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Is Your Lesson a Grecian Urn?

…that any kind of reading and writing, manipulating materials and words, interaction with peers, and exposure to the world in general offer opportunities for learning. With that in mind, think of “Grecian Urn” as more of a relative term than an absolute one: Few lessons will be pure Grecian Urns; almost any lesson will probably have some arguable educational value. Far more lessons will simply contain elements that are Grecian Urn-ish; we can make these lessons better if we try to minimize those elements. The best way to identify a Grecian Urn is to look at a task and ask…

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Your Lesson a Grecian Urn? October 20 Review of The Classroom Chef October 12 Is Your Classroom Academically Safe? October 9 Graphic Novels in the Classroom: A Teacher Roundtable September 2016 September 29 How Pineapple Charts Revolutionize Professional Development September 27 A Step-by-Step Plan for Teaching Argumentative Writing September 20 Using Playlists to Differentiate Instruction September 18 CommonLit: An Online Library of Free Texts September 17 Google Docs Basics: A Video Course for Teachers and Students September 11 A Strength-Based Approach to Teaching ESL August 2016 August 28 Create Videos in Minutes with Mysimpleshow August 16 The Compliments Project August…

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Is That Higher-Order Task Really Higher Order?

…remove all the “creative” trappings and just look at the mental work students are doing, it should still involve creating something new with the content they’re learning. Sample Lesson: Bill of Rights Now let’s take a look at these mistakes within the context of a more complete set of lesson plans, followed by another set that does a better job of building in higher-order thinking. Tony is an 8th grade social studies teacher who is designing a set of lessons on the Bill of Rights of the U.S. Constitution. His state standards say that students should be able to do…

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Distance Learning: A Gently Curated Collection of Resources for Teachers

…fictionalized stories that take place in various locations around the world.  Infographic: On paper or using a tool like Piktochart, have students create an infographic to represent or teach about an idea or set of data.  Lesson: Have students write their own lesson on a chunk of your content. Provide them with the basic structure of a lesson to follow, including objectives, direct instruction, guided practice, and some sort of assessment to measure their success. Model: Students can create a physical model representing some aspect of your curriculum, then photograph it from various angles or create a video tour of…

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Episode 108: To Learn, Students Need to DO Something

…reach teachers who do have this issue in their classroom, who are kind of skipping over what I think is an important step in the classic lesson plan. So I’m going to review what I understand to be sort of a basic lesson plan format. And I’ve got it kind of in five basic steps. We’ve got Step 1, which is some sort of an anticipatory set, we set objectives for the day, sort of like let them know what we’re going to be learning. And that’s usually a fairly quick step. And by the way, we could be getting…

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