Skip to main content

Home/ History Teachers/ Group items matching "Students" in title, tags, annotations or url

Group items matching
in title, tags, annotations or url

Sort By: Relevance | Date Filter: All | Bookmarks | Topics Simple Middle
John Tognolini

Melbourne Museum: Investigating Pompeii - 0 views

  •  
    Two education kits have been designed to support senior secondary student engagement in the exhibition A Day in Pompeii. VCE Classical Societies and Cultures for Victoria, and HSC Ancient History for NSW students.
Mark Moran

Students' Guide to Web Search - 0 views

  •  
    The Internet has many sites with information and help for homework assignments. But how do you know if the information a site contains is reliable? The Students' Guide to Web Search helps you learn how to tell a good site from a garbage site, and shows you how to start searching smart.
Ben Pope

History - Wordle - 0 views

  •  
    This article suggests using 'wordle' to create a 'word cloud' from a selected text. It works really well in historical sources (or modern articles) for bringing out key terms. It's also a really efficient way for students to 'scan' a text to see if it might be relevant when researching - particularly for those who read slowly, or for ESL students who are daunted by large blocks of text - and it looks very nice too!
Michelle DeSilva

Virtual field trip - 0 views

  •  
    WITH AN INTERNET CONNECTION, STUDENTS CAN TRAVEL AROUND THE WORLD RIGHT IN YOUR CLASSROOM. SO BUCKLE UP YOUR SEATBELT, AND TAKE YOUR STUDENTS ALONG FOR AN EXCITING RIDE!
David Hilton

Twitter | Teachinghistory.org - 8 views

  •  
    Does anyone else use Twitter with their classes? I use #historystudent with my senior history students. Please feel free to bring your students onto the feed. DM me on MisterHistory@twitter.com if you'd like to organise collaboration. 
Deven Black

A Teacher's Guide to the Holocaust - 13 views

  •  
    A Teacher's Guide to the Holocaust offers an overview of the people and events of the Holocaust. Extensive teacher resources are included."> This is a cached version of http://fcit.usf.edu/holocaust/default.htm. Diigo.com has no relation to the site.x


    TimelinePeople Arts
    Activities<img s
Lance Mosier

Democracy of Tomorrow - 4 views

  •  
    Student created website that promotes students taking an active role in the democratic process.
Lance Mosier

TitanPad - 8 views

  •  
    Create a public space for group collaboration on the fly. Might be a great tool to have on-line discussion with students, or a place for students to collaborate on an assignment.
Van Weringh

World War 2 interactive PPTs, made with flash - 22 views

  •  
    Interactive powerpoints made with flash about germany, hitler, world war 2. Very useful for students, they can use it to revise for world war 2.
  •  
    Interactive powerpoints made with flash about germany, hitler, world war 2. Very useful for students, they can use it to revise.
Lance Mosier

Teachers Network: How to Use the Internet in Your Classroom - 10 views

  •  
    The Virtual Field Trip is a field trip that students and teachers take via the Internet.  A great benefit of this activity is that it utilizes technology tools to help students visualize and understand subject matter through exploration and active learning. It's also a great way to "travel" without leaving your classroom! Look for sites with QuickTime VR, which allows you to view panoramic views of your virtual field trip location.
Peter Pappas

The Student As Historian - DBQ Resources and Strategies - 30 views

  •  
    This downloadable SlideShare accompanies my workshop in "Teaching with Documents." Don't think of it as a presentation. It's a online guide to resources and includes strategy illustrations from my workshop.
Lance Mosier

Teacher Guide - George Washington: A National Treasure - 7 views

  •  
    This Teacher Resource Guide is designed for incorporation into history and social studies curricula. It will introduce your students to some of the events and issues that shaped George Washington's life. The activities should enhance your students' knowledge of Washington and expand their horizons about this complex and interesting man.
Jennifer Garcia

The Plantation Letters, Home - 17 views

  •  
    "This teaching resource includes digitized selections from the Cameron Family Papers extracted from the Southern Historical Collection at UNC-Chapel Hill. The resource is designed for non-commercial use by educators and students interested in themes associated with antebellum plantation life. The original Cameron Family Papers (1757-1978) include some 35,000 undigitized items available for public perusal in the university's Wilson Library. This web resource presents only a small fraction of the total available documents, as identified and digitized by the site designers to best represent themes associated with traditionally underrepresented persons on antebellum plantations, namely slaves, women, and children. The Camerons regularly communicated by post with their family, friends, and business associates (overseers, tradespersons, and merchants). The level of detail provided in their personal communication provides a rich context for the study of antebellum plantation life in the southern United States. Site users may either search for letters related to a particular theme, or browse available letters using the index of letters page. All letters have been tagged by subject/theme. Letters are available in Macromedia Flashpaper format (.swf). Users may choose to view the original source letter, a typed transcription of the original text (easier to read), or both. The transcription is recommended to teachers and students with limited time, given the difficulty in deciphering original text. "
Brian Peoples

The bar has been raised. - 4 views

  • A school leader who wishes to “create and sustain a culture that supports digital age learning must become&nbsp;comfortable&nbsp;collaborating as co-learners with colleagues and students around the world” (aka&nbsp;“I don’t do technology” is no longer acceptable.) &nbsp;Also, this framework seeks to help school leaders propel their organizations forward as members of “dynamic learning communities.” Vision is vital.
  • ensure instructional innovation; model and promote effective use of technology for learning; provide learner-centered environments to meet the individual needs of students; ensure effective practice in the study of technology and infusion across curriculum; promote and participate in learning communities that allow for global, digital-age collaboration
  • allocate time, resource and access to ensure ongoing professional growth in technology fluency and integration; facilitate and participate in learning communities to nurture administrators, teachers, and staff; promote and model effective communication and collaboration using digital tools; stay current on the latest educational research and emerging trends in educational technology to improve student learning
  • ...2 more annotations...
  • model and establish policies for safe, legal, and ethical use of digital information/technology; promote and model responsible social media interactions; model and facilitate a shared cultural understanding and involvement in global issues through the use of communication and collaboration tools
  • A med student at UVA commented to our leadership team- teachers and admins together- this past week that the “real learning begins when we get to the team-based work.”
  •  
    thought-provoking
Kristin Keinz

Harrisonburg Virginia Urban Renewal Documents - 2 views

  •  
    In the 1950s and 1960s planners in Harrisonburg, VA implemented a federally sponsored slum clearance and urban renewal program. Seeking to compare this redevelopment effort with the urban renewal efforts in other major cities, students in James Madison University's US Urban Social History Course have begun digitizing relevant primary documents. These files are drawn from Harrisonburg's City Council minutes as well as records located at the Department of Planning and Community Development, the Harrisonburg Redevelopment and Housing Authority, and in local planner Robert Sullivan's personal collection. The files are organized by the location where the originals are currently located. Indices and summaries of relevant Daily New Record articles will be added shortly. The students who digitzed this collection of documents include: John Almquist, Alicen Brown, Alexander Carroll, Rose Anne Coates, Troy Cunningham, Eric Echelberger, John Fitzmaurice, Paul Frankel, Christopher Gray, William Hayes, Mark Hitchko, Kristin Keinz, Anna Klemm, Meaghan Leonard, Christina Lloyd-Williams, Brian Mannion, Mallory Micetich, Elizabeth Morris, Emily Neufeld, Samuel Padgett, Taylor Wood
Suzie Nestico

Anthony Armstrong's US History Class Wiki - 22 views

  •  
    Amazing, resourceful, student-centered class wiki for US History.  Student blogs, course content, projects and assignments.  Fantastic resource for any social studies teacher.
Sallee Humanities

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

  •  
    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
Mr Maher

Computational Propaganda Worldwide: Executive Summary - 4 views

  •  
    12 page article for Civics and History teachers to scan quickly and get a sense of the current world of propaganda. When teaching students about posters and slogans from World War I and II, we have to let students know if the infinitely more powerful tools of propaganda today
  •  
    One comparison would be the political pamphlet of 16th Germany. The reformation resulted. The chart at the end was useful.
Mr Maher

President Ford's Congressional Testimony on Nixon Pardon Preview - YouTube - 0 views

  •  
    Can students be convinced of a judgement if it is communicated in a clear, conscise and convincing manner? In this video, President Gerald Ford explains why he pardoned Richard Nixon. Play this video for students after providing them with a brief explanation of Watergate. Have them offer their interpretations.
Mr Maher

The United States Magazine and Democratic Review - Google Books - 1 views

  •  
    Almost every US History teacher tells students about Manifest Destiny, boiling down an explanation of the term to about eight words in a bullet point of a 18 slides presentation that students dutifully copy and recognize out of four other distractors in a multiple choice question. This is the article the phrase comes from - teachers should be forced to read it and explain why they think their teaching of the phrase does any justice to history at all
‹ Previous 21 - 40 of 376 Next › Last »
Showing 20 items per page