (91), STEM (370)
In the Classroom
Set up short stations where students explore how AI works (using teacher-approved tools) and discuss real-world examples such as chatbots, image generators, and recommendation systems. Use the Starter Kit's YouTube video as a quick introduction to AI concepts, followed by a class discussion or reflection activity. Have students use AI tools to generate story ideas, outlines, or vocabulary lists, then refine their work using critical thinking and teacher guidance.Add your comments below (available only to members) | Become a Member
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20 AI First Steps for Teachers - Ditch That Textbook
Grades
K to 12This site includes advertising.
tag(s): artificial intelligence (300), professional development (318)
In the Classroom
Take advantage of the information in this article to learn how to set up stations where students try out approved AI tools for brainstorming, image generation, or research support. Students can record what the tools can and cannot do. Have students use AI to generate story starters, design art prompts, or suggest project ideas, then create original work from those prompts. Have students evaluate an AI tool's usefulness, safety, and learning value, then present recommendations to the class.Add your comments below (available only to members) | Become a Member
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Artificial Intelligence in Education - ISTE + ASCD
Grades
K to 12tag(s): artificial intelligence (300), professional development (318)
In the Classroom
Have students analyze real-world AI scenarios (e.g., facial recognition or chatbots in schools) and discuss fairness, privacy, and bias using ISTE's ethical guidelines. Use ISTE + ASCD's student-friendly AI resources to teach what AI is, how it works, and where students encounter it in everyday life. Pair this with short videos or discussion prompts. Have students propose an AI tool to improve school life, explaining its purpose, benefits, and potential risks.Add your comments below (available only to members) | Become a Member
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Using Generative AI to Support Assessments Without Letting it Grade Student Work - Tech & Learning
Grades
K to 12This site includes advertising.
tag(s): artificial intelligence (300), assessment (144), feedback (15), organizational skills (89), professional development (318), rubrics (39)
In the Classroom
Use AI to help you rewrite or clarify directions for projects, writing tasks, or assessments so students better understand expectations before they begin. Have AI generate draft rubrics in kid-friendly language. You can edit them to match your standards and use them to guide student self-assessment and reflection. Use AI to help draft feedback comments that focus on growth, clarity, and next steps. You remain the final decision-maker on all student evaluations.Add your comments below (available only to members) | Become a Member
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6 Questions Teachers Should Ask Before Implementing AI - Forbes
Grades
K to 12This site includes advertising.
tag(s): artificial intelligence (300), evaluating sources (45), professional development (318)
In the Classroom
Discuss this article during grade or content level meetings, or as part of staff meetings. Introduce the information to students by presenting brief classroom scenarios in which AI could be used (e.g., writing assistance, tutoring, grading). In small groups, have students discuss the proper use of AI using simplified versions of the article's six guiding questions. Have students design posters that explain how to use AI safely and responsibly, focusing on privacy, originality, and ethical use. Posters can be displayed in the classroom or shared during a technology lesson. Students can complete a writing or problem-solving task on their own, then compare it to an AI-generated version. They reflect on what humans do better, what AI does well, and when teacher feedback is most valuable.Add your comments below (available only to members) | Become a Member
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The Little Book of Generative AI Prompts for Teachers - Mark Anderson
Grades
K to 12tag(s): artificial intelligence (300), assessment (144), differentiation (92), professional development (318), Teacher Utilities (214)
In the Classroom
Use these prompts to save time and improve efficiency in your classroom. Learn more about creating prompts and using templates by viewing the archive of OK2Ask: AI Templates That Work: Quick and Easy Prompting Solutions, reviewed here. Use the prompts, then modify them as needed, to generate practice activities for students, differentiate assignments, and generate engaging activities based on students' interests. Use these examples to teach students how to evaluate AI responses and write effective prompts that provide their desired results.Add your comments below (available only to members) | Become a Member
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TalkingPoints - TalkingPoints
Grades
K to 12This site includes advertising.
tag(s): classroom management (135), communication (121), multilingual (82), Teacher Utilities (214)
In the Classroom
Send a weekly message to families highlighting the skills, standards, and learning goals being taught in class. Include photos of student work or classroom activities to help families stay connected to learning. Share reading prompts, discussion questions, or vocabulary words with families each week. Encourage students to discuss their books at home, and have families respond in the app with comments or photos from reading time. Share positive messages, digital badges, photos, or examples of student accomplishments with families.Add your comments below (available only to members) | Become a Member
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Generate Lesson Plans with Khan Academy - Khanmigo
Grades
K to 12tag(s): artificial intelligence (300), differentiation (92), learning styles (22), Teacher Utilities (214)
In the Classroom
Generate leveled practice questions with Khanmigo for three stations: review, on-level, and challenge. Students rotate based on readiness, building confidence and a deeper understanding. Use Khanmigo to draft a rubric, then have students help revise it using kid-friendly language. Use Khanmigo to create a short, high-interest lesson hook (story, scenario, or question). Have students respond with quick writes or turn-and-talk discussions to activate prior knowledge.Add your comments below (available only to members) | Become a Member
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Life & Well-Being - We Are Teachers
Grades
K to 12This site includes advertising.
tag(s): mental health (62), preK (322), professional development (318)
In the Classroom
Share inspirational articles and ideas with peers as support throughout the year. Consider creating a Wakelet collection to share with your department or school staff that includes your favorite articles and ideas from this resource and others. If you conduct professional development activities, use the Trading Card Creator reviewed here to create trading cards as a way to encourage discussions of strategies to relieve stress. For example, make cards for time savers and stress relievers, each with different ideas, then pass out the cards and ask the holder to share the concept on their card, along with another personal suggestion.Add your comments below (available only to members) | Become a Member
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PBL Works Podcast: The Project - Buck Institute for Education
Grades
K to 12tag(s): bias (33), professional development (318), Project Based Learning (28)
In the Classroom
Listen to these podcasts in conjunction with visiting the PBL site, reviewed here, to understand how to implement project-based learning in any classroom. Find additional ideas and resources at Project Based Learning Project Ideas, reviewed here. As you learn about project-based learning, share ideas with peers using a collaboration tool such as Milanote, reviewed here to share links, images, videos, and more.Add your comments below (available only to members) | Become a Member
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Online Web Tools - KodX
Grades
K to 12tag(s): artificial intelligence (300), colors (63), editing (89), images (266), text to speech (23)
In the Classroom
Use the Online Web Tools to find resources that support student learning and help with everyday digital needs, for example, during the creation phase of an interdisciplinary project. As an example, use the site's QR code generator to link physical books in the classroom library to audio recordings of the stories, or use the text-to-speech tool to help beginning readers hear their own written sentences read aloud. After selecting the necessary tools for tasks such as image resizing or text formatting, have students include their content as part of a presentation created with Canva for Education, reviewed here. After students complete their presentations, post their final creations to a class Padlet, reviewed here to invite commentary and questions from their peers as part of a gallery walk.Add your comments below (available only to members) | Become a Member
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Active Listening: The Art of Empathetic Conversation - PositivePsychology
Grades
4 to 12tag(s): classroom management (135), conflict resolution (11), empathy (67), listening (117), problem solving (275), professional development (318)
In the Classroom
Before a class discussion, review active listening expectations. Assign students specific listening roles, such as summarizer or question-asker, to reinforce engagement and accountability. Use short social scenarios or conflict situations and have students role-play both ineffective and effective listening. Discuss how active listening changed the outcome and how it applies to real classroom interactions. Pair students and give one student a short prompt to discuss while the other practices active listening. The listener must paraphrase what was shared and reflect a feeling before switching roles.Add your comments below (available only to members) | Become a Member
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Empathy and Active Listening - European Union
Grades
4 to 12tag(s): empathy (67), listening (117), social and emotional learning (195)
In the Classroom
Read short scenarios aloud and have students identify the emotions involved. Discuss what an empathetic response might sound like in each situation. Have students act out brief classroom or social scenarios involving misunderstandings. After each role-play, the class discusses how active listening and empathy could change the outcome. In small groups, have students practice restating a speaker's ideas using sentence stems such as "What I hear you saying is..." or "It sounds like you feel...". This builds clarity, empathy, and respectful communication.Add your comments below (available only to members) | Become a Member
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Learn Something Series: Empathy, Listening, & Vulnerability - Princeton University
Grades
4 to 12tag(s): empathy (67), listening (117), professional development (318)
In the Classroom
In pairs, have one student share a short personal story or opinion while the other practices active listening by maintaining eye contact, paraphrasing, and asking a clarifying question. Switch roles and debrief on which listening behaviors helped the speaker feel heard. Present short, age-appropriate scenarios involving misunderstandings or conflict. Have students discuss how each person might feel and what an empathetic response would sound like. Have students write or draw about a time when asking for help or sharing feelings made a situation better. Volunteers may share if comfortable, reinforcing that vulnerability can build trust.Add your comments below (available only to members) | Become a Member
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Respect - Kindness in the Classroom
Grades
6 to 8tag(s): critical thinking (179), empathy (67), listening (117), social and emotional learning (195), thinking skills (116)
In the Classroom
Students can engage with the lesson featured on the site. Students can use Google Keep, reviewed here to post their scale level for their active listening. Students can create a timeline using Turbo Timeline Generator, reviewed here to show how technology has allowed us to become better listeners.Add your comments below (available only to members) | Become a Member
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