What roles will you establish? You want to build expectation of time investment. If I invest my time in you, how are you going to invest in someone else?
Cool lesson idea for pythagorean theorum and ratios.
Includes already-made geogebra apps for the lesson so that students can manipulate the size of the TV in order to respond to teacher questions.
Lesson objective: In this lesson, students use coordinates to compute perimeters of polygons and areas of triangles and rectangles, e.g., using the distance formula.
Pretty much all the steps to this lesson are on the website, which also includes a download link with all the materials that you will need.
Something to think about if you plan on completing this lesson:
When you first pose the problem to the students - Have the students discuss how they could represent the location of the different vertices for the Bermuda triangle. Give the students time to research/explore and find the latitude/longitude on their own rather than giving it to them directly. There are plenty of tools out there that can help the students complete this task, the most common being Google Earth and Google Maps
This seems like a decent interactive for an introduction to atoms/elements/period table.
Have the students click through several atoms in order and then discuss:
- What do you notice?
- What do you wonder?
- Predict what the next atom (or the atom 17 clicks away) will look like. Explain your response.
Although some of the lesson plans are relatively vague, this a pretty solid site overall. There are a number of lesson plans here that could be adapted to fit your specific unit/essential questions.
The best thing about these lessons is that the lesson documents (PDFs) contain a wide variety of primary and secondary sources that you can use in a variety of ways.
The Zinn Education Project is free to sign up for and use.
There are a lot of great problems here that could be used in math class. Starting class with one of these problems could be a great way to hook students into the lesson and have the students start generating their own questions and problem solving methods. Then, the math can be brought in appropriately. A lot of these problems seem to lend themselves to the "3 Act Task" model. A video/image representing the problem could go a long way in getting kids hooked.
Do you teach struggling readers?
No matter the content area that you teach, student success is often defined by literacy. Reading comprehension and vocabulary frequently act as roadblocks that prevent students from grasping difficult concepts. Rewordify is a tool that will help you ignore this roadblock, and even teach reading comprehension and vocabulary when used appropriately. I initially read about the tool from this blog post (http://www.freetech4teachers.com/2013/08/rewordify-helps-students-read-complex.html#.UhuJ79KsiSp). If you don't have time to check out that entire post, here is a brief summary of the tool and a few possible uses for it:
Tool Description: This online tool allows the user to input a chunk of text and replaces all the "hard words" with synonyms.
This seems like a spectacular tool to promote reading comprehension across the content areas. Here a just a couple ways you could use this tool.
* Have you found a website with incredible information, but the reading level is way too high for your students? Have the students use Rewordify and make the reading level more appropriate for your students.
* This could be a great tool to teach new vocabulary and reading comprehension. Here's one idea on how to do this:
o Have students read a passage and highlight/underline/annotate the passage, including making notes of the words that they don't understand. Then, have the students summarize what they have read. Input the same text into rewordify and have the students read and summarize what they have read a second time. Compare the two summaries and discuss any similarities/differences. Now, have the students create definitions for the words that were highlighted (Students cannot use the provided synonym when completing this portion of the activity).
William Berry
Dept. of Organizational Development, Quality and Innovation
Moody Middle School ITRT - (804) 261-5015
http://blogs.henrico.k12.va.us/techtips/http://blogs.henrico.k12.v