At the first meeting that principals had with Dr. Rose,our new FCS Superintendent, he asked us to talk about our "why". We had to share the reason why we decided to do this work. Why did we decide to become educators? It is a thought provoking question that can't really be answered with cliche sayings such as "I love kids" or "I always wanted to teach". Something in our lives influenced us to make this our life's work. For some, it was a childhood experience or a teacher that made us believe there was no greater calling. For others, it was later in life as a second career. It was about making a difference. While it is important to identify the initial "why" of your journey, it is more important to know "why" you continue to do this work. Our work is neither easy nor glamorous. The hours are long and the accolades are few. However, focusing on your "why" will keep you moving forward when you want to give up. It has been a great three weeks of school and you are one of the reasons why.
1. Best for Young Readers: The Stacks
At The Stacks, students can post book reviews, get reading recommendations, play games based on the latest series, watch "
Meet the Author" videos, and more. It's like Facebook for reading and it's safe for school, too.
2. Best for Finding Books: Book Wizard
Use Scholastic's Book Wizard to level your classroom library, find resources for the books you teach, and create reading lists with the click of a button. You can also plug a title into the BookAlike feature to find books with an easier, similar, or more difficult reading level.
With hundreds of lessons for every grade level, you're guaranteed to find a colorful idea for your class, such as the "
Chinese Dragon Drum" for Chinese New Year or the "
What Do You Love?" project for Valentine's Day.
4. Best Way to Start the Day: Daily Starters
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, such as "Before erasers, people used a piece of bread!" Sort by grade (PreK-8), and project them onto your interactive whiteboard or print copies for your students.
The creators of the 6+1 traits of writing offer a terrific overview of the model on their site, with research to support the program, lesson plans, writing prompts, and rubrics. You can also find writing samples to practice scoring and see how other teachers scored the same piece.
6. Best Online Dictionary: Wordsmyth
Add the beginner's version of the
Wordsmyth widget to your toolbar, and students can look up new vocabulary no matter where they are online.
At the National Library of Virtual Manipulatives, you'll find activities for every area of math at every grade level. Need to teach shapes to preschoolers, for example? Try the
Attribute Blocks, which challenge students to sort virtual objects. Working on functions with middle schoolers? Drop numbers into the
function machine to identify the pattern.
Zoom over the Sahara desert. Fly past the streets where your students live. Take a tour of the Eiffel Tower. You can do it all with Google Earth, the tool that makes the world feel a little bit smaller with its map-generating capabilities. If you're new to Google Earth,
the tutorials offer a great introduction.
This fantastic site acts as a clearinghouse for all of the educational materials developed by government organizations. You can find primary sources, videos, and photos for just about any topic. And it's all free!
The National Science Teachers Association site is a goldmine for classroom teachers who may not feel as comfortable teaching geology and astronomy as they do reading and arithmetic. You'll find journal articles, experiment ideas, and a roundup of the latest science stories in the news.
For topics too current for textbooks,
Scholastic News classroom magazines offer engaging nonfiction reading online, drawn from the latest headlines. Subscribe to receive news-related, age-appropriate
Common Core lesson plans and skills sheets, and free access to the
app that comes with each issue.
12. Best for Middle School: figment
Figment allows young writers to post their work, receive criticism, and read others' contributions. From fan fiction to poetry to novels-in-progress, all types of writing are encouraged and shared. Be aware that not all content is school appropriate.
The Smithsonian offers thousands of resources for educators, including lesson plans, virtual tours of their latest exhibits, and the opportunity to connect with experts in the field. In one lesson, "
Final Farewells," students can see a school yearbook from the Civil War era up close, and discuss how the political climate may have affected the content.
14. Best Multimedia Tool: Glogster
Glogster bills itself as a tool for making interactive posters, or glogs, containing pictures, text, video, links, and animation. A glog on
To Kill a Mockingbird might contain a link to the Scottsboro trial, a clip from the Gregory Peck movie, and a drawing of the tree where Boo Radley leaves gifts for Scout. Fun!
15. Best for the Interactive Whiteboard: SMART Exchange
Go to SMART Exchange before creating any lessons for your interactive whiteboard from scratch. Chances are you'll find an existing lesson ready to grab and go, or inspiration from other teachers who've taught the same material. Plus, the customizable
Whack-A-Mole game is a must-have for test prep and review.
16. Best for Interactive Whiteboard Help: Promethean Planet
Even if you've deemed yourself an interactive whiteboard pro, Promethean's teacher community offers a boatload of tips and practical advice you'll find useful. Find help the next time your toolbox goes missing, or if you want to punch up a lesson with cool graphics.
17. Best for Online Classroom Workspaces: Wikispaces Classroom
Wikispaces Classroom walks you through process of creating an online classroom workspace that's private and customizable. It works across browers, tablets, and phones, and can be used for day-to-day classroom management, tracking formative assessments in real-time, and connecting with students and parents in and out of the classroom.
18. Best for Video Clips: TeacherTube
TeacherTube is the best source for instructional videos in a safe environment. We especially love the clips of teachers showing off the catchy rhymes they've made up to teach certain topics — check out the "
Mrs. Burk Perimeter Rap" and the "
Mr. Duey Fractions Rap."
19. Best for Moviemaking: PowToon
Moviemaking has never been easier than it is at PowToon. To
create a short animated clip, all you have to do is write a script and choose characters and other graphics using a simple drag-and-drop tool. The classroom possibilities are endless
— challenge kids to write an additional scene for a book you are reading in English class, or have one character explain the water cycle to another for a science project.
This site not only offers an overview of the Common Core State Standards, but provides a thoughtful framework for how the standards were determined and what we can reasonably expect students at given grade levels to achieve.
Along with an excellent blog that tackles some of the more difficult aspects of education, Teaching Tolerance offers
activities and teaching kits on topics ranging from the civil rights movement to the separation of church and state.
22. Best Professional Development On the Go: Annenberg Learner
Many of the PD series from the Annenberg Foundation are available on demand here, with videos on teaching measurement, writing workshop, and more. You'll see master teachers at work and undoubtedly snag an idea or two for your own classroom.
In the hustle and bustle of the classroom, it can be easy to lose track of the outside forces affecting education. The National Education Association explains how to take action regarding the issues you care about most — including merit pay, the No Child Left Behind Act, and funding for education.
Reading the Top Teaching blog is like paging through a cooking magazine. Just as you might be inspired to try a 12-course meal instead of your usual mac and cheese, you'll leave wanting to push your teaching to the next level. No matter what you're interested in — Pinterest-worthy bulletin boards, savvy tech-integration tips, or how to save money on classroom materials — these veteran teachers' wealth of experience and knowledge will leave you satiated.
So we may be biased, but we think you'll find our page your most useful one on Facebook by far. Each week, you'll find free printables, lesson plan and craft ideas, frequent giveaways, and note-worthy news. All you have to do is "like" us. And stand by for the fascinating discussion that happens on our page, including the 10 O'Clock Teacher Question, posed by
— and answered by — teachers like you.
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