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Courtney Hill

Huey Long and Father Coughlin speak 1935 - 0 views

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    Pan of Coughlin's Church, people entering church, Coughlin delivers speech, crowd. Huey Long before crowd singing Every man a king crowd, long delivers speech, woman comments on Long, man comments on Long. William Lemke on platform, Lemke speaking.
Gary Wright

Hands-On Activities for Teaching High School - 0 views

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    This website has a lot of "hands-on, minds-on" activities for teaching high school and middle school. There are also links to print out the handouts that go with each activity. A great tool!
Jackson Ray

BBC History - 1 views

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    This website is sponsored by BBC and is similar to the History.com.  It has a lot of videos, facts, and general information on many historical events.  
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    This is a good site for teachers to check in on and learn new things to teach. Also, it could be used to have the kids read an article and reflect on it or use for research.
Patrick McCarthy

History of Napoleon Bonaparte and the First Empire, History of Napoleon III and the Sec... - 1 views

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    This is a site sponsored by the Napoleon Foundation which offers significant information on one of history's most notorious figures. It includes text, timelines, family trees, etc.  
Gary Wright

Biology in Motion - 0 views

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    Online resource that provides numerous activities, interactive cartoons, and online labs. There is also a link provided on the website "Tips for teachers" that provides teachers with suggestions on how to incorporate this technology into the classroom
Katlyn Lancaster

Edgar Allan Poe Death Theories - 0 views

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    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.
alexis hubert

High School Math Activities | Education.com - 0 views

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    This website gives me good ideas on how to connect what I am teaching in the class to things or ideas that the students encounter on a regular basis. There are many ways to expand the learning in the classroom to outside occurrences. 
Joseph Perone

Becoming a Nurse - Why Math is Critical - 1 views

  • Nursing Math It is not the hardest math in the world, but you do need a solid understanding of basic math. Check out the free basic math review and if any of it seems unfamiliar, you should brush up on your basic math skills. There is no way around it you need to know math to get in nursing school, become a nurse and practice safely. Nursing math is all about dosage calculation and you must be right all the time.
  • Test taking skills. Nursing tests are not your standard exams. Many nursing students fail simply because they can not comprehend the test questions.  Check out either reducing test anxiety or test taking tips DO NOT MISS THE FREE FIVE DAY TEST TAKING SKILLS CLASS.
  • earn Nursing Math -- Drug Calculation This page has three calculators for nursing math and drug calculations. What is special about these calculators is that they are not here just to give you the value, but to show you the steps to learn how to calculate the value on your own.
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    For anyone who wants to go into medicine (nursing, being a doctor, etc), and wants to know "why we need to know this" - read on!
Chris Bollow

PBS Teachers | PBS Teachers . Social Studies - 1 views

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    This is possibly the page bookmarked on here that will be used THE MOST in the future. It seems as if there are just an infinite amount of good lesson plans on here. Even if I were to not necessarily steal the whole lesson, it's just a good place with a
Chris Bollow

Smithsonian - 0 views

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    This site has information on US History, World History, and current events. There are games and puzzles, videos, articles, photos, and information on stuff being studied for the first time right now.
Lindsey Skinner

Greek and Latin Roots: Roots - 0 views

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    This site is great and directly ties into one of the lessons on prefixes, roots and suffixes that I put into my unit plan
Chad Behanna

hufflessons / American Romanticism - 0 views

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    This wiki entry is from a teacher and it gives several ideas on how to explore American Romanticism. It also gives some more in depth information on Edgar Allan Poe.
Chris Kidder

PBS teachers - 0 views

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    PBS Teachers is PBS' national web destination for high-quality preK-12 educational resources. Here you'll find classroom materials suitable for a wide range of subjects and grade levels. We provide thousands of lesson plans, teaching activities, on-demand video assets, and interactive games and simulations. These resources are correlated to state and national educational standards and are tied to PBS' award-winning on-air and online programming like NOVA, Nature, Cyberchase, Between the Lions and more.
Chris Bollow

Discovery Education - 0 views

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    This is the Discovery online official website with resources for history teachers.
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    The site provides a lot of lesson plans and numerous topics for discussion in a classroom. One example would be the discussion titled "Right to Privacy?" which is about cameras being put up on street corners. There is also free homework help offered to students.
Chris Bollow

National Archives and Records Administration (NARA) - 2 views

shared by Chris Bollow on 02 May 11 - Cached
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    This is the National Archives website. It includes pictures, video and docments of historical events. It also includes a lesson plans section for teachers.
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    The National Archives are a great place for students to study primary resources, and a great place for any educator to check out suggested lesson plans. There are current exhibits, and suggested lessons. Currently on the front page there is one about Re
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
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  • "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
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    Great answer to the question "Why do I need to know Algebra???"
Heather Griffin

Fishing with Hemingway - 0 views

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    Hemingway webquest- provides tons of information on the author, his works, and his life
Kamron Robertson

United Nations Education - 0 views

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    games, info on human rights issues
Kourtnie Jeffcoat

Personal Narratives with Johnny Cash - 0 views

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    This lesson plan focuses on the use of personal narrative and can be used to help students write their own narratives while analyzing a famous one.
Gary Wright

BIODIDAC: A bank of digital resources for teaching biology - 0 views

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    This is a database of images that can be used by science teachers in lectures/presentations. It contains organismal biology, human biology, and histology. All the images in one place!
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