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Evaluate Sources - University of South Carolina

Grades
6 to 12
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Discover clear guidance and lesson ideas to help students learn to assess the reliability and quality of information they find online. The site explains how to check an author's credibility,...more
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Discover clear guidance and lesson ideas to help students learn to assess the reliability and quality of information they find online. The site explains how to check an author's credibility, identify bias, verify facts, and decide whether a source is appropriate for research or classroom use. It is designed as a teaching resource, with examples and strategies to introduce information literacy skills, research skills, and responsible use of digital sources across a variety of subjects.

tag(s): bias (33), evaluating sources (45)

In the Classroom

Give students several websites about the same topic, including one reliable source and one questionable source. Have students use the evaluation guidelines (author, date, bias, evidence, purpose) to decide which source is most trustworthy. Prepare cards with short descriptions of sources (blog post, news article, encyclopedia entry, advertisement, social media post, academic article). Have students sort the cards into categories such as reliable, questionable, or not appropriate for research and justify their choices using the evaluation checklist. Show students an article or website with clear bias and have them highlight words or phrases that show opinion, exaggeration, or one-sided information.

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Insta-Lesson - Insta-Lesson

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K to 12
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Create lesson plans quickly using Insta-Lesson--no registration required. Although any educator can use this tool, the creators designed it to help create substitute plans, complete...more
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Create lesson plans quickly using Insta-Lesson--no registration required. Although any educator can use this tool, the creators designed it to help create substitute plans, complete makeup work, and develop enrichment or remediation activities. Start by adding a lesson topic to begin planning, then select a grade level, and optionally include details such as the learning standard and lesson length. Choose from two options to generate your lesson. The first option builds a lesson through guided steps, while the second option quickly generates a lesson using the information you have already added. When finished, Insta-Lesson sends the completed lesson, teacher guide, and slide presentation to your email.

tag(s): artificial intelligence (300), substitutes (25), Teacher Utilities (214)

In the Classroom

Use this tool to create lesson plans for substitutes or remediation, including detailed instructions and standards-aligned activities. After generating the lesson, use the editing tools to modify the plan as needed to match your professional needs and standards. Share the slide presentation with students and add an exit ticket slide to review upon your return. If needed, clarify directions or provide additional instructions for students or your substitute for your lesson by creating a short recording using Awesome Screenshot, reviewed here.

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BingWow - BingWow

Grades
K to 12
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BingWow is a free online tool that lets teachers quickly create custom bingo games using AI, making it a fast way to generate ready-to-use activities. Enter a title, choose a ...more
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BingWow is a free online tool that lets teachers quickly create custom bingo games using AI, making it a fast way to generate ready-to-use activities. Enter a title, choose a card size (small, medium, or large), and select a tone (playful, balanced, or realistic); the AI then generates the bingo content based on your input. You can choose between a standard clue set, where all players have the same clues in different positions, or a wildcard option that creates some unique clues on each board to vary gameplay. After generating a set, each square is editable, allowing you to add images and refine the content before use. The site also includes premade bingo sets organized into categories such as education, holidays, and kids, available directly at the bottom of the homepage. No sign-in is required, and there are no ads, which makes access quick and simple. Users may still need to review and adjust AI-generated clues for accuracy or alignment with learning goals, and customization is limited to editing individual squares rather than changing broader game settings.

tag(s): artificial intelligence (300), game based learning (304), printables (35), worksheets (70)

In the Classroom

BingWow makes it easy to turn any topic into an engaging review game that involves little or no prep time, is free, and has no two cards alike. Start with the basics: enter weekly vocabulary words to generate bingo cards, then call out definitions instead of the words so students must recall the meanings before marking their cards. Create cards with multiplication facts, fractions, or decimals, call out a problem, and have students find the correct answer. Enhance learning by using BingWow during read-alouds or video lessons by loading cards with terms students are likely to encounter, and turn passive viewing into active listening. Extend learning by challenging students to design their own bingo sets tied to a research project, current unit, or independent reading book. Students curate the clues, which requires them to identify key concepts and think critically about what matters most. They can then generate cards through BingWow and lead the class in a live review game.
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Google Labs - Google

Grades
4 to 12
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Google Labs is your home for finding the latest experiments from Google. Scroll down the page to find resources that encourage creativity, learning, and play. Read a summary of the...more
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Google Labs is your home for finding the latest experiments from Google. Scroll down the page to find resources that encourage creativity, learning, and play. Read a summary of the experiment, then choose the "try it now" link to access and explore the resource. Experiments are added frequently; some examples include a tool that creates and plays chess using AI-generated chess pieces, an experiment that generates images with prompts for storytelling, and an experimental career-dreaming tool.

tag(s): animation (61), artificial intelligence (300), careers (196), french (72), images (266), spanish (112), vocabulary development (102)

In the Classroom

Bookmark and save Google Labs as a resource to find new and unique learning tools. For example, use Whisk to generate animated images for creative writing projects, or explore words with TestFX to enhance vocabulary and add interest to any writing project. Visit Talking Tours with students to tour cultural institutions, landmarks, or highlighted areas of nature or architecture. If sharing this site with older students, ask them to create a screen recording using a tool like Free Screen Recorder Online, reviewed here that provides a tutorial for how to use the experiment and shares examples.

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PamPam - PamPam

Grades
4 to 8
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PamPam is an AI-powered custom map maker and trip planner. Use AI to generate and customize a map, or start one by uploading a Notion, Sheets, or CSV file. Use ...more
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PamPam is an AI-powered custom map maker and trip planner. Use AI to generate and customize a map, or start one by uploading a Notion, Sheets, or CSV file. Use the map maker to add locations, customize colors, add photos, and more. Share or embed your maps using the links provided. PamPam supports real-time collaboration, allowing you to share your maps with others to build and edit maps together. Free plans allow users to add up to thirty points to a map.

tag(s): artificial intelligence (300), map skills (69), maps (224), virtual field trips (139)

In the Classroom

Teach map skills by creating interactive maps of locations near your school or of famous cities located around the world, then add pictures to highlight areas of interest. Create maps featuring historical locations, literary settings, or plot areas with active volcanoes. Ask students to create maps featuring a virtual guide to your town that highlights favorite places, including restaurants, parks, and other activities.

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Wondercraft AI Podcasting - Wondercraft AI

Grades
6 to 12
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Wondercraft AI Podcasting is an online audio-creation platform that allows teachers and students to create podcasts, voice recordings, and narrated projects using artificial intelligence....more
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Wondercraft AI Podcasting is an online audio-creation platform that allows teachers and students to create podcasts, voice recordings, and narrated projects using artificial intelligence. You can type a script, paste text, or upload notes, and the site generates realistic voices, music, and sound effects without needing recording equipment or editing experience. The tool also allows collaboration, sharing by link, and exporting finished audio, making it useful for digital storytelling, presentations, and media projects. Because it requires an account and uses AI voice generation, the site is best suited for older students or teacher-managed classroom projects.

tag(s): artificial intelligence (300), digital storytelling (166), podcasts (163)

In the Classroom

Have students write a short story, myth, or personal narrative, then use Wondercraft to turn the text into a narrated audio story with AI voices and sound effects. They can choose different voices for characters and add background music. Students can research a famous historical figure and write a speech that person might have given. They then use Wondercraft to generate the speech as an audio recording using an AI voice. Students can write simple sentences or conversations in a foreign language and use the AI voice generator to hear correct pronunciation. They can compare the generated voice with their own reading.

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Descript - Descript

Grades
6 to 12
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Descript Podcasting is an online tool that allows teachers and students to record, edit, and publish podcasts using simple, text-based editing and AI tools. The site lets you record...more
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Descript Podcasting is an online tool that allows teachers and students to record, edit, and publish podcasts using simple, text-based editing and AI tools. The site lets you record audio or video, automatically transcribe it, and then edit the recording by changing the text, making podcast production easier for beginners. Built-in features include removing filler words, improving sound quality, adding captions, collaborating with others, and publishing finished projects directly online. Because everything can be done in one program, Descript is useful for classroom podcasting, presentations, digital storytelling, and media projects.

tag(s): artificial intelligence (300), digital storytelling (166), podcasts (163)

In the Classroom

Have students pretend to be a character from a story and record a podcast interview. One student plays the host and the other answers questions in character. Students can record a podcast where they act as reporters traveling back in time to interview a historical figure. Students can create a weekly class podcast where they explain vocabulary words in their own words and use them in sentences or short stories.

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Waveroom - Waveroom

Grades
4 to 12
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Waveroom is an online recording studio that lets you record audio and video directly in a web browser without installing any software. The platform can be used to create podcasts, ...more
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Waveroom is an online recording studio that lets you record audio and video directly in a web browser without installing any software. The platform can be used to create podcasts, interviews, lessons, or presentations, and it supports multiple participants recording together with separate audio tracks for easy editing. Because sessions can be shared by link and recordings can be downloaded in high quality, the site works well for student podcast projects, interviews, storytelling, or multimedia reports. Teachers should preview the site and guide students when using it, since an account is required to create recording rooms, and content can be shared online.

tag(s): digital storytelling (166), podcasts (163)

In the Classroom

Have students perform a script, poem, or scene from a story and record it using different voices and expressions. Have students record a debate on a classroom topic or current event. Each student should present an argument and respond to another speaker, helping practice speaking, listening, and reasoning skills. Students can record a short lesson explaining a science concept, such as ecosystems, weather, or space.

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Dashboard - RSS.com

Grades
4 to 12
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Dashboard is an online podcast hosting platform that lets you create, manage, and publish podcasts through a simple web-based dashboard. Teachers and students can record audio, upload...more
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Dashboard is an online podcast hosting platform that lets you create, manage, and publish podcasts through a simple web-based dashboard. Teachers and students can record audio, upload episodes, and automatically distribute their podcasts to popular listening platforms such as Spotify, Apple Podcasts, and Amazon Music without needing advanced technical skills. The site includes tools for organizing episodes, tracking analytics, and sharing podcasts through links or embedded players, making it useful for classroom projects involving storytelling, interviews, book talks, or student-created reports. Because accounts are required to create and publish content, teachers should preview the site and guide students when using it for school projects.

tag(s): digital storytelling (166), podcasts (163)

In the Classroom

Have students record a short podcast episode recommending a book they have read. They should include a summary, a favorite part, and reasons others should read it. Students can create a podcast where they pretend to interview a historical figure. They must research the person, write questions, and answer in character using facts from their research. Have students work in small groups to create a weekly news podcast summarizing important events. Have them include at least one school event, one national story, and one world topic.

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Lesson plan: Teaching 9/11 through Comics - PBS NewsHour

Grades
6 to 12
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This PBS NewsHour Classroom lesson plan provides teachers with a structured activity to explore the events of September 11, 2001, using comic books and graphic novels. The lesson encourages...more
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This PBS NewsHour Classroom lesson plan provides teachers with a structured activity to explore the events of September 11, 2001, using comic books and graphic novels. The lesson encourages students to analyze images, discuss emotional reactions, and think critically about how historical events are represented in popular culture, helping them connect history, literacy, and media analysis. The resource is designed for secondary students and focuses on discussion, reflection, and interpretation, but the topic is emotionally heavy and should be carefully previewed by the teacher before use to ensure it is appropriate for the class's age and maturity level.

tag(s): comics and cartoons (61), sept11 (18)

In the Classroom

Show one panel from a comic used in the lesson and have students write what they notice, what they think is happening, and what questions they have. Have students write a short reflection on why remembering historical events is important and how people help one another during difficult times. After learning about the event in an age-appropriate way, have students create a short comic strip using Comic Strip Templates by Canva, reviewed here that explains an important idea, such as helping others, bravery, or community.

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Medieval Meme/Storyboard Generator - ClassTools

Grades
3 to 12
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The ClassTools Meme Generator allows teachers and students to quickly create custom medieval-themed memes or comics by adding text to images using an easy drag-and-drop editor. The...more
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The ClassTools Meme Generator allows teachers and students to quickly create custom medieval-themed memes or comics by adding text to images using an easy drag-and-drop editor. The tool is part of the ClassTools website, which offers free interactive templates to help teachers create engaging classroom activities without installing software or creating an account. Students can design humorous or creative memes using knights, castles, kings, and other medieval characters to summarize learning, show understanding of a topic, or present ideas in a fun and memorable way. Finished memes can be saved as images and shared digitally or printed for classroom use.
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tag(s): comics and cartoons (61), digital storytelling (166), medieval (38), stories and storytelling (75)

In the Classroom

After reading a chapter or short story, have students create a medieval-themed meme that shows the main event, problem, or theme. Students must write a caption that clearly explains what happened using complete sentences or key vocabulary from the lesson. Students choose a character from a story or a historical figure and create a meme that shows one important trait. At the end of a unit, have students create a meme that shows the theme, lesson, or big idea learned. Have them include a short written explanation describing how the meme connects to the topic.

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Free AI Comic Generator - Canva

Grades
K to 12
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Use your imagination to quickly create comics from a prompt using Magic Media tools from Canva. Follow the "create" link to begin your creation, then scroll past the sample images ...more
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Use your imagination to quickly create comics from a prompt using Magic Media tools from Canva. Follow the "create" link to begin your creation, then scroll past the sample images to find the message box and add your description. Before generating your image, you can choose from the available style and layout options, if desired. Once created, download the images, share a link, or use the image in one of Canva's many options.

tag(s): artificial intelligence (300), comics and cartoons (61), digital storytelling (166), images (266)

In the Classroom

Bring history or literature to life by having students create AI-powered graphic memoirs of historical figures or protagonists from a class novel. Students can use specific text prompts to generate consistent characters that represent their chosen figure, focusing on capturing emotion and setting through descriptive language. To turn these comics into a collaborative class gallery, have students post their final panels to Padlet, reviewed here, where peers can leave comments and feedback on the narrative choices. For a more immersive experience, students can take their finished comic narratives and use them as scripts to record a dramatic reading using Soundtrap, reviewed here.

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Make Comics - Book Creator

Grades
K to 8
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The comics feature in Book Creator allows students to design their own comic books using built-in panel layouts, speech bubbles, stickers, captions, and customizable backgrounds. Students...more
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The comics feature in Book Creator allows students to design their own comic books using built-in panel layouts, speech bubbles, stickers, captions, and customizable backgrounds. Students can add images, drawings, text, audio, and video to create interactive comic stories, making the tool useful for writing projects, storytelling, and content explanations in any subject area. The feature is part of the Book Creator platform, which is designed for classroom use across grade levels and subjects, allowing teachers to have students create digital books, comics, journals, and projects in one easy-to-use tool. This makes it especially helpful for engaging reluctant writers and encouraging creativity while still demonstrating understanding of academic content.

tag(s): comics and cartoons (61), digital storytelling (166)

In the Classroom

Students can create a comic showing an important historical event or a famous person. Each panel can depict a single moment in the event, with dialogue explaining what is happening. Have students create a comic in which a character solves a math problem step by step. Each panel shows part of the thinking process and explains how the answer was found. Students can create comics showing situations involving empathy, flexible thinking, persistence, or problem-solving. One panel can show the problem, and another can show a better choice.

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Free Comic Book Maker - Brush Ninja

Grades
K to 12
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This online comic creator from Brush Ninja allows students to design simple comic books that can be printed and folded into small booklets using a single sheet of paper. The ...more
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This online comic creator from Brush Ninja allows students to design simple comic books that can be printed and folded into small booklets using a single sheet of paper. The tool lets you create or upload up to 8 images and arrange them into pages that form a mini comic, magazine, or booklet, making it easy to turn drawings or digital art into a finished product. Because the program runs in the browser, no download is required, and it can be used on most devices, making it a good option for classroom projects, storytelling activities, or creative writing extensions. The site is part of the Brush Ninja collection of free creative tools designed to be simple, safe, and accessible for learners of all ages.
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tag(s): comics and cartoons (61), creative writing (123), stories and storytelling (75)

In the Classroom

After reading a story or chapter, have students create a short comic showing the beginning, middle, and end of the text. Have students illustrate a scientific concept or process, such as the water cycle, the life cycle, or experimental steps. Students can create a comic where a character must solve a math problem. Each panel can show one step of the solution with explanations.

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Disabled Here and Now Collection - Elea Chang

Grades
6 to 12
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The Disabled Here and Now Collection is a free image library that is a "disability-led effort to provide free & inclusive stock images from our own perspective, with photos and ...more
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The Disabled Here and Now Collection is a free image library that is a "disability-led effort to provide free & inclusive stock images from our own perspective, with photos and illustrations celebrating disabled Black, Indigenous, people of color (BIPOC)." The collection is organized into five categories: Community, LGBTQIA2S+, Life, Nature, and Social Justice. You can also search using tags such as accessibility, autism, cane, deaf, dating, illustration, self-care, visually impaired, and wheelchair user. All images from Disabled And Here are published under a Creative Commons Attribution license, making them easy to use in educational and creative projects.

tag(s): disabilities (37), diversity (55), images (266)

In the Classroom

Students can use the images from Disabled Here and Now Collection to create a Google Slides, reviewed here presentation. Students can read the interviews that are posted on the site and share the information that they learned via a blog post using Just Paste It, reviewed here. Students can create a story from a picture that is displayed on the site.

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Reading Treks: Enrique's Journey-The True Story of a Boy Determined to Reunite with His Mothe - TeachersFirst

Grades
4 to 7
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Follow a powerful real-world journey with this Reading Trek inspired by Enrique's Journey by Sonia Nazario. This virtual field trip uses an integrated map created with Google...more
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Follow a powerful real-world journey with this Reading Trek inspired by Enrique's Journey by Sonia Nazario. This virtual field trip uses an integrated map created with Google My Maps, reviewed here, along with an accompanying Teachers' Guide that features lesson activities, map extensions, and discussion prompts to deepen understanding. The narrative chronicles Enrique's perilous trek from Honduras to the United States as he searches for his mother, offering students a deeply human perspective on immigration, family separation, resilience, and hope. Blending geography, social studies, and literacy, the story helps students trace migration routes while examining cause-and-effect relationships, point of view, and real-world challenges faced by children and families. Best suited for grades 4-7, the Teachers' Guide activities align with Common Core ELA Standards and Social Studies practices, encouraging critical thinking, empathy, close reading, and meaningful discussions about global issues and personal courage.

tag(s): diversity (55), immigrants (51), immigration (85), maps (224), point of view (8)

In the Classroom

Step into a real-life journey of courage, sacrifice, and hope through activities that help students connect deeply with Sonia Nazario's Enrique's Journey. Begin by introducing the story to the whole class, with the Reading Trek map displayed on an interactive whiteboard, and guide students through its layers to preview the countries, routes, and challenges Enrique will face along the way. Next, have students use Google My Maps, reviewed here to plot Enrique's journey from Honduras through Mexico to the United States, adding a short description, an image, and a meaningful quote from the text at each stop to help visualize the danger, emotion, and resilience required at every stage. Extend learning by inviting students to create a short scene from Enrique's journey using Witty Comics, reviewed here, such as riding atop La Bestia or crossing the border, encouraging them to capture dialogue, determination, and risk in a visual format that deepens comprehension and builds empathy for Enrique's lived experience.
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Make a Voting Plan - Vote411

Grades
6 to 12
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Discover this page that helps voters prepare to participate in elections by guiding them through the key steps of the voting process. It encourages users to check their voter registration...more
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Discover this page that helps voters prepare to participate in elections by guiding them through the key steps of the voting process. It encourages users to check their voter registration or register to vote; explore their options for early, mail-in, or Election Day voting; find their polling place and understand what they need to bring; and research the candidates and ballot measures that will appear on their ballot. The page also suggests sharing your voting plan with others to help strengthen civic engagement. Vote411.org is a nonpartisan election information resource produced by the League of Women Voters Education Fund that offers personalized voting tools and guides.

tag(s): democracy (29), elections (87)

In the Classroom

Have students walk through the tool using a sample address (or a fictional profile) to see what steps a voter must take before Election Day, then create their own My Voting Plan checklist. Have students turn the steps from the site (register, choose how to vote, find polling place, research candidates) into a flowchart or timeline using Timeline Infographic Templates by Venngage, reviewed here showing how elections work in real life. Have students write an informational or argumentative piece explaining why making a voting plan increases civic participation, citing evidence from the site.

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Neal.fun - Neal Agarwal

Grades
3 to 12
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Neal.fun is a collection of free, creative experiences that mix fun with learning and curiosity. This site offers dozens of engaging interactives, including Wonders of Streetview, Let's...more
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Neal.fun is a collection of free, creative experiences that mix fun with learning and curiosity. This site offers dozens of engaging interactives, including Wonders of Streetview, Let's Settle This, and Spend Bill Gates' Money. Some projects teach or show real ideas, while others are more playful.

tag(s): critical thinking (179), financial literacy (93), logic (166), maps (224), puzzles (163), timelines (60)

In the Classroom

Include activities in your station rotation. For example, ask students to complete the Paper activity, observe the height after 3, 5, and 10 folds, and then predict the height at 15 and 20 folds before moving on. Challenge students to play The Password Game to see how far they can get in creating a password that meets the ever-changing requirements. Include "Who Was Alive" as part of social studies lessons to identify well-known figures who were alive on a specific date, helping students develop context within time periods of significant events. Dark Patterns is an excellent resource for internet safety lessons, teaching students about the tricks websites use to deceive them into doing what they want. If students enjoy this site and interactive games, share Drench, reviewed here as an alternative easy-to-play, yet challenging and engaging game.

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Healthy Habits - Common Sense Education

Grades
K to 12
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The Common Sense Education Healthy Habits resources help students develop balanced, mindful, and responsible technology use. This topic area includes age-appropriate lesson plans, videos,...more
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The Common Sense Education Healthy Habits resources help students develop balanced, mindful, and responsible technology use. This topic area includes age-appropriate lesson plans, videos, and classroom activities that focus on screen time management, digital well-being, focus, and healthy online behaviors. Organized by grade level, the materials support instruction in technology, ELA, health, and advisory lessons while encouraging students to reflect on how their digital choices affect their learning, relationships, and overall wellness.

tag(s): communication (121), digital citizenship (108), internet safety (121), media literacy (122)

In the Classroom

Use a short Common Sense video to introduce a topic like online safety or media bias, followed by guided discussion questions. Students can design posters, slides, or short videos using Canva for Education, reviewed here or Adobe Express Video Maker, reviewed here to teach others about safe and responsible technology use. Have students explore how online actions leave a lasting impact and create a personal "Think Before You Post" checklist.

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Graph Maker - Canva

Grades
4 to 12
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The Canva Graph Maker page introduces a free, web-based tool available in Canva's design platform that lets users easily turn data into visual representations such as bar graphs, pie...more
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The Canva Graph Maker page introduces a free, web-based tool available in Canva's design platform that lets users easily turn data into visual representations such as bar graphs, pie charts, histograms, treemaps, and infographic-style visuals. Users can input data manually or upload Excel or CSV files to generate clean, professional-looking charts. The platform includes customizable templates, drag-and-drop editing, and collaborative features, as well as animated options like bar chart races. Canva also offers AI-powered tools like Magic Charts and Magic Insights to assist with design and data analysis. This tool is especially helpful for educators and students creating data stories for class projects, reports, or presentations.

tag(s): artificial intelligence (300), charts and graphs (196), infographics (70)

In the Classroom

In ELA, have students choose a novel or short story and create a graph representing elements such as character appearances, chapter lengths, or types of figurative language. During experiments, students record variables like temperature changes, plant growth, or force and motion data, then create line graphs or histograms to show their results. Assign students to investigate a real-world issue (e.g., renewable energy use, screen time, recycling habits) and use Canva Graphs to present supporting data. They then use their visuals during class debates or persuasive writing activities. Students collect data about classmates' favorite books, hobbies, or snacks, then use Canva Graphs to create bar or pie charts to visualize the results.

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