Lesson Plan Links WESTFIELD HIGH SCHOOL LIBRARYCYBERSPACE BRANCH. lesson plans. ENCARTA lesson COLLECTIONTreasure trove of lesson plans for all subject areas. http://www.springisd.org/whs/lib/lessonplans.htm
Extractions: WESTFIELD HIGH SCHOOL LIBRARYCYBERSPACE BRANCH These sites are not part of the Spring ISD on the Web, and Spring ISD has no control over their content or availability. BLUE WEB'N Matrix that cross-references content areas with categories such as lessons, resources, activities; each website is rated. ENCARTA LESSON COLLECTION Treasure trove of lesson plans for all subject areas. Lesson plans and activity sheets can be printed. ERIC One-stop source of the latest education information: lesson plans; full-text education articles; keyword searchable. LESSON PLANS PAGE Over 500 lesson plans arranged by subject area and age group. PBS ONLINE TEACHER SOURCE Inventory of more than 1,000 free lesson plans, teacher guides, and online activities. Searchable by subject, grade level and keyword. P.E. CENTRAL- Links to lesson plans and activities with cross-curricular connections for PE teachers. NASA K-12 lesson plans. SPORTSMEDIA ACTIVITIES Lesson plans and activities for PE instructors. TEACHER TOOLS Links for lesson plans and other teacher tools.
Extractions: Author: Georgiann Smith Marjory Stoneman Douglas Menu Background In 1975, Marjory Stoneman Douglas was named Conservationist of the year by the Florida Audubon Society for more than 60 years of dedicated work of informing people of the importance of the Florida Everglades and also for her efforts to conserve, protect and restore the Everglades. She was awarded with the same honor by the Florida Wildlife Federation a year later. For Marjory Stoneman Douglas, though, the public's concern about the threatened Everglades' ecosystem was the best reward. Marjory Stoneman Douglas was born on April 7, 1890. When Marjory was four, she went with her parents on a trip to Florida. She would always remember "the marvelous light, the wonderful white tropic light." Marjory had a rough childhood in which she moved often from state to state in order for her father to find work. Her parents divorced and she spent most of her childhood with her mother. To escape her troubled household she would read. She loved books and also began to write stories of her own. In the fall of 1908, Marjory left home to attend Wellesley College, a women's college near Boston. She quickly took an interest in continuing her writing and found a new interest in public speaking. In 1911, during her third year at Wellesley, Marjory and some of her friends formed a club to support the voting rights of women. (Until 1920, only men could vote.) When asked why she formed the club Marjory explained, "You have to stand up for some things in this world."
Susan M. Baxter, Harborview School, Juneau, AK CANDIDATE DEBATE Susan M. Baxter, Harborview School, Juneau, AK CANDIDATE debate Appropriate for grades 38. OVERVIEW In the team classroom, a modified open classroom setting http://www.col-ed.org/cur/sst/sst36.txt