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October Treats for Your Classroom!


Are you looking for easy-to-do online projects with great curriculum links? Do you want to get some extra classroom mileage out of your students' Halloween sugar highs? Are you worried about how to work Columbus into your curriculum in politically correct ways? Education World offers a potpourri of great October ideas!

HALLOWEEN LESSONS AND PROJECTS

  • Move Over Halloween -- Here Comes Historical Figure Day!
    Historical Figure Day, a celebration held at a middle school in Moorpark, California, serves as an alternative to the traditional Halloween hoopla. Featuring a unique collection of such personalities as Socrates, King Tut, Napoleon, Sacagawea, and Levi Strauss, this school-wide event takes on epic proportions! Find out how Mesa Verde middle schoolers get into character and bring the past to life. Teacher Mike Winters shares project details, and students voice their reactions to a great learning experience.

  • A Dozen Candy-Coated Classroom Activities!
    Do you have a sweet tooth? A mouth full of them? Your students, no doubt, share your passion for sweets, and so does the Internet. Whether you need a novel approach to teaching graphing skills or a unique way to motivate students to write, you will find food for thought on the Net. "Treat" yourself to a dozen activities -- activities that enlist all types of candy to grab and hold your students' attention!

  • The MindsEye Monster Exchange Project: Monsters Made to Order!
    "The dog is brown." Does that sound like your students' idea of a descriptive sentence? The MindsEye Monster Exchange Project is ready to change all that! A unique activity that has students writing descriptive paragraphs, this project is fast becoming an integral part of the language arts curriculum of many classrooms. What is the best part? Students get to use their imagination to design their very own monsters! Included: Comments from teachers across the grades who have seen the educational value in this well-thought-out online project.

THE SEASONS, PUMPKINS, APPLES, AND MORE

  • Track the Change of Seasons -- On the Internet!
    Signs of Autumn/Signs of Spring, a K-6 global Internet project, offers teachers and students a springboard for learning about the changing seasons around the world.

  • Pump Up the Curriculum With Pumpkins!
    Jump into pumpkin facts and pumpkin lore. Try pumpkin science, pumpkin math, pumpkin writing ...

  • Add Color -- and Learning -- to Your Fall Lesson Plans!
    Savor the season! Bring the colors of fall into the classroom with some free foliage from Vermont! Then involve students in some hands-on science and language activities that teach important concepts and valuable study skills. Included: Ten activities to teach about the season!

  • Happy Birthday, Mr. Appleseed!
    September 26 is Johnny Appleseed's birthday. We celebrate with a bushel of apple-related Web sites for students of all ages!

  • 'Harvesting' the Web for Farm Resources
    Fall is the traditional harvest time. Leaves are falling, pumpkins are ripening, and apples are just waiting to be picked from the trees. With many crops ready to be gathered, October is the perfect time to "farm" the Internet for agricultural resources! Included: Web sites for students of all ages!

TEACHING ABOUT COLUMBUS

  • Beyond Columbus: Teaching the Lessons of 1492
    The voyages of Christopher Columbus provide unlimited teaching opportunities -- opportunities that can be pursued without glorifying the man or denigrating his achievements. Observe Columbus Day by helping your students explore Web sites that put the controversial explorer's achievements into historical perspective. Included: Links to online lesson plans for teaching about Columbus across the grades!

  • An additional activity from the Web:
    Christopher Columbus WebQuest
    The purpose behind this WebQuest is for you, the jury, to decide whether Christopher Columbus is guilty of being a fraudulent historical figure. This WebQuest is designed for fifth and sixth graders but may be used at upper grades.

10/5/2001