Research and Education
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Ice and Sky
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Science |
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Ice and Sky is an interactive website about the history of glaciological research in Antarctica. Since the International Geophysical Year (July 1, 1957 to December 31, 1958), scientists have uncovered important details about the Earth's climate by examining the properties of Antarctica's ice. On this website, created by French documentarian Luc Jacquet and the non-profit media organization Wild Touch, visitors can learn about this history through a six-part video. Within each video chapter, educators will also find a number of related resources. These resources include recorded interviews with key scientists, detailed PowerPoint presentations, educational booklets, and short videos. While some of resources are embedded on the site, others can be downloaded through a link on the right side of the browser. Educators may also create their own classroom websites that feature specific resources of their choice. Worth noting: Ice and Sky earned a 2016 Webby nomination as an outstanding educational website. [MMB] |
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Romantic Circles
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Language Arts |
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Romantic Circles, a scholarly website published by the University of Maryland, is "devoted to the study of Romantic-period literature and culture." Originally featured in the Scout Report shortly after its inception in 1996, Romantic Circles continues to publish literary scholarship, teaching resources, and digitized Romantic-period texts and images. As explained in the About RC section (a good place to start for newcomers), these resources may be explored via eight main sections. In the Praxis Series section, readers will find engaging essays that highlight select subjects, historical figures, or theoretical approaches. For instance, of the two issues published in December 2016, one centered on German Romanticism while the other explored English Romanticism in East Asia. Romantic Circles also offers Pedagogies, collections of essays dedicated to teaching the Romantics. The most recent collection features six essays, authored by American and Canadian academics, on the topic of Teaching Romanticism and Literary Theory. The Electronic Editions (under the Editions tabs) are another great resource. Here visitors will find a rich assortment of digitized items, from William Wordsmith's A Guide through the District of the Lakes in the North of England to the collected letters of poet Robert Southey. [MMB] |
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Humanities Indicators
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Arts |
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From the American Academy of Arts and Science comes Humanities Indicators, a comprehensive repository of data about the state of the humanities in the United States. Data, collected by the Academy as well as by Academy-vetted institutions, are organized into five categories (K-12 Education, Higher Education, Workforce, Funding and Research, and Public Life) and may be downloaded as a Microsoft Excel document. Visitors may also download data-driven visuals, such as graphs, as either a PowerPoint slide or as a PDF. Readers will find information about U.S. Students Pursuing Study Abroad, State Funding for Higher Education, Earnings of Humanities Master's Degree Recipients, Use of Public Libraries, and Language Instruction in Elementary and Secondary Schools, among many other topics. Humanities Indicators also features an Indicators in the News section that features recently published news articles, blog posts, and books involving the humanities. [MMB] |
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Leonard Gelfand Center for Service Learning and Outreach: Educational Materials
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Science |
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K-12 STEM educators can access a number of free classroom resources on this website from Carnegie Mellon University's Leonard Gelfand Center for Service Learning and Outreach. These materials, authored by Carnegie Mellon faculty and staff, are offered across six webpages and cover a variety of topics. For instance, instructors will find an activity on brownfields (land that may contain dangerous contaminants from previous use), a series of "classroom kits" for engaging students with DNA, a number of lesson plans centering on climate, energy, and the environment, hands-on laboratory activities involving polymers, and more. In addition, parents and teachers of all subjects may be interested in checking out Safe-Net, a collection of materials about cyber safety and security. All lessons and activities are described in detail for easy classroom adaptation; many also explicitly align with Pennsylvania Common Core Standards and the Next Generation Science Standards. [MMB] |
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SNCC Digital Gateway
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Social studies |
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The Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) Legacy Project, Duke University Libraries, and Duke University's Century for Documentary Studies have teamed up to create the SNCC Digital Gateway, a website that documents the history and legacy of SNCC (pronounced "Snick"). Launched in December 2016, the SNCC Digital Gateway features both information and primary sources about the grassroots civil rights organization founded in 1960. Visitors can explore this material in a variety of ways. The People section contains detailed profiles of over 100 individuals who were involved with SNCC. Meanwhile, in the History section, visitors can explore an interactive timeline of key events in SNCC history. Those interested in how SNCC members organized and planned their activism can find out more via the Perspectives and Inside SNCC sections. Finally, visitors can explore key sites of SNCC activism with the Map. All of these sections include a number of embedded primary source materials, including official organization notes, powerful photographs, newsreels, and documentary footage. The inclusion of these materials - especially the oral history interviews with activists - allows visitors to gain keen insight into the experiences and legacy of SNCC and its activists. [MMB] |
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Education at the Getty: Poetry and Art
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Arts |
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The J. Paul Getty Museum presents a number of engaging lesson plans on poetry and art. Crafted by the Getty Foundation's Education team and by educators around the country, these lesson plans draw on digitized material from throughout the museum. On this website, readers will find a rich collection of lesson plans, activities, classroom handouts, and videos about the intersection between art and poetry. One series of lessons, Illuminated Calligrams, has upper elementary school students explore Andrea Soffici's visual poem, "Tipographia," along with the calligrams of Guillaume Apollinaire. In another lesson, high school students analyze William Blake's "A Poison Tree" alongside Blake's painting Satan Exulting Over Eve. The site also offers links to four Getty videos on YouTube related videos and printable classroom handouts for Background & Context (including a helpful vocabulary list and an accessible definition of Ekphrastic poetry). [MMB] |
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The University of Texas at Austin Linguistics Research Center
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Foreign Languages |
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Are you taking (or teaching) a Sanskrit Class and looking for study resources? Interested in learning a bit of Latin on your own time? Or looking to learn more about the etymology of common English words? The University of Texas at Austin's Linguistics Research Center provides a number of free resources related to Indo-European languages, a category that includes Latin and Greek as well as Spanish and English. For language learners, the Early Indo-European OnLine section provides online lessons for eighteen different languages, including Sanskrit, Greek, Latin, Old English, Old Russian, and others. Lessons consist of a series of introductory guides accompanied by grammar charts, and famous texts. Learners can also access learning resources, such as dictionaries and glossaries. Moving along, those interested in word etymology will want to check out the Indo-European Lexicon section, which includes the Proto-Indo-European (PIE) Etyma, an index adapted from a book by linguist Julius Pokorny. [MMB] |
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Eastern State Penitentiary
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Social studies |
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The Eastern State Penitentiary in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania opened in 1829, the outcome of decades of campaigning for a humane alternative to early American prisons. Between 1829 and the prison's closure in 1971, Eastern State gained fame (and infamy) around the world: Alexis de Tocqueville and Charles Dickens both wrote of this prison, and Al Capone was perhaps its most well-known resident. On this website, run by the Eastern State Penitentiary (now a historical site), visitors can learn more about the prison's complex history and the evolving nature of the American carceral system. In the Learn section of this website, visitors will find a 571-page history of the prison (authored by the City of Philadelphia, the Philadelphia Historical Society, and the Eastern State Penitentiary Task Force of the Preservation Coalition of Greater Philadelphia); resources for conducting further research, and three lesson plans. Meanwhile, in the Explore section, visitors can take an online tour of the prison, which was originally constructed in service to the "Philadelphia System" of solitary confinement, which nineteenth century prison reformers believed fostered repentance. [MMB] |
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