Research and Education
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Incredible Bridges: Poets Creating Community
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Language Arts |
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The Academy of American Poets and EDSITEment have teamed up to create Incredible Bridges: Poets Creating Community, an online initiative and set of lesson plans designed to engage youth with contemporary poetry. The title of the initiative comes from Poet Laureate Juan Felipe Herrera, who, during a 2015 interview at the Library of Congress, discussed the civic responsibility of poets: "Let's create incredible bridges." Aimed at middle school and high school learners, each lesson incorporates a famous poet reading her or his own work, along with multimedia resources and interactive activities. For example, in a lesson centered on Joy Harjo's poem "Remember," students listen to "The Water Song" by Corbin Harney alongside Harjo's poem. In another lesson centered on Claudine Rankine's "From Citizen IV [On the train the woman standing,]" students act out the premise of Rankine's poem before exploring it together. Other poets featured here include Adrienne Su, Edward Hirsch, and Naomi Shihab Nye. Each lesson plan meets Common Core Standards for English/Language Arts. [MMB] |
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youcubed
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Mathematics |
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From Stanford University's Graduate School of Education, youcubed is a center dedicated to providing research-based resources for teaching mathematics. On its website, mathematics instructors will find a number of resources that may be of interest, including problem solving activities, lesson plans, teaching strategies, research papers, articles, and podcasts. Perhaps a good place to start is with Ideas & Tasks, where readers will find ideas for incorporating visual learning in the math classroom, strategies for facilitating group work, and reflections about how to conduct assessments in the math classroom. This section also includes recommended mathematics games and apps. Math teachers and math education researchers may be interested in the Resources section, which offers research articles on mathematics learning and growth mindset. Many of these resources are authored by Jo Boaler, co-founded of youcubed and professor of mathematics education at Stanford. There is also a section designed especially for parents. [MMB] |
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Coursera: Seeing Through Photographs
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Arts |
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Sarah Meister, photography curator at the Museum of Modern Art (MOMA), teaches this six-week Coursera course, Seeing Through Photographs. Drawing from MOMA's rich collection of photographs, this course "aims to address the gap between seeing and truly understanding photographs by introducing a diversity of ideas, approaches, and technologies that inform their making." Designed for any member of the general public, this course features topics including the history of photography in arts and sciences and photographs that portray human subjects. These topics are taught using a series of short videos, a diverse collection of readings, artist interviews, slideshows, and more. Photographers featured in this course include Ansel Adams, Dorothea Lange, Carrie Mae Weems, and Cindy Sherman, to name just a few. As with all Coursera courses, students have a choice to audit for free or to receive a certificate for a fee. This course may appeal to art or social studies instructions interested in incorporating photography and visual culture into their classrooms. [MMB] |
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British Library: Turning the Pages
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Arts |
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Turning the Pages is a software program developed by Armadillo Studios that enables libraries and museums to digitize books, manuscripts, and other documents in an engaging 3D format. Here, readers will find the British Library's spectacular collection of items digitized with this software. The collection may be of special interest to literary scholars, religious studies scholars, historians, and book lovers of all stripes. This ample collection, which spans centuries and genres, includes highlights from Leonardo da Vinci's notebook; a handwritten and illustrated history of England authored by a thirteen-year-old Jane Austen; and diaries kept by Robert Falcon Scott during his final journey to Antarctica in 1911 and 1912 (an expedition that tragically ended in his death). In addition, this collection features a number of religious texts, Mozart's musical diary, and much more. Items are accompanied by detailed annotations that provide additional context for each page. [MMB] |
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Library and Archives Canada: Aboriginal Heritage
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Social studies |
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Library and Archives Canada's Aboriginal Heritage collection is designed to engage researchers, students, and the general public with materials relating to Canada's First Nations, Metis Nation, and Inuit peoples. Many of these resources have been digitized and organized into virtual exhibitions created by the LAC. These exhibits provide context and background to the archival materials in this collection, including photographs, interviews, sound recordings of music, treaties, and more. Virtual Exhibitions include Our Voices, Our Stories - First Nations, Metis, and Inuit Stories from Yesterday and Today; Project Naming, which profiles an initiative to identify Inuit individuals in photographs; and Aboriginal Sound Recordings: Music and Song. Archival materials are organized by pages dedicated to each group, where, in addition to these virtual exhibitions, visitors will find databases, links to outside resources, and more. Visitors will also find resources related to residential schools in the Resources for Researchers. [MMB] |
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Khan Academy: Career Profiles
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Vocational Education |
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Khan Academy is well known for its instructional videos in mathematics and science. Recently, the organization also launched this video series about careers as part of its College, Careers, and More section. This series, which is designed for both students who are exploring their first career as well as for those who are considering a career change, features interviews with a wide variety of professionals. In each video, profiled individuals discuss their day-to-day job duties and reflect on how they came to their current profession. Interviewees also discuss required education and training, salary ranges for their career, and their personal financial goals and plans. As of this write-up, professions profiled include an instructional designer, a hairstylist, and a commercial airline pilot. The team behind this series plans to add new videos and career profiles, so stay tuned. [MMB] |
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