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Homework hotline - homeworkhotline.org

Grades
3 to 12
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Site is dated but still many great tips. Have a student stumped by homework? Find exercises and extra help in various subject areas in this kid-friendly site. Navigate through the...more
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Site is dated but still many great tips. Have a student stumped by homework? Find exercises and extra help in various subject areas in this kid-friendly site. Navigate through the various resources and friendly graphics to areas of the site such as "Sweet Stuff" which features neat interactives, "Needed Knowledge" with great tips, "Book review" to view video book reviews, and "Getting Historical." Watch informative (don't confuse with boring) videos of various math problems whether it be basic math, solving word problems, or even geometry. Find videos for other subjects such as science, language arts, social studies, health, and art. Review information in various subjects by trying age-appropriate interactives.

tag(s): homework (27), tutorials (51)

In the Classroom

Visit the "Boring Stuff' link for parents and teachers to find a PDF of 10 Ways to Use the Homework Helper Site in Your Classroom. Find segment guides, scripts, and book reviews beneficial for in class or use by students outside of class. Share this link at Back to School Night and put the link directly on your class website. Encourage middle schoolers to build independent work habits using this site. Consider creating helpful information, videos, and tutorials of information students need answers to and creating your own help site as a school. Use students to create book reviews, math tutorials, etc. Use a tool such as SchoolTube to share the videos.
 This resource requires PDF reader software like Adobe Acrobat.

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Homographs - Tracy Boyd

Grades
3 to 5
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This online game challenges students to identify the correct definition for a homograph that is being described. Can be played independently or with a partner. Great vocabulary building...more
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This online game challenges students to identify the correct definition for a homograph that is being described. Can be played independently or with a partner. Great vocabulary building activity.

tag(s): grammar (139)

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Honing Your Craft During the Dog Days of Summer - TeachersFirst

Grades
K to 6
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This article in the series in the TeachersFirst Help! I Lost My Library/Media Specialist series reviewed here is just in time for summer break. Here...more
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This article in the series in the TeachersFirst Help! I Lost My Library/Media Specialist series reviewed here is just in time for summer break. Here you'll find an easy, quick read with some suggested activities: Read a Book - with several Professional, Children's, and Young Adult books suggested, and Take a Class suggesting several Teachers Institutes and Online Classes. Also, read about Professional Book Studies and Book Clubs under Extensions with suggestions for running the studies or clubs.

tag(s): book lists (161), independent reading (83)

In the Classroom

Mark this one in your TeachersFirst favorites, even if you have NO time to even LOOK at it right now. Share it with your student teacher, mentoree, recent teacher ed graduate, and newbie teachers as they go off on break, too. Read what you have time for this summer, and save the rest for a break later on.

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Hook the Boys on Reading - TeachersFirst

Grades
K to 5
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This read aloud collection, designed to encourage boys to read, is part of the Help I lost my library/media specialist series reviewed here. Although...more
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This read aloud collection, designed to encourage boys to read, is part of the Help I lost my library/media specialist series reviewed here. Although nothing can replace the specialized knowledge of a teacher-librarian, this collection of books and before/after reading activities was created by an experienced elementary library/media specialist. Read about what interests young male readers and find ways to make reading part of their lives even if they avoid fiction. The list of books to read aloud and accompanying activities include Lexiles where available.

tag(s): book lists (161), reading lists (76)

In the Classroom

Read the article to remind yourself what interests male readers and consider some of the ideas for launching special activities directed specifically toward boys. Share the ideas with fellow teachers or your PTA/PTO as possible literacy initiatives.

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How Data Visualization can Empower Students in a Data-Driven World - Canva

Grades
5 to 12
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The Canva Learn page titled "Data Visualization for Students" explores how educators can help students interpret, organize, and visually present data--skills essential across subjects...more
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The Canva Learn page titled "Data Visualization for Students" explores how educators can help students interpret, organize, and visually present data--skills essential across subjects like math, science, social studies, and media literacy. It offers a series of classroom-friendly activities that guide students through comparing data sets, mapping information, selecting the right chart type, and evaluating real-world visuals for clarity and bias. These scaffolded exercises encourage critical thinking and creativity while making data more accessible and meaningful. Teachers and students can access these tools through Canva's free Education plan, which includes premium features.

tag(s): charts and graphs (180), data (204), media literacy (123), visualizations (15)

In the Classroom

Have students collect data from classmates (e.g., favorite books, lunch choices, or screen time) and create bar or pie charts using Canva for Education, reviewed here. Collecting and organizing data provides students with practical experience in arranging and visualizing information they are already familiar with. Provide students with different data sets and challenge them to choose the most appropriate chart or graph type using Canva (e.g., a line graph for trends, a pie chart for parts of a whole, a map for location-based data). Assign a topic (such as climate change, school attendance, or book genres) and ask students to research supporting data, then design an infographic in Canva with charts, text, and visuals.

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How Do You Play - howdoyouplay.net

Grades
K to 12
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Don't remember how to play certain games or need to find some new ideas? This is the site for you! How Do You Play contains instructions for many classroom-friendly games ...more
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Don't remember how to play certain games or need to find some new ideas? This is the site for you! How Do You Play contains instructions for many classroom-friendly games and activities. Choose from categories of active games, board games, classroom games, icebreakers, sports, and many more. Find instructions and information for great icebreaker questions/games, how to build the tallest tower, playing spoons, how to play a photo scavenger hunt, egg drop with teambuilding, life timelines, and much more. Each game or activity includes a list of materials needed, number of players, time required, and directions for play. Some directions for strategy games also include strategy options. Although many of the games seem juvenile, the team building and icebreaker options are even good for adults.

tag(s): back to school (53), firstday (25), sports (87)

In the Classroom

Use this site to find games and activities for classroom centers or review activities. Icebreaker activities include options for the first week of school community building. Bookmark this tool for the first week of school or anytime that you want to experience some "team-building" in your class. This is a great site to use if you have weekly classroom meetings to build relationships among students. Share this site with students and have them create their own games based on research projects or as review for major tests. Challenge students to describe their "creations" using the models shown on this site. Share this site with parent helpers to find ideas for classroom parties.

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How Does Your Garden Grow? A Project-Based Approach to Learning - TeachersFirst

Grades
K to 6
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Implement every aspect of the curriculum through gardening using this TeachersFirst special Help! I Lost My Library/Media Specialist article. Find suggested books (many with links for...more
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Implement every aspect of the curriculum through gardening using this TeachersFirst special Help! I Lost My Library/Media Specialist article. Find suggested books (many with links for activities for the book), background knowledge, a section on gathering information (with suggested activities), suggested activities for growing your garden, ISTE Standards for Students and AASL National School Library Standards, extension activities and more. The ideas and activties can range in grade levels from kindergarten to seventh grade. This is only one of many classroom-ready articles in our Help! I lost my library/media specialist!. If food and nutrition are more of a focus, you will want to check out this article from the Help! I lost my library/media specialist! series.

tag(s): book lists (161), life cycles (22), plants (142), soil (17)

In the Classroom

After reading one or two of the suggested books as a class, brainstorm what students know about gardens using your interactive whiteboard or projector. Consider setting up stations around the room with the other recommended books and their activities; be sure to request some of the books on inter-library loan if you do not have them in your school. After completing the stations, return to the brainstorm and revise what students know about gardens and planting. Use some of the ideas from Gather Information to implement spring garden planting, literacy, and a growing understanding of science. Next step, planting! Use one or more of the ideas in this article for planting your garden. You might even consider working across grade levels and subjects and planning a school garden together. Your health/PE teacher will probably join in the effort! Follow through with one or more of the Show What You Know suggestions.

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How Metacognition Can Optimize Learning - Cult of Pedagogy

Grades
K to 12
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How Metacognition Can Optimize Learning is a YouTube podcast featuring cognitive scientist Megan Sumeracki. The podcast focuses on metacognition, the act of thinking about thinking,...more
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How Metacognition Can Optimize Learning is a YouTube podcast featuring cognitive scientist Megan Sumeracki. The podcast focuses on metacognition, the act of thinking about thinking, and how it helps our brains hold onto information. In addition, it explains Metacognitive Monitoring (Awareness) and Metacognitive Control (Action). An example provided in the video is rereading and retrieval practice.
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tag(s): thinking skills (117)

In the Classroom

Students can use mindmaps, reviewed here to create study resources. Students can use Google Drawing, reviewed here to create outlines and/or graphic organizers. Finally, students can use StoryMap JS, reviewed here to create story maps.

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How Our Brains Learn to Read - EAB District Leadership Forum

Grades
K to 6
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Do you know that we use four different areas of our brains to read? This interesting printable document provides visualization and short descriptions of each portion of the brain used...more
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Do you know that we use four different areas of our brains to read? This interesting printable document provides visualization and short descriptions of each portion of the brain used in reading and the role each plays. For example, find the visual cortex to view the location in the brain and understand its role in orthographic processing (the ability to recognize and remember written words and parts of words visually). This document is shared as a PDF file and is ready to print and use for many different purposes.

tag(s): brain (58), literacy (124), professional development (319), reading comprehension (146), reading strategies (93), science of reading (37)

In the Classroom

Save this document as a resource for sharing information on reading and literacy with parents. Consider adding this printable and additional PDF documents to create a digital book using PDF to Flipbook Convereter, reviewed here. Include basic information on different literacy elements and suggestions for at-home activities for parents in your digital book.
 This resource requires PDF reader software like Adobe Acrobat.

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How Stuff Works - Howstuffworks, Inc.

Grades
4 to 10
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Find answers to the most curious questions that students ask on this great site. Search the site for your topic of interest, such as how cars work, what makes a ...more
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Find answers to the most curious questions that students ask on this great site. Search the site for your topic of interest, such as how cars work, what makes a refrigerator cold, or how construction has changed and the materials that are used. Articles provide diagrams, text, videos, images, and a range of other resources to show a curious student what makes something tick. The site's explanations are a great resource for "kitchen science" projects, getting budding inventors started, or providing added explanations of how things work the way they do. Click the top menu topics for the various subjects such as Adventure, Animals, and Autos through Money, Science, and Tech. Can't find your answer? Ask in the search, and it may become the question of the week. Sign up for the monthly newsletter. Search the other areas of the site such as "Games," "Quizzes," and "Pics and Puzzles." Find great podcasts and blogs. Scroll to the bottom to find fun facts, trivia, and even a poll of the day! Ignore the advertising; the site content is worth it.

tag(s): independent reading (83), questioning (37), trivia (17)

In the Classroom

Use this site as an "activator" to introduce a new science unit or lesson on a projector. It could also be a great way to introduce informational speeches/videos and how to write them. The videos on earth and life science topics provide a great launchpad for further class discussions. Participate in the poll of the day. Use the trivia and facts section for interesting ways to get kids thinking in class. Use this site for students to "show and tell" something they have learned. Use the information presented here to understand better how science is applied in our everyday lives. This activity would work well for individual or pairs of students in a lab or on laptops. Introduce this site on your interactive whiteboard or projector. Then have students explore this site independently or in small groups. Ask students to visit the site and give them a choice for how to share the information they learned by creating a multimedia presentation using Canva Edu, a video using Adobe Express Video Maker, a podcast using RedCircle, or a blog post using Edu blogs. Use this site as an anticipatory set or "activator" to introduce a unit or lesson on a projector or interactive whiteboard. Be sure to include this site on your class web page for students to access both in and outside of class.

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How the Grinch Saved Christmas - Dr. Seuss Enterprises

Grades
K to 2
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Teachers can incorporate the How the Grinch Saved Christmas page from Seussville as a fun, festive activity in December to build reading, comprehension, and critical thinking skills....more
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Teachers can incorporate the How the Grinch Saved Christmas page from Seussville as a fun, festive activity in December to build reading, comprehension, and critical thinking skills. Under both the Parents and Educators tabs, find many interactive games, puzzles and others designed to reinforce story elements while keeping students engaged. Ideal for independent or small-group work, these activities allow teachers to reinforce comprehension and themes of kindness and holiday spirit in How the Grinch Stole Christmas.

tag(s): christmas (31), dr seuss (12), holidays (280), plot (15), preK (322), read across america (9)

In the Classroom

After reading How the Grinch Stole Christmas together as a class, students can use this page to explore Grinch-themed games and puzzles that reinforce the story's plot, characters, and themes. Teachers could set up activity stations where students rotate through games like puzzles, memory matching, or spot-the-difference, supporting independent practice while keeping students engaged.

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How to Create Differentiated Multi-Level Lesson Plans with AI - GMind AI

Grades
3 to 12
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Differentiation is one of the most effective ways to meet the needs of diverse learners, but creating multiple versions of lessons can quickly become overwhelming. This video introduces...more
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Differentiation is one of the most effective ways to meet the needs of diverse learners, but creating multiple versions of lessons can quickly become overwhelming. This video introduces the GMind AI Multi-Level Lesson Planner, a tool designed to help teachers generate differentiated instructional materials in minutes, not hours. The presenter demonstrates how educators can enter lesson objectives, grade levels, and standards, then use AI to create multiple versions of activities, questions, and learning supports tailored to different student readiness levels. Teachers will see practical ways to personalize instruction, provide appropriate scaffolds, and maintain rigorous learning expectations while significantly reducing planning time. This resource is especially valuable for educators looking to make differentiation more manageable and accessible in today's diverse class. This video is hosted on YouTube; schools that restrict YouTube access may need an alternative method for viewing the content.
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tag(s): artificial intelligence (316), differentiation (99)

In the Classroom

After watching the video, have students work with a teacher-created lesson or reading passage and identify how it could be adapted for different learners. Small groups can create modifications for struggling readers, on-level learners, and advanced students, then compare their ideas with AI-generated suggestions. Have students act as teachers and use a planning template to create a mini-lesson for a younger grade. They must include at least three versions of an activity: one with extra support, one at grade level, and one enrichment option for advanced learners. Have students explore a content topic using a differentiated choice board that offers activities at varying levels of complexity. Using Adobe Express for Education, reviewed here, options may include creating an infographic, recording a podcast, designing a slideshow, writing a persuasive argument, or developing a teaching video. Students can select tasks that match their interests and learning preferences while demonstrating mastery of the content. Learn more about how to use AI to differentiate instruction by watching the archive of OK2Ask: AI for Differentiation, reviewed here.

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How to Deliver a World Class Presentation - Malcolm Andrews

Grades
6 to 12
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Does giving a presentation make you nervous? Perhaps you envy those who make presenting look easy? This infographic packed with tips and advice provides solutions to everyday concerns...more
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Does giving a presentation make you nervous? Perhaps you envy those who make presenting look easy? This infographic packed with tips and advice provides solutions to everyday concerns about speaking in public. Scroll through to find common problems and how to address them. Other information includes planning, preparation, and delivery tips for getting the most out of any presentation.
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tag(s): infographics (71), speaking (22), speeches (22)

In the Classroom

Share this infographic with students before class presentations. Include it on your website for reference throughout the year. After class presentations, have students reflect on what they learned through the speech creating and presenting process and ask them to think about what they would do differently next time. Ask students to write a rough draft script for what they want to say (be sure to have them state what they would do differently next time). Then use a tool such as ScreenPal, reviewed here. This wrap-up for your assignment will help students internalize what they've learned about giving a presentation. Challenge students to create an infographic for something they do well academically, i.e. test taking and studying, writing up labs or research reports, etc. Use a tool such as Infogram, reviewed here.

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How to Differentiate Instruction with AI - Khan Academy

Grades
3 to 12
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What if differentiating instruction for every learner could take minutes instead of hours? This practical article from Khan Academy explores how teachers can use Khanmigo, Khan Academy's...more
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What if differentiating instruction for every learner could take minutes instead of hours? This practical article from Khan Academy explores how teachers can use Khanmigo, Khan Academy's AI-powered teaching assistant, to personalize learning and better meet the needs of diverse students. The article highlights strategies for adapting reading levels, creating scaffolded supports, generating enrichment activities, providing targeted interventions, and developing multiple pathways for students to demonstrate understanding. Through classroom examples and actionable suggestions, the article shows how AI can help teachers spend less time creating differentiated materials and more time focusing on meaningful instruction and student engagement. Rather than replacing teacher expertise, Khanmigo is presented as a tool that supports educators in making learning more accessible, personalized, and effective for all students.

tag(s): artificial intelligence (316), blogs (79), differentiation (99)

In the Classroom

Use Khanmigo, reviewed here to generate questions, explanations, or practice activities at different levels for a classroom learning station. Students can rotate through stations that match their readiness levels, allowing all learners to engage with the same concepts while receiving appropriate support. Ask Khanmigo to generate a menu of enrichment activities related to a unit of study. Students can select a project that interests them, such as creating a presentation, conducting research, writing from a different perspective, or designing a real-world application of the content. Use Khanmigo to create targeted questions, discussion prompts, and practice tasks for different instructional groups. While the teacher works with one group, other students can engage in personalized activities that reinforce or extend learning objectives.

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How to Draw a Groundhog - Ms. Haynes

Grades
K to 6
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This video provides a step-by-step guide on how to draw a groundhog, perfect for celebrating Groundhog Day. The tutorial is easy to follow, with clear instructions suitable for students...more
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This video provides a step-by-step guide on how to draw a groundhog, perfect for celebrating Groundhog Day. The tutorial is easy to follow, with clear instructions suitable for students of various ages. Teachers can use it as a fun art activity to engage students, allowing them to create their own groundhog drawings while learning about the holiday's traditions. This video is on YouTube, so it may not be viewable if blocked by your district.

tag(s): drawing (57), holidays (280)

In the Classroom

Students can research facts about groundhogs and Groundhog Day, then create a fact sheet or poster with both their drawings and interesting information about the holiday. Use a tool such as Canva Edu, reviewed here for students to create virtual posters. Create a Groundhog Day-themed bulletin board with students' drawings. Add fun facts and predictions for the upcoming spring season. Have students write a short prediction about whether they think the groundhog will see its shadow based on what they've learned about Groundhog Day. They can incorporate their drawings into their written predictions. You can share the predictions and drawings using a tool such as Padlet, reviewed here.

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How to embed almost anything in your website - Amit Agarwal

Grades
K to 12
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This simple blog site offers directions for embedding practically anything in a web site. Directions are included for photos, RSS feeds, YouTube videos and other videos, podcasts, and...more
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This simple blog site offers directions for embedding practically anything in a web site. Directions are included for photos, RSS feeds, YouTube videos and other videos, podcasts, and more.
This site includes advertising.

tag(s): images (268), photography (136), portfolios (21), resources (80)

In the Classroom

If you have students creating projects using online tools, embedding is often the best way for them to collect projects all in one place. Often the tools are not clear about how to manage the details of embedding, to this reference is very helpful. If your students create ME-portfolios to showcase their work to colleges or potential employers, embedding is a must. Link to this site from your class web page of general resources to help today's tech-savvy students learn how to embed from various applications. Provide this link on your class website, wiki or blog for students (and parents) to access at school and at home. Teachers can create a class wiki or web site using embedding, even in school-subscription web site services. Share your elementary class's creative projects by embedding them on your class site so parents can see their great work. This site wil help you learn how.

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How to Implement the 6 Blended Learning Models - Prodigy

Grades
K to 12
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Prodigy's "How to Implement the 6 Blended Learning Models" is an informative blog post that introduces educators to blended learning by first defining it and outlining its key benefits....more
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Prodigy's "How to Implement the 6 Blended Learning Models" is an informative blog post that introduces educators to blended learning by first defining it and outlining its key benefits. The article then explains six blended learning models, including Face-to-Face Driver, Rotation, Flex, Online Lab, Self Blend, and Online Driver. Each model is described in detail, with practical guidance for immediate classroom implementation and clear examples of its use in instructional settings.

tag(s): blended learning (28), blogs (79), classroom management (136), Teacher Utilities (218)

In the Classroom

Students can participate in various blended learning models in the classroom. In the Flex Model, students can participate in a Kahoot!, reviewed here or create their own Blooket, reviewed here. Finally, students can use Lino, reviewed here to build an online collaborative board of material that they learned from any of the examples of blended learning shared in the blog post.

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How to Incorporate Art into Different Subjects Curriculums - Art Sprouts

Grades
K to 8
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Looking to spark creativity while boosting comprehension across your curriculum? The Art Sprouts article "How to Incorporate Art into Different Subject Curriculums" offers a treasure...more
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Looking to spark creativity while boosting comprehension across your curriculum? The Art Sprouts article "How to Incorporate Art into Different Subject Curriculums" offers a treasure trove of ideas for seamlessly blending visual art into science, math, history, language arts, and even PE. For science, it suggests using scientific illustration, nature journaling, infographics, economics, language arts, and chemistry art projects to enhance observational understanding. In math, tessellation, geometric designs, fractal art, origami, and data visualization help students grasp key concepts visually. Integrating art into history and language arts includes portraiture, cultural artifact studies, political cartoons, book illustrations, comic creation, poetry posters, and storytelling murals. Even physical education can benefit from action painting and movement-based performance art. Overall, the post emphasizes that art can deepen cross-disciplinary understanding, strengthen academic skills, and help students make meaningful connections while enjoying learning.

tag(s): comics and cartoons (61), cross cultural understanding (177), data (204), geometric shapes (151), infographics (71), journals (22), origami (15), poetry (195), stories and storytelling (76), tessellations (6)

In the Classroom

Take students outside to observe plants or animals and have them record their findings through detailed sketches and annotations. They can complete the journals online using Book Creator, reviewed here. Combine movement and art by having students dip sponges or brushes in paint and use physical motions -- jumps, swings, spins -- to create large collaborative canvases, connecting creativity with kinesthetic learning. After studying a historical figure, have students create a timeline using MyLens, reviewed here.

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How to Make a Digital Escape Room for the Classroom - Nearpod

Grades
3 to 12
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The Nearpod blog post "How to Make a Digital Escape Room for the Classroom" provides educators with a step-by-step guide to creating engaging and interactive digital escape rooms. Learn...more
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The Nearpod blog post "How to Make a Digital Escape Room for the Classroom" provides educators with a step-by-step guide to creating engaging and interactive digital escape rooms. Learn how these activities can enhance critical thinking, collaboration, and problem-solving skills while making learning more immersive. The guide walks teachers through backward design planning, setting learning objectives, crafting clues and puzzles, and using digital tools like Google Forms, reviewed here and Nearpod, reviewed here to create an interactive experience. By following these strategies, teachers can design customized digital escape rooms that align with their curriculum and keep students actively engaged.

tag(s): collaboration (116), digital escapes (30), game based learning (308), problem solving (273), puzzles (165)

In the Classroom

Start the lesson with a quick digital escape puzzle related to the topic. For example, students solve an equation in a math class to reveal a clue, or in an ELA class, they decode a sentence to find a hidden theme. After experiencing a digital escape room, have students design their own using Nearpod or Google Forms, reviewed here and Nearpod, reviewed here. They can create puzzles based on a novel they read, a historical event, or a math concept, reinforcing learning through creation. Combine multiple subjects into one escape room experience. For example, students solve a math puzzle to get a clue, analyze a poem for another, and answer a science question to unlock the final key--blending critical thinking across subjects. Design a digital escape room focused on real-world skills (ex., financial literacy, digital citizenship, or environmental science). Students must apply knowledge to solve practical challenges and unlock the final "escape."

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How To Make Digital Flashcards With Google Docs Spreadsheets - MakeUseOf

Grades
4 to 12
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Want to make flashcards using tools you already know? Follow these step-by-step directions for making flashcards from a Google Spreadsheet. Directions also include screenshots, making...more
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Want to make flashcards using tools you already know? Follow these step-by-step directions for making flashcards from a Google Spreadsheet. Directions also include screenshots, making the process much easier. You need a Google Doc account and some familiarity with using spreadsheets. This site does include comments. At the time of this review, all comments were appropriate for classroom use.
This site includes advertising.

tag(s): flash cards (46)

In the Classroom

Create flashcards to share with your students. Students can run them from a computer or download an app that can read the two column format of a spreadsheet to view on the go. All information for using the flashcards is explained in this resource. Use for any subject matter for any age. Challenge students to create their own flashcards to use to study for the big test! This tool can be used in ALL subject areas.

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