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Tom Daccord

Teaching Global Studies With Technology: A four-part training workshop | The Center for... - 1 views

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    "Teaching Global Studies With Technology: A four-part training workshop * Participants apply separately for each two-day workshop and can apply to be a part of all four. The goal of this set of workshops is to assist educators in integrating technology into their classroom teaching. Together, we aim to equip teachers with new skills and ideas for creating student-centered learning environments for the 21st century."
Tom Daccord

Teaching History With Technology - 3 views

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    EdTechTeacher.org presents The Center for Teaching History with Technology, a resource created to help K-12 history and social studies teachers incorporate technology effectively into their courses. Find resources for histlaptop classory and social studies lesson plans, activities, projects, games, and quizzes that use technology. Explore inquiry-based lessons, activities, and projects. Learn about new and emerging technologies such as blogs, podcasts, wikis, ipods, and online social networks and explore innnovative ways of integrating them into the curriculum. Find out how others are using technology in the classroom.
Tom Daccord

Social Studies: Reading - 0 views

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    D.C. Everest Social Studies Department actively promotes reading by teaching content reading strategies, using historical fiction and non-fiction in the classroom, and teaching historical research skills. Included are helpful Social Studies Reading links.
Patrick Higgins

The Best Online Resources For Teaching & Learning About World War II (Part One) | Larry... - 4 views

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    Larry Ferlazzo's list of resources for teaching WWII
Tom Daccord

The Pursuit of Technology Integration Happiness: 10 Resources for Teaching History with... - 4 views

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    "10 Resources for Teaching History with Technology"
Tom Daccord

The Pursuit of Technology Integration Happiness: 10 Resources for Teaching Geography wi... - 6 views

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    "10 Resources for Teaching Geography with Technology"
Michelle DeSilva

socialtechineducation - home - 0 views

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    A place where teachers can share lesson plans integrating social tech into teaching and learning.
Tom Daccord

Education - Change.org: Disconnected - 0 views

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    As an artist and teacher, Shelly Blake-Plock is an everyday instigator for progressive art, organization, and education. In addition to his work teaching high school Latin and Art History, Shelly is a member of both the experimental Red Room Collective and Baltimore's High Zero Foundation; he also works daily as lead blogger at teachpaperless.com to promote fresh ways of thinking about new culture and new education for a new millennium.
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    As an artist and teacher, Shelly is an everyday instigator for progressive art, organization, and education. In addition to his work teaching high school Latin and Art History, Shelly is a member of both the experimental Red Room Collective and Baltimore's High Zero Foundation; he also works daily as lead blogger at teachpaperless.com to promote fresh ways of thinking about new culture and new education for a new millennium.
Patrick Higgins

A Bit of a Confession | Metanoia - 0 views

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    Ryan's post from May 27th regarding the overwhelming desire to teach content.
Tom Daccord

PBS Teachers | Access, Analyze, Act: From Economic Theory to Financial Reality - 1 views

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    "David Brancaccio gives an impassioned plea for teachers to go beyond the text book approach to teaching economics in an effort to meet real world challenges and build a economic foundation for the next generation." [Video 2 mins. 49 secs.]
Tom Daccord

Diana Hess, Controversy in the Classroom - 1 views

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    "University of Wisconsin Professor Diana Hess has published Controversy in the Classroom: The Democratic Power of Discussion (Routledge, 2009). The longitudinal study of high school students that is a major source of data for this book was partly funded by CIRCLE. Hess argues that planned, moderated discussions of controversial issues teach essential democratic skills. She provides research-based advice about how to define "controversial issues" and handle them in classrooms."
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    "University of Wisconsin Professor Diana Hess has published Controversy in the Classroom: The Democratic Power of Discussion (Routledge, 2009). The longitudinal study of high school students that is a major source of data for this book was partly funded by CIRCLE. Hess argues that planned, moderated discussions of controversial issues teach essential democratic skills. She provides research-based advice about how to define "controversial issues" and handle them in classrooms."
Tom Daccord

American Dynasties - 2 views

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    "An irreverent, surprising, and fresh approach to teaching social history to secondary schoolers, American Dynasties is an immersive digital video game where players live the lives of Americans from eras past."
Tom Daccord

The Best Sites To Help Teach About 9/11 | Larry Ferlazzo's Websites of the Day... - 0 views

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    This list by Larry Ferlazzo highlights accessible sites for English Language Learners.
Tom Daccord

The Partnership for 21st Century Skills - ICT Literacy Maps - 0 views

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    In collaboration with several content area organizations, the Partnership for 21st Century Skills developed a series of ICT Literacy Maps illustrating the intersection between Information and Communication Technology (ICT) Literacy and core academic subjects including English, mathematics, science and social studies (civics/government, geography, economics, history). The maps enable educators to gain concrete examples of how ICT Literacy can be integrated into core subjects, while making the teaching and learning of core subjects more relevant to the demands of the 21st century.
Patrick Higgins

Welcome - The Flow of History - 0 views

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    Great blend of visual and text to teach the "flow" of history.
Tom Daccord

Massachusetts Council for the Social Studies - 0 views

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    The Massachusetts Council for the Social Studies (MCSS) is an independent, non-partisan, non-profit educational organization. It is a network of social studies educators who work at every level of schooling. They communicate with each other through publications and meetings. They broaden their communication by working with related professional associations, government, and private agencies. MCSS is affiliated with the National Council for the Social Studies (NCSS) and participates fully in that organization's efforts to advance the profession. NCSS encourages the highest standards of teaching, teacher preparation, and curriculum development. NCSS has developed and published both a code of ethics and academic freedom standards. It has established a defense fund to provide first-line legal assistance to teachers threatened with actions that violate this freedom. Social Education , the official journal of NCSS since 1937, is an outstanding organ of information and commentary. The Social Studies Professional is a newsletter of resources and opportunities. Social Studies and the Young Learner is a quarterly journal devoted exclusively to elementary social studies education. In addition, the NCSS publications program features a wide variety of bulletins, special publications, and standards. The program of the NCSS annual meeting provides major speakers, clinics, sessions, tours, a major exhibit of instructional materials, and several awards honoring those who have contributed to the advancement of social studies education.
Patrick Higgins

NHEC | History Content - 0 views

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    George Mason University's project for the teaching of American History. Some wonderful resources and live conversations with historians, I think.
Neil Schlager

Milestone Documents - Primary Source Texts & Expert Analysis - 1 views

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    MilestoneDocuments.com combines famous primary source texts with expert analysis by esteemed historians. Designed for teachers, students, and researchers, MilestoneDocuments.com explores the speeches, laws and legal opinions, proclamations and executive orders, and other documents that influenced the course of history. At present the site only covers documents from American history, but we will be adding coverage of primary documents from world history later in 2009. Also coming soon is a greatly expanded set of resources for teaching with documents. For now, see our free monthly e-newsletter for U.S. history teachers.
Tom Daccord

Grown Up Digital » New game-based high-school history course - 0 views

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    New game-based high-school history course Posted by: Don Tapscott on 05Jun 2009 For a couple of decades I've been advocating a new model of pedagogy that involves technology. For example, I just published a piece in the Edge on the Demise of the University. The purpose of introducing technology into schools isn't to simply digitize existing processes and leave the basic broadcast teaching model unchanged. Instead, technology opens the door to new techniques that focus on the student and allow students to proceed at their own pace. In this spirit, imagine students studying American history with the same concentration and enthusiasm they display when playing their favourite video games. After all, 97 percent of high school students are avid gamers. That's the goal of Conspiracy Code, an online game based course released this week by Florida Virtual School (FLVS), and 360Ed, Inc. an education game development company.
Patrick Higgins

America in the 20th Century - History's most popular video series - 1 views

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    Excellent source for anyone teaching 20th Century American History.
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