Friday, March 15, 2013

Interactive Websites

Literacy Zone
https://sites.google.com/
    Blog with lots of interactive whiteboard resources
 

CCSS RIDE Workshops

There are several CCSS workshops that RIDE is offering for content area teachers. Some topics include writing an argument, academic vocabulary, and Interim Assessment Scoring training.
https://www.eride.ri.gov/workshopReg/main.aspx

Trivia Quiz Site

trivia quiz site

    See below the list of the categories under literature
    Authors A-C
    Authors D-G
    Authors H-K
    Authors L-P
    Authors Q-S
    Authors T-Z
    Contemporary Literat...
    Fables and Fairy Tales
    Fantasy
    Historical Fiction
    Horror
    Humor and Satire
    J. R. R. Tolkien
    Literature Before 1900
    Literature by Region
    Manga
    Mixed Literature
    Mystery & Detective ...
    Non-Fiction
    Plays
    Poetry
    Religious Literature
    Romantic Fiction
    Science Fiction
    Self Help/Improvement
    Shakespeare
    Stephen King
    Thrillers
    Westerns
    Young Adult Fiction
    EndFragment-->

    Picture Book Resources

    I really like the Picture Book Database at Miami University in Ohio. http://www.lib.muohio.edu/pictbks/

    Friday, March 8, 2013

    Arts and Literacy work together

    http://www.jsd.k12.ak.us/~heagyl/ArtIsElementary/Arts_Literacy_Projects.html

    Understanding of DL

    ·         Suggested Reading was shared for participants read and reflect on as we continue to develop our understanding of DL
    ·         Eyes on Disciplinary Literacyby Annie Enchakattu | Jul 24, 2012  by Vicky Zygouris-Coe
    ·         Mentoring Students in Disciplinary Literacy From Developing Readers in the Academic Disciplines by Doug Duehl
    ·         Teaching Disciplinary Literacy to Adolescents: Rethinking Content-Area Literacy

    Digital Text Sets for Science and Social Studies

    http://readingandwritingproject.com/resources/classroom-libraries/text-sets.html

    TCRWP Social Studies Resources

    Teacher's College at Columbia Univeristy supports literacy across content areas. There are a variety of resources that support multiple disciplines. This is one for Social Studies  http://readingandwritingproject.com/resources/social-studies-resources.html

    Social Studies and Literacy


    7. Ten Geography Activities for Secondary Students

                “Geography frequently takes a back seat to history in the social studies classroom,” say Tom Marshall and Michael Gonchar in this New York Times Learning Network article, “but teaching geographic literacy is essential if students are going to understand the challenges and opportunities of our complex world.” They suggest ten activities for teaching geography using New York Times content, all related to the National Geography Standards:
                Play Geography Bingo. Have students search New York Times stories and archives to fill in a Bingo card on topics like migration, culture, and ecosystems:
                Have students draw and annotate mental maps. They should think about times they got lost and how we may be losing skills because we’ve become too dependent on technology.
                Compare different kinds of maps. Some maps are better than others, and by looking at different kinds of maps – and use of symbols, imagery, and technology – students can design their own maps of a location they know well, a location in a film or novel, or an imaginary place, to convey detail and enhance understanding.
                Explore boundary disputes. The one that’s most in the news is the ongoing conflict between Israelis and Palestinians over their borders. Have students look at the New York Times Borderlines blog for interesting and compelling examples.
                Explore international stereotypes. Students have opinions of people in other countries that are often exaggerated or inaccurate. Introduce the concepts and have them identify contemporary examples of stereotyping.
                Explore economic globalization. Have students read articles on the outsourcing of iPhone jobs and the impact of floods in Thailand and the earthquake and tsunami in Japan.
                Explore the culture, history, and landscape of a foreign land. Have students read the Frugal Traveler and Journeys columns in the Times and then write their own travel stories.
                Explore how people affect their environment for better or for worse. Examples include cities in the Brazilian rain forest and protecting woodlands in Paraguay.
                Explore the effects of storms, earthquakes, and climate change. Students explore the negative and positive effects and write letters to local officials suggesting effective actions.
                Explore migration of people around the world. What are the pushes and pulls?

    “All Over the Map: 10 Ways to Teach About Geography” by Tom Marshall and Michael Gonchar in The New York Times Learning Network, Dec. 12, 2012

    Art and the Common Core

    As educators work to help students meet the demands of the Common Core State Standards in English/language arts and mathematics, some teachers are suggesting that works of art can be "read as text" and subject to a close reading, much like a novel or essay, as called for in the new English standards. This Education Week webinar will feature two experts to discuss the potential of arts integration with the common core and to provide practical examples of how to put the concept into practice.
    Guests:
    • Susan M. Riley, expert in arts integration, curriculum innovation, and resource development specialist, Anne Arundel County public schools, Md.

    • Lynne Munson
    • , president and executive director, Common Core

    This webinar will be moderated by Erik Robelen, assistant editor for Education Week.
    Underwriting for the content of this webinar has been provided by the GE Foundation.
    Webinar Date: Tuesday February 19, 2 – 3 p.m. ET
    Can't attend?
    All Education Week webinars are archived and accessible "on demand" for up to four months after the original live-streaming date.

    Purpose

    This blog will serve as an educational resource for disciplinary literacy. Members of this committee will virtually share information from their specific discipline to help support instruction and the implemention of  common core standards.