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ABC Avenue YouTube Channel - ABC Avenue

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K to 2
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ABC Avenue's YouTube Channel offers videos of children's books read aloud for the youngest of readers. Choose the video link to see all uploaded videos or choose playlists to view ...more
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ABC Avenue's YouTube Channel offers videos of children's books read aloud for the youngest of readers. Choose the video link to see all uploaded videos or choose playlists to view by type of book. Playlists include funny books, picture books, and more. If your district blocks YouTube, the videos may not be viewable.

tag(s): book lists (161), literature (214), preK (322)

In the Classroom

Share individual videos on classroom computers for students to view during center time. Share a link to this YouTube Channel on your class website or newsletter for viewing at home. Share this site with older students, then ask them to create their own video story read alouds for younger students using a tool like playposit (fromerly eduCanon) reviewed here, then share them using a tool such as SchoolTube, reviewed here.

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ABC Education - ABC

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K to 10
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ABCEducation is a large educational website from Australia containing videos, games, and audio clips. Special sections for parents include informational articles, teaching resources,...more
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ABCEducation is a large educational website from Australia containing videos, games, and audio clips. Special sections for parents include informational articles, teaching resources, and education news. Choose primary or secondary level to view offerings sorted by category, or go to games and sort by topic or grade level to find resources. Register on the site to store and save favorite activities for later use. The site was created in Australia, so some of the pronunciations and spellings may differ from those in American English.

tag(s): addition (138), animals (278), antarctica (28), atmosphere (25), australia (28), cells (80), climate change (112), continents (29), counting (66), decimals (94), division (109), earth (192), earthquakes (51), ecosystems (107), egypt (60), energy (140), environment (249), food chains (23), forces (47), forensics (12), fossil fuels (11), game based learning (311), gold rush (18), human body (98), immigration (85), insects (63), light (59), maps (221), molecules (43), money (112), multiplication (133), nuclear energy (19), nutrition (137), oceans (142), parts of speech (40), percent (60), perimeter (21), place value (43), plants (142), probability (129), rhymes (24), rocks (43), songs (50), sound (74), subtraction (119), time (94), vietnam (41), volcanoes (59), weather (174), whole numbers (8), world war 1 (86), world war 2 (168)

In the Classroom

This site is excellent for enrichment. Include it on your class web page for students to access both in and out of class. Share this link on your class web page and/or in a parent newsletter for help with homework and school projects. These high-quality media resources will engage your students and enhance their learning.

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ABC Match - Read Write Think (Iron Monkey Interactive)

Grades
K to 1
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This electronic version of "match the cards" teaches early readers the beginning sounds of words. Students match alphabet letters to the corresponding picture card. A child's voice...more
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This electronic version of "match the cards" teaches early readers the beginning sounds of words. Students match alphabet letters to the corresponding picture card. A child's voice says the words. Bells sound when the student makes the correct match. Scores record how many cards were matched correctly. Keeping track of the time is an option to challenge students.

tag(s): alphabet (46), phonics (53)

In the Classroom

This lends itself for use in early childhood computer literacy centers on your single classroom computer or cluster (with headphones).

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ABC News - ABC news

Grades
6 to 12
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This nationally published news source makes for an excellent resource for a teacher or student looking for current events. There's information ranging from politics, global news, business,...more
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This nationally published news source makes for an excellent resource for a teacher or student looking for current events. There's information ranging from politics, global news, business, technology - even pop culture. This would be useful in any classroom where a knowledge of the now was focused on.

tag(s): news (223), newspapers (86)

In the Classroom

Use this site as a resource for current events projects - assign students various weeks throughout the semester in which they are to be the class news reporter, keeping their peers up to date and informed. Have students research what's going on via this news site and present a small presentation at the beginning of class every day during their week. Students can either orally present, or for the technologically inclined, create a short video summarizing the same information. Have students create news briefs and share them using a tool such as SchoolTube.

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ABCTeach - Jack Armstrong

Grades
K to 2
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ABCTeach offers engaging, age-appropriate activities that help kindergarten students practice essential skills, including letter recognition, numbers, telling time, reading comprehension,...more
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ABCTeach offers engaging, age-appropriate activities that help kindergarten students practice essential skills, including letter recognition, numbers, telling time, reading comprehension, and handwriting. Teachers will appreciate this safe, easy-to-navigate site for supporting foundational learning at school or home. A wide variety of printable resources, including alphabet handwriting sheets, are available, and educators can access many free materials without creating an account through the site's free resources section.
This site includes advertising.

tag(s): alphabet (46), handwriting (15), numbers (121), preK (322), reading comprehension (146), time (94), writing (308)

In the Classroom

Use ABC handwriting and letter-recognition printables to create literacy stations. Students can trace letters, identify pictures that begin with the focus sound, and practice writing the letter using crayons, markers, or dry-erase boards. Print simple reading comprehension or sight-word booklets. Students can read, illustrate, and assemble their own mini-books, reinforcing decoding skills while building confidence as early readers. Send home selected free printables for optional practice. Families can support learning without needing to register or create accounts, helping reinforce skills taught in class.

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ABCya - ABCYA.com, LLC

Grades
K to 6
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ABCya.com, created by a web developer turned computer teacher, provides educational games, videos, and activities for elementary students. Choose from six free games that change frequently....more
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ABCya.com, created by a web developer turned computer teacher, provides educational games, videos, and activities for elementary students. Choose from six free games that change frequently. Be sure to preview the games before sharing them with the class to ensure the one you want to use is still available. Nearly every subject is included. Simply click on your grade level (K-6+) and find what is available under language arts, math, and other subjects. Specific topics range from basic typing activities to creating word clouds to grammar games (at all levels) and so much more. The interactives are teacher approved and offer colorful and attention grabbing ways for learning. Opportunities for sharing on Facebook, tweeting, and sharing on social bookmarking sites are incorporated. This is a MUST SEE site for elementary teachers looking for some great practice sites for basic skills!

tag(s): alphabet (46), audio books (43), audtxt (19), decimals (94), drawing (57), fractions (178), game based learning (311), geometric shapes (153), keyboarding (28), latitude (9), literacy (124), longitude (8), number sense (74), numbers (121), operations (71), preK (322)

In the Classroom

Share this site on your interactive whiteboard or projector, demonstrate how to use the specific tool/activity. Create a learning center on your whiteboard or on individual laptops and allow students to try it out on their own. List this as a student and parent resource on your classroom website. Use this site to informally assess skills to tell you which students to allow to do alternative work or go ahead. Allow your gifted students to explore new concepts while providing necessary reinforcement for those learners that need a technology-inspired method to help master learning goals. This is an excellent tool for differentiating. Provide as an anticipatory guide for new units.

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Academic Integrity & Citations - The University of British Columbia

Grades
9 to 12
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The Academic Integrity and Citations page from the Chapman Learning Commons at the University of British Columbia provides students with clear guidance on upholding honesty, responsibility,...more
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The Academic Integrity and Citations page from the Chapman Learning Commons at the University of British Columbia provides students with clear guidance on upholding honesty, responsibility, and ethical behavior in their academic work. It offers explanations of academic integrity, tools for assessing citation skills, and practical guidance on when and how to cite sources. The site includes resources on identifying common knowledge, choosing and using the correct citation style, and recognizing the importance of connecting new ideas to existing research. It also explains students' rights regarding open licensing and ownership of their academic work. Overall, the page helps learners build confidence in conducting research, avoiding plagiarism, and using citations effectively and responsibly.

tag(s): citations (34), copyright (42), Research (90)

In the Classroom

Give students a set of statements and ask them to sort each into categories such as Needs a Citation, Common Knowledge, or Does Not Need a Citation. Have groups explain their reasoning. Present short classroom scenarios involving plagiarism, improper paraphrasing, or misused sources. Have students work in pairs to decide what went wrong and how to fix it. Assign a brief research task in which students choose a topic and gather three credible sources. Throughout the process, include checkpoints that require them to justify why a source is reliable, identify what needs to be cited, and produce a properly formatted bibliography.

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Academic Word Finder - Achieve the Core

Grades
4 to 12
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The Academic Word Finder identifies academic vocabulary (tier 2) words found in any text. Register using email to create an account before beginning. Copy and paste any text you want...more
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The Academic Word Finder identifies academic vocabulary (tier 2) words found in any text. Register using email to create an account before beginning. Copy and paste any text you want to analyze, (the site recommends starting with two to three paragraphs) and select your grade level. The Word Finder identifies the vocabulary found in the text and provides additional context with grade range, part of speech, meaning, and an example sentence. Email or print the results using links found on the site. Each entry is automatically saved to your Achieve the Core account for future reference.

tag(s): multilingual (83), parts of speech (40), vocabulary (254), vocabulary development (103)

In the Classroom

Use the Academic Word Finder to introduce difficult portions of text before reading. Display the results on your interactive whiteboard or with a projector to review with students. This site is perfect for use with special needs or ENL/ESL students to break down difficult content into smaller, understandable portions. Use this site to identify vocabulary words then create online games for student practice. Bamboozle, reviewed here, offers several options for creating games for two teams. Use the Word Finder to choose vocabulary to include when creating interactive lessons for students. MoocNote, reviewed here, includes tools for creating interactive video lessons with embedded documents and quizzes.

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Acapela.tv Talking Cards - Acapela Group

Grades
K to 8
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Acapela uses a text-to-speech application to create short videos using your text. Choose a thumbnail to begin, then follow the directions to add speech. Some videos also include an...more
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Acapela uses a text-to-speech application to create short videos using your text. Choose a thumbnail to begin, then follow the directions to add speech. Some videos also include an option to add an image. Options let you choose from several languages. This is an excellent choice for ESL/ELL learners. When finished, the share options allow you to send via email or via social networking links. NOTE: Do NOT click on any of the "download" or "play now" links on the side or top of the page. Click directly on the video thumbnails to use them. This site contains quite a few advertisements and links that lead away from the site. Demonstrate how to use and stay away from these links before allowing students to use them on their own.
This site includes advertising.

tag(s): animation (62), text to speech (23)

In the Classroom

Have students create their own short video using short stories or poems they have created. Create your own video to display on your interactive whiteboard (or projector) giving your class directions for a project or announcing class events or projects. Have ESL/ELL students (or any student with special speech needs) copy and paste their work into a video to hear their words come to life.

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Acast - Acast

Grades
K to 12
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Start or convert your podcasting to Acast's free account. There are many benefits to a free account, such as unlimited hours of audio and editing; with Acast, there are no ...more
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Start or convert your podcasting to Acast's free account. There are many benefits to a free account, such as unlimited hours of audio and editing; with Acast, there are no limits for storage, uploads, or downloads. In addition, you will have your own podcast website that updates automatically, and, unlike other podcast programs, there are no limits to which podcast app you use, and a bonus to that is a one-click distribution to all podcast listening apps. Another advantage with Acast is that you get a free web player that can be embedded on your website, blog, and social media. On top of all that, you get free analytics that shows episode performance, geography, and more. As if all of this isn't enough, if you use another podcasting program, easily switch over to Acast. Be sure to look at the Acast Essentials Toolkit which is free and will explain all areas of podcast production and it features insights from well-known podcast creators.

tag(s): communication (123), digital storytelling (167), podcasts (167)

In the Classroom

With older students (and strong readers), you may want to pair them up and have them read Aclass Essentials for the basics of podcasting. Using Fiskkit, reviewed here, with this article will enhance student learning. Create regular podcasts to share on your class web page or wiki. Record class assignments or directions. Record story time or a reading excerpt for younger ones to listen to at a computer center AND from home, adding a touch of blended learning to your classroom! Have readers (perhaps older buddies) enhance their learning and build fluency by recording selected passages for your non-readers. Launch a service project for your fifth or sixth graders to record stories for the kindergarten to use in their reading and listening center. Challenge students to create "you are there" recordings as "eyewitnesses" to historical or current events. Make a weekly class podcast, with students taking turns writing and sharing the "Class News," encourage and extend learning and have students create radio advertisements for concepts studied in class (Buy Dynamic DNA!). Invite students to write and record their own stories or poetry in dramatic readings. English language learners or students just beginning to read could record their fluency by reading passages. Allow parents to hear their child's progress reading aloud, etc. Compare world language, speech articulation, or reading fluency at two points during the year. Challenge your Shakespeare students to record a soliloquy. Write and record a poem for Father's or Mother's Day (or other special events) and send the URL as a gift to that special person. If you have gifted students who lean toward the dramatic, this tool is simple enough for them to create dramatic mini-casts without needing any additional tools.

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Acclaim - Aksel Gongor, MyAcclaim, LLC

Grades
6 to 12
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Organize and annotate videos and files with Acclaim. Acclaim's step-by-step process and prompts makes creating courses, sharing course information, creating folders within courses,...more
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Organize and annotate videos and files with Acclaim. Acclaim's step-by-step process and prompts makes creating courses, sharing course information, creating folders within courses, and adding videos or files almost effortless. The free registration is referred to as a demo. Register with email and create a course, a Course URL will be given. No need to copy it at this time. Clicking on the setting symbol on any course (and even folders) will give you the URL again. Students will need an email to join and access your courses and folders. Folders and courses can be made public or private. When prompted, upload files (including videos you created) from Dropbox, Google Drive, your computer, and others. Do this by "choosing" from a list, or using the "drag and drop" method. Add videos, your own recorded on a webcam, or from Vimeo or YouTube by pasting in their URL. Teachers and students can annotate videos at certain points with comments and questions. These comments and questions will receive a time stamp. If you organize your videos and documents within a course with folders, once students have registered with their email, you will need to go into the folder settings and give them access. Acclaim is 100% web based, and it is mobile friendly for all devices.
This site includes advertising.

tag(s): teaching strategies (69)

In the Classroom

Acclaim is a terrific tool for any teacher who likes to show and discuss certain aspects of videos in class. No more talking over the video or pausing to ask a question or make a comment. Use Acclaim in class to pause and have the discussion questions visible from the video. This works exceptionally well if you're in a blended classroom or want to flip a lesson and have students watch the video from home and be prepared to discuss in class, or if you use stations in your classroom. Students can also put in questions for clarification at the time they are watching. Share Acclaim with research groups for uploading documents and videos they are thinking of using in presentations and projects. Physical education teachers will find Acclaim useful to pause and review certain aspects of a game or exercise you've recorded. Share the URL via email or post to your website or blog.

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Achieve the Core - Student Achievement Partners

Grades
K to 12
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Achieve the Core provides high-quality resources to assist with implementing Common Core Standards. Whether you are already a Common Core whiz or just a beginner, this site will help...more
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Achieve the Core provides high-quality resources to assist with implementing Common Core Standards. Whether you are already a Common Core whiz or just a beginner, this site will help you grow and learn. Choose from three main portions of the site: Professional Learning, Planning for Instruction, and Classroom Resources. Search the site by selecting Classroom Resources, which has subject area, lessons, student samples, tasks, assessments, and more. Begin your professional development with instructional modules found under the Professional Development tab and Instructional Materials and Assesments. Modules include a facilitators guide, a video, and hands on activity with discussion ideas. Content includes both ELA and Math. Some lessons can be found (in ELA) that also incorporate science and social studies. Filter by individual grade level or by elementary, middle school, or high school. Under ELA/Literacy, examine text dependent questions and text complexity. You will also find instructional videos, sample lesson and assessment questions, instructional practices, and aligning materials. Math activities include videos, examining the shifts, and evaluating yourself. Another area to explore is the Leadership Tools. To the far right of the Classroom Resources, find Early Reading Accelerators which includes Foundational Skills and Knowledge and Vocabulary. This can be viewed online or downloaded in PDF format. Under Early Reading you will also find special materials for fractions.

tag(s): commoncore (62)

In the Classroom

Bookmark this site for professional development. Find the self evaluation tools to use before your evaluation by administrators. Start a Common Core study group, and explore and share together. Ready made parent materials make parent involvement easy. Learn ways to become involved with the Common Core movement. And of course, don't miss the fabulous "ready to go" lessons!
 This resource requires PDF reader software like Adobe Acrobat.

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Acrostic Poems - ReadWriteThink

Grades
1 to 12
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Acrostic poetry is one of the simplest forms of creative writing for primary students to master. With this interactive tool, students can use their own creativity while experimenting...more
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Acrostic poetry is one of the simplest forms of creative writing for primary students to master. With this interactive tool, students can use their own creativity while experimenting with this poetic form. After a brief introduction, students are asked to enter a topic of choice, brainstorm words and phrases that remind them of that topic, then construct a poem with the help of "hint words." Completed works can be printed. Aligned to standards.

tag(s): poetry (195)

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Act It Out: Stories from Asian American Cultures - Education World

Grades
3 to 8
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This lesson plan, "Folktales, Fairy Tales, and Myths from Asian American Cultures," engages students in reading and acting out traditional stories from China, Japan, Malaysia, India,...more
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This lesson plan, "Folktales, Fairy Tales, and Myths from Asian American Cultures," engages students in reading and acting out traditional stories from China, Japan, Malaysia, India, and other Asian cultures. Students define and differentiate between folktales, fairy tales, and myths through this activity while developing creative thinking and dramatic skills. Working in cooperative groups, they bring these stories to life through dramatization, fostering an appreciation for diverse cultural narratives. This lesson supports literacy, collaboration, and cultural awareness, making it a dynamic way to explore storytelling and performance in the classroom.
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tag(s): asia (138), china (79), cultures (290), folktales (34), india (33), japan (62), myths and legends (44)

In the Classroom

Have students sit in a circle and take turns reading a folktale aloud, then, after each section, pause to discuss the characters, setting, and cultural elements. Ask students to illustrate and summarize their chosen story by creating a flipbook with each page highlighting a different part of the tale, reinforcing sequencing, comprehension, and creativity. Make the flipbooks digitally using Any Flip reviewed here. Students can rewrite and perform a traditional folktale in a modern setting by updating characters, changing the setting to a familiar place, or introducing modern technology while maintaining the story's core message. Have students research the country of origin for their folktale and create a map using Google My Maps reviewed here or MapHub reviewed here highlighting key cultural elements such as traditional clothing, landmarks, language, and customs.

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Active Listening - Morningside Center for Teaching Social Responsibility

Grades
3 to 6
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The Active Listening (Grades 3-6) lesson from Morningside Center helps students develop strong listening and communication skills by practicing active listening techniques such as focusing...more
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The Active Listening (Grades 3-6) lesson from Morningside Center helps students develop strong listening and communication skills by practicing active listening techniques such as focusing on the speaker, showing engagement, and paraphrasing what they hear. Through interactive activities such as partner conversations and guided role-plays, students learn to truly understand others and reflect back meaning, with the overall goal of improving conflict resolution and mutual understanding in the classroom.

tag(s): empathy (68), listening (117), social and emotional learning (197)

In the Classroom

Students can create the Active Listening checklist with visuals by using Canva for Education, reviewed here. Students can record themselves showing active listening by using ScreenPal, reviewed here. Students can create a digital escape activity using Save the Planet Breakout, reviewed here.

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Actively Learn - Jay Goyal and Dr. Deep Sran

Grades
7 to 12
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Teach students how to develop close reading skills with Actively Learn. Choose from over 150 commonly taught texts that include embedded Common Core aligned questions and multimedia....more
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Teach students how to develop close reading skills with Actively Learn. Choose from over 150 commonly taught texts that include embedded Common Core aligned questions and multimedia. Choose from any public domain texts or any article from the Internet and be guided through creating your own Common Core aligned questions. Also, embed your own multimedia or images. Reading "school texts" becomes much more personalized when students are able to write notes, questions, or respond to their reading directly on the page they are reading. This is like the old way of using paper and pencil to annotate the text in the margin. Others can respond to questions and notes written by peers reading the same text. Actively Learn makes it easy to set up an assignment by having a "help" button for each area that will show a video for help, or download a PDF to read the instructions. Not only will you find poetry, drama, and stories, but also nonfiction for the sciences and the humanities. The introduction video requires Flash. The rest of the site does not.

tag(s): guided reading (31), reading strategies (93)

In the Classroom

Choose a piece to use with your students and model for them how the program works on your interactive whiteboard (or projector). Then assign students to read a piece with a partner in class. Once students are familiar with the format and tools, assign reading for them to complete on their own. Upload current event articles into Actively Learn and write open ended questions for students to answer. Include images or video to go with the article. Use a tool like the Questioning Toolkit, reviewed here, to create some intriguing questions and writing prompts. This is a great tool to use for students with learning differences and ESL/ELL students due to the ability to adjust the text size, color and background, include audio, and the built in dictionary. Besure to check out the blog for ideas about teaching divisive topics, an infographic for close reading stategies, and more.
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Activities and Crafts to Honor Juneteenth - Mom.com

Grades
K to 8
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Discover meaningful ways to help children learn about the history and significance of Juneteenth through crafts, books, music, food, and community activities. The article includes hands-on...more
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Discover meaningful ways to help children learn about the history and significance of Juneteenth through crafts, books, music, food, and community activities. The article includes hands-on projects such as creating Juneteenth and Pan-African flags, making African-inspired drums, exploring picture books, visiting museums, and attending local celebrations. The resource encourages age-appropriate conversations about freedom, culture, resilience, and African American history while offering engaging ideas to incorporate into social studies, art, literacy, and family or classroom celebrations.

tag(s): african american (129), crafts (110), holidays (280), Juneteenth (32)

In the Classroom

Students can create Juneteenth or Pan-African flags while learning about the colors, symbols, and history connected to the celebration. After creating their flags, students can write a short explanation describing the meaning behind the designs and colors they used. Students can design and decorate African-inspired drums or other rhythm instruments, then explore how music and celebration have played important roles in African American culture and traditions throughout history. Create a classroom Juneteenth museum walk where students research important people, events, foods, music, or traditions connected to Juneteenth and present their findings through posters, artifacts, or digital slideshows using Canva Edu, reviewed here.

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Activities for Kids - Activities for Kids

Grades
K to 5
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Find crafts and activities for both home and in the classroom. First, figure out which are ads and which is actual site content! Discover activities for families or after school. ...more
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Find crafts and activities for both home and in the classroom. First, figure out which are ads and which is actual site content! Discover activities for families or after school. Also find party ideas, theme ideas, crafts, classroom helpers, puzzles, and games. Free personalized printouts include blank checks, thank-you cards, coupon books, and bookmarks. Find fun worksheets for holidays.
This site includes advertising.

tag(s): crafts (110), directions (9), holidays (280), mothers day (29), parents (52)

In the Classroom

Bring great ideas to your next PTO meeting with Activities for Kids! Feature this site during parent nights, open houses, and curriculum nights. Include this link on your class website so kids can access it during snow days or vacations. Encourage teachers and students to use it in after-school craft clubs or after-school care. In math, work with fractions using kid-friendly recipes. Use the blank checks for a unit on personal finance or as a checkbook reward system. In language arts, practice personal letter writing with thank-you notes, or use the how-to activity directions as examples for following directions. During thematic units, check for ideas in the party section.
 This resource requires PDF reader software like Adobe Acrobat.

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Activities for Metacognition - DePaul University

Grades
3 to 12
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If you want a clear, practical way to help students understand how they learn, the DePaul University Teaching Commons page on Activities for Metacognition is a useful resource. It explains...more
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If you want a clear, practical way to help students understand how they learn, the DePaul University Teaching Commons page on Activities for Metacognition is a useful resource. It explains metacognition as both reflection (what we know) and self-regulation (how we learn). The guide shows how metacognitive activities can help students identify prior knowledge, set goals, monitor their learning, evaluate their work, and transfer strategies to new tasks. It also shares simple classroom structures such as journal prompts, partner conversations, and whole-class routines that you can use before, during, or after a lesson to strengthen students' awareness of their own thinking.

tag(s): critical thinking (182), social and emotional learning (197), thinking skills (125), visual thinking (16)

In the Classroom

During reading or writing, call a "strategy pause." Have students stop for one minute and write down which strategy they are using, why they chose it, and whether it is helping them build monitoring and mid-lesson adjustment skills. Provide a new reading or writing task and ask students to select one strategy from a previous lesson to apply. Afterward, have them write a short explanation of how the strategy worked in a new situation to encourage long-term skill transfer. Students can create a simple flowchart showing how they approached a challenge: what they knew before starting, what strategies they tried, how they monitored progress, what they changed, and what they learned. Display students' charts to demonstrate visual thinking skills and strategies, or use Padlet, reviewed here to create a digital gallery walk of students' explanations.

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Activities: Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows - TeachersFirst

Grades
4 to 8
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TeachersFirst offers a chapter-by-chapter set of activities for Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows. Designed to be used after each chapter, the activities include science searches,...more
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TeachersFirst offers a chapter-by-chapter set of activities for Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows. Designed to be used after each chapter, the activities include science searches, writing, and art projects suitable for individual or group use. The ideas and activities ask you to respond, extend, discuss, create, and more. There is simply no better way to try new "After Reading" strategies. Don't miss this great collection as a way to encourage anyone to get the most from reading and re-reading a new favorite. Find links to two other sets of Harry Potter book activities on the Intro page.

tag(s): harry potter (9)

In the Classroom

Share this link on your teacher web page or in a parent newsletter, if you don't have time to do all the activities at school. Ask students to design their own activities to accompany other Harry Potter books.

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