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Siri Anderson

EIA Energy Kids - Energy Kids: Energy Information Administration - 0 views

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    Looks like some neat energy related kids pages.
Jill Ollmann

Tiki the Penguin's home page - for kids and for the planet - 0 views

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    Website designed for kids to use with information on topics such as energy, pollution, eating the future, and food. It also has videos, quizzes, and fun stuff too.
Jacob Rath

Energy saver - 0 views

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    Some great lesson plans about how students can learn more about being energy starts and helping companies do the same.
Barb Hagen

ZOOM . activities . sci | PBS Kids - 0 views

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    This has different areas of science; chemistry, enginerring, and forces and energy. Teachers and students can click on the experiment they wish to try. There are step by step instructions and a material list provided. Children also comment on the results from conducting the experiment, which are listed after the directions.
Marah Ryks

No Impact Project » For Educators - 0 views

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    This site contains free lesson plans on consumption, energy, food, transportation, and water. The site has limitless opportunities, whether you use it as a starting point for a lesson, to teaching the whole curriculum. Note that the site is FREE, and the lesson plans can be adapted to the younger grades.
Siri Anderson

Enercities - 0 views

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    Build a sustainable city.
Siri Anderson

Rural Electricification Lesson - 0 views

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    Students complete online activities to review the movement of power to rural MN.
nikkilh

5 Principles of Outstanding Classroom Management | Edutopia - 0 views

    • nikkilh
       
      Classroom management
  • 5 Principles of Outstanding Classroom Management
  • 1. Take Care of Yourself to Take Care of Your Students
  • ...11 more annotations...
  • Countless studies corroborate the idea that self-care reduces stress, which can deplete your energy and impair your judgment.
  • 2. Focus on Building Relationships
  • Many educators noted that a teacher’s ability to balance warmth and strong boundaries is key to successful relationships—and classroom management.
  • 3. Set Rules, Boundaries, and Expectations (and Do It Early)
  • Many others cautioned that while enforcing rules consistently is critical, it’s important to pick your battles too—especially if those confrontations are going to be public
  • 4. Take a Strength-Based Approach
  • A strength-based lens means never forgetting to look beneath the surface of behavior, even when it’s inconvenient
  • don’t forget to continue to work to deepen the connection, being mindful of the context and using language thoughtfully.
  • Finally, cultural differences can also play an unconscious role in our expectations of whether a student will succeed, so it’s important to reflect on any stereotypes that come up for you.
  • 5. Involve Parents and Guardians
  • The majority of teachers send home reports of both positive and negative behaviors—it’s critical to do the former, too—and also use email and text services to communicate about upcoming events, due dates, and student progress.
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