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Read through some kindness activity ideas that are appropriate for grades 3-5.
During the last few years, the Office of the Privacy Commissioner of Canada has been conducting research and discussions with high school students on the subject of privacy and the Internet. We wanted to know how we could help them use online tools in a fun way that they won’t regret later on in life. The feedback we received from both students and teachers was valuable. Many of them indicated that they would find a presentation about these topics, useful. We decided to develop a presentation for teachers and other community leaders that talks about the impact of some online activities on privacy, and how young people can control the risk.
High grades will no longer be the only path to admission at the University of B.C., now that the school will also begin to consider personal profiles written by high school students.
WELCOME! Here is collection of Science, Mathematics, and Language Arts Ideas with some Music and Arts and Crafts. The monthly themes have been Animals, the Solar System, Energy (Electricity, Magnets, Light, Sound), Plants, Matter, Machines, Geometry, Crafts, and Weather. These activities can be used in homeschool classes, public schools, private schools, libraries, after school programs, or anywhere else that learning occurs! Please share your ideas!
Because many courses use objective tests for grading, most students have the mistaken impression that the difference between a B or an A is a matter of points. In reality, letter grades represent different kinds of performances.
As a student, I too experienced the frustration of getting a B when I thought I deserved an A. It takes a long time and a lot of practice to develop the analytical thinking skills that generate A-level work.
This FREE, pioneering curriculum is designed to empower teens to be smart about how they create, communicate, and treat others in our 24/7 digital world. Browse the units below to find the right lessons for your students.
We all love technology, it makes our lives better, it gives us access to better ways to plan and it makes learning easier, but the next generation of students are becoming more reliant on it than ever, perhaps too reliant.
As classrooms gear up for September, this would be a nice read.
But is that such a terrible thing? According to a new infographic by Masters in Education, social media may actually help students get better grades. One of the most jaw-dropping figures featured in the image below is that ‘heavy’ social media users actually got better grades than ‘light’ social media users. While there is obviously more to this story than this boiled-down infographic, it is both entertaining and informative (just like all infogrpahics, no?)
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