We were listening in on a virtual teacher chat and someone mentioned the Thinkfinity website. "Fabulous!" exclaimed one middle grades teacher. "I go there all the time." A curriculum coach replied: "I always ask teachers who are searching for a different angle: 'Have you looked on Thinkfinity yet?'" Thinkfinity is an amalgam of the earlier Marco Polo and Thinkfinity Literacy Network sites and is now partnering with other stellar resources like Illuminations and Read/Write/Think. There's a super search engine, right on the homepage, and by dragging your cursor over the appropriate button, you can see the special offerings for Educators, Parents, Students, and Afterschool.
Teacher To Teacher Lesson Resources http://teachers.net/
Goodness, it doesn't get much better than this. Vetted teaching ideas and lesson plans from across the curriculum, nicely organized for easy searching, and presented by accomplished teachers across America. The Teacher To Teacher workshops have been sponsored at various locations around the nation by the U.S. Department of Education since 2004. Read about the program at this page and then click in the left margin to examine presentation-clusters from the most recent summer sessions by subject area and theme. Scroll to the bottom of the subject list to find links to presentations from previous years. If you open a presentation PDF, you'll likely find an email address for the teacher-author (usually at the end), if you'd like to query for more information. PDF files of handouts are also provided.
Edutopia - George Lucas Educational Foundation http://www.edutopia.org/
One of the best sites on the Web for information and ideas about cutting-edge teaching and learning. There's an emphasis on technology, but the resources here go far beyond the tools. You'll find stories about innovative middle schools, videos that show ideas in action, interviews with experts, and whole sets of information around themes like Project-Based Learning and Technology Integration. See all of Edutopia's priority topics. You'll definitely want to explore this site -- it's worth a couple of hours!
Awesome Stories http://www.awesomestories.com/
If you’ve been a MiddleWeb visitor for long, you know we’re BIG fans of the Awesome Stories website, where students and teachers can access hundreds of stories from history and current events, all peppered with links to primary resource material. The site is the passion of Carole Bos, a successful trial lawyer in Michigan, whose intellectual hobby has turned into a most amazing educational tool. In early 2009, Carole and her colleagues completely revamped the site with lots of new functionality. You can read about the improvements here. We think you’ll agree that new interactivity makes the site a core resource for educators.
Education World http://www.education-world.com/
Supported by advertising and corporate contributions, the Education World site just gets better and better -- it's both broad and deep, offering original material on important education topics, lesson plans and teaching ideas, a massive index to internet sites, and -- most important -- an energetic and innovative staff that continues to search for ways to best serve educators. This link leads to a site guide that will ease exploration of this large site.
PBS Teacher Source http://www.pbs.org/teachers/
Includes more than 1,000 free lesson plans (matched to standards), teacher guides and online activities--and you can explore these resources by subject or grade level or with keywords. The site includes information about how teachers and media specialists can legally tape PBS shows for classroom use. The site allows you to set up a free account and receive newsletters about upcoming PBS offerings, tailored to your local viewing area. There's also info about ordering PBS videos. Want to learn more about teaching with technology? PBS offers PD programs.
DiscoverySchool.com for Teachers http://school.discoveryeducation.com/
Lesson plans, teaching tools, chat listservs, classroom customizers, a clip art gallery, a puzzle generator, and access to Kathy Shrock's famous collection of education weblinks in every imaginable category. Then there's the brainbuster feature (great for daily startups), the Science Fair Central, etc. etc. Impressive!
Middle School Portal http://msteacher.org/
This K-12 site, developed with National Science Foundation support, offers teachers a direct path to resources from the National Science Digital Library. Enter the Science or Math subject pathway to browse a list of topics and take an in-depth look at teachable concepts.The resources have been selected by math and science educators and can be searched by topic, keywords, etc. The Portal is supported by folks at Ohio State University, who regularly add new themes and activities built upon the vast database. Look at these in-depth science topics and these in-depth math topics to see for yourself! Also, while the main focus here is on math and science, you’ll find useful ideas about integrating those subjects with history, art, social studies, and more. We’ll just say it – this is one of the most awesome resources we know about, and it’s designed with middle school in mind.
Teachers.Net Gazette http://teachers.net/gazette/JUL08/lessons/
Teachers Net Gazette is the major feature of a vast website created by and for educators. Each monthly issue of the Gazette (laid out in colorful newspaper style) offers major features by middle grades teachers and by authors like Harry Wong, Alfie Kohn, brain expert Eric P. Jensen, principal leader Todd R. Nelson and many more. The Gazette has gained new energy under the leadership of editor Kathleen Carpenter. Check out, for example, the December 2008 issue, featuring a story by Bill Page on “Teaching At-Risk Students.” Subscribers (it's free) receive regular email reminders of new content.
Apple Learning Interchange
http://edcommunity.apple.com/ali/
Microsoft Lesson Plans
http://www.microsoft.com/education/lessonplans.mspx
Here are materials of interest to teachers, offered by both Apple and Microsoft. Both sites include lesson plans and other resources, often technology-oriented or web-based. We found the Microsoft materials to be more product-oriented, but they often included more details (including handouts, etc.). Both Apple and Microsoft include lesson plan search engines, and you can also search how-to articles at the Microsoft site. Apple offers a free membership to the ALI Community and users can subscribe to RSS feeds that alert them when new material of interest is added.
Framework for 21st Century Learning http://www.21stcenturyskills.org/ |
Oh, you counted? OK, make it 12 great sites!
Source: MiddleWeb http://www.middleweb.com/
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