The PENCIL Box provides a venue for companies or individuals who have gently used materials to donate these supplies to New York City Public Schools. Once you become a member of The PENCIL Box (free) you will find all types of computer equipment, furniture, science equipment, art supplies and much more. When you identify a piece of equipment you could use in your classroom, simply send a message to the donor with your reason and wait for a response. Good luck and happy shopping!
Delicious Social Bookmarking
January 6, 2009Social Bookmarking is a service that allows you to save all of your favorite websites online instead of on a single computer. You can also share your bookmarks with others, check out what people around the world are bookmarking, and tag your bookmarks for easy access.
You can find all of my bookmarks here: http://delicious.com/skananni.
You can also become my part of my network and see what I am adding.
Get your own free delicious account by signing up here.
Jing
January 6, 2009Jing is freeware that allows you to capture your screen, take videos of your desktop, and share it them quickly and easily with others. This is an excellent (and surprisingly easy) way to give your students access to lessons they may need to see again. It can also be used as a tool that allows students to show off what they know. You can find it here.
Autism and the Family
January 6, 2009Here is an interesting piece from National Public Radio about growing up with a sibling with autism. Click here for the audio and text.
Do2Learn
December 22, 2008I Spy: Play Online
October 10, 2008Scholastic.com has free games that are as fun as they are educational. The I Spy section offers auditory support for non-readers, making this a game that your student can play independently. And good luck; it is not so easy!
Just for Kids
May 27, 2008Just for Kids is an interactive science website hosted by the University of Illinois. Topics include weather, the plant cycle, and metamorphosis. The sites are visually motivating and many activities include auditory support for students who are at the learning to read stage.
Thinkfinity
May 19, 2008Thinkfinity.org is a search engine that will help you find relevant and motivating lesson plans, activities, and websites for your students. The resources found on Thinkfinity are monitored and you can be assured that the resources are both appropriate and of high quality. Even more exciting, many lesson plans and activities have an icon that lets you know exactly which New York State Standards apply. You can differentiate your lessons, have your standards, and keep your students excited with the click a of a mouse. The website is sponsored by Verizon, so thanks to them!
Digital Camera Ideas
May 1, 2008Digital Camera Ideas for the Classroom
Take lots of pictures while on a class field trip. Have students write a caption for each picture and to create an adapted book.
Photograph “a day in the life of your classroom” for parent Open House. Create a slide show to run as parents tour your classroom.
Store a photograph with each student’s electronic portfolio.
Walk through the school to find such examples of geometric shapes as circles, triangles, parallel lines, obtuse angles, and so on. Label each photo and create a geometry book.
Photograph community landmarks and have students create a brochure about your community.
Take pictures of easily recognizable signs in your community and assemble the photos into an “I Can Read” book.
Use photographs to illustrate the process for complicated projects or for science experiments.
Write a class novel and illustrate it with live-action photos of your students.
Take pictures of class procedures and display them in the classroom as a reminder.
Create a seating chart with photographs.
Make picture frames for a Mother’s Day or Father’s Day gift. Glue each photo into a decorated jar lid and glue a magnet to the back.
Document the growth of classroom plants or animals with daily or weekly photos.
Take photos of school staff performing their duties. Write a caption for each photo and create a Community Workers book.
Snap a black-and-white headshot of each student, size it to ¼ page, and place a box frame around it. Place a blank box the same size as the framed picture beside it. Have students draw ½-inch to 1-inch gridlines in pencil in both boxes and label the gridlines 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, and so on in each direction. Then have students try to duplicate their pictures by drawing only what they see in each grid.
Take a photograph of each student at the beginning and end of the school year. Have students complete Venn diagrams of themselves, showing how they have — and haven’t — changed during the year.
Compile a set of file cards naming such abstract concepts or emotions as freedom, love, hate, honor, joy, sorrow, patriotism, responsibility, and respect. Have students select a card at random and take a photograph illustrating that concept.
Have each student choose a letter and find an object that begins with that letter. Take a picture of the child with the object and use the pictures to create an adapted book.
Arrange students into groups and assign each group one of the five senses. Have each group photograph the appropriate sensory organ and then have them take pictures of objects that organ might best perceive.
Take pictures to illustrate such science concepts as food chain, biodiversity, biome, and so on.
Have students go on a photographic scavenger hunt, taking pictures of the objects they find rather than retrieving the objects themselves.
Take pictures of plants or animals in your community and use them to create a field guide of local wildlife.
Adapted from Article by Linda Starr, Education World®, Copyright © 2004 Education WorldPractice Real Life Money Skills on the Web
May 1, 2008If your students are counting coins, balancing checkbooks, or filling out job applications, moneyinstructor.com has free interactive lessons that can be used online or during a traditional lesson.
To access the interactive activities, you’ll need to sign up for a free account. They will try to get you to upgrade to an elite status, but I find plenty of appropriate and engaging activities available for free.
Posted by mswebsite
Posted by mswebsite
Posted by mswebsite 