Research and Education
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STEM Career
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Science |
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Many educators, counselors, and parents are aware of the growing demand for science, technology, engineering, and math (STEM) skills. For those searching for STEM-based resources, STEM Career may be of interest. Developed by Rich Feller, professor of counseling and career development at Colorado State University, RSTEM Career serves as a "brokering site to support STEM advocates." Resources have been organized by audience, such as Students, Counselors, Educators, and Parents. For instance, Counselors will find resources sorted into three categories (Programs To Encourage Students To Participate In, Scholarships for Students, and Guides to Make You A Better Counselor In STEM), while the Educators will find five categories (Extracurricular Activities, Lesson Plans, Free Software, Classroom Resources, and Other Resources). Whatever sections readers choose to scout, there is an abundance of STEM-related material on the site. [CNH] |
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Penguin Teacher's Guide: You Can Do a Graphic Novel (PDF)
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Language Arts |
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This Teacher's Guide serves as a companion piece to Barbara Slate's instructional book, You Can Do a Graphic Novel. The guide may be used alongside the 2010 book at all levels of education, with a suggested lesson that spans six classroom periods, introduces students to the art of the graphic novel, then begins with basic explanations of the form of the graphic novel, the goals for the lesson, and an overview of what students will need (pencils and paper). Students will be introduced to the the fundamentals of the creative process, offered a number of tips for how to get the creative juices flowing, and then instructed on how to make up a story, how to fashion characters and plot, how to get writing, and finally how to layout the pages of a graphic novel. Along the way, students will learn about themselves and their world and develop important tools and skills that will apply well beyond the limits of the graphic novel. [CNH] |
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Journal of Probiotics & Health
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Health |
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The Journal of Probiotics & Health is an open access, online, peer-reviewed, scholarly health journal that is designed to be read by anyone with an interest in this important field, regardless of whether they belong to a major library system. Articles focus on probiotics, gastrointestinal infections, gut-microbiota, and the impact of microflora on digestive and overall health. Recent articles have explored the beneficial effects of bifidobacterium for chronic constipation, how lactobacillus pentosus strain S-PT84 and Vitamin B mixtures can enhance natural killer cells, and the influence on digestive health of Pseudomonas aeruginosa, found in fermented kefir. For readers fascinated by the intricacies of digestive health, this peer-reviewed and freely accessible journal will come as a welcome discovery. [CNH] |
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Utah Education Network: Multimedia Resources for Educators and Students
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Educational Technology |
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The Utah Education Network (UEN) has assembled an exciting array of multimedia resources on its website. The content has been divided into seven categories: Pictures, ClipArt & Images; Videos, Movies & Streaming Resources; Multiple Media Types; Sounds, Audio & Music; PowerPoint & Multimedia Slideshow Resources; Search Engines for Resources; and Related Materials. Each category contains worthwhile finds. For example, the American Memory Project is part of the Pictures, ClipArt & Images collection. Here, readers may peruse the Library of Congress's resources on a range of collections, from advertising to women's history. Likewise, from the Multiple Media Types category, readers will find links to the NASA Image Exchange, the National Science Digital Library (NSDL), and American Rhetoric, each of which contains unique educational worlds. [CNH] |
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POV: For Educators
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Social studies |
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Since 1988, POV has brought together over 400 documentaries that offer articulate and compelling narratives about contemporary social issues. On this page For Educators, the users will find more than 100 standards-aligned lesson plans, dozens of discussion guides, and a number of reading lists all assembled to compliment the PBS film series. For example, the materials that accompany the documentary, "Ai Weiwei: The Fake Case," include an overview of the lesson, objectives, subject areas for which the lesson might be used, and ten film clips, as well as a ten step activity that includes small groups in which students discuss activism in their own communities. There are also links to news stories and other Internet resources about Chinese activists and resources that help students understand different kinds of activism and what they mean in the political landscape. Other lessons focus on documentaries about mental illness, human trafficking, war news, the rituals of tea in various cultures, and numerous other topics. [CNH] |
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Common Core Curriculum Unit Plans: Sociology
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Social studies |
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This impressively organized site, which was designed by Lisa Korpics, a teacher at the Valley Central High School in Montgomery, New York, offers unit plans that take educators and their students through a crash course in sociology. The course begins with an Introduction to Sociology, then proceeds with an overview of sociological theories, before presenting sociological information about subcultures, countercultures, criminology, families, marriage, social movements, social structure, deviance, and more. Along the way, readings and notes root the discussion in historical examples, from Karl Marx to The Sociology of Breaking Bad. The course is aligned with Common Core, which can simplify its introduction into school systems that are integrating the government standards into their pedagogies. [CNH] |
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American Chemistry Society: High School Chemistry Education Resources
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Science |
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The American Chemistry Society (ACS) has pulled together some valuable resources for high school chemistry teachers, Classroom Teaching Resources to Education Standards to Professional Development. Educators will find lesson plans on the Isolation of Phytochrome, the Development of Baking Powder, the Discovery of Fullerenes, and Man and Materials Through History, among other topics. An extensive list of tools and ideas related to "Green Chemistry" are also provided, including the ACS GCI Green Chemistry Pocket Guides and Beyond Benign, a site entirely dedicated doing chemistry in an earth-friendly manner. In addition, the two-hour NOVA special, "Hunting the Elements," in which David Pogue deconstructs and reconstructs the periodic table of elements, provides two full hours of educational fun for all ages. [CNH] |
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