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Lesson Plan Name Grades
Finding Letters in Nature 3 to 8
(0 stars, 1 ratings)
Take a second look at the natural world. Can you spot alphabet letters in nature?
Getting Down to Business (Letters and Technology) 7 to 11
(0 stars, 1 ratings)
Students use technology to learn parts of a business letter, how to write a business letter, research businesses, and write a letter of request to a business of their choice.
Learning with Letters & Sounds P-K to P-K
(0 stars, 2 ratings)
Students will learn letters and sounds through working on the Letterland app. Students will use Chromebooks and headphones as they listen and work on the application. The app will allow students to each have an account. Students will focus on characters, letters, and sounds.
Autism help through PowerPoint 6 to 12
(0 stars, 1 ratings)
Students will create advanced PowerPoint lessons that have people choose something from a field of three. Our hope is to help children with special needs grow while my middle school students learn advanced PowerPoint and learn to understand other people.
Letter matching/naming with Osmo P-K to P-K
(0 stars, 1 ratings)
Students will use Osmo learning system to learn to identify and manipulate letters, sounds and words. The program works with iPads which makes the program interactive and exciting for the students.
Postcards 4 to 6
Students will create a colored pencil drawing of themselves in an environment of their choice, using a digital output of their head as the starting point. The teacher will reduce the painting to postcard size and the students will write a descriptive letter on the back.
The Mini-Me People Iditarod 9 to 12
I work at Warren Project TEACH/TEC (Teen Education and Child Health/Transitional Education Center). We are an Alternative High School for Parenting and Pregnant Teenagers and Students at Risk.
"Dear Peter Rabbit" Lesson Plan 1 to 4
(0 stars, 3 ratings)
This lesson incorporates Beatrix Potter's story of "Peter Rabbit" and a variety of technology resources. The end result has students writing letters online to Peter Rabbit after his ordeal in Mr. McGregor's garden. http://www.vrml.k12.la.us/sadies/lesson/peter/peterlesson.htm
21 century pen pals 3 to 8
(0 stars, 1 ratings)
These lessons are for the students to show what they've learned about specific topics to an international school.
A Day in the Life of a World War II Soldier 7 to 12
(0 stars, 2 ratings)
Students complete a webquest where they look at first hand accounts of WWII soldiers and nurses.
A to Z photo project 9 to 12
(0 stars, 1 ratings)
This project is designed for technology students to get familiar with a DSLR digital camera. Students display "best of" around the school.
ABC's and 123's and a Rainbow of Color K to 2
(0 stars, 1 ratings)
To create a digital story with a student with Traumatic Brain Injury so she can learn her letters, colors and numbers. Children with TBI often struggle to learn new concepts so we look for new and unique ways to tap into other areas of the brain for new learning in hopes that the undamaged portions will assist in learning.
All About Me! K to 1
(0 stars, 2 ratings)
Writing stories "All About Me"
Alphabet Group Project 10 to 12
(0 stars, 1 ratings)
Students work in groups to locate alphabet letters in ordinary items and scenery. This is not a dictionary project, but rather an awareness of lines, shapes, angles, and level.
Animal Research Paragraph 2 to 2
(0 stars, 1 ratings)
Animal Research Paragraph-Students will need to research animals and gather facts from various sources.
Author Study - Tomie de Paola K to 2
(0 stars, 2 ratings)
Students use Tomie de Paola books to explore different themes and ideas as well as make connections between Tomie de Paola's books and connections to real world scenarios and situations.
BLANKETING THE WORLD WITH LEARNING ANDLOVE K to 4
(0 stars, 1 ratings)
We used the Flip Camera to capture all classes' interpretations and lessons related to reading the Book "The Lady in the Box" by Anne McGovern. We compiled videos of 12 classes into a movie and culminated the project with a blanket drive.
Building Brilliant Bloggers 3 to 3
(0 stars, 1 ratings)
We would like to enter the twenty-first century by learning to share our thoughts, recommendations, and questions about books online through blogging.
Caching in Pine's Treasures 6 to 12
Project ‘Caching in Pine’s Treasures” was designed to increase student knowledge of Social Studies’ topics in a non-traditional way. Students will use digital cameras and GPS units to learn historical information outside the classroom walls increasing student motivation, content knowledge, and knowledge of “technology-based gadgets.”
Captured at the Farm K to 2
(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.
Classical Greece: Magazine Project 5 to 7
(0 stars, 2 ratings)
Members will be creating a full magazine centered on the Grecian’s Golden Age. Issues will be celebrating either the 30th, 40th, or 50th anniversary of the Greeks victory over the Persians.
Click it! See it! Say it! K to 2
(0 stars, 12 ratings)
Bring your "hunks and chunks" to life using everyday pictures the students have taken to capture the sounds. Your students phonics rings will take on a whole new perspective.
Collaborating Living Moments 6 to 12
(0 stars, 1 ratings)
Students who are incarcerated experience very little positive influences, have created substantial challenges, and show little ability to make beneficial, character building decisions. which incapacitate them to progress academically, socially, vocationally, etc., and ensure continued failure . We wish to utilize the Seminole County Dividend Speakers to influence these students, however, due to incarceration and facility regulations, students are unable to participate in their presentations. Therefore, we would request technology, in the form of DVD video camera and digital programming, to bring speaker presentations in house. We would tape initial speaker performances at Eugene Gregory and later present to other students at John Polk and the Juvenile Detention Facility.
Community Helpers in our School and Town P-K to K
(0 stars, 3 ratings)
This lesson correlates with our Reading Unit on Neighborhood Helpers
Computer Basics P-K to P-K
(0 stars, 1 ratings)
A lesson that teaches students what a computer is, and the types of computers we use today.
Create A Keychain using 3D design P-K to 9
(0 stars, 2 ratings)
In this lesson my students will be able to utilize online 3D software to create a "marketable" keychain and print it out on a 3D printer. This will let students take ownership of this process by making it their own and understanding how to begin an entrepreneurship.
Creating Bar Graphs P-K to 5
(0 stars, 1 ratings)
The students will represent data (the lengths of their names) using "Graph Master" to create a bar graph on the computer. Then they will compare their graphs to the other students in the class.
Dear Future Writing Assignment 1 to 4
(0 stars, 1 ratings)
Students will be writing to future residents through a Time Capsule.
Digital Cameras and Numbers K to 1
(0 stars, 1 ratings)
Using digital cameras to take pictures of groups of numbers to practice grouping and counting.
Digital Research Animal Project 1 to 2
(0 stars, 1 ratings)
Students will research an animal of choice and use an iPad app to create a trading card to inform peers of their new learning.
Element Advertisement! 6 to 8
Using digital voice recorders, students will create radio advertisements to inform their audience about the specifics of different elements found on the Periodic Table. The advertisements will then be uploaded to a class blog and presented to the class.
Elementary Lessons for Primary and Secondary Sources 3 to 4
(0 stars, 4 ratings)
Primary and Secondary Sources Lessons
Enhancing Our Outdoor Classroom Studies through Technology K to 5
(0 stars, 2 ratings)
Students will make and collect scientific observations in our outdoor classroom. In addition to traditional observations, video recordings and digital photographic records will be collected as well.
Essential to Autumn: Line, Shape, Color, Texture, Pattern, Rhythm, Emphasis, Movement, Balance, and Unity 3 to 5
(0 stars, 1 ratings)
Students will observe their natural environment to experience the changes that occur when Autumn arrives. Students will create artworks based on personal observations and experiences with their environment in Autumn.
Everyday Recycling P-K to K
(0 stars, 1 ratings)
This lesson will teach students how to identify recyclable materials and integrate the practice of recycling into their own homes. The students will also learn words associated with recycling and create a take home project modeling Planet Earth.
Explore and Collaborate: Career Choices & Resume 6 to 12
(0 stars, 1 ratings)
Explore and Collaborate Lesson Plans - Google Docs: Career Choices & Resume A lesson that teaches students about career choices and how to build their own resume.
EXTRA! EXTRA! Hear all about it!! P-K to 5
(0 stars, 6 ratings)
Parents can now hear the excitement in their child's voice and see the smile on their child's face as their children share what they did throughout the week with this podcast newsletter.
Farm Animals P-K to P-K
(0 stars, 1 ratings)
Rodeo - Farm Animals Elementary Zone Grant
Finding Solutions to Hunger 6 to 8
(0 stars, 1 ratings)
This is a project plan more than a lesson plan. It is a 10-week project using a wonderful online collaboration tool designed to be used by educators. Besides teaching the curriculum objectives—the goal is to open the students’ eyes to hunger in the world.
Flip Camera Christmas Lessons and Ideas P-K to 6
(0 stars, 1 ratings)
Flip Camera Christmas Lessons and Ideas
Flip into Technology! 6 to 12
(0 stars, 1 ratings)
Students use Flip cameras to gather information and integrate it into any classroom activity.
Flip Video Cultural Exchange between students in Texas and New Zealand 6 to 8
(0 stars, 1 ratings)
Students create a class YouTube video comparing the differences/similarities between the Hurricane Ike disaster in Houston, TX to the earthquake in Christchurch, New Zealand. The video was sent to all schools in Christchurch, New Zealand - expanding students' world view to include more than just their immediate concerns.
Flippin for Valley View Scavenger Hunt K to 6
(0 stars, 1 ratings)
This is a lesson for including an outdoor nature preserve onsite at our school and using it to teach state standards while incorporating technology into a classroom where nature can't come inside.
FlipVideo Poetry: Teaching Narrative Poems Through Community Service Learning 7 to 8
(0 stars, 3 ratings)
In order to promote literacy as part of our district improvement plan, 7th grade students will work in pairs to draft, write and illustrate a narrative poem to be presented on National Read Across America Day to primary school students as part of a 'Seussical". Performances will be videotaped so that teachers can show the presentations over and over to varied classes for instructional purposes.
Fredrick Douglass...A digital History 7 to 7
Using technology, the students will create projects that depicts the stuggles of slaves with a focus on Fredrick Douglass and his determination to abolish it.
From photo to printed word: Getting second-graders to write! K to 2
(0 stars, 2 ratings)
By taking pictures and focusing on the basics (capital letters and periods), second graders get the beginning concepts of writing a story by taking compelling images.
Geography Postcard Podcasting 7 to 8
(0 stars, 1 ratings)
Students will produce four postcards that will show the major landforms and describe the climate of the different regions of the U.S. and Canada. Students will then write a description of their travels in the form of a friendly letter. Each student will create a podcast using the postcards and letter. The podcast will be posted to the class website.
High School Students Meet Veterans 9 to 12
The goal of this lesson is for the students to come away with a better understanding of who veterans are and what their life was/is like.
How to "Write Right"! K to 1
(0 stars, 2 ratings)
One to two sentences will be written on the board with an appropriate/relevant illustration underneath. Students will be given the opportunity to review and practice their oral, reading and writing skills in this lesson.
I Spy With My Little Eye 1 to 1
This is a lesson I used with first grade students. It focuses on color identification, inserting graphics in Word, and word processing.
If Hornets Could Talk... 5 to 5
(0 stars, 2 ratings)
As a teacher, I find myself constantly challenged to integrate the state and parish standards, grade level expectations, ILEAP test preparation, and multi-disciplinary lessons, at the same time keeping my students engaged, excited, and learning. At times I find the students either bored or discouraged with basic assignments, in particular reading, writing, and researching. I find that no matter how important the components being taught, without a “catch” or “hook,” the students view the assignments as redundant and see no connection with real life. I’ve found a “hook!”
Integrated Curriculum, student- led Environmental Project P-K to 12
(0 stars, 1 ratings)
A student-led environmental project based on cooperative learning with a cross-curricular base in order to address many subject areas and work towards the goal of creating positive change. This is an amazing project that empowers the children, helps them to discover and utilize their gifts to create change in the world.
Introduction to Stop Motion 2 to 12
(0 stars, 1 ratings)
This is basically accomplishing three things: teaching kids the process and technology involved with stop-motion animation, working on the editing side of making a movie, and creating two projects (one to practice application and one for synthesis).
Kids with Cameras make a difference 1 to 4
1-4th grade students create a photography exhibit titled "Sense of Place" about their community and then use the exhibit to collect donations to support international Kids with cameras programs.
Kinderbet-An Alphabet for Children P-K to K
(0 stars, 2 ratings)
Kindergarten children will brainstorm and search the classroom and campus for objects that begin with each letter of the alphabet. They will photograph each item and create both a power point and a written book to be presented to the library.
Language and Literacy Support through Photography K to 8
(0 stars, 1 ratings)
This project provides ideas and activities for promoting development of oral language, literacy, and student identity through the use of photography-based Language Experience Approach lessons and books.
Learning Character Concepts and Living With Character P-K to 5
(0 stars, 1 ratings)
Military towns have plenty to be proud of particularly of the members of the community that have shown responsibility, trustworthiness, fairness, respect, caring and citizenship. Students will share fiction books they have read through their favorite characters and connect those characters to pillar character concepts for favorite people in their lives who have some connection to the military.
Letter Review P-K to P-K
(0 stars, 1 ratings)
This lesson is a plan I use weekly when introducing a new letter through Letterland (our letter/sound curriculum). It uses a variety of methods to practice writing the letter and practicing letter sounds.
Long Beach History Digital Scrapbook 3 to 4
(0 stars, 2 ratings)
Students create digital scrapbooks for their city's local history, including the Tongva Native Americans, settlers and newcomers to the land, and how the city was created. Students attend field trips to local historical sites and current landmarks, documenting their visit and reporting on it in a scrapbook.
Making Book Trailers 5 to 7
(0 stars, 2 ratings)
5th grade students will make short trailers for popular children's books using Windows Movie Maker.
Man in Conflict - Vietnam and Literature 11 to 11
(0 stars, 1 ratings)
Plan designed to teach different forms of conflict found in American Literature. Students will be able to identify types of conflict found in various literary forms and compare/contrast using other media forms.
Military Families P-K to P-K
(0 stars, 1 ratings)
Improving student vocabulary through interactive spelling games and a short story.
Native Americans 3 to 6
(0 stars, 1 ratings)
This unit on Native Americans encourages students to read print and online informational texts focusing on Native American tribes of various regions. They will create, practice, and present digital presentations based on the information they found.
Nature Inspired Digital Alphabet 2 to 5
Through digital photography and basic computer skills students create their own nature inspired digital alphabet. Students find letters of the alphabet in objects made from nature, for example: ground erosion makes the letter “y,” or the veins of a leaf make the “A.”
Noun Book Videos 1 to 3
(0 stars, 2 ratings)
Students create a noun book with pictures they have pulled from various magazines. They then work in pairs, to video record each other as they present and explain their noun book. The videos are added to their Video Portfolios.
Osmo Letter Recognition and Spelling 9 to 12
(0 stars, 1 ratings)
Students will use the Osmo system and letter tiles to practice letter recognition and spelling activities, based on IEP goals and performance levels. Teacher and Teacher Assistants will rotate between students to assist students as well as positively reinforce their work.
Persuasive Writing 2 to 3
(0 stars, 1 ratings)
Students will learn the skill of writing a persuasive letter through a read aloud, teacher guidance and technology.
Picture This: A Book Full of Patterns! P-K to 8
My students will use various hands-on manipulatives while making different types of patterns (ab, abc, aabb, aabbcc, etc.) Students will use the digital camera to take a picture and write what they did!
Podcasting the 44th Infantry Division (WWII) 10 to 12
(0 stars, 1 ratings)
Using the original (1944-45) letters of PFC Fred Sisk (about 80 letters from the European Theater) and published histories of his division (the 44th) we will create podcasts that recreate the events of the divisions fight from Normandy and into Germany and Austria.
Preserving Living Legacies 9 to 12
(0 stars, 1 ratings)
This is an oral history lesson which engages students to research a top of United States History as related to the actual life experience of a senior member of our town community. Students will research, prepare interview questions, interview a senior, videotape their interview, and publish their findings in book form.
Probability- How Likely Is It? 5 to 6
(0 stars, 1 ratings)
Students will use online manipulatives, Web 2.0 sites, Excel/spreadsheet software, Glogster.com, and a class wiki to conduct an experiment and communicate their results. This is a culminating activity/project for any probability unit in grades 5-6.
Reading Stations 1 to 1
(0 stars, 2 ratings)
During Reader's Workshop, the students will be rotating through four different learning stations, completing one station a day for a week. The purpose of this is to incorporate more activities using technology into their everyday independent practice.
Reading Strategies for Decoding Tricky Words 1 to 1
(0 stars, 1 ratings)
The Flip Ultra Camcorder will be used to create a video toolbox of reading strategies demonstrated by students. These strategies, which develop independent readers who self-monitor and self-correct as they read, will be shared with parents. The video toolbox will provide a balance between reading strategies, self monitoring, and cross-checking behaviors.
Reasons Why... 4 to 8
(0 stars, 2 ratings)
This English lesson will use flip cameras and persuasive techniques.
ScreenPlay Writing 9 to 12
(0 stars, 1 ratings)
This a two-week unit that includes screenplay writing and video editing
See it, Say it, Move, it, Do it! K to K
(0 stars, 2 ratings)
An interactive lesson featuring multiple learning styles to enhance all students' abilities to recognize the alphabet. *Lesson plan developed collaboratively with ESL teacher, Darcy Berger.
Short Vowel Discrimination P-K to 5
(0 stars, 1 ratings)
The integration of Dr. Seuss rhymes creates an engaging study of onsets and rimes. Students will discover patterns in words, sort words based on their vowel patterns, and apply their knowledge in reading and writing activities. Using a Promethean Board and Active Inspire software will add educational technology to the lesson.
Smart Board Literacy Center K to K
(0 stars, 1 ratings)
Using a Smart board as a literacy center will be beneficial in the development of both early reading skills and technology/computer skills. The smart board will also help students to practice their motor skills.
SpellingBot 2 to 2
(0 stars, 1 ratings)
During Word Work station, students will create a robot using Cubelets Robot Blocks that will help them spell and locate the correct spelling of their spelling words.
Star Reading 4 to 12
(0 stars, 1 ratings)
Students will understand the importance of fluency and become fully engaged in the process. The teacher will act as a facilitator while students perform the tasks. Students will become motivated to become more fluent readers as they view and graph their scores. They also learn to critique their own reading and that of their peers. They will begin to fully understand what fluency is and sounds like through the process.
Student Created Power Point 3 to 5
(0 stars, 1 ratings)
Student will learn to use the tools in Power Point to create a Power Point project to introduce themselves.
Tablet use in Centers P-K to 9
(0 stars, 1 ratings)
Teacher will use a tablet in a center in order to focus student on quick activities centered on one concept. Students will cycle through the 6 centers in groups of 4.
Technique is the Key 3 to 6
(0 stars, 1 ratings)
The main focus of this lesson is improving students' keyboarding skills - specifically speed and accuracy. This lesson is taught at the beginning of the school year and is appropriate for 3rd-6th grade students.
Technology-Assisted "7 Habits of Highly Effective Teens" 9 to 10
(0 stars, 1 ratings)
This unit teaches teens the underlying principles that are essential to achieving their goals and personal success. The activities, described in detail below, support an understanding of each of the 7 Habits along with any important terms and the application of those habits into the daily lives of the students through the implementation of “baby steps” that will be monitored twice a week by the students’ personal mentor and supplemented with a wide range of technological hardware and applications.
Thanks for Your Service P-K to 12
(0 stars, 2 ratings)
Students need to learn to be thankful for what they have. What better way than to honor those who have fought for their freedom.
The History of Daily Life in America: An Inquiry-based Unit Plan P-K to 8
(0 stars, 2 ratings)
By completing an inquiry-based project, students will be able to compare the various ways people lived in the 1800’s to the way we live today. Students will learn how to form a good inquiry question, effectively search the web for answers and synthesize the information found to form a deep understanding of the topic. Students will prepare a Power Point presentation of their knowledge to share with the class. At the very end of this unit, students will take part in a living history lesson and act like people living in the 1800’s.
The Peace Project K to 2
What does "peace" mean to second graders? Students will create artwork and personal videos to communicate their reflections about "peace" to share with the world.
The Very Important Me Project K to 2
(0 stars, 2 ratings)
First Grade Students will create a project using various computer applications to show their skills they have learned in first grade, including the use of Microsoft Word, Paint, and the Video Star App. They will be combining these skills with ones they are learning in the classroom including sentence structure, punctuation and capital letters.
The Wonder of Seeing the Best in Ourselves- A+ Attitude 6 to 6
(0 stars, 1 ratings)
Students will read the novel Wonder by RJ Palacio, learn about theme, character, perspective and the steps of writing a research paper. The students will then create a research paper, an oral presentation and a citizenship project that promotes compassion.
Their Side Of The Story 3 to 5
(0 stars, 1 ratings)
Students use Flip cameras as a way to look at and understand school life from others' point of view.
Thorne Comm 6 to 8
Technology can help teachers communicate more effectively with parents. Photographic evidence of student's performance is very effective!
Time Capsule Essay (A Letter to Future Students) 2 to 4
(0 stars, 1 ratings)
Dozier Elementary's Time Capsule Project Link shows all information @http://www.vrml.k12.la.us/dozier/eye/09_10/TimeCapsule09_10/projects.htm
What's Going On 5 to 6
(0 stars, 2 ratings)
The 6th grade special education students are going to make a monthly newsletter for their peers on the things that are happening. This lesson helps with self esteem, organization, and written expression, and technology skills.
Where is home? (Basic intro to home row finger placement.) K to 2
(0 stars, 1 ratings)
Younger students learn the proper finger placement for the home keys using the tune "Where is Thumbkin".
Who Am I? 4 to 5
(0 stars, 1 ratings)
Students will use the digital cameras to take profile pictures of themselves and then insert them into a word processing document where they have typed an acrostic poem with their name, giving clues about themselves. The pictures are then formatted to be black and white so that the photo looks like a silouette.
Word Processing 6 to 8
(0 stars, 1 ratings)
A lesson that teaches students how to use a word processor
Write My Name P-K to P-K
(0 stars, 1 ratings)
In this lesson, students take pictures and use a computer with iMovie to make a digital story of a slowmotion video of how to write their name, so they can practice independently.
Year in Review 6 to 8
(0 stars, 1 ratings)
Each student will capture his/her best moments/work/events of the school year with cameras/phones or movie making program.
Yes We Can! Students with Autism & Downs-Syndrome on the Drums! K to 12
(0 stars, 2 ratings)
Students with profound special needs, such as autism, Downs-syndrome, CP, & medically fragile conditions, will participate in a variety of exciting experiential activities, including adaptive percussion & drumming, Karaoke type music, and using American Sign Language to express themselves to music. Project will be documented via video and digital pictures and shown to the school body in a music video format.
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