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Lesson Plan Name Grades
Book Trailers 6 to 8
(5.0 stars, 1 ratings)
Students will create digital book talks to highlight titles in our library collection. These book trailers will then be linked to the title in our online catalog.
Boston Tea Party 3 to 5
(5.0 stars, 1 ratings)
Students simulate the Boston Tea Party. Students use the Smart Board to sequence the events of the Boston Tea Party and discuss the consequences that followed. Students create their disguises and chant a poem as they dump tea into the "Boston Harbor". Students will create a digital account of the simulation.
Bracket Madness! 9 to 12
(5.0 stars, 2 ratings)
Students will "compete" against each other by utilizing various forms of imagery to compliment their research-based presentations in an attempt to end up in the championship bracket. Although the original idea is for a "Most Courageous Person in History" presentation, it is a concept that is easily adapted to any classroom curriculum.
Breaking News ... from Our Solar System! 4 to 8
(5.0 stars, 1 ratings)
Students will create a news broadcast about an object or objects in our solar system. Broadcasts will be recorded on video and shared with the rest of their class, other classes, and even other schools. Teachers can look into showing the broadcasts on the district's public access channel (if available).
Breaking News: Who Did It? 7 to 7
(5.0 stars, 1 ratings)
Students will summarize the work that they have been doing to solve a mystery in science class using genetics to find who contaminated a school nutrition source! In groups of 3 or 4, students will create a breaking news headline detailing the crime and the suspect including evidence using the Videolicious App on the iPad.
Bringing Historical Figures Alive 3 to 7
(5.0 stars, 2 ratings)
In this unit students will learn about a famous person in history and use several types of media to investigate them and show what they have learned.
Building a School Archives: The First Twenty Years 3 to 8
(5.0 stars, 1 ratings)
History can be close at hand and relevant to students! My students will improve their literacy, critical thinking, and collaboration skills as they become historians and create an online school archives of the first twenty years.
Cabezas Arriba! 11 to 12
(5.0 stars, 1 ratings)
Students will practice the preterite tense using Quizlet Live, then present short skits where they use the tense in conversation, and then students will play Cabezas Arriba (Heads Up) with a Google Doc that is displayed on the ITV. Students have to describe the words behind the student (can't see word) using the target language.
Campus Media Team 5 to 6
(5.0 stars, 1 ratings)
The campus media team create biweekly news shows for the school. The videos are for the students and teachers to be kept informed, entertained and updated on the latest events happening at school.
Can You Hear Me? 6 to 12
(5.0 stars, 1 ratings)
Humor in forms of nonverbal communication (political cartoons and comic strips) is often used in place of a narrative form of communication. This nonverbal form of communication provokes the reader to infer, use imagination, and prior knowledge to interpret the author’s purpose.
Candidate Obama Support and President Obama's Agenda 7 to 8
(5.0 stars, 1 ratings)
Support letters via Microsoft Word for Candidate Obama ... sent to Obama Headquarters in Chicago [received Obama response] ... then PowerPoint presentations of President Obama's Agenda researched at www.whitehouse.gov ... sent as followup to the White House.
Captured at the Farm K to 2
(5.0 stars, 1 ratings)
Kindergarten students will capture digital photos and/or video while visiting a local farm to represent "life" (animals, gardens, milk, butter, etc.). Students will collaborate with a second grade class to create a multimedia digital storybook about their field experience.
Capturing Animals through Technology 2 to 5
Students will use digital recoding photograpgy equipment to take pictures of animals at our local zoo. They will then insert the photography into a variety of audio-visual technology -based reports featuring thier animals.
Capturing Conic Sections with Digital Cameras 9 to 12
(5.0 stars, 2 ratings)
This project will help students to make connections between math and the real world by having them identify conic sections in art and architecture in their communities. Students will photograph these examples of circles, ellipses, parabolas, and hyperbolas in the real world with digital cameras and then write the equations for the graphs.
Career Creation 5 to 12
(5.0 stars, 1 ratings)
Students will do career investigations based upon personal interests, skills assessments, counselor recommendations, dreams, parental guidance, etc. and develop a "Build Your Own Destiny" Google Form. Included in the Form will be pictures, videos, and links.
Causes of the American Revolution Research Project 5 to 5
(5.0 stars, 1 ratings)
Students will use EdCanvas to learn about the causes of the American Revolution, choose one cause of the American Revolution to research furtherand then give a presentation to the class on that cause of the American Revolution.
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