Macbeth Curriculum | Actors Shakespeare Project - 0 views
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Students will participate in activities designed to explore the themes, characters and volatile moral issues raised in Shakespeare's Macbeth. Students will explore the themes of power, ambition and the social status of women in the play and in this production set in the 1920's. By engaging students with text from main characters in the play, students will explore their response to the play's key question: what is the tragedy of Macbeth?
What's Lost as Handwriting Fades - NYTimes.com - 0 views
Access and Use More Than 20,000 Historical Maps from the New York Public Library - 0 views
Who do our students consider the audience? SmartBlogs - 0 views
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We need to develop more learning opportunities where students constitute the actual evaluators for the work itself. Imagine if students, teachers and others evaluate and provide feedback to determine the effectiveness of a student's creation: Develop an 60-second speech to be shared with the student council and three advertising posters to be copied and placed around school to decrease bullying. Your work will be evaluated according to our rubric by the students in our class, outside professionals and me - as the teacher. These are the experiences that push learning beyond a one-way conversation between student and teacher. They demystify the assessment process and allow each student to be a creator and simultaneous evaluator, providing multiple experiences for students to recognize and apply the criteria for quality"
8 Steps To Flipped Teacher Professional Development - 0 views
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"Whatever you do the first year will be a trainwreck (compared to the nice and tidy sit-and-get PD). So from the beginning, everyone should be aware that it's all a work in progress-just like the profession itself. Perhaps the greatest potential here is in the chance to personalize professional development for teachers. The above ideas are too vague to be considered an exact guide, but an "exact guide" really isn't possible without ending up with something as top-heavy and standardized as the process it seeks to replace-or at least supplement. Instead focus on the big ideas-personalizing educator training through self-directed and social media-based professional development."
To Create Change, Leadership Is More Important Than Authority - Greg Satell - Harvard B... - 0 views
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Instead of painstakingly building local majorities, they attempted 2 compel entire populations. http://t.co/bWjeteFQYK #scalefail @sewilkie
A Media Specialist's Guide to the Internet: UPDATED: Want to Learn About Makerspaces? H... - 0 views
Twitter Literacy (I refuse to make up a Twittery name for it) - City Brights: Howard Rh... - 1 views
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"Know-how is where the difference lies"...Along w "so,what & "why-buy" (and not just with #Twitter Literacy) http://t.co/kiWzdDOgkU #edchat
Project Based Learning: Explained. - YouTube - 0 views
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"The Buck Institute for Education commissioned the cutting-edge advertising agency, Common Craft, to create a short animated video that explains in clear language the essential elements of Project Based Learning (PBL). This simple video makes the essential elements of PBL come alive and brings to light the 21st Century skills and competencies (collaboration, communication, critical thinking) that will enable K-12 students to be college and work-ready as well as effective members of their communities."
The Abolitionists | Created Equal - 0 views
Launchpad: Frederick Douglass's "What To the Slave Is the Fourth of July?" | EDSITEment - 0 views
Three Months Among the Reconstructionists - Sidney Andrews - The Atlantic - 0 views
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In the fall of 1865, Sidney Andrews, a northern-Illinois-based journalist, set out to take stock of the post-war South, traveling extensively in South Carolina, North Carolina, and Georgia-attending state constitutional conventions and speaking with people from a variety of backgrounds. His scathing assessment gave ammunition to those advocating a more aggressive Northern hand in Reconstruction: he wrote disparagingly of a widespread lack of education and culture, an undemocratic caste system, festering racial tensions, and entrenched anti-Union sentiment. His reports were published in The Atlantic and elsewhere, and the topic proved to be of such interest to Northern readers that some of his writings were gathered in an 1866 book, The South Since the War. In the congressional elections that year, advocates of much harsher policies toward the South swept to power, and for the following decade-known as the years of "Radical Reconstruction"-the South would be subjected to firm rules imposed by Congress.
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