Classroom Thunderstorm
(View Complete Item Description)Students create a class composition of a thunderstorm by exploring expressive qualities of crescendo/decrescendo and accelerando/ritardando
Material Type: Activity/Lab, Assessment, Lesson Plan
Students create a class composition of a thunderstorm by exploring expressive qualities of crescendo/decrescendo and accelerando/ritardando
Material Type: Activity/Lab, Assessment, Lesson Plan
Students create different versions of a known song and listen to contrasting recordings for musical differences and similarities.
Material Type: Activity/Lab, Assessment, Lesson Plan
Students compose and notate short melodies using their names.
Material Type: Activity/Lab, Assessment, Lesson Plan
Students compose and notate short 4/4, 3/4, and 6/8 rhythms across multiple class periods.
Material Type: Activity/Lab, Assessment, Lesson Plan
Students compose and notate short rhythms in 4/4, 3/4, and 6/8 meters across multiple class periods.
Material Type: Activity/Lab, Assessment, Lesson Plan
In these lessons students will explore the paintings of Horace Pippin and Wayne Thiebaud and the mobiles of Alexander Calder to discover and practice math and visual art concepts. Background and biographical information about the work of art and artist, guided looking with class discussion, and activities with worksheets using mathematical formulas and studio art provide the framework for each lesson.
Material Type: Activity/Lab, Assessment, Lesson Plan
Students create and perform melodic contours.
Material Type: Activity/Lab, Assessment, Lesson Plan
This template is meant to be a guide for Nebraska Physical Education Teachers when creating digital online lessons. Headings and/or topics not included in the lesson plan should be marked N/A.
Material Type: Activity/Lab, Lesson, Lesson Plan
The goal of this unit is to introduce students to the basic elements of art (color, line, shape, form, and texture) and to show students how artists use these elements in different ways in their work. In the unit, students will answer questions as they look carefully at paintings and sculpture to identify the elements and analyze how they are used by different artists.
Material Type: Diagram/Illustration, Lesson Plan, Unit of Study
Students create movements to represent long and short rhythmic patterns and compose patterns using non-traditional notation.
Material Type: Activity/Lab, Assessment, Lesson Plan
In this lesson students perform a line dance to reinforce story telling through movement.
Material Type: Lesson Plan
This unit, developed by Northshore School District in Washington, contains four days of lessons where students engage with music from a variety of cultures and analyze how emotions are communicated through different styles of music. Students will make connections between showing emotions with their words, their bodies and with instruments and will perform instruments as an ensemble to communicate different emotions.
Material Type: Lesson, Lesson Plan, Teaching/Learning Strategy, Unit of Study
My Favortie kNOw is one of many Mathematically Productive Instructional Routines (MPIR). They are short (10ish minutes), daily exercises aimed at building number sense. This is one of six different MPIR covered in the Mathematically Productive Instructional Routines collection from the Washington Office of Public Instruction and the Washington Association of Educational Service Districts.
Material Type: Teaching/Learning Strategy
This segment from Swift: Eyes through Time traces the history military officers and engineers discovering a strange phenomenon in the sky that astronomers now know are gamma-ray bursts.
Material Type: Lecture
In this video segment, the ZOOM cast demonstrates how to use cabbage juice to find out if a solution is an acid or a base.
Material Type: Activity/Lab
In this video segment adapted from ZOOM, cast members make their own hovercraft and demonstrate how the air leaking out of a balloon can make a plastic plate hover above a table.
Material Type: Activity/Lab
This video from First Alaskans Institute spotlights the Alaska Native community of St. Paul and its hands-on commitment to care for the land and animals on which it depends.
Material Type: Lecture
In this video adapted from Storyknife Productions, Alaska Native pilots share how they use traditional knowledge to read the landscape and predict the weather.
Material Type: Lecture
It takes a thick skin to withstand the hardships that life has to offer. This collection of images shows a variety of animals, each with a slightly different type of protective covering.
Material Type: Activity/Lab, Diagram/Illustration
Learn about the structure and function of living organisms by drawing an imaginary animal in the Take the Stage game show, ANIMAL SURVIVAL! Viewers become contestants on a game show and are challenged to draw an imaginary animal that could live and survive in either the desert, ocean, or the arctic tundra. When drawing the imaginary animal, the contestants write out two distinct structures and a function for each of the structures that help it survive. Learning Objective: Compare the structures and functions of different species that help them live and survive in a specific environment.
Material Type: Lesson