
National Geographic and the Common Core
National Geographic Education’s website continues to evolve and it no longer has the “beta” label attached to it. One of the resources that I spotted

National Geographic Education’s website continues to evolve and it no longer has the “beta” label attached to it. One of the resources that I spotted

This coming Monday is Earth Day 2013. As I’ve done in the past, I’ve compiled a list of resources for teaching about Earth Day and

Fotor is a free image editing tool available in your web browser, as a desktop application for Mac and Windows, as iPad app, as an

No one knows a town or neighborhood like the people that live there. Google knows that and has made Map Maker a crowd-sourcing project to create

The Digital Public Library of America is a huge collection of digitized artifacts and exhibits from museums and libraries across the United States. Through the

As the school year winds down a lot of teachers, teacher-librarians, and school administrators turn their attention to summer professional development opportunities. I’ve been fortunate

People who have attended one of my presentations this spring may have seen these tools already as I was an early tester of them, but

Last month’s most popular post was 6 Alternatives to PowerPoint and Keynote. A lot of times when we think about putting together presentations we think

Career Sighted is a new website designed to help students learn a bit about jobs in careers they have an interest in. The videos introduce

The Art of Storytelling is a website hosted by the Delaware Museum of Art. On the site students can learn about works of art. The