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akudis

Six Tips for Dealing with ADD Students - TeacherVision - 3 views

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    A website that shares some tips to help make your classroom more enjoyable for students with ADD.
jessiwattenhofer

Tips for Handling Emotional Behavior Disorder in Classrooms | Resilient Educator - 2 views

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    Most of these strategies I found to be very helpful with the EBD students I work with! What do you think would be the most effective strategy? Anyone else have experience in working with these students?
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    5 tips for helping EBD students on the first day of school
chlohawk

Highly Sensitive Children: 3 Tips for Their Teachers | Psychology Today - 1 views

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    Giving choices, checking-in, and advocating for your highly sensitive students are a few ways that you can support them.
chlohawk

4 Expert Tips to Help Low-Income Students Enjoy Unparalleled Success - The Edvocate - 0 views

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    Meeting the children's basic needs, considering their safety, developing a relationship, and helping them meet their higher order needs are some ways you can guide them to success
madisonryb

7 Tips on How to Achieve a Happy Classroom | Incompassing Ed - 0 views

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    Strategies provided to help achieve a happy environment in the classroom.
Bill Olson

Teamwork Skills: Being an Effective Group Member | Centre for Teaching Excellence | Uni... - 0 views

  • To function successfully in a small group, students need to be able to communicate clearly on intellectual and emotional levels. Effective communicators: can explain their own ideas express their feelings in an open but non-threatening way listen carefully to others ask questions to clarify others’ ideas and emotions can sense how others feel based on their nonverbal communication will initiate conversations about group climate or process if they sense tensions brewing reflect on the activities and interactions of their group and encourage other group members to do so as well
  • To work together successfully, group members must demonstrate a sense of cohesion. Cohesion emerges as group members exhibit the following skills: Openness: Group members are willing to get to know one another, particularly those with different interests and backgrounds. They are open to new ideas, diverse viewpoints, and the variety of individuals present within the group. They listen to others and elicit their ideas. They know how to balance the need for cohesion within a group with the need for individual expression. Trust and self-disclosure: Group members trust one another enough to share their own ideas and feelings. A sense of mutual trust develops only to the extent that everyone is willing to self-disclose and be honest yet respectful. Trust also grows as group members demonstrate personal accountability for the tasks they have been assigned. Support: Group members demonstrate support for one another as they accomplish their goals. They exemplify a sense of team loyalty and both cheer on the group as a whole and help members who are experiencing difficulties. They view one another not as competitors (which is common within a typically individualistic educational system) but as collaborators. Respect: Group members communicate their opinions in a way that respects others, focusing on “What can we learn?” rather than “Who is to blame?” See constructive feedback in the process section for more details.
clwisniewski

Visual impairment in the classroom - 0 views

  • Visual impairment in the classroom
    • sadielaurenn
       
      Another great classroom resource!
  • Visual cues are central to most early childhood education systems.
    • sadielaurenn
       
      This is incredibly true, almost every lesson we will teach have some aspect of a visual. How will we accomplish our lessons without visuals?
  • In a school environment, visual impairments can cause difficulties when it comes to traditional reading and writing activities, reading at a distance, distinguishing colors, recognizing shapes and participating in physical education games which require acute vision, such as softball and kickball.
    • sadielaurenn
       
      Prior to research, when I heard "vision impairment" I would typically think of someone who is blind. Throughout researching this disability I have realized that it is so much more. Something as simple as needing glasses for being near sided or far sided is consider a vision impairment.
  • ...4 more annotations...
  • Tips for teachers working with students who are visually impaired
    • sadielaurenn
       
      Below are some very basics tips to help accommodate your visually impaired students.
  • Children and adults with low vision are not considered legally blind, they simply have reduced vision at or lower than 20/70. Students who are blind have vision that is at or lower than 20/200. Nonetheless, only 15% of students with visual impairments are considered to be completely blind, with no light or form perception ability
    • clwisniewski
       
      An interesting statistic!
  • Children with visual impairments often start off learning to read and write with the assistance of low-tech solutions, such as high-intensity lamps and book-stands. Sometimes screen magnification and computer typing and reading programs are used. In other cases, low vision students will learn to read using the Braille system over text, or a combination of the two. However, as students progress through early grade levels and reading and writing activities become more demanding, periodic literacy skills assessment is required to ensure additional resources and adaptive strategy instruction are provided to meet their needs.
    • clwisniewski
       
      It's good to continue assessing visually impaired students in case they need further assistance.
  • For those students with visual impairments who do not master Braille, making use of technology to facilitate reading is fundamental. In fact, most talented Braille readers prefer to use computers or tablets when reading for fun anyway. And students who learn to use a computer not only find homework easier to complete, but often become faster readers. It is simply more efficient for low vision students to use a computer and word-processor over reading paper books and handwriting. This is particularly relevant at a high-school level, when reading and writing assignments become lengthier and more challenging.
    • clwisniewski
       
      This could be included in a student's IEP, so they have access to a device that can assist them with reading and writing.
Josi Rahne

How to Teach History Facts the Fun Way - 1 views

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    How to Teach History Facts the Fun Way. Tips and Activities to teach History facts in a way that will interest students and keep them engaged.
Siri Anderson

Effects of Food Regulation in the Progressive Era | DocsTeach: Activities - 1 views

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    Thanks for tip on this one Tammy!
Lindsey Ruth

Fresh From the World...Where Your Food Comes From - 3 views

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    Extension from the University of Illinois. Is geared for fourth and fifth grades, but great info for all. Has lesson plans and classroom tips.
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    Interactive site showing where your food comes from.
Alys Mosher

Galileo Educational Network Association - 0 views

  • key components
  • arise from people's attempts
  • to learn more about the world(s) we live in
  • ...6 more annotations...
  • invite perspective to be brought to bear in order to develop deep understanding
  • Attempts to answer essential questions allow people to explore the connection between their personal, individual, unique experience of the world and its exterior, objective, held-in-common dimensions
  • allow us to explore what knowledge is, how it came to be, and how it has changed through human history
  • poised at the boundary of the known and the unknown
  • reaches beyond itself
  • engages the imagination in significant ways
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    Key Components of essential questions
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    Helps you understand the foundation of an essential question and how to form one.
Siri Anderson

Taconite : Library : MNHS.ORG - 0 views

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    MNHS on taconite history in MN.
Siri Anderson

Share Your Story : Minnesota's Greatest Generation : mnhs.org - 0 views

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    Students can document their family history and share it in these public archives.
Tandy Kibbler

1934 Truckers' Strike (Minneapolis) : Library : MNHS.ORG - 0 views

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    Noted as the most violent in the history of the state. Important for state history, the organization of unions. Possible classroom investigation... how this impacted the local economy as this happened during the depression years.
Siri Anderson

Farmer-Labor Movement : Library : MNHS.ORG - 0 views

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    MN history related to collective bargaining
Siri Anderson

Fake internet resources - 180 Technology Tips #124 - 0 views

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    Great examples to share with students about internet legitimacy.
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