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Primary Source Analysis Tool - Library for Congress

Grades
6 to 12
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The Primary Source Analysis Tool is a graphic organizer for students. The graphic organizer includes three sections titled: Observe, Reflect, Question, Further Investigation, and Additional...more
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The Primary Source Analysis Tool is a graphic organizer for students. The graphic organizer includes three sections titled: Observe, Reflect, Question, Further Investigation, and Additional Notes. This document can be either downloaded or added to your Google Drive. You can also edit the document directly by clicking the three dots in the top-right corner and selecting Annotate.

tag(s): graphic organizers (57), primary sources (129)

In the Classroom

Print and share this tool for students to use when evaluating a primary source document. Students can then share their finished graphic organizer with Lino, reviewed here for others to view or include it as a supplement to a writing assignment or research project.
 This resource requires PDF reader software like Adobe Acrobat.

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Teacher Hive - Tony Vincent

Grades
K to 12
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Teacher Hive is a free resource for finding and creating teacher-created apps. Registration isn't required to access shared apps; however, registration allows users to save favorite...more
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Teacher Hive is a free resource for finding and creating teacher-created apps. Registration isn't required to access shared apps; however, registration allows users to save favorite apps, follow content creators, and share their apps. Find apps by searching, browsing featured apps, or browsing by collection type, such as teacher tools, brain breaks, math, and more. Each app includes a link to information: a summary, AI-generated details about the resource used to create the code, and details about the target grade level. Visit "The Buzz" to find recent posts featuring newly landed apps, as well as suggestions for creating apps and using the site to its best advantage.

tag(s): artificial intelligence (299), game based learning (304), Teacher Utilities (214)

In the Classroom

Share apps found on Teacher Hive with students to use for review, remediation, or practice of classroom content. Teacher Hive is an excellent site to share with parents who ask for additional learning support at home. Create personalized learning activities, no coding knowledge required, for students to add to Teacher Hive using Gemini Canvas, located in Google Gemini, then choose tools from the dropdown box to find Canvas in the chat message. After refining your activity, follow the directions in Teacher Hive to copy the code, upload your app, or share the link from Gemini with your students.

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Bolt AI - StackBlitz

Grades
6 to 12
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Bolt is a free tool that simplifies coding by allowing users to describe the application or website they want to create in plain English, then uses AI to translate that ...more
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Bolt is a free tool that simplifies coding by allowing users to describe the application or website they want to create in plain English, then uses AI to translate that information into functional code. The interface features a live preview pane, enabling users to see their changes in real time as they edit code or prompt the AI for adjustments. When satisfied, publish the website and receive the URL to share. Free accounts include 300,000 tokens daily and 1,000,000 tokens per month. Building a basic, generic landing page typically costs between 25,000 and 100,000 tokens for the initial generation.

tag(s): artificial intelligence (299), coding (108)

In the Classroom

Use Bolt to engage students in a computer science or web design course by prompting the AI to create a basic landing page for a fictional business or a personal portfolio. To enhance the lesson and check for understanding of the generated code, have students take their most complex functions or script segments and explain them using Snorkl, reviewed here. This allows you to see the student's thought process behind the AI's output. For a final project that extends learning, challenge students to build a community-focused web app or a comprehensive digital study guide and then present their development journey through an interactive presentation created in Gamma, reviewed here. This process allows students to synthesize their technical work into a professional multimedia format that showcases their problem-solving and coding skills.

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Adobe Podcast Enhance - Adobe

Grades
4 to 12
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Adobe Podcast Enhance is an AI-powered tool that helps improve the quality of podcasts and other spoken recordings directly in a web browser. Its main feature, Enhance Speech, cleans...more
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Adobe Podcast Enhance is an AI-powered tool that helps improve the quality of podcasts and other spoken recordings directly in a web browser. Its main feature, Enhance Speech, cleans up audio by reducing background noise, removing echo, and making voices sound clearer and more professional with just a few clicks. Adobe Podcast also includes helpful tools for transcription, recording, editing, captioning, and converting audio to video, making it a useful, easy-to-use platform for creating high-quality podcast content without advanced software.

tag(s): artificial intelligence (299), podcasts (160)

In the Classroom

Have students record short podcasts such as book talks, opinion pieces, or history reports, then use the Enhance tool to clean up their audio for a more professional sound. Students can interview classmates, teachers, or community members and enhance the recordings to create polished audio stories or news segments. Students can turn their original stories or poems into audio performances with improved sound quality for sharing with the class.

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MegaMinds - MegaMinds

Grades
4 to 12
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MegaMinds turns lessons into interactive journeys where students learn by speaking, building, and exploring in a 3D world. As students participate in an activity, teachers can track...more
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MegaMinds turns lessons into interactive journeys where students learn by speaking, building, and exploring in a 3D world. As students participate in an activity, teachers can track progress in real time and gain insights to guide their teaching. After creating an account, follow the directions to explore the site or add a class. MegaMinds has an extensive library of activities across many content areas and social-emotional topics, or students can design a 3D space to build their own projects. After selecting a topic, preview the activity and assign it to your class. Students access activities using the activity code. The free plan includes 3 rooms, 3 student projects, 25 students per session, Voice chat, screen/webcam share, in-room messages, sticky notes, premade lessons, templates, and activities.

tag(s): artificial intelligence (299), collaboration (112), digital escapes (30), game based learning (304), social and emotional learning (198), Teacher Utilities (214)

In the Classroom

Assign MegaMinds activities to supplement and practice current learning activities. Students can complete a multiplication escape room, learn AI literacy skills, create a historical presentation, and much more. Assign a practice room as a short warm-up activity before a lesson or have students work in groups to solve a challenge in a shared 3D world.

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Snopes - Snopes, Inc.

Grades
5 to 12
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Snopes is a long-established online fact-checking and reference website that helps users determine whether widely shared claims, rumors, urban legends, and viral stories are true, false,...more
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Snopes is a long-established online fact-checking and reference website that helps users determine whether widely shared claims, rumors, urban legends, and viral stories are true, false, or somewhere in between. It began in 1994, investigating folklore and internet myths, and has grown into one of the most widely consulted fact-checking resources online, offering detailed explanations and ratings that explain the evidence behind each claim. Snopes covers a wide range of topics from news and politics to science and pop culture, and it links to its sources so readers can explore the context for themselves. Its clear summaries and evaluation system make it a useful tool for teaching media literacy and critical thinking in the classroom.
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tag(s): evaluating sources (45), internet safety (121), media literacy (122), myths and legends (44)

In the Classroom

Start class with a viral claim and have students predict whether it is true or false before checking Snopes. Have students analyze Snopes articles to identify claims, evidence, and sources, strengthening informational reading and research skills. Have students choose a claim, research it using credible sources, and write and share their own "fact-check" report modeled after Snopes articles using a multimedia tool such as Canva Docs, reviewed here or Animate from Audio, reviewed here.

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10 Free Printable Goal-Setting Worksheets to Stay Organized - Parade

Grades
5 to 12
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The Parade.com article by Maryn Liles offers a curated list of 10 free printable goal-setting worksheets and guides to help people clearly define, plan, and track their goals. It explains...more
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The Parade.com article by Maryn Liles offers a curated list of 10 free printable goal-setting worksheets and guides to help people clearly define, plan, and track their goals. It explains that successful goal-setting requires not just intentions but also a strategy and accountability, and highlights a variety of worksheets focused on priorities, motivation, breaking goals into steps, habit tracking, and using the SMART framework to make goals specific and achievable. This resource is useful for anyone who wants a range of ready-to-use tools to support short- and long-term goal planning, both personally and in classroom or life-skills contexts.
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tag(s): organizational skills (88), thinking skills (115)

In the Classroom

Set up stations with different types of worksheets (SMART goals, habit trackers, reflection sheets). Students can rotate through the formats, sample each, and choose the one that best fits their personal or academic goals. Have students complete a worksheet at the start of the week and revisit it on Friday. They can reflect on progress, challenges, and next steps to build accountability and self-management skills. Students can create a short presentation with Aha Slides, reviewed here showing their goal, action steps, obstacles, and outcomes.

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AI Starter Kit for Teachers - Tech & Learning

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K to 12
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The Tech & Learning AI Starter Kit for Teachers is a comprehensive, educator-focused resource designed to help teachers deepen their understanding of AI and develop practical...more
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The Tech & Learning AI Starter Kit for Teachers is a comprehensive, educator-focused resource designed to help teachers deepen their understanding of AI and develop practical classroom tools, tips, and strategies for integrating AI into instruction. It includes explanations of key terms, recommended AI platforms and apps, and expert guidance on using these tools effectively, from lesson planning to productivity and assessment. The page also includes a YouTube video version of the starter kit, giving teachers an alternative way to engage with the content through multimedia. If your district blocks YouTube, then the video may not be viewable. This resource supports educators who are new to AI or looking to expand their AI toolbox for teaching and learning.
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tag(s): artificial intelligence (299), assessment (144), Formative Assessment (47), multimedia (62), professional development (318), quizzes (91), STEM (364)

In the Classroom

Set up short stations where students explore how AI works (using teacher-approved tools) and discuss real-world examples such as chatbots, image generators, and recommendation systems. Use the Starter Kit's YouTube video as a quick introduction to AI concepts, followed by a class discussion or reflection activity. Have students use AI tools to generate story ideas, outlines, or vocabulary lists, then refine their work using critical thinking and teacher guidance.

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20 AI First Steps for Teachers - Ditch That Textbook

Grades
K to 12
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The Ditch That Textbook article "20 AI 'First Steps' for Teachers" offers a practical, teacher-friendly introduction to artificial intelligence in education. It breaks down a...more
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The Ditch That Textbook article "20 AI 'First Steps' for Teachers" offers a practical, teacher-friendly introduction to artificial intelligence in education. It breaks down a curated list of foundational actions educators can take to get comfortable with AI, including learning what AI is, trying out classroom tools, and thinking critically about how AI fits into teaching and learning. The resource frames AI not just as a potential tool for instruction and lesson prep, but also as something educators should approach thoughtfully, including considering implications for academic integrity and student outcomes. This article is an excellent starting point for teachers who want to confidently explore AI's possibilities and challenges in their classrooms. If your district blocks YouTube, then the videos may not be viewable.
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tag(s): artificial intelligence (299), professional development (318)

In the Classroom

Take advantage of the information in this article to learn how to set up stations where students try out approved AI tools for brainstorming, image generation, or research support. Students can record what the tools can and cannot do. Have students use AI to generate story starters, design art prompts, or suggest project ideas, then create original work from those prompts. Have students evaluate an AI tool's usefulness, safety, and learning value, then present recommendations to the class.

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Artificial Intelligence in Education - ISTE + ASCD

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K to 12
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The ISTE + ASCD Artificial Intelligence in Education site provides a comprehensive hub of resources and professional learning designed to help educators understand and use AI responsibly...more
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The ISTE + ASCD Artificial Intelligence in Education site provides a comprehensive hub of resources and professional learning designed to help educators understand and use AI responsibly and effectively in schools. It highlights ISTE + ASCD's mission to support teachers in enhancing learning with AI while addressing ethical and practical considerations, and it offers professional development opportunities, community connections, and hands-on AI lessons that build students' AI literacy. The page also showcases initiatives like GenerationAI, the AI Innovator Challenge, and AI tools for educators, all aimed at empowering teachers to integrate AI in ways that deepen student engagement and prepare learners for an AI-enabled world.

tag(s): artificial intelligence (299), professional development (318)

In the Classroom

Have students analyze real-world AI scenarios (e.g., facial recognition or chatbots in schools) and discuss fairness, privacy, and bias using ISTE's ethical guidelines. Use ISTE + ASCD's student-friendly AI resources to teach what AI is, how it works, and where students encounter it in everyday life. Pair this with short videos or discussion prompts. Have students propose an AI tool to improve school life, explaining its purpose, benefits, and potential risks.

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Using Generative AI to Support Assessments Without Letting it Grade Student Work - Tech & Learning

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K to 12
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This article explains how generative AI can enhance assessment practices while keeping teachers, not machines, at the center of evaluating student learning. It emphasizes that, although...more
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This article explains how generative AI can enhance assessment practices while keeping teachers, not machines, at the center of evaluating student learning. It emphasizes that, although the idea of AI grading is tempting, current tools are too unreliable and biased to make evaluative judgments. Instead, the article highlights how AI can help teachers design better assessments, clarify rubrics, scaffold student tasks, and analyze trends in class performance. It also suggests using AI to support teachers as they craft feedback, create scaffolds such as organizers or checklists, and refine assessment clarity, but not to replace human judgment or score actual student work.
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tag(s): artificial intelligence (299), assessment (144), feedback (15), organizational skills (88), professional development (318), rubrics (39)

In the Classroom

Use AI to help you rewrite or clarify directions for projects, writing tasks, or assessments so students better understand expectations before they begin. Have AI generate draft rubrics in kid-friendly language. You can edit them to match your standards and use them to guide student self-assessment and reflection. Use AI to help draft feedback comments that focus on growth, clarity, and next steps. You remain the final decision-maker on all student evaluations.

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6 Questions Teachers Should Ask Before Implementing AI - Forbes

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K to 12
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The Forbes article "6 Questions Teachers Should Ask Before Implementing AI" by Peter Greene guides educators through thoughtful considerations before bringing AI tools into their...more
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The Forbes article "6 Questions Teachers Should Ask Before Implementing AI" by Peter Greene guides educators through thoughtful considerations before bringing AI tools into their classrooms. It emphasizes that educators should critically evaluate what an AI program actually does, understand their school or district's commitment (including long-term costs), and clarify the specific goals for using AI with teachers and students. The piece also highlights the importance of establishing safety and privacy guardrails, weighing the opportunity costs of time and resources, and deciding what aspects of student work teachers will actually assess when AI is involved. Greene's advice is grounded in caution and deliberation, encouraging teachers to balance enthusiasm for new technologies with clear educational intentions and responsible practice.
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tag(s): artificial intelligence (299), evaluating sources (45), professional development (318)

In the Classroom

Discuss this article during grade or content level meetings, or as part of staff meetings. Introduce the information to students by presenting brief classroom scenarios in which AI could be used (e.g., writing assistance, tutoring, grading). In small groups, have students discuss the proper use of AI using simplified versions of the article's six guiding questions. Have students design posters that explain how to use AI safely and responsibly, focusing on privacy, originality, and ethical use. Posters can be displayed in the classroom or shared during a technology lesson. Students can complete a writing or problem-solving task on their own, then compare it to an AI-generated version. They reflect on what humans do better, what AI does well, and when teacher feedback is most valuable.

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Tally - Tally BV

Grades
K to 12
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Tally allows you to create forms, much like working in an online document; start typing and add the information and features you choose. Begin by adding a title, then choose ...more
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Tally allows you to create forms, much like working in an online document; start typing and add the information and features you choose. Begin by adding a title, then choose to create a form from scratch or use a template. Templates include surveys, questionnaires, and more. To add content, type your question or add text, or type "/" to choose from a list of options that includes options to add short, long, or multiple choice answers, a dropdown box, links, and more. Customize the look of your form by choosing a theme, fonts, and colors. Create an account to publish your form, then share it using the share link or embed code. The free plan includes unlimited forms and submissions, with many integrated features.

tag(s): assessment (144), differentiation (92), Formative Assessment (47), polls and surveys (43), quizzes (91)

In the Classroom

Use Tally's question types, conditional logic, and calculation features to build review activities, study guides, or self-paced assessments. Build simple forms for students to reflect on what they learned, answer comprehension questions, or provide feedback at the end of a lesson. Have students create and distribute surveys on topics related to science, social studies, math, or ELA.

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The Little Book of Generative AI Prompts for Teachers - Mark Anderson

Grades
K to 12
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This PDF is a 20-page mini-book that offers carefully crafted prompts for educators. In addition, the author shares his thoughts on ethics and bias related to the use of AI ...more
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This PDF is a 20-page mini-book that offers carefully crafted prompts for educators. In addition, the author shares his thoughts on ethics and bias related to the use of AI and uses categories to link to one of three areas that support education: enhancing learning, supporting teaching, and reducing workload. Many of the prompts are in a template format, making them easy to use by replacing the bracketed text with your customized instructions.

tag(s): artificial intelligence (299), assessment (144), differentiation (92), professional development (318), Teacher Utilities (214)

In the Classroom

Use these prompts to save time and improve efficiency in your classroom. Learn more about creating prompts and using templates by viewing the archive of OK2Ask: AI Templates That Work: Quick and Easy Prompting Solutions, reviewed here. Use the prompts, then modify them as needed, to generate practice activities for students, differentiate assignments, and generate engaging activities based on students' interests. Use these examples to teach students how to evaluate AI responses and write effective prompts that provide their desired results.
 This resource requires PDF reader software like Adobe Acrobat.

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TalkingPoints - TalkingPoints

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K to 12
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TalkingPoints is a family engagement and communication platform designed to help teachers, schools, and families stay connected through two-way messaging that automatically translates...more
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TalkingPoints is a family engagement and communication platform designed to help teachers, schools, and families stay connected through two-way messaging that automatically translates conversations into more than 150 languages. Teachers can send individual, group, or class-wide messages, share reminders, photos, videos, polls, and documents, and communicate with families without revealing personal phone numbers. The platform helps remove language barriers, encourages meaningful family involvement, and supports stronger home-school partnerships that can improve student attendance, behavior, and academic success. TalkingPoints offers a free version for individual teachers that includes messaging, translation, media sharing, and mobile and web access, making it especially valuable for schools serving multilingual communities.
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tag(s): classroom management (135), communication (122), multilingual (82), Teacher Utilities (214)

In the Classroom

Send a weekly message to families highlighting the skills, standards, and learning goals being taught in class. Include photos of student work or classroom activities to help families stay connected to learning. Share reading prompts, discussion questions, or vocabulary words with families each week. Encourage students to discuss their books at home, and have families respond in the app with comments or photos from reading time. Share positive messages, digital badges, photos, or examples of student accomplishments with families.

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Perseverance Strategies for Kids and Teens - Pathway 2 Success

Grades
K to 12
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The Pathway 2 Success "Perseverance Strategies for Kids and Teens" is a practical, educator-friendly resource that helps students build perseverance through simple, research-based social-emotional...more
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The Pathway 2 Success "Perseverance Strategies for Kids and Teens" is a practical, educator-friendly resource that helps students build perseverance through simple, research-based social-emotional learning strategies. The article explains what perseverance is and why it matters, then offers concrete tools students can use when tasks feel challenging, such as goal setting, positive self-talk, flexible thinking, calming strategies, and asking for help. These strategies support students' self-regulation, motivation, and problem-solving skills, making the resource useful for classroom discussions, small-group lessons, or school counseling sessions aimed at strengthening resilience and executive functioning across all subject areas.
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tag(s): classroom management (135), social and emotional learning (198)

In the Classroom

Students can use Google Keep, reviewed here to track their goal. Students can create a Check in with Yourself using Google Forms, reviewed here. Students can create a comic using Comic Strip Templates by Canva, reviewed here to teach one of the techniques.

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Media Literacy and Production Resources - Youth Media Challenge

Grades
4 to 12
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The Youth Media Resources page provides cross-project support and inspiration for educators teaching media literacy and student media production. It includes implementation guides,...more
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The Youth Media Resources page provides cross-project support and inspiration for educators teaching media literacy and student media production. It includes implementation guides, teacher-created resources, ideas for sharing student work beyond the Youth Media Challenge showcase, and links to professional development opportunities to help teachers build confidence with media-making and critical analysis skills. These resources complement the standards-aligned Youth Media Challenge projects and support students in creating meaningful audio, video, and visual media while strengthening their voice and storytelling abilities.

tag(s): media literacy (122), professional development (318), stories and storytelling (75)

In the Classroom

Show examples of student-created media from KQED projects to spark interest and discuss what makes a story powerful. Teach mini-lessons on video, audio, or visual storytelling using KQED's how-to resources. Have students create and submit their own media stories or share them with a wider school or community audience.

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Puzzel - Daan Weustenraad.

Grades
2 to 12
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Puzzel is a versatile, web-based tool that allows teachers and students to create and play interactive puzzles, including crosswords, word searches, matching games, jigsaw puzzles,...more
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Puzzel is a versatile, web-based tool that allows teachers and students to create and play interactive puzzles, including crosswords, word searches, matching games, jigsaw puzzles, and quizzes. The platform is easy to use and supports customization, real-time previews, and sharing or embedding activities, making it ideal for gamifying lessons and reinforcing content across subjects. Teachers can design puzzles aligned to vocabulary, concepts, or review material, while students can engage in collaborative or individual problem-solving activities. Its wide range of puzzle generators and flexible design features make it a valuable resource for increasing engagement and supporting learning through play.

tag(s): game based learning (304), logic (165), puzzles (162)

In the Classroom

Have students complete a teacher-created crossword or word search using current vocabulary. After finishing, students can explain the meaning of 3-5 words they found and use them in original sentences. Set up rotating stations with different puzzles (crossword, quiz, matching). Each station reviews a different concept from the unit. Students can work in small groups to solve each activity and track their progress. After a lesson, students can create puzzles that connect the topic to real-world applications or other subjects. For example, a reading puzzle could include examples of figurative language from songs or other media.

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RhymeBrain Rhyming Dictionary - Steve Hanov

Grades
2 to 12
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RhymeBrain is a free, online rhyming dictionary and word-play tool that helps you find words that rhyme with any English word you enter. It provides lists of perfect rhymes, near ...more
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RhymeBrain is a free, online rhyming dictionary and word-play tool that helps you find words that rhyme with any English word you enter. It provides lists of perfect rhymes, near or almost rhymes, and related word suggestions, making it useful for poetry writing, songwriting, vocabulary development, and phonics practice. The simple, student-friendly interface allows learners to quickly explore word patterns and sound relationships, supporting literacy lessons and creative writing activities.

tag(s): dictionaries (49), phonics (53), poetry (196), rhymes (24), vocabulary (251), vocabulary development (102)

In the Classroom

Have students use RhymeBrain to brainstorm rhyming words as they write poems, raps, or song lyrics. Ask students to choose unfamiliar rhyming words from the list, look up their meanings, and use them in original sentences or short poems. Challenge students to write a stanza or paragraph using a set number of rhyming words from RhymeBrain, encouraging flexible thinking and advanced language play. To turn these rhymes into a collaborative project, have students record themselves performing their finished poems or raps.

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Pixel Thoughts - Pixel Thoughts

Grades
K to 12
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Pixel Thoughts is a 60-second meditation tool to help alleviate stressful thoughts. Type what is bothering you into the message bar to add what is stressing you to the star, ...more
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Pixel Thoughts is a 60-second meditation tool to help alleviate stressful thoughts. Type what is bothering you into the message bar to add what is stressing you to the star, then relax, listen to calming music, and watch your stress disappear into the universe.

tag(s): emotions (72), social and emotional learning (198), thinking skills (115)

In the Classroom

Use Pixel Thoughts as a brain break activity or display on your whiteboard during transitions to create a calming effect in the classroom. Share this site with students to use as needed when stressed or overwhelmed. Include additional stress-reducing resources on classroom computers, such as The Best Teacher Playlist: 20 Songs to De-Stress, reviewed here.

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