Skip to main content

Home/ Classroom 2.0/ Group items tagged Maps

Rss Feed Group items tagged

Ruth Howard

Footprint Basics - Introduction - 1 views

  •  
    Students can ascertain carbon footprints of various entities including their own.
Maggie Verster

21st Century Skills Map for science - 0 views

  •  
    The Partnership advocates for the integration of 21st Century Skills into K-12 education so that students can advance their learning in core academic subjects.
Greg Brandenburg

XMind - Social Brainstorming and Mind Mapping - 0 views

  •  
    As close to Inspiration as you will find for free
Martin Burrett

Google Earth - Ancient Rome - 0 views

  •  
    Information about an amazing 3D recreation of ancient Rome through Google Earth. http://ictmagic.wikispaces.com/History
  •  
    Welcome to my website thi truong bat dong san DAT BINH DUONG you'll have new look into Vietnamese real estate. Dat Binh Duong | Mua Ban Nha Dat | Dong Do Dai Pho | Can Ho Anh Tuan
Sheri Edwards

aMap - 0 views

  •  
    online debate mapping
  •  
    create arguments
Judy Robison

SAS® Curriculum Pathways® | Overview - 2 views

  •  
    SAS® Curriculum Pathways® provides innovative, web-based resources in the core disciplines, for grades 8-14. Topics are mapped to state and national standards.
  •  
    Fully funded by SAS and offered at no cost to US educators and students, SAS Curriculum Pathways is designed to enhance student achievement and teacher effectiveness by providing Web-based curriculum resources in all the core disciplines: English, math, science, social studies/history and Spanish, to educators and students in grades 8-14 in virtual schools, home schools, high schools and community colleges.
  •  
    SAS Curriculum Pathways, which is used by thousands of teachers in more than 30 states, is now available for free to every educator in America. SAS Curriculum Pathways provides content in the core disciplines of English, mathematics, social studies, science and Spanish. Aligned with state standards, it has more than 200 InterActivities and 855 ready-to-use lessons that enable technology-rich instruction and engage higher-order thinking skills. It is primarily for use in grades 8-12, though middle school content is in development.
Samantha Morra

CO2 emissions, birth & death rates by country, simulated real-time - 0 views

  •  
    Interactive Earth with CO2 emmisions with birth and death rates by country.
Caroline Roche

Clipart ETC Site Map - 0 views

  •  
    Free clipart on lots of educational topics
Mary Ann Apple

HealthMap | Global disease alert map - 0 views

  •  
    Mashup
Kathleen N

The MAPS Youtube Project pb wiki / FrontPage - 0 views

  •  
    What social issues do you care about? How can you raise awareness?
Dennis OConnor

John Quincy Adams, Twitterer? - NYTimes.com - 0 views

  • They may be two centuries old, but, written with staccato-like brevity, entries from one of Adams’s diaries resemble tweets sufficiently that they began appearing Wednesday on Twitter.
  • The diary, which Adams maintained until April 1836, is a rarity among the many he kept, in that the description for each day is no more than one line long. Historians believe he used the descriptions as references to longer entries in other journals.
  • The posts will link to maps that, using the latitude and longitude coordinates from his entries, pinpoint his progress across the ocean. There will also be links to the longer entries of other Adams diaries, which can be found on the society’s Web site, http://www.masshist.org/jqadiaries/.
  • ...2 more annotations...
  • Word spread, and the society decided to tweet the entries. They average 110 to 120 characters, below the 140-character limit imposed by Twitter, and there is nary an LOL or BFF among them.
  • The idea appears to be working. As of Wednesday evening, only nine hours after the first entry was Twittered, the post had more than 4,800 followers, and Mr. Dibbell said the number was climbing.
  •  
    Clever use of social networking tech. The initial take on twitter was that it just broadcast mindless sort personal observations. This use turns that idea around. Interesting way to teach a bit of history. What if we started tweeting Basho & Issa, the great Japanese haiku poets? Hmmm sounds like a fun lit project doesn't it?
« First ‹ Previous 301 - 320 of 357 Next › Last »
Showing 20 items per page