Skip to main content

Home/ SEC300/ Group items tagged fun

Rss Feed Group items tagged

alexis hubert

Fun Mathematics Lessons by Cynthia Lanius - 0 views

  •  
    These lesson plans are meant to be fun and interactive for the students. Some can be done as a cooperative learning activity, some are more focused on inidividual work, and some are online activities that can be submitted and checked for accuracy online. 
Lenore Howard

Cool Tools for School - 0 views

  •  
    Where do I start, they have link to websites for students and teachers that create discussion forums, making quizzes and polls, designing of slideshows and presentations with a plethera of websites one might now be able to find otherwise. Designing word art and also link to games that are educational as well as fun for students.
Melissa Williamson

Teaching Ideas - 0 views

  •  
    Ideas for improving history lessons to make them interactive and fun.
Andie Faircloth

The Onion- "America's Finest News Source" - 0 views

  •  
    I had completely forgotten about this! I used The Onion in high school; it's a satirical based newspaper about politics, local events, entertainment and other various topics. This is a great way to test students' understanding of satire in a fun way.
Nicole Ottaway

http://www.funbrain.com/math/ - 0 views

  •  
    This is a fun game to play with the class as a review activity. More geared towards algebra classes or below.
Katlyn Lancaster

Story Maker - 0 views

  •  
    On this website, you use graphics to create a story. The options are a little limited, but it could help in generating ideas for creative writing. Although this website may seem a little juvenile at first glance, it is actually very fun and I think high schoolers may enjoy it.
Katlyn Lancaster

Edgar Allan Poe Death Theories - 0 views

  •  
    While this entire website is full of useful information about Edgar Allan Poe (and therefore may be useful in an English class), this particular page is highly interesting. It contains information on all of the major theories on how and why Poe died, which could make for a very fun inquiry lesson.
Andie Faircloth

Grammar Bytes - 0 views

  •  
    This fun and hilarious site has EVERYTHING you need for making grammar instruction interactive and enjoyable: terms, handouts, presentations, exercises/games, YouTube videos, and tip and rules!!!
Patrick McCarthy

History.com - History Made Every Day - American & World History - 0 views

  •  
    This is the History Channel website.  It has a lot of fun facts, games, and videos to engage the students.  I would caution them to check the historical accuracy for some of the website's videos though.  
Emily Watson

GoAnimate - Make your own cartoons and animations easily. Our tools are free and you do... - 0 views

  •  
    This is a free animation site where students or teachers can create animations to show to their class. I've seen other sites, but this is the best combination of easy to use and fun tools. There are various characters, voices and settings.
Emily Watson

Wikispaces - For Educators - 0 views

  •  
    Similar to glogs or prezzis, wikispaces provide a digial place for students to synthesize, express and design their knowledge into a fun and free product. This is the tool that our students at Isaac Bear used when they delivered their digital reflections
alethea killiany

APlus Math - 0 views

  •  
    This site has many fun math games incuding flash cards, word searches, and puzzles. Appeals to many differnt learning styles. Covers many different topics.
alethea killiany

Cool Math Sites - 0 views

  •  
    great for ideas of fun ways to teach math or review concepts
Lenore Howard

Small games for different subjects and grade levels - 0 views

  •  
    This site through BBC contains many fun interactive games that incorporate learning into each level of the game. I find them entertaining myself but I think this website would be great for having students remain on task after a test or quiz, or perhaps they have worked ahead and need to become occupied with something. Can be used by anybody, anywhere!
Colin Tracy

Renaissance Art - 0 views

  •  
    Interactive, fun and interesting website about the Renaissance art and artists.
Andie Faircloth

Fun and Easy Creative Writing Prompts - 0 views

  •  
    Stuck? Are your students stuck? This website offers a plethora or creative writing prompts to jog any writer-blocked mind. Could also serve as a bell ringer/exit ticket assignment.
Nicole Ottaway

Fun Mathematics Lessons by Cynthia Lanius - 0 views

  •  
    This site has some really different activities on it that would be good for a casual day. These would help break up the class from the typical notes.
Morgan Wintsch

Top 20 Websites No Teacher Should Start the 2010-2011 Year Without - 0 views

  •  
    Lists websites that make teaching more fun and/or easier such as: Diigo, Doodle, Dropbox, Edmondo, LiveBinders, etc.
monet hardison

Ninth Grade Vocabulary Games - 0 views

  •  
    Vocabulary review games!! Whether you're learning or teaching analogies, antonyms and synonyms, compound words, figurative language, homophones, parts of speech, root words, prefixes and suffixes or contractions to your English speakers or your ESL students, Vocabulary *is* fun!
Joseph Perone

Why Do I Have to Take Algebra? - 1 views

  • "I don't need algebra, because I'm not going to college": There was a time not so long ago when children in middle schools were assigned to "tracks" according to what "everybody knew" each child would "need". (This tracking was why middle schools were invented in the first place.) Educational "experts" presumed to "know" what the various children "needed", based on culturally-based (but unjustified) presumptions. The educators then locked children into "appropriate" tracks, thereby locking many children out of college before they'd even begun high schoo
  • Modern educationist philosophy in America seems to say that education has to be "fun" and "entertaining" to be justifiable. Today's students often absorb the ethic that, unless a thing is easy, they shouldn't have to bother. But most worthwhile things in life are going to require some effort. If you want that great job, that interesting career, that open-ended future, you're almost certainly going to need some mathematical skills. And algebra is the basis, the foundation, the tool-box, for those skills.
  • "I'm only taking this class because the university makes me!": Let's be brutally honest here. The university didn't put a gun to your head and make you enroll. You decided you wanted their degree. You wanted their piece of paper. Why? Probably so you could (eventually) get a better job. In order to get that job, you need at least some subset of the skills which are taught in algebra. You might be right that you'll never factor another quadratic in your entire life. But you want the university's piece of paper, so you're going to have to jump through the hoops required to get it. The algebra class is one of those hoops. If you don't want to jump through the hoop, that's fine; but you won't get the piece of paper. It's your choice
  • ...4 more annotations...
  • "I can't drop out!", you reply, "I can't get that job unless I have a college degree." Ah. So, to get the job you want, you need to demonstrate proficiency in basic job skills. To demonstrate that proficiency, you need a degree. To get the degree, you need algebra. In other words, you do need this stuff for your job
  • "Will algebra even be 'relevant' in the future?": While jobs and their specific skill-sets may change over time, mathematics won't. Twenty years from now, two plus two will still be four, and quadratics will still be either factorable or prime. Whatever job you get will provide the job-specific training you need, but to get that job in the first place, you're going to need some background knowledge and skills. And to be able to keep up with progress, to keep on top of new skill-sets, to move up the ladder, to jump across into new and better career fields, you will need the flexibility of a broad foundation. That foundation includes mathematics
  • The lessons and patterns of mathematics are important, too. If all you take from algebra is a comfort with variables and formulas, an ability to interpret graphs and to think logically, and a willingness to use abstraction when you try to solve problems, then you have gained some incredibly useful life skills, skills that will open doors, give you options, and allow you to make your own informed choices
  • The specific algorithms you might study are not as important as the general patterns, techniques, and lessons that you can learn. Don't short-change your future by opting out now
  •  
    Great answer to the question "Why do I need to know Algebra???"
1 - 20 of 23 Next ›
Showing 20 items per page