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25 Best Websites for Teachers

25 Best Websites for Teachers
1. Best Teacher Resources: Scholastic Teachables From lesson plans and reproducibles to mini-books and differentiated collections, Scholastic Teachables has everything you need to go with your lessons in every subject. It’s the best of Scholastic classroom resources right at your fingertips. 2. Best for Finding and Leveling Books: Book Wizard Use Scholastic’s Book Wizard to level your classroom library, discover resources for the books you teach, and find books at just the right level for students with Guided Reading, Lexile® Measure, and DRA levels for children's books. 3. FInd hundreds of standards-based lesson plans, crafts, and activities for every grade level, plus art techniques for beginners to practiced artists. 4. Establish a morning routine with Scholastic's Daily Starters — fun, fast math and language arts prompts and questions, including Teachable Moments from history and Fun Facts. 5. 6. 7. 8. Zoom over the Sahara desert. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22.

https://www.scholastic.com/teachers/articles/teaching-content/25-best-websites-teachers/

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350+ Online Learning Resources for Teachers and Parents With school districts starting the 2020/2021 school year online, parents and teachers are continually looking for online learning resources. Teachers have been tasked with delivering lesson plans and classroom activities as part of distance learning. Parents are trying to keep students on track with their studies and educational growth.

31 Amazing Sources for Free Teacher Resources Teachers are always on the lookout for new inspiration and new ideas, but who’s got time to plow through the zillions of resources on the internet? Well, good news! We’ve done the research for you and here are 30 of our top sources for free teacher resources including lesson plans and activities created by fellow professional educators (marked with an asterisk). Happy hunting! 1. Amazon Inspire* 200 Free Kids Educational Resources: Lessons, Apps, Books, Websites... This collection provides a list of free educational resources for K-12 students (kindergarten through high school students) and their parents and teachers. This page is being updated and cleaned up during the COVID-19 crisis. Please tell us if we're missing something valuable. Below you will find free video lessons/tutorials; free mobile apps; free audiobooks, ebooks and textbooks; quality YouTube channels; free foreign language lessons; test prep materials; and free web resources in academic subjects like literature, history, science and computing. Home Schooling Resources During COVID-19

27 Tech Tools Teachers Can Use to Inspire Classroom Creativity Hey there! We use cookies to make sure you have a great experience on our website. Learn more Got It Indigenous heritage - Library and Archives Canada Helping to preserve Indigenous cultures and languages Learn more about the Indigenous documentary heritage initiatives to increase access to First Nations, Inuit and Métis Nation-related content in LAC's holdings and support Indigenous communities to digitize and preserve culture and language recordings. Library and Archives Canada (LAC) acquires, preserves, and provides access to published and archival heritage material that represents First Nations, Inuit and Métis Nation experiences and contributions to Canada. This includes text, photographs, maps, and audio-visual material. Explore the collection through our online databases, digitized documents and thematic guides.

The path to paperless: 13 tech tools for teachers on a tight budget Flipgrid Holly Clark, education strategist and coauthor of The Google Infused Classroom, says video discussion platform Flipgrid is a great tool for teachers to capture information about student learning and growth. Flipgrid is a free app where teachers can post a question or other cues for student response, and students can then reply with short videos. Indigenous Education Strategy Ontario's Indigenous Education Strategy is supporting First Nation, Métis and Inuit students to achieve their full potential. The Ministry of Education is committed to improving Indigenous education in Ontario, improving student achievement and well-being, and closing the achievement gap between Indigenous students and all students. This strategy has been designed to improve opportunities for First Nation, Métis and Inuit students, to increase the knowledge and awareness of all students about Indigenous histories, cultures and perspectives. Background Indigenous Education In Ontario

About PPW - Promising Practices in Indigenous Education Website Christy Bressette is an Anishinabe parent, student, teacher, and member of Kettle and Stony Point First Nation. Her spirit name “Neta Noo-Ke Kwe” (Hard-Working-Woman) was given by her grandfather, the late Elder Dave Bressette. Christy successfully defended her dissertation in 2008, making her the first Indigenous student at Western University to earn a Ph.D. in Educational Studies. Christy is an educator in provincial and First Nation schools, and several Canadian universities. She is the Indigenous Education Coordinator at the Council of Ministers of Education, Canada (CMEC).

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