Skip to main content

Home/ Minchau School/ Group items tagged science

Rss Feed Group items tagged

Lissa Davies

Wildlife and Nature videos - 0 views

  •  
    Animal videos and information
Lissa Davies

A Plethora of habitat websites and activities - 0 views

  •  
    Great list of different sites on habitats
Lissa Davies

Instructions - 1 views

This isa place for us to store and share our favourite sites to use with students and each other. When you discover a great site on a particular topic, simply bookmark it to Diigo, and share it to ...

Instructions

started by Lissa Davies on 10 Oct 10 no follow-up yet
Lissa Davies

Welcome to Web Weather for Kids - 2 views

  • Learn what makes weather wet and wild, do cool activities, and become hot at forecasting the weather on Web Weather for Kids!
    • Lissa Davies
       
      I like how this site has safety for kids
  •  
    This is a great site for kids
Lissa Davies

YouTube - Solar Roadways: The Prototype - 0 views

  •  
    A video outlining a proposal to create solar roadways to solve our  energy needs. 
Lissa Davies

Extreme Planet Makeover - 0 views

  •  
    How to integrate Extreme Planet Makeover into the classroom: Extreme Planet Makeover is a neat simulation where students can design a custom planet. As they create their own custom planet, they will begin to notice what makes a planet habitable or not, and the unique features that must be in place for life. Extreme Planet Makeover can be used with the whole class using a projector-connected computer or interactive whiteboard. Invite each student to make an adjustment to the planet. With each adjustment, students can describe the ways that the planet has changed. The finished class planet can be used as the base for a creative writing prompt. Set up Extreme Planet Makeover as a center activity where students can create a planet and download to save. The finished planets can be shared on a class photo stream, website, or blog where students can compare and contrast the features of each planet. In a one to one or computer lab setting, students can each create a planet that they use for a compare/contrast to an actual planet in the solar system and as a creative writing prompt. Who lives on this planet? What galaxy is their planet in? How do you get there? Tips: One of the features I really appreciate about the Extreme Planet Makeover is the explanations that pop up over each planet attribute. Students learn about how atmosphere, size, different stars, the distance from the star, and the age effect a planet.
Lissa Davies

Top Documentary Films - Watch Free Documentaries Online - 0 views

  •  
    Top Documentary Films is a great site for finding all sorts of documentaries. While not hosting these documentaries, it does provide links to them that are found on Google Video, You Tube etc.  Be forewarned that there are topics listed that are not suitable for children - as always, preview and choose from the larger collection before using them.
Lissa Davies

Edheads - Activate Your Mind! - 0 views

  •  
    Edheads helps students learn through educational games and activities designed to meet state and national standards (US). EdTechIdeas: Students can learn about simple and compound machines, how to predict the weather,  perform virtual knee surgery, and even create a stem cell line.
Lissa Davies

Google Maps World Gazetteer | maplandia.com - 0 views

  •  
    You can look at all kinds of interesting places in Google Earth and Maps if you search correctly and long enough. But if you're searching for something small and you don't know the coordinates, you might get very frustrated. Maplandia offers an categories to help you zero in on what you need. 
Lissa Davies

Video -- Tsunamis 101 -- National Geographic - 0 views

  •  
    A 3 1/2 minute video about tsunamis
Lissa Davies

Shadow art Kumi Yamashita - BOOOOOOOM! - CREATE * INSPIRE * COMMUNITY * ART * DESIGN * ... - 0 views

  •  
    Amazing art using shadows. Great to demo for light and shadow grade 4
Lissa Davies

The Greatest and Greenest Earth Day Sites for Kids - Part II « Ed Tech Ideas - 0 views

  •  
    Greatest Earth Day sites part 2
Lissa Davies

Beautiful web-based timeline software - 0 views

  •  
    How to integrate Tiki-Toki into the classroom: Tiki-Toki is a fabulous new way for your students to create and share online.  Timelines are an obvious choice for history projects but can be used throughout the year for a variety of subjects and learning focuses.  Students can reflect on and share learning using a Tiki-Toki timeline.  Students can begin a timeline at the beginning of the year sharing videos, links, pictures and reflections each unit, week, month, or semester until the end of the school year.  This is a nice way to encourage students to reflect on learning while providing them with a record of what has been accomplished throughout the year.Students can create timelines based on books or literature they are reading.  Young students can create a timeline with information about beginning, middle and end while older students can add supporting details, action, climax and concluding thoughts.  A timeline book report is a welcome change for your logical/analytical thinkers- seriously, offer it as an option!Timelines can also be used as KWL charts (Know, Want to Know, Learned).  At the beginning of any learning, students can list the facts that they know about the topic. Next, they can brainstorm and write about what they want to know about a topic.  At the end of the unit or semester, students can detail what they have learned including any relevant videos or images.iLearn Technology
Lissa Davies

50th Anniversary of NASA - 1 views

  •  
    This is one of those sites that you could let kids loose on just for exploration.  Without any guidance from you they will learn plenty!  Ideally kids would explore this site in partners or on their own in a one to one computer lab setting.  If each student has a computer, headphones will be a necessity.  If individual exploration just isn't in the cards, visit the site as a class with an interactive whiteboard or projector-connected computers.  Invite students up to the computer (whiteboard) to take turns guiding the class.  The site has plenty of interactive content to give each student a chance at the computer (whiteboard).  Unless you have a good chunk of time dedicated to the site, this is one that I would stretch out over a week.  Each day students can explore a new decade. The space exploration component of this site is amazing and could keep everyone plenty busy with learning.  With older students, discuss what the music of the decade reveals about that time in history.  What does the music tell them about people, community, values, events of the day?  Take it one step further and ask students to dig into other historical events in each decade, discussing their impact on space exploration, culture and where we are today.  One thing that I missed out on in history was all of the stories that make it so rich.  For me, history was reduced to names, dates and places.  Give your students the opportunity to put themselves into history and learn about how the events influenced each other.iLearn Technology
Lissa Davies

iLearn Technology » Blog Archive » NOVA: Design a Parachute - 0 views

  •  
    How to integrate the NOVA Design a Parachute interactive into the classroom: In this activity, students assume the role of engineer as they design a parachute that will slow the Mars Explorer Rover as it lands on the surface of Mars.  I like the authentic feel of this activity, students are led through the thinking process of an engineer as they consider all of the requirements the chute must meet before they begin designing.Approach this interactive as a class using an interactive whiteboard or projector-connected computer.  As a class, get "briefed" on the requirements for the parachute design.  Discuss how these requirements may impact the parachute design.  Treat this like an actual briefing and encourage discussion (all ages like to pretend!).  Before students access the interactive, ask them to sketch their thoughts about parachute design.  This lets them think through the design apart from the pre-determined categories presented in the interactive.Students can design and test their parachutes individually in a one to one computer lab setting or take turns designing and testing in a computer center lab on classroom computers.Debrief after the interactive to discuss the parameters that were the most successful and what students learned about volume, drag, strength and stability.Extend this activity by creating a mock-up of the parachute they designed online.  Find a high place on the playground or in the building where students can test these parachutes.  What did they have to adjust for an Earth bound parachute? iLearn Technology
Lissa Davies

Solar Car Racing Game - TryEngineering - 0 views

  •  
    Cool site with a game about designing and racing your own solar car!
Lissa Davies

10 Fab Flickr Groups for Teachers | The Whiteboard Blog - 0 views

  •  
    List of Flickr groups to use with students, such as Geometric Beauty for math lessons, etc. 
« First ‹ Previous 41 - 60 of 74 Next ›
Showing 20 items per page