Showing posts with label education. Show all posts
Showing posts with label education. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 29, 2014

The power of asking neutral questions (to build trust and create relationships): What country do you want to visit? What languages do you want to learn to speak?


What is the power of asking neutral questions:  What country do you want to visit?  What language to learn?

When we ask a neutral question, we validate and say "YOUR OPINION MATTERS" and we listen.

It is the beginning of building trust.   The students might be giving you their opinoin and they practice sharing their preferences.   It might be the first time that they are honest with their feelings and choices with a school adult.

Click here to get the AUDIO recording
I learned this idea because Dennis Littky in 2005 NPR interview says, "they don't trust, they are bored.  It's the first time anyone has asked them what they want.  they have spent 8 years in school being told what to do."

See Littky's interview by searching "NPR radio Dennis Littky small school"  School features real world learning  transcript

School Features Real-World Learning, No Grades : NPR

www.npr.org › News › US › Education
NPR
Apr 25, 2005 - April 25, 200512:00 AM ... hide captionMet school director Dennis Littkymeets with students (from left) Kyle Williams, Jesse Jones and Audris ... Dr. Hector Cordero says she knew little when she started interning at his office.


Write to me at VisualAndActive@GMAIL.com and let's improve this technique.  my mobile is  +1 954 646 8246   TransformTeaching.org

NUMBER 2





NUMBER 3
WHERE DO YOU WANT TO GO?  AUSTRALIA



NUMBER 4
Let's visit New York
with so many places to visit





NUMBER 5

I want to visit Taj Majal.
More to do click here



NUMBER 6


NUMBER 7 



NUMBER 8
Tell us about France and the red-white-blue of their design

NUMBER 9
Where do you want to go?  New York



Send your suggestions to VisualAndActive@gmail.com


Wednesday, December 11, 2013

A happy place to eat in Fort Lauderdale: Rosie's Grill in Fort Lauderdale




I like meeting here because the music is loud and it's possible to enjoy bad news here.


Get the menu



Let's see what mischief we can experience
at the Happiest Place to Meet in Florida...






The next time you want to meet to discuss educational topics, let's meet here.

Tapas and Talk 



Address: 2449 Wilton Dr, Wilton Manors, FL 33305
Phone:(954) 563-0123


Thursday, December 5, 2013

Conversations with Mario Llorente, educational pioneer... If you are looking for something to listen to over a holiday weekend, start here.



PART two





Part 3








Wednesday, July 17, 2013

Teachers Listen, Students Talk: The lesson from PRIVATE UNIVERSE, the documentary from the 1980s about the PERSISTENT private theories of students

Students have persistent theories about how the world works.   Asa math teacher, I find some "imaginative" private talk when I ask students to show me their work and talk me through how they talk themselves through a problem.

I learned to LISTEN to my students and watch how they lecture to each other because I watched this powerful and engaging documentary that the Annenburg Foundation funded in the 1980s.   IT is called "The Private Universe" because students carry a view of the world that persists even after they have gone through school.

See the website:   http://www.learner.org/teacherslab/pup/

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TrXaQu_qGeo

You can find this world view by asking Harvard graduates to explain the mechanism of the seasons and the phases of the moon.   That's the first four minutes of this video.






Here is the part that teachers will benefit from.  Just patiently watch the segment from 6 minutes to the end (about 3 minutes).  It is painful to watch.
6:30  The teacher: "I hope she will tell you what she knows."
Heather:   The earth doesn't go in a circle.  



Heather talks about the beams being indirect and so we experience summer
indirect beams cause summer

"It doesn't go in a straight line"




Heather's private theories contradict the teachings of elementary science (minute 8)

Heather:  "The rays from the sun come around the earth and illuminate that part of the moon because of the earth's shadow.   (how the moon forms a sickle shape)

Teacher:  You assume that they know certain things.  Even the day that I taught it, I assumed that they had the basic idea and they don't.   Heather's teacher was unaware of the student's private theories.   (from minute 8:30)


In his commentaries about education, Dr. Fischler describes the "discrepant event."   The teacher should introduce information that challenges the child to think about the world.   The new information should conflict with the private universe and cause the child to wrestle with the new information.  This takes time.   It takes discussion and projects to elicit the errors and the steps in the child's thinking.  

“CHILDREN ARE WORKING AS IF I DID NOT EXIST.”
MARIA MONTESSORI
When students work together in small groups on projects, they become self-motivated, interested in the problem that they are working on, and learn to help one another by sharing responsibilities.
The CAI approach delivers the needed level of comprehension. Jean Piaget says that we redefine a concept every time we meet a discrepant event: An event for the learner that does not fit the concept that he already has. As a result, the learner has to go through questions: “Did that really exist?” “How do I modify the concept to accommodate the new information?”
Students go through this when they learn that electrons might not be particles. Electrons act more like clouds in certain circumstances.


“THE PRINCIPAL GOAL OF EDUCATION IS TO CREATE MEN AND WOMEN WHO ARE CAPABLE OF DOING NEW THINGS, NOT SIMPLY OF REPEATING WHAT
OTHER GENERATIONS HAVE DONE.”
JEAN PIAGET


In order to do new things, they have a concept of what ought to be. But now they are confronted with a surprise, something that does not fit. That is the discrepant event. Then the individual has to go through assimilation, asking, “Does that really happen? Is that real? What is true? What am I seeing or what have I been told? What did I expect to happen?”...and then it did not happen. Then, the student has to go through the process of accommodation, and modify his mental concept to take into account something that occurred which they did not expect. Then they are at equilibrium, and they are content again, until the next discrepant event is introduced. When you talk to children, you have to know their level of comprehension, so you know what information needs to be provided to help them develop and become more knowledgeable. The individual learner must experience these steps. The teacher introduces the discrepant event, and first the learners assimilate and then accommodate the information.
If the student does not have the basic comprehension, you will miss the mark – the information that you think is a discrepant event will “go over his head.” For example, you can tell a six-year-old that the earth is rotating on its axis at a rate of 25,000 miles per day, and this phenomenon is what creates day and night. Why don't we feel it? But, if you were in an automobile and you put your hand out the window, you would feel that force.
With a six-year-old, you are going too fast. You do better by starting with “day is when the sun is out” and “night is when the sun is hidden.” You can ask, “Why is the night dark? What gives light to the moon?” You can give a six-year-old a bit of this, but he does not really understand this concept.
After introducing a discrepant event, we need to give the student time to process the information.
We tend to start with what the child can observe. Science for grades 1 to 3, the focus should be on “what can you see?”

Explaining that the earth is turning is not going to foster understanding in younger students. Rather, wait until they begin to ask you about rotation. However, not all students will be ready to ask you at the same developmental time. Some require more time, others less, but these concepts should be taught around their proximal zone of development rather than on an arbitrary schedule that inevitably prevents some students from being able to grasp the information.
================= 
From Dr. Fischler's book -- you can get a free copy by visiting www.TransformTeaching.org and you can see excerpts at  Transform-Education.com

This is why Dr. Fischler uses the phrase, "Time is a variable."

Friday, May 31, 2013

Video games (if designed carefully) can make learning addictive -- let's click and make this phrase more popular. (Flow is a concept by Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi)

"As you get good at a skill in the video game, we adapt and make it more difficult."

Here is the key idea (only 2 minutes).  It's worth a look.

This is an interesting extension of the "Flow between Boredom and Anxiety" chart that was made famous by the author of the book "Flow."  "Chick Sent Me High E"  the psychologist


CLICK here

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Nw8URn0eTAk


Monday, May 20, 2013

Dr. Fischler's comments about Summerhill's focus on "what people want to learn"


I sent Dr. Fischler the following information from A.S. Neill's website


From: Steve THE EBOOK MAN McCrea [mailto:theebookman@gmail.com] 
Sent: Sunday, May 19, 2013 8:02 PM
To: Abraham Fischler
Subject: summerhill?

Dr Fischler

How does Summerhilll fit into the "student is the class" formula?

Steve

As an introduction, here is a chapter from the book ‘Summerhill – a radical approach to child rearing’ by the school’s founder, A.S. Neill.
A.S. Neill is widely considered to be one of the great educators of the time. UNESCO list him as one of the 100 most influential educational thinkers and he was also listed as one of twelve greatest educators of the last millennium by a UK national broadsheet newspaper in December 1999.
His writings, together with other radical thinkers of the period such as Bertrand Russell, confronted the values of the establishments for many years.
This extract from Neill’s book ‘Summerhill’ is an example of his challenging views on education and freedom for children. It is reproduced here to give some background and history to the Summerhill Policy Statements.
“I hold that the aim of life is to find happiness, which means to find interest. Education should be a preparation for life. Our culture has not been very successful. Our education, politics and economics lead to war. Our medicines have not done away with disease. Our religion has not abolished usury and robbery. The advances of the age are advances in mechanism – in communications and computers, in science and technology. New wars threaten, for the world’s social conscience is still primitive.
If we feel like questioning today, we can pose a few awkward questions. Why does man hate and kill in war when animals do not? Why does cancer increase? Why are there so many suicides? So many insane sex crimes? Why the hate that is racism? Why the need for drugs to enhance life? Why backbiting and spite? Why is sex obscene and a leering joke? Why degradation and torture? Why the continuance of religions that have long ago lost their love and hope and charity? Why, a thousand whys about our vaulted state of civilised eminence!
I ask these questions because I am by profession a teacher, one that deals with the young. I ask these questions because those so often asked by teachers are the unimportant ones, the ones about French or ancient history or what not when these subjects don’t matter a jot compared to the larger questions of life’s fulfilment – of man’s inner happiness.
How much of our education is real doing, real self-expression? Handwork is too often the making of a wooden box under the eye of an expert. Even the Montessori system, well known as a system of directed play, is an artificial way of making the child learn by doing. It has nothing creative about it. In the home the child is always being taught. In almost every home there is at least one ungrown-up grown-up who rushes to show Tommy how his new engine works. There is always someone to lift the baby up on a chair when the baby wants to examine something on the wall. Every time we show Tommy how his engine works we are stealing from that child the joy of life – the joy of discovery – the joy of overcoming an obstacle. Worse! We make that child come to believe that he is inferior, and must depend on help.
Parents are slow in realising how unimportant the learning side of school is. Children, like adults, learn what they want to learn. All the prize-giving and marks and exams side-track proper personality development. Only pedants claim that learning from books is education.
Books are the least important apparatus in a school. All that any child needs is the three R’s the rest should be tools and clay and sports and theatre and paint and freedom.
Most of the school work that adolescents do is simply a waste of time, of energy, of patience. It robs youth of its right to play and play and play: it puts old heads on young shoulders.
When I lecture to students at teacher training colleges and universities, I am often shocked at the ungrownupness of these lads and lasses stuffed with useless knowledge. They know a lot: they shine in dialectics: they can quote the classics - but in their outlook on life many of them are infants. For they have been taught to know, but have not been allowed to feel. These students are friendly, pleasant, eager, but something is lacking – the emotional factor, the power to subordinate thinking to feeling. I talk to these of a world they have missed and go on missing. Their textbooks do not deal with human character, or with love, or with freedom, or with self-determination. And so the system goes on, aiming only at standards of book learning – it goes on separating the head from the heart.
It is time that we were challenging the school’s notion of work. It is taken for granted that every child should learn mathematics, history, geography, science, a little art and certainly literature. It is time we realised that he average young child is not much interested in any of these subjects.
I prove this with every new pupil. When told that the school is free, every new pupil cries, “Hurrah! You catch me going to lessons!”
I am not decrying learning. But learning should come after play. And learning should not deliberately seasoned with play to make it palatable. Learning is important – but not to everyone. Nijinsky could not pass his school exams in St. Petersburg, and he could not enter the State Ballet without passing those exams. He simply could not learn school subjects – his mind was elsewhere. They faked an exam for him, giving him the answers with the papers – so a biography says. What a loss to the world if Nijinsky had really to pass those exams!
Creators learn what they want to learn in order to have the tolls that their originality and genius demand. We do not know how much creation is killed in the classroom with its emphasis on learning.
I have seen a girl weep nightly over her geometry. Her mother wanted her to go to university, but the girl’s whole soul was artistic.
The notion that unless a child is learning something the child is wasting his time is nothing less than s curse – a curse that blinds thousands of teachers and most schools inspectors.
Classroom walls and the National Curriculum narrow the teacher’s outlook, and prevent him from seeing the true essentials of education. His work deals with the part of the child that is above the neck and perforce, the emotional, vital part of the child is foreign territory to him.
Indifferent scholars who, under discipline, scrape through college or university and become unimaginative teacher, mediocre doctors and incompetent lawyers would possibly be good mechanics or excellent bricklayers or first rate policemen.
I would rather Summerhill produce a happy street sweeper than a neurotic prime minister.
In all countries, capitalist, socialist or communist, elaborate schools are built to educate the young. But all the wonderful labs and workshops do nothing to help Jane or Peter or Ivan surmount the emotional damage and the social evils bred by the pressure on him from his parents, his schoolteachers and the pressure of the coercive quality of our civilisation.
The function of the child is to live his own life, not the life that his anxious parents think he should live, nor a life according to the purpose of the educator who thinks he knows best. All this interference and guidance on the part of adults only produces a generation of robots.
We set out to make a school in which we should allow children freedom to be themselves. In order to do this we had to renounce all discipline, all direction, all suggestion, all moral training, all religious instruction. We have been called brave, but it did not require courage. All it required was what we had – a complete belief in the child as a good, not an evil, being. Since 1921 this belief in the goodness of the child has never wavered: it rather has become a final faith.
A. S. Neill MA Hon M. Ed., Hon Dr. Of Laws, Hon Doc.



from the website


Here is Dr. Fischler's reply:




Begin forwarded message:
From: Abraham Fischler
Date: May 20, 2013 11:38:41 AM EDT
To: "'Steve THE EBOOK MAN McCrea'"
Subject: RE: summerhill?

He admits that the three R’s are important. I agree.  But there is much more to learn but not in a mandatory way.  The content of the other objectives is to provide the opportunity for the students to learn the soft skills  problem solving on issues they are interested, cooperation, self judgment and defend it, time management t, competition and many other important outcomes which is part of the child’s search for closure. We have to talk
Abe



EducationFutures.org offers a view inside Pandora's Box: The writings of Raymond Hartjen, Ph.D.

Some quotes by Dr. Raymond Hartjen's book


From Empowering the Child
by Dr. Raymond Hartjen



An Intense Caring Community
“….. a micro-model of a caring community: an extended family in which children, practicing good social skills on a daily basis, are removed of their sharp edges and honed to a high degree of habitual and compassionate behavior. Children learn to cooperate with each other on projects of mutual interest. Older students help the younger ones learn to share resources and work out their differences. The school begins to fill a void in the lives of many children who, living in single-parent or two-earner households, are left without adult guidance for a good part of the day. The variety of people in this community becomes a resource in itself. When children are given a safe place to practice self-expression and try out ideas, shyness gives way to self-confidence. All are encouraged to find their own ways to excel.

======  

Book Quote II
Once you have equipped students with skills of inquiry, problem-solving, decision-making, forecasting, they are freed from dependency on their teachers in order to learn. They become free-thinking human beings, capable of looking at issues from all perspectives, aware of their biases, able to present arguments objectively, with clear logic and reasoning. After twelve years spent practicing these skills in a model social environment, they grow into mature, self-confident, socially responsible human beings ready to make significant contributions to the world in which they live.


====  

Book Quote III
Teachers need to know more about the minds of their students before they can begin to nurture them. It is here, at the very beginning, that this form of education splits from the traditional form. Traditionalists already know what they are going to do for these students before they ever meet them. Nurturing teachers can only devise their plans for guiding the children after they have met them and come to know their interests. Only then can the teacher/guide begin to help the children explore those interests.


===  

Book Quote IV
The rule-based classroom is designed to help children retain their skills as natural inquirers in a more formal scholarly setting. Many authors have pointed out that preschool children have an insatiable appetite for learning. If you were to step back for some time and observe them at play, you would begin to see how they try on new roles and explore their environment. We as professional educators have to learn much more about how to recognize these natural inquiry skills and help children hone them. A child's quest for knowledge is a natural gift. We must respect it and nurture it.

====== 

Book Quote V 
The defining difference in these schools lies in the creation of a learning environment in which a community/culture focuses on human development and personal growth, in which the individual students are ultimately responsible for their own education. When each student is a responsible party in a small-scale caring community, the spirit of personal freedom prevails.

It is not an easy task to set up and maintain such a learning environment. It is like living on the edge of chaos. It involves risk-taking. But there are those who contend that we only really learn when risks are taken. Keeping within safe bounds limits our experiences and, consequently, limits what we learn.

====  

Book Quote VI

Look again at the influences:
if computer-generated birds can learn to fly and avoid objects,
if social interaction is the basis for intellectual growth,
if freedom is the basis for human dignity,
if creativity is the cure for destructiveness,
and
if the other rules of self-motivation, thinking, and focus prove valid,
then
don't we hold the keys to empowering the child of the twenty-first century through such a highly-charged educational experience?

====  


Book Quote VII
In 1400, our youth was a poor peasant without identity, working the fields by day and sleeping on a flea-infested bed of straw at night. In 1900, our youth had just left the farm for a career in the big city and found himself instead performing a highly-repetitive job on a production line, ten hours a day, six days a week. In 1994, almost the twenty-first century, our youth is an independent consultant at age fifteen, making $95 an hour with two hundred clients clamoring for his expertise in computer programming and networking.

Scientists refer to the complex adaptive nature of man as a form of emergence. Certainly, it is clear from the brief six-hundred-year history of mankind above, that mans behavior has emerged from mere existence to a higher level of actuality. Emergence is the force that drives us to evolve, and our youth are out there at the edge, leading the way. If our schools are to empower them, if our schools are to contain them at all, then it is time for a dramatic change in the way we enable our youth to become educated.

Selected by Dr. Raymond Hartjens



This is Dr. Hartjen's
book from 1994 (he has it
on an ebook now)


What you can do

a) find a used copy

b) visit Dr. Hartjen's website   EducationFutures.org
Read his "Fearless" web page

c)  write to him and ask about his ebook.

d)  click on his youtube channels

e)  find his Facebook page
https://www.facebook.com/raymond.hartjen.7







What is Your Net Impact?  www.YourNetImpact.com

I sent the following message to a young fellow:

happy b day

do you have a wish about what youtube video or charity my students should click?   send your birthday wish for 30 clicks to TLASteve@gmail.com   and I'll get my students to click wherever you request   MVI_1633.MOV Steam bending a stem for a Herreshoff 12 1/2 using fres  that's my wish today for an old man in Long Island... http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UripI73bCDg


Sunday, May 19, 2013

Available: Former Graduate Student, ready to share what he learned in two years of Graduate School. Free lectures online. Get 15 posters (Free downloads) based on articles that were required reading in my Ed.D. program

Have you heard about the Pen Drive Internet?
Here's my transcript from university.  After two years of online studies, I'm suspending my pursuit of an Ed.D.  I'm going to focus on bringing what I've learned to teachers (until 2016). 

If you have a classroom, you have walls.  

I've got posters.

https://docs.google.com/file/d/0BxOBI_rp54liX1lyb1lRY3ZLbjQ/edit?usp=sharing

Go ahead -- look at the interesting topics.
Perspectives in ITDE
(Instructional Technologies and Distance Education)

Principles of Instructional Technologies

Principles of Distance Education

Instructional Media

Hear about the lecture for the Certificate of Applied Instructional Technologies:
Dr. Fischler's book describes this triangle
Get his commentaries in Spanish




Here are links to some of the posters that I developed -- pulling ideas form out of academic articles and inserting them into the classroom.

POSTERS


Slogans by Dr. Fischler


Posters in TURKISH
(on scribd.com)


Do you want to know about the "Your Net Impact" campaign?

Do you want to learn more about the opportunity of using penpals and Skype to connect students in other countries?
Dr. Fischler's workshop about
QUOTATIONS for CHANGING
the CULTURE of a School

Get this book in SPANISH

You can learn about Mario Llorente's Pen Drive Internet campaign

Here's my summary of two years of lectures

Get more information (free)

The math chart that guides Florida graduation curriculum
FINALLY:  you can get a high school diploma in Florida
without taking Algebra 2.  No hyperbolae, no ellipses, no matrices.


Go ahead, ask for free ebooks
Get the free ebooks at TransformTeaching.org








Thursday, May 9, 2013

www.YourNetImpact.com can assist teenagers in using social media to "have an impact"


I posted a series of photos and someone clicked "LIKE"... so I should return the favor.  I bumped into a website of appreciation:

So -- of course -- I clicked and left a comment on one of the photos that caught my eye.   Thank you, Mac (the author of the blog).

Then I wrote to the person the following note:


If you have a particular type of travel you like, let me know.   

I'm a high school teacher and I have a website called  WWW.YourNetImpact.com and I'm trying to get my students to realize that they have impact with their facebooking and tweeting,  social and political impact...   so why diminish themselves by limiting their social media time?   Some of my students say, "I have only 5 minutes to check on what my friends are doing and to upload my photos, then I have to get back to homework."  or  "Social media is a real time drain.  I don't have time to be in virtual worlds, there is so much to do in the real world."





but what about getting important videos and websites more visibility?   A click on Jennie Hinde's A-newdawn.org could highly her organization's efforts to improve the lives of orphans.    By not clicking, "LIKE", my students are denying their friends (who are on facebook) the privilege of learning about Jennie's group.  When the friends of my students hear about Jennie's work, won't they want to click LIKE , too?    and that's the cycle of "Your Net Impact."   The impact of students on the Internet can add klout to people like Jennie in addition to Justin Bieber and Ellen degeneres and Lady Gaga.    
anyway, i greatly appreciate seeing your LIKE and I hope I can return the click ...  tell me a LIKE that I should do in return.

Where can I put my next LIKE to have some net impact?

Thanks for your list of interesting photos   nice blog .. it's an example (for my students) of having "net impact" and sharing what you think is significant with others.   bravo

If you would like to see Mac's photo blog, click here
macatwp@gmail.com and write to mac.


Monday, May 6, 2013

What's your philosophy of education? I've got more than four points. (part 2)

See Part 1

The difficulty comes when i find out the current goals instead of the long term goals.

At some schools  where I've worked, the policies are convenient to the administration and the studernt is expected to adapt to the situation.

Students ask me, "Why can't i get what i want?  Why does the school offer only one way to do [this] or [that]" and I make the mistake of asking the student to look at the situation from the school's point of view and then the discussion expands and I usually ask the student to think outside the box.   "What are your options?"   That's a question that many school administrators don't want students to explore.

5.  I also arrange to meet the students after school sometime during the week, i make it optional, i try not to force the idea and I try not to exclude anyone.  

6. I also try to go on an afternoon or evening trip... $40 limosouine tour of miami beach.   oh?     why not rent a van and go together?

it's often a long night but memorable.

i say, "Why should we end at 4 hours?   after the obligatory tour of 6-10 pm, i'm off the clock but I'm happy to see that the student has good memories.   We often return after 1 a.m.

I take a longer view than some school administrators take.   Tom Peters says "one size fits all?   One size fits one or often few or none"
The policy at some schools is to keep teachers separate from students.  "Teachers deliver a lesson and then leave the school."  When the school stops paying, at the end of the class, the teacher is expected to leave the building.

Flexibility


Those are some of the procedures that I use.   

7.  The student sis the center of my classroom.  I use the CELTA technique of arranging the room so that the students see each other's faces when talking and every moment as an opportunity to practice speaking and listening.  

8. teachers speak less than 20% of the time and students are engaged -- well, they are invited to be engaged in a range of activities.

9.  The aim is to build a portfolio of experiences and a record of examples of students' work.  The portfolio shows the students what they have learned.

10.  There is a balance between (a) evidence of actual work (that is real work) and (b) getting "something" flashy produced and physically in the hand of the students within two weeks (such as an audio CD or DVD or some videos) which is like a yearbook
The "flashy" or techie item might never be looked at, but it is a sense that "I did that" and the student carries something -- perhaps a memory -- of a procedure that had real change in the brain, even if the vocabulary is forgotten.


11.  Students remember how they were treated long after they have forgotten what was actually taught or presented or practiced or produced or discussed in class.

12.  very few worksheets = "shut up" sheets
very little busy work

13.  Some students have a mindset that they want to study grammar and i'm happy to give them what they want.   I know that the level of each student is different, each has different holes, so I ask them to participate in the swiss cheese approach.  find the holes and plug them.


14.  my philosophy is one student at a time
treat all the student the same differently
(give every student some amount of attention, but the type of attention will be adapted to the expressed or anticipated needs of the person)
find their goals
build individual personal learning plans

15.  Use numbers in lists so that people can discuss the point in class "I want to talk about point number 4" and everyone in the room knows what part of the board to look at.  

16.  use dennis littky techniques


My technique is "open the book somewhere and use that quote to stimulate a discussion in class."


Here's an example of some Internet materials that might be introduced in class.

Search Results

  1. CNN Student News - CNN.com

    www.cnn.com/studentnews

  2. National and world news with background material, activities, discussion starters and teaching guides. USA.


  3. CNN Student News/Quick
    CNN Student News/Quick Guides & Transcripts. FOLLOW THIS ...


  4. Student News A to Z with Carl
    The weblog of CNN Student News.

  5. CNN Student News (video)
    CNN Student News utilizes CNN's worldwide resources to bring 


  6. CNN iReport
    Welcome to the CNN Student News iReport assignment group 
  7. Daily Discussion
    CNN Student News/Daily Discussion & Newsquiz ...


  8. April 16, 2013
    CNN Student News Transcript - April 16, 2013. updated 7:13 ...
  9. More results from cnn.com »

  10. iTunes - Podcasts - CNN Student News (video) by CNN

    https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/cnn-student-news.../id179950332
  11. Download past episodes or subscribe to future episodes for free from CNN Student News (video) by CNN on the iTunes Store.
  12. Carl Azuz - CNN Student News Official | Facebook
    www.facebook.com/CNNStudentNews

  13. Carl Azuz - CNN Student News Official. 89866 likes · 715 talking about this.

  14. CNN Student News | Facebook

    www.facebook.com/pages/CNN-Student-News/223024161084827


  15. CNN Student News (CNNStudentNews) on Twitter

    https://twitter.com/CNNStudentNews


  16. CNN Student News - 2/15/13 - YouTube

    www.youtube.com/watch?v=alEQN6GX2-Q
  17. Friday's edition of CNN Student News covers everything from a damaged cruise ship to an asteroid passing ...