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Education World's
Learning Machine


Explore the coolest teaching resources on the Web.

From the Science Machine
Use Science of Music to explore sound and music. (Grades 3-8)

From the Reading Machine
Chicken Stacker reinforces short vowel sounds. (Grades K-2)

From the Math Machine
Tickets Please! is a fun Web site for teaching addition. (Grades 1-2)


It isn't the cute little kids in Davis Guggenheim's Waiting for Superman that will tug at your heartstrings; it's the parents. It's Daisy's unemployed father who believes his 10-year-old can do and be anything -- if she only gets the chance. It's Bianca's mother who pays $500 a month -- $500 a month on a receptionist's salary! -- to send her kindergartner to parochial school. It's Anthony's grandmother who's reluctant to send the fifth grader to boarding school -- but is more terrified of losing him, like his father, to the D.C. streets. It's Francisco's mother who despite phone calls and letters and personal pleas from the second grader himself can't get his teacher to set up a parent conference or even to send home his work folder. (What are you thinking, Mr. Saxon?) Oh sure, the kids -- the promising victims of education's broken promises -- in this eye-opening documentary will touch you; but the parents? The parents will break your heart.

Read more.




Financial Advice for Teens:
What Pro-Athletes Don't Know About Money

Adults should teach young people that it's not how much you make that determines your financial success in life, but what you do with what you make.


Teacher Feature
Gaming Night and Day
Marcia Baldanza's students game their way to greater understanding.


Wire Side Chat
Edutainers Make Lessons Engaging
In coining the term "edutainer," these authors aren't suggesting that teachers juggle, but rather that they use some entertainer-type skills to help make lessons more relevant and engaging.

Strategy of the Week
Parent-Teacher Conferences
When it comes to parent-teacher conferences, it's a toss up as to who least wants to be there -- the nervous parents or the teacher who must deliver news that isn't always expected or appreciated. We have resources for both.


What can you do with SchoolNotes? Check out Heather Ashmore's Life Science Page.




Achieving Class Goals
Help kids understand the goal-setting process.

Honor Your Good 'Sit-izens'
Create a good "sit-izenship" chair.
Record the 'Aha!' Moments
Remember the special moments -- write them down!


Dr. Ken Shore: The ABCs of Bullying Prevention
Understanding the Bully
Children are not born bullies. Bullies are made -- which means they can be unmade.



Tips for Organizing Your Classroom
Organize Science and Social Studies Materials
Invest in plastic drawers for organizing and storing science and social studies materials.

Classroom Management Article
Helping Students Find the "Write" Way to Behave
Having students write about their misbehavior, why it occurred, and what they are going to do to correct it, is valuable for students and teachers.


From Our Classroom Tips Library
Classroom Management: Parent Partners
Behavior Management: Gimme Five!
Motivating Kids: Make Sure They Understand
Book Report Makeover: Thumbs Up or Down?
Homework Tips: Homework BINGO
Best Idea Ever: Review on the Fly
Testing Tips: Word Perfect




Fred Jones's Tools for Teaching
Calm is Strength; Upset is Weakness
A calm response to provocation can be learned. Because upset happens quickly, however, you have to learn to relax immediately and automatically when confronted. That takes practice.


Ruth Sidney Charney: The Responsive Classroom
Using Language to Encourage and Empower Children
Three simple structures support encouraging and empowering language. We call those structures "The Three R's": to reinforce, to remind, to redirect.


Eric Baylin's Songs to Brighten a Teacher's Day
The Meeting Song
This song was written to stir to life a roomful of slouching teachers at the beginning of a meeting. It worked! Of course, we still have to figure out a way to make meetings purposeful and engaging.


Meet other members of Education World's Professional Development columnist team.




THE MATH AND SCIENCE CORNER



Wendy Petti's Math Cats
Financial Literacy
Even young students can develop healthy habits of saving toward short-term and long-term goals, and intermediate students can learn to research and invest virtual money in the stock market.

Featured Math Article
Crayon Factory Offers Hands-On Economics
Students learn first-hand about raw materials, producers, consumers, natural resources, and marketing.

Go Figure!
In which house does each of the children on George Island live?


Double Trouble
Adding and subtracting to 18; adding double digits.


Math Mnemonics
Area of a circle.

THE SCIENCE LAB
Where Did It Go?
Demonstrate the pockets of space between water molecules.


Write on Target
From hall graffiti to a winter memoir, these activities will have your students, too, penning with pleasure.

Letters to Home
Open lines of communication between school and home with this letter-writing lesson.


Describing Winifred Witch
Winifred Witch was a sight to see! She...

Inquiring Minds Want to Know
Choose a weird headline, be a news reporter.

Writing Lessons
Write a Round Robin Story
In groups of five, every student takes part in writing a round-robin story.
Persuade the Aliens
Be an alien. Persuade your master to adopt a custom you witnessed on Earth.


Cathy Puett Miller:
Every Minute Counts:
Layering Instruction

The pace of instruction seems our first enemy -- making it imperative that we create multiple opportunities to enforce what we most want children to learn.

Reader's Theater
Hen-Picked
The Little Red Hen has a thriving pastry business and needs an apprentice. Who should it be?


Reading Feature
Dr. Seuss Literacy Night Is the Cat's Meow
An evening of characters and games at Hill Field Elementary includes a wide range of activities, a "make and take" home-reading activity area, and a popular school-wide book exchange -- all to excite kids and families about literacy.


Best Books for Teaching About...
Bats
Inventors and Inventions



Learn what Total Reader can do for your students.



More from Our Professional Development Channel

This ten-part series from the Department of Education explores the components of a successful strategy for educating children with ADHD.

Part 5
Successful Instruction for Students With ADHD: Concluding Lessons

Effective teachers conclude their lessons by providing advance warning that the lesson is about to end, checking the completed assignments of at least some of the students with ADHD, and instructing students how to begin preparing for the next activity.