Search form

Home > Curriculum Now Center

Curriculum Now Header Graphic

Camera Captures School Year
Teacher Martha Richardson includes a disposable camera on her students' supply list for the year -- in return, she gives parents a photographic record of their children's school year.


RECENT ARTICLES

Read -- and Pedal -- Across America!
Georgia fourth-grade teacher Faye Smith puts a new spin on Read Across America projects! Her PAUSE program, Pedal Across the United States Every day, pairs reading and cycling in an interdisciplinary reading motivator. Education World writer Leslie Bulion talks with Smith about the many places she and her students will go as they read and pedal their way across the country.

Planning for Your First Day at School
On the first day of school, the secret to success is in the planning, not the pedagogy. How's your back-to-school planning going? Have you forgotten anything? Our checklist can help!

Sub Station: Tips and Resources for Substitute Teachers
Looking for a quick lesson that can be used anytime, anywhere? Need something to fill those ten minutes before the lunch bell? Want to add some games to your bag of tricks? We've got the resources you need in our Sub Station, a special resource for substitute teachers that every classroom teacher will love!

Back-to-School Letters and Survival Kits Build Communication
Many teachers and administrators have started introducing themselves to parents and students before school starts, or right at the opening bell. Some have even started providing "survival kits," to help students weather the first few days of school. At some schools, teachers are welcomed with "survival kits" of their own!

Latin Makes a Comeback
In danger of disappearing just a few years ago, Latin is now making a comeback in American classrooms. Read what both teachers and students have to say about the benefits of studying this ancient language.

It's That Time: 25 Great Reasons to Start Thinking About Going Back to School
Could summer break be winding to a close already? Although the calendar still says summer, the first day of school is just days away for many American educators. There is no better time than now to look back at some of the best articles from the Education World archive!

Kids Discover the Value of Learning Through Hands-On 'Hammer' Time
When master carpenter Perry Wilson showed his friend's son how to build a tree house, he discovered that he was really teaching the child the value of mathematics. The task brought to mind his own struggles with a learning disability and the failure of his school to help him realize his potential. As a result, Wilson quit his job and established If I Had a Hammer, a program that uses alternative methods, specifically the construction of a small house, to show kids how to put the material they are learning in school to work.

View More Articles


Featuring Teacher-Created Web Sites

Ace Writing
http://www.geocities.com
/fifth_grade_tpes

Created by Michelle Bergey, Twentynine Palms Elementary School, Twentynine Palms, California

"Writing is a hard -- and very time-consuming -- subject to teach, so it's often overlooked in a busy classroom. However, writing well provides fantastic benefits to students," California teacher Michelle Bergey told Education World. "A lot of research shows that students who are taught to write have a better vocabulary, develop better reading skills, and do better on standardized tests than students who are not taught to write well."

In an effort to improve her students' writing, Bergey spent the summer of 2000 creating the Ace Writing Web site. Her goal was to have enough curriculum material for the entire year, so her teaching team could focus on quality instruction rather than on planning.

To lead students through the new site -- and through the intricacies of learning how to write -- Bergey created "Professor Pen." In the section "How to Get an A in Writing," for example, this virtual host displays the district's writing rubric and discusses in detail each of the five areas of writing students in Morongo Unified School District are graded on: content, organization, vocabulary, language mechanics, and editing. In other student sections, Pen shares his favorite online word games and offers links to writing resources and to online publishing opportunities for young writers. The teacher section of the site, although "Pen-less," provides more resources, from lesson plans to assessment tools to printable writing success certificates.

In fact, Ace Writing contains enough activities, links, lessons, tips, tools, and devices to provide a year of interesting and valuable writing lessons -- and, hopefully, a lifetime of academic success.

--Linda Starr

View More Web Wizards