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It’s a fact of life, when you assign work or projects in social studies class, you’ll have early finishers. What should you do with them? Let them hang out and talk? Ummm, no, that’s just asking for classroom management nightmares. When you fail to set procedures for students, they’ll create their own procedures 100% of the time, so make sure students know what assignments they must complete and what they are able to do once finished with their required work.
Here is a Cold War Stations activity that I use with my AP World students when we cover the Cold War. One of my colleagues developed it years ago. It includes seven stations, each with cartoons, documents, or photographs for students to process. I printed it out for seven different stations, but students could also work on it online. Here's a google link to the handout that students complete.
Nearly a half century ago, a landmark study showed that teachers werent explicitly teaching reading comprehension. Once children learned how to read words, no one taught them how to make sense of the sentences and paragraphs. Some kids naturally got it. Some didnt. Since then, reading researchers have come up with many ideas to foster comprehension.
The laws of our country are the foundation of our democracy, safety, and prosperity. Without laws, there would be no protection for citizens rights and freedoms. There would also be no framework of laws to maintain order in the country. As such, citizens and their rights would be in grave danger and the nation could fall into a state of chaos. Thats why teaching the Legislative Branch and its importance to students is so crucial.
An anthropologist plunges into the world of Patagonian heavy metal music in Argentina to explore how the genre relates to language and cultural revitalization. I FIRST HEARD Patagonian heavy metal on a cold winter night in Esquel, Argentina. The song roared to life with guitar riffs and drumming resembling a U.S. or European thrash metal record. But around the 35-second mark, unfamiliar wind instruments grabbed my attention.
Few traits define humanity as clearly as language. Yet, despite its central role in human evolution, determining when and how language first emerged remains a challenge. Fossils do not speak, and ancient DNA does not carry recordings of conversations. Traditionally, scholars have debated linguistic origins based on indirect clues—symbolic artifacts, brain size, or the complexity of tool-making.
Nancy Muoz is on her second act this time, in a school and she feels shes finally where she belongs. After a long career working in health care, the pandemic led her to seek a new opportunity. She found it in the form of an operations coordinator role inside a middle school in Camden, New Jersey. In that position, Muoz sits at the front desk what she calls the face of the house answering phone calls, sending emails, receiving visitors.
Teaching government at Hilliard Darby High School in Ohio (a suburb of Columbus), Amy Messick helps students understand how our constitutional system works. She also encourages them to figure out their own political views and to actively engage in civic life. One former student who appreciates what he learned from Messick now serves on the school board for the district in which Messick teaches.
Over 100,000 years ago, Neanderthals and Homo sapiens roamed the Levant, a region that would become a crossroads of human migration. For decades, researchers have debated the nature of their interactions. Did they coexist peacefully, exchanging ideas and technologies? Or were they rivals, competing for territory and resources? Exposed section of archaeological sediments dated to to 110 thousand years ago at Tinshemet cave A new study, published in Nature Human Behaviour 1 , brings fresh insight
The Education Reporting Collaborative, a coalition of eight newsrooms, is investigating the unintended consequences of AI-powered surveillance at schools. Members of the Collaborative are AL.com, The Associated Press, The Christian Science Monitor, The Dallas Morning News, The Hechinger Report, Idaho Education News, The Post and Courier in South Carolina, and The Seattle Times.
2024 Mary-Kay Gamel Outreach Prize kskordal Mon, 03/10/2025 - 08:52 Image Following the unanimous recommendation of the Outreach Prizes Committee, we wish to deliver the exciting news that Candida R. Moss has been awarded the 2024 Mary-Kay Gamel Outreach Prize by the SCS. Dr. Moss is the Edward Cadbury Professor of Theology at the University of Birmingham, but is also a public intellectual who has written as a columnist for The Daily Beast and is most recently the author of Gods Ghostwriters: En
Nestled within the limestone cliffs of Uluzzo Bay in southern Italy, Grotta della Lea has remained largely untouched since it was first documented in the 1970s. Unlike many other archaeological sites that have been repeatedly excavated over decades, this cave has only recently been investigated systematically. That lack of disturbance makes it an exceptional place to study how humans occupied the region during the final millennia of the Upper Paleolithic.
Teaching Irish American History Mar. 10, 2025 By Studies Weekly NEWSLETTER You only need to walk into a store and see St Patricks Day decorations to know Irish Americans have profoundly impacted our countrys culture. But what brought so many Irish immigrants to the United States? This overview of Irish American history can help you teach students why they see so many Irish influences today.
2024 Forum Prize kskordal Mon, 03/10/2025 - 08:50 Image Following the unanimous recommendation of the Outreach Prizes Committee, we wish to deliver the exciting news that Max Miller of Tasting History has been awarded the 2024 Forum Prize by the SCS. Tasting History is a vibrant, engaging public resource on living history available to a mass audience.
For more than two millennia, the Bayanbulag fortress stood silent in the arid landscapes of southern Mongolia, its stones weathered by time and shifting empires. But beneath its surface, an ancient mass grave held the story of a brutal encounter between two of East Asia’s most formidable powers: the Han Dynasty of China and the nomadic Xiongnu.
Americas schools are facing a crisis in reading achievement. The recently released National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP) found that only 31 percent of 4th graders and 30 percent of 8th graders were reading at or above a proficient level. Dr. Julie A. Evans, the CEO of education nonprofit Project Tomorrow , has found that educators across the country are grappling with the intertwined challenges of declining student engagement and persistent social-emotional issues.
Ive been reading research and writing about it on this website for around eight years. Ive written numerous times on learning strategies such as retrieval practice , spaced practice , dual coding , and much, much more. But, one strategy that has never featured on any article Ive written is interleaving. Go ahead, do a keyword search for it here. There may be an article where it is mentioned, but Ive never looked at any research and considered how to use it appropriately in my classes.
This week was all about making westward expansion more engaging and interactive while reinforcing key historical concepts through EduProtocols. From annotated maps and Thick Slides to Map & Tell and Parafly , students used a variety of strategies to build knowledge, analyze sources, and develop writing skills. We started with a Great American Race to introduce westward territories, followed by a Map & Tell to break down the meaning of “5440′ or Fight.” Parafly helped st
Before the soft-footed, domesticated Felis catus found its way into Chinese homes, another feline species occupied human settlements for thousands of years. A new genetic and archaeological study 1 has revealed that leopard cats ( Prionailurus bengalensis ), small wild felines native to East Asia, lived alongside people in China’s early agrarian societies for at least 3,500 years—only to disappear from human settlements centuries before the arrival of domestic cats via the Silk Road.
A couple of months ago, I had a conversation with another leader who was listening to some of my frustrations about how the school year was going. This school year is unique as we just opened a new building with over 450 students in kindergarten through eighth grade, consolidating three different elementary and middle campuses from different neighborhoods across New York.
I’ve been doing this for a while. Multiple years in middle school classrooms. Multiple years teaching in higher ed. And then a transition to my current role as a curriculum consultant. I get the opportunity to work with and learn from some amazing people from all over the country.
Two hundred and forty-nine years ago, the 56 signers of the Declaration of Independence pledged their lives, fortunes and honor to what has become the worlds longest-standing experiment in constitutional democracy. Yet as we prepare to celebrate America at 250, warning signs abound that we may be failing their charge. National pride in America is at a record low, coinciding with desperately low scores on the nations civics report card from the National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP).
Three million years ago on the East African plains, a tense scene might have played out. A group of Australopithecus afarensis —small, upright-walking hominins—gathers around a carcass, quickly slicing off scraps of meat with sharpened stones. Their actions do not go unnoticed. From the tall grass, a Homotherium —a scimitar-toothed cat—lurks, poised to charge.
Scaffolding in Tier 1 instruction helps all students access grade-level content by providing temporary support that is gradually removed as students gain independence. Key strategies include activating prior knowledge, pre-teaching vocabulary, using visual aids, modeling and encouraging student discourse. This approach ensures diverse learning needs are met, fostering gradual mastery of skills and promoting student success.
More than 100 000 has been awarded by The National Lottery Heritage Fund to help safeguard the future of one of the UK's oldest and most important heritage trees - The Great London Plane of Ely! Image: Alan Parkinson, shared on Flickr under CC license I am lucky to be able to walk through the Old Palace gardens whenever I want, and standing in the garden is a huge London plane tree.
One of the biggest challenges in history education is engaging students in meaningful analysis while encouraging collaboration and critical thinking. Enter Snorkl , an AI-powered whiteboard tool that allows students to interact with historical content by annotating images, adding text, drawings, or even recording their voices. By integrating Snorkl with historical inquiry, EduProtocols , and depth and complexity strategies, we can create a dynamic space where students engage deeply with the past
When we first teach students the sounds of the alphabet, we often get caught in a bit of a jumble. Right away, we encounter the elaborate spelling variations of English. We are teaching the sound that the letter a makes but it makes more than one so we add in complexity by explaining both the long a sound (ape) and the short a sound (apple). The same goes for many other sounds like g where we explain that it makes both the hard g sound (gorilla) and the soft g sound (giraffe).
Thanks to Bob Lang for the tipoff to AlphaGeo's data and mapping. It claims to "Future Proof your Geography". The first of the resources can be found by clicking the EXPLORE button top right. This reveals some trends mapping. It includes a range of Risk Data. Heat Stress Annual maximum temperature Annual 5-day average maximum temperature Cooling degree days (CDD) Number of local hot days in a year Drought Maximum number of consecutive dry days Number of extremely hot days in a year Water supply
Pace is a frequent, yet often nebulous, target beginning teachers are given by their mentors. Mentors readily identify pacing issues, but pinpointing the root cause is challenging. Consequently, mentees struggle to translate “improve your pace” into actionable steps. To truly support their progress, we must define “pace” with precision.
Chance Ward knew something was wrong as soon as he started opening the boxes. Inside were the remains of horses—bones jumbled together in plastic bags, packed without care, sometimes broken from the journey. These weren’t just scientific specimens. They were the remains of animals deeply intertwined with the histories and cultures of Indigenous communities.
In the APSA Public Scholarship Program, graduate students in political science produce summaries of new research in the American Political Science Review. This piece, written by Ewa Nizalowska, covers the new article by Rouven Symank, “Durkheims Empire: The Concept of Solidarity and its Colonial Dimension.” When we think of the concept of solidarity, what typically comes to mind is the morally positive idea of cohesion and mutual support within groups.
An Opinion piece by Tim Lang (who developed the idea of food miles amogst other things) in The Guardian. He reminds us of our unpreparedness when it comes to food security. We just assume the food will keep arriving. But our food systems faces many threats: Think energy outages, ransomware attacks, AI/bot attacks, internet failure, chokepoints and trade disruption.
How can nuclear energy help to secure energy security for Singapore? What are the limitations of using solar energy? What are the limitations of using hydrogen to generate energy? Why is nuclear preferred over natural gas in generating hydrogen energy? Where are the countries presently using small modular reactors to generate nuclear energy? Where can a floating small modular reactors be located in Singapore?
Burials offer a glimpse into the lives, beliefs, and sometimes violent deaths of past peoples. A recent study published in Latin American Antiquity 1 has brought attention to a particularly enigmatic burial at Buen Suceso, Ecuador, dating to between AD 771 and 953. The grave contained the remains of a young pregnant woman, a cranial fragment from another individual, and an assortment of grave goods that suggest a possible ritual sacrifice.
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