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Marc Safran

Code of Best Practices for Fair Use in Media Literacy Education | Media Education Lab - 0 views

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    UPDATED INFO!! - The Code of Best Practices in Fair Use for Media Literacy Education helps educators gain confidence about their rights to use copyrighted materials in developing students' critical thinking and communication skills.
HistoryGrl14 .

LYNELL BURMARK, Ph.D. : Visual Literacy - 12 views

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    Dr.Burmark has some great tips and thoughts about the use of visuals that we should definitely consider as we as history teachers present content.
Sallee Humanities

The Plague in Britain - Science Show - 16 July 2005 - 10 views

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    Again - am using this for low literacy students.  Have downloaded the audio and edited to just be this transcript.  Will use the transcript so students can read along to help reading comprehension
HistoryGrl14 .

Flackcheck.org - 12 views

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    Political Literacy site. Great for an election year!
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    Great Resources, activities, etc
Daniel Ballantyne

READ, WRITE, ROCK! - 9 views

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    An interesting game that helps students improve their literacy skills
Matt Esterman

Resources | cap that! - 9 views

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    Sign up under 'Get involved' at the top of this page to receive notifications when new resources are available. Our teaching resources include captions to increase learning and literacy benefits for students. We are currently working with teachers to build our resources for primary and secondary schools across a number of different subjects.
Kristen McDaniel

Our Documents - Home - 8 views

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    To help us think, talk and teach about the rights and responsibilities of citizens in our democracy, we invite you to explore 100 milestone documents of American history. These documents reflect our diversity and our unity, our past and our future, and mostly our commitment as a nation to continue to strive to "form a more perfect union."
Kristine Goldhawk

- Inaugural Addresses - Welcome To Words of The Inaugural Address - 0 views

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    Really cool to use for compare/contrast and visual literacy.
Kristen McDaniel

Historical Thinking Matters: home page - 4 views

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    This site is run by George Something University and has material on four key events from American history, all designed to develop 'historical thinking". They have primary sources in there which I would steal and use for other purposes, but that's just me.
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    Welcome to Historical Thinking Matters, a website focused on key topics in U.S. history, that is designed to teach students how to critically read primary sources and how to critique and construct historical narratives. Read how to use this site.
HistoryGrl14 .

SpellingCity.com Home Page - 0 views

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    Great site for helping with Content Vocab. Free and no account creation required.
Shane Freeman

21st Century Presentation Literacy: President Obama's Education Address - 9 views

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    Presidents, like everyone else change and adapt over time.  Use the Wordles of last years speech and this years to compare the to speeches and make connections to your own life after you have viewed the speech.  
Historix Mueller

History Education in a World of Information Surplus | Democratizing Knowledge - 14 views

  • ut the problem of doing history this way in an age of information-surplus is that students spend much of their time as passive audience members, ingesting information, rather than grappling with it to find their own voices. Let’s be clear – it is inconceivable that students won’t have access to lecture information in the future: Wikipedia has every fact that I’ll cover in my AP U.S. History course this year, and if students want to hear an expert lecture they can always find one on iTunes University from Berkeley or MIT. So instead of coverage-style lecturing we need to use the very valuable classroom time to engage in deep inquiry about historical and current problems. Teachers should create powerful essential questions that require students to master information literacy skills they’ll need in a digital age, and to master historical inquiry. From these questions, students will behave as historians, researching, analyzing, evaluating, and creating DAILY. Isn’t that more valuable critical thinking than the odd essay question every few weeks between lectures? Liz Becker and Laufenberg and correct. The 20th century history classroom has to change. In a world of information surplus, we must recognize that good history education must transform students into power information critics, able to evaluate claims and build their own truths from myriad facts.
David Hilton

Subject Matters: Why students fall behind on history - CNN.com - 15 views

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    An article on some of the challenges facing history teachers these days.
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