OLE Products: Election 2012 - 1 views
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"Free Civics Resources Pearson is also offering free learning resources tied to the upcoming U.S. presidential election, including a continually updated "Election Series" blog with classroom activities and ideas, a calendar of events, profiles of the presidential hopefuls, and three mini-courses focused on key civics topics. Follow #ElectionSeries on Twitter to get the latest materials as they are released."
OLE 2012 Election Series - 0 views
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"Free Civics Resources Pearson is also offering free learning resources tied to the upcoming U.S. presidential election, including a continually updated "Election Series" blog with classroom activities and ideas, a calendar of events, profiles of the presidential hopefuls, and three mini-courses focused on key civics topics. Follow #ElectionSeries on Twitter to get the latest materials as they are released."
Active history blog - 0 views
iLearn Technology » Blog Archive » The Miniature Earth Project - 0 views
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What it is: The Miniature Earth Project is a great website that poses the question: “what if the population of the Earth were reduced into a community of only 100 people?” Based on this assumption, the site helps students understand what the breakdown of nationalities would be, religious representation, how many people would live in an urban area, how many people would have the majority of the world income, how many would live without clean world, those that live on less than $1.25/day, etc. The purpose of the site is to break our quickly approaching 7billion people in the world down to a number (100) that we can more easily wrap our minds around. The point of the site is to help kids (and adults) understand the real landscape of the world and cause positive action.
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“Understanding our rights and responsibilities as individuals and the similarities and differences of others helps contribute to the development of world citizens.”
iLearn Technology » Blog Archive » History Pin - 0 views
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What it is: History Pin is a really neat website that lets students (and anyone) electronically “pin” historical pictures, videos, audio clips, and stories to a digital globe. There are three main ways to use History Pin: exploring it, adding to it, or curating things on it
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How to integrate History Pin into the classroom: History Pin is a neat place for students to learn about history. They can see history through pictures, video and stories submitted by people around the world. History Pin is also a fantastic place for students to demonstrate learning. They can add pins, create collections or tours around their learning.
Revised AP Physics, U.S. History Coming Soon - Curriculum Matters - Education Week - 0 views
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The College Board today announced the release of redesigned AP programs for U.S. history and physics, with a focus on reducing the amount of content coverage required to allow more time for studying key concepts in greater depth. Schools will offer the revised courses starting in fall 2014.
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The emphasis on covering less material in greater depth surely rings a bell with lots of this blog's readers, given that this is a core mantra these days, emphasized, for example, in the Common Core State Standards in mathematics, as well as the common science standards now being developed by a coalition of states and others.
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Topics covered in Physics 1 include Newtonian mechanics; work, energy, and power; and mechanical waves and sounds. Physics 2 covers fluid mechanics, thermodynamics, electricity and magnetism, optics, and atomic and nuclear physics.
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Common Core Practice | Presidential Campaigns, College Rankings and Food Journeys - NYT... - 0 views
NYT Election Lesson plans - 1 views
Engage Future Voters with Election Projects | Edutopia - 1 views
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With the presidential election dominating the news between now and November, there's no shortage of timely material to bring into classroom discussions. If used as the starting point for project-based learning, the 2012 election can engage students in thinking critically about everything from media messages to voter rights to public opinion polls.
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When students become media literate, they learn to ask critical questions about how political advertisements were constructed, who paid for them to be produced and aired, and whether the information is credible or distorted. Often, such projects lead to students producing and publishing their own media messages.
iLearn Technology » Blog Archive » Admongo: "Aducation" learning about advert... - 0 views
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A look at advertising can introduce students to persuasive writing, the effect of different music, colors and mediums, critical thinking and problem solving.
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I like to have students to consider both sides of advertising. First, what does it mean to be a consumer and how does advertising play into that? Second, how would you create an advertisement that reaches a target audience?
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You can also tie advertising to history by asking students to look at World War II posters
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Helping Students Become Active Citizens - 0 views
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In a May post here at the Voices blog, I suggested that one of the things I thought colleges should be looking for from prospective students was civic engagement. Certainly, having students see themselves as actors and creators of history is one of my goals for my history students.
Weekly News Quiz | Oct. 1-7, 2013 - NYTimes.com - 1 views
Five Ways to Teach the Shutdown - NYTimes.com - 0 views
Ripped from the Headlines: How to Turn Current Events into Real-World Projects - 1 views
Reverse Instruction US History - 2 views
How to Help Your Students Observe the 9/11 Anniversary | Edutopia - 1 views
Free Technology for Teachers: Interactive Civil War Poster - 1 views
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This year's poster is about the US Civil War. The poster is titled How Do You Piece Together the History of the Civil War? This 24"x36" poster demonstrates some uses of primary documents and artifacts for reconstructing the history of the Civil War.
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