Skip to main content

Home/ 2011Reference/ Group items tagged Reading

Rss Feed Group items tagged

Anne Hubbell

FREE Teaching Resources and Lesson Plans from Federal Agencies - 1 views

  •  
    This is a great resource for teachers from the Federal Government. There are topics in every field from arts and music to U.S. time periods. There are animations, photos, primary documents, and videos. Students could take a tour of a cell in animation, make comparisons using photos, read letters and journals of famous Americans, and watch videos about lava. There are lots of resources available for free.
Anne Hubbell

BAM! Body and Mind - 1 views

  •  
    The Department of Health and Human Services Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has this fun site for kids. The topics include disease, nutrition, physical activity, your body, and more. There are lots of colorful graphics and links to more information. Students can visit the game room, take the BAM challenge, or read about different stories like a newsletter. I think students would enjoy this website.
Lorie Adams

Welcome to Web Weather for Kids - 2 views

  •  
    Great website for elementary students about weather. Many activities to engage students as well as teachers.Stories and games make it a fun site to visit and learn at the same time. It also addresses one of the Nebraska State Standards for Science in 2nd grade. This primary site has a teacher guide for ideas to teach about many different kinds of weather related information.
  •  
    This site has lots of information about weather. Students can learn about lightning, tornadoes, hurricanes,blizzards, and floods. There are links to safety, games, activities, stories, and more. One of the games is cloud concentration in which students click on cards to find matching clouds. The stories looked very interesting and were all about severe weather.
  •  
    This site is fun, friendly and easy to navigate. Students can research a topic such as clouds. After students have read about the layers of the clouds they have the options of playing a related game or related activity that could be done in the classroom or at home. Students can learn what makes weather, do activities and learn to predict the weather.
Raelynn Buffington

Tracking the Buffalo - 0 views

  •  
    This primary source describes the importance of the buffalo and hide painting for the Plains Indians. It is geared toward intermediate elementary students. You will find teacher information, art work and information for students to read.This would also be a good website for the Art teacher in you.
Jennifer LaFleur

Recycle City - 0 views

  •  
    This website would be great for upper elementary or even middle school when learning about different ways to recycle and also about things that are not good for the environment. There are teacher resources as well as a game where students get to be the new city manager and help clean up the town by picking up litter and recycling. By clicking on different parts of the town they learn about harful and beneficial items. Kids do need to be able to read well to play this game which is why I think it would be best for upper elementary.
Amanda Gregory

History Matters: Making Sense of Evidence - 2 views

  •  
    This is one part of the site, "History Matters," and it is all about helping students and teachers understand and make use of primary sources. There are all kinds of activities to help learn how to read and analyze letters, photographs, songs, cartoons, etc. On other parts of the site, you can find primary sources documenting American past.
Sydney Omo

Time For Kids - 0 views

  •  
    Time For Kids is a great source of information for kids to keep up on current news stories.  They cover the US and around the world.  They feature kid reporters and have a homework helper section.
Steph Schnabel

Welcome to MapStats for Kids - 1 views

  •  
    This site provides a fun and interactive way for students to look at statistical information from the US government. It would help students with map skills and being able to read mathematical information (mean, median etc.) from a graph. There are links included for teachers and parents along with a link to "grown up stats" that links you to fedstats.gov.
Amanda Gregory

Archiving Early America - 1 views

  •  
    This site archives early American documents, including the Declaration, Constitution, the first annual almanac, and maps. The part I like the best is a section called "How to Read a 200 Year Document." It has all kinds of frequently asked questions, such as why "s" looks like "f" in old documents. These could be really helpful for not only teachers, but students who are not used to the 17th century language.
McKenzie White

Eyewitness - 1 views

  •  
    Eyewitness:American Originals form the National Archives provides first-hand and personal testimonies of select historical events as told from the point-of-view of presidents: Jefferson, Washington, Truman, JFK, Bush Sr., John Adams, Carter, Eisenhower-as well as other influential individuals. This would be great for time period specific research projects. Easy to read and compact digital arrangements make this user friendly for young students, teens, and educators.
‹ Previous 21 - 30 of 30
Showing 20 items per page