Category Archives: PBS LearningMedia

Music, Society, and Culture with PBS LearningMedia

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Stephen Kent

Help your students to expand their cultural repertoire with these featured resources centered on music, society, and culture. Register for full access to the free service.

Stephen Kent: Music
Grades 6-13+ | Video | Musical Creation & Performance
Meet a composer and musician who has been playing the didgeridoo - a traditional aboriginal instrument - for more than 25 years.  In that time, Stephen Kent has created a unique, contemporary style of execution influenced more by his travels than by a desire to continue within the Australian aboriginal musical tradition.  Continue reading »


5 Resources for Exploring the Backyard

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spider

Some of the best adventures take place in our own backyard! This summer, motivate your intrepid backyard explorers with PBS LearningMedia’s collection of free lesson plans, videos, and interactive games that explore the buzzing, slithering, burrowing world of insects and critters. Use these resources to enhance everyday learning opportunities and to reinforce key concepts in the sciences and language arts. Featured resources include:

Everyday Science: Backyard Wildlife Interactive
Grades PreK-1 | Interactive | Plants and Animals
This interactive encourages children to make a field trip to their own backyard or nearby park and ask the following questions - Who shares that space? What do they eat? Where do they live? Backyard Wildlife, an original KET video, provides an introduction to animals that might be found just outside the back door or in a nearby park.
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Explore Immigration and Asian-Pacific Heritage with PBS LearningMedia

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Introduce your students to the authors, musicians, entrepreneurs, and everyday people living in America who trace their roots to Asia and the Pacific Islands. Use this special collection of digital resources to learn about their cultural heritage and to bring their unique stories into your classroom. Log in to view the full collection, or create an account. It's free.

Grace Lin
Grades PreK-7 | Video | Personal Stories
Hear from author and illustrator Grace Lin as she explains how books have become her way of recapturing the Asian cultural heritage that she had resisted in her youth.

Hana's Japanese Drums
Grades K-8 | Video | Cultural Heritage
Drums have played an important role in many cultures for thousands of years. In this video segment from ZOOM, a young girl named Hana talks about her interest in the art of Japanese Taiko drumming.

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Top Five Videos to Teach Sounds in Nature

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Thinkstock.com

Thinkstock.com

When you hear crickets chirping or birds tweeting, do you wonder what it all means? From orcas and shrimps to beetles and chimpanzees, every species communicates verbally or non-verbally to transmit information to others. The cues could signal courtship and mating, the approach of predators, territorial boundaries, a food source, or pure joy. To the untrained human ear animal communication may be indistinguishable. The following digital media resources shed light on the research experts have been uncovering on the way some animals hear and communicate.

ANIMAL HEARING
This video segment explores the night time worlds of the desert fox and the barn owl, whose heightened sense of hearing allows them to travel and find food while most other animals lie low and wait for daylight. Footage from NOVA: "Mystery of the Senses: Hearing."

GUESS HOW WHALES HEAR!
What does the ocean sound like to a whale? How do whales hear? Dr. Darlene Ketten of Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution really wanted to know. This video segment reveals how one marine biologist learns how cetaceans hear and what they hear. Understanding this information may help save these important creatures against noise pollution caused by human activity.

SOUND WAVES LISTENING TO ORCAS
Orcas are an icon of the Pacific Northwest, stirring a mix of fascination, awe and affection. Thousands of people come to the San Juan Islands in Puget Sound just to catch a glimpse of the Southern Resident orcas that call these waters home. By using underwater microphones, or hydrophones, scientists record the acoustic environment of the killer whales to track their communication and gain a deeper understanding of how human-made noise affects them.

PRAIRIE DOG CALLS
In this video from DragonflyTV, Julian and Sabrina think one of the funniest exhibits at the zoo is the prairie dogs. They're always busy yipping and yapping, but that got them wondering if they just make noise or if they are communicating. Do prairie dogs make different kinds of barks? Julian and Sabrina create sound spectrum snapshots of prairie dog barks to explore animal communication.

BIRD CALL QUIZ
Birds have different calls to communicate to each other. Test your ability to distinguish between the calls. In this interactive activity figure out which are songs, which are companion calls, and which are alarms.

For more great science videos, visit pbslearningmedia.org .


How PBS LearningMedia Can Strengthen Students' Media Literacy for Common Core

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PBS LearningMedia, a free destination for instant access to tens of thousands of classroom-ready, digital public media resources including videos, games, audio clips, photos, and lesson plans, provides core subject area resources. Included in this resource library are resources that address media literacy skills underlying the basic tenants of Common Core State Standards.

The introduction of the Common Core State Standards explains, "To be ready for college, workforce training, and life in a technological society, students need the ability to gather, comprehend, evaluate, synthesize, and report on information and ideas, to conduct original research in order to answer questions or solve problems, and to analyze and create a high volume and extensive range of print and nonprint texts in media forms old and new."

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Constitution USA in PBS LearningMedia

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This spring, PBS LearningMedia spotlights the U.S. Constitution!

Enhance your next lesson with PBS LearningMedia’s brand new collection of FREE, curriculum-targeted resources from the series, Constitution USA (Grades 9-12). Use these resources to instigate classroom discussion around key concepts like Federalism, equality, and separation of powers – and to help your students to better-understand the impact of the Constitution in their own lives. Click here to access to the new collection.

The framers of the Constitution were cautious about centralizing power and, as a result, adopted the philosophy of ‘divide and conquer’. At the national level, they created three different branches of government to administer three different types of power: The legislative branch made the laws through a Congress of two houses, the Senate and the House of Representatives. The executive branch enforced the laws through a president, vice president, and numerous executive departments such as Treasury and State. And the judicial branch interpreted the laws through a Supreme Court and other lower courts. Use this special collection from PBS LearningMedia to expand on these concepts with your high school students and to reinforce key concepts in your next history, government, or social studies class. Featured resources include:

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After Newtown: Classroom Resources for Examining Gun Control

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Source: factcheck.org

Source: factcheck.org

The battle over gun control can be boiled down to a tug-of-war between maintaining our rights and ensuring our safety. Specifically, the issue is about the balance between Americans' constitutional right to bear arms -- as spelled out in the Second Amendment -- and the desire that almost all of us share to live safely without the threat of being harmed by gun violence. The U.S. has the highest gun ownership rate in the world, and the most gun-related deaths of any industrialized country. It also has some of the loosest gun control laws.

A mass shooting in December 2012 at the Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Connecticut resulted in the deaths of 27 people, including 20 children. The tragedy helped revive demand for tighter gun control laws, to which President Obama responded by promising action, and a number of lawmakers got to work crafting a set of measures to address the issue. But groups like the National Rifle Association staunchly opposed any new kind of gun regulations, and the legislative effort to enact background checks and other moderate new measures was narrowly defeated in the Senate this spring. At present, the issue is on hold, but the problem gun violence in America has certainly not gone away, and efforts at reform will likely resurface soon. - (From the introduction to KQED's The Lowdown resources around gun control.)

Use these resources about gun violence in your high school government and English language arts classrooms to support the use of informational text and argumentative writing as defined in the Common Core State Standards, and the study of the Bill of Rights and the division of power between the federal governments and individual states.  Begin with this lesson plan for ideas on using the resources that are part of the first collection of resources below from KQED's news education blog, The Lowdown.

1. Gun Violence
Grade: 9-12 |Social Studies & English Language Arts | Interactive Maps, Timelines, Multimedia Visualizations, Videos

Topics include America’s Mass Shooting Dilemma, U.S. Gun Homicides: Visualizing the Numbers, Are States With Tough Gun Laws Actually Safer?, The Loose Laws and Loopholes of Federal Gun Regulations, Gun Control in America: The History, The Issues, and One Controversial Cartoon, The Geography of U.S. Gun Homicides, The United States of Firearms: America’s Love of the Gun, How Come No One’s Talking About Gun Control This Election?

2. The Path to Violence: Gun Violence & The Path to Violence: School Violence
Grade: 9-12 | Subject: Social Studies & Health | Video

The Path to Violence tells the story of a powerfully effective Secret Service program — the Safe School Initiative — that’s helped schools detect problem behavior in advance.

But despite the progress made, recent attacks have revealed a gaping hole in our safety net. Adam Lanza, Jared Loughner and allegedly James Holmes all executed their attacks after they’d left their respective schools. Here parents may be the only line of defense — parents who are terrified of their own children. Can the hard-won gains made by psychologists and law enforcement be extended to the families of some of the nation’s most violent individuals? Is the country ready to have a national conversation about the balance between safety and civil liberties that such interventions would require?

3. After Newtown: Guns in America: Colonial Era
Grade: 9-12 | Subject: Social Studies & Health | Video

From the first European settlements in the New World, guns have been at center of our national narrative for 400 years.

4. After Newtown: Guns in America: Chicago
Grade: 9-12 | Subject: Social Studies & Health |Video

Gun technology has evolved a great deal since the Colonial era. So too has America's gun culture. With an estimated 300 million firearms in circulation, many argue that the nation is inundated with weapons and fear the human toll they've taken is too high. Over 30,000 people die each year from a gun-related injury. At the same time, guns are enjoyed by tens of thousands of Americans for sport, and many more rely on them for self-defense.

5. After Newtown: Guns in America: Philadelphia
Grade: 9-12 | Subject: Social Studies & Health |Video

Examine the evolution of guns in America, their frequent link to violence, and the clash of cultures that reflect competing visions of our national identity.

4. Student Reporting Labs React to Newtown
Grade: 9-12 | Subject: Social Studies & Health | Video

When breaking news is reported, stories often lack a youth voice or perspective. After the tragic shooting of 26 students and faculty at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Connecticut, Student Reporting Labs mobilized its youth journalists and asked them to interview their peers about the tragedy.


From Criminal Investigations to the Climate Crisis: Biotechnology Classroom Resources

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Protein Purification

Protein Purification

Biotechnology is a rapidly growing field that uses research tools from biology and chemistry to find solutions to current scientific problems. Some biotechnology professionals look for the genetic basis of disease or factors that affect lifespan. Others focus on solving food shortages, the climate crisis, or criminal investigations.

There is a broad assortment of biotechnology resources to support learning in PBS LearningMedia including this biotechnology collection from WGBH.

Biotechnology Collection
Students learn about biotechnology applications, concepts, tools and techniques, and career options with resources in this collection. These resources explore common laboratory techniques used for treating disease and improving diagnosis, and examine the ethical debate over such research. Career profiles demonstrate the multifaceted nature of biotechnology jobs and the wide range of opportunities in this field.

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Blended Lessons and Interactive Resources with PBS LearningMedia

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Interactive: A World's Fair Scrapbook

Interactive: A World's Fair Scrapbook

Make learning INTERACTIVE with resources from PBS LearningMedia! Try out one of PBS LearningMedia’s unique interactive resources. The PBS LearningMedia content library provides PreK-12 educators with 30,000 contextualized teaching resources to engage 21st century learners while supporting the integration of the Common Core State Standards. The service offers a variety of media types that include video and audio files, lesson plans, interactive games - and a new collection of blended lessons. These resources give educators the chance to work collaboratively with students in the classroom – or provide a self-paced learning opportunity for students to complete at home.

Interactive Resources: See “A World’s Fair Scrapbook” – an interactive resource that explores the use of primary sources as a means to reconstruct history. “The Hamburger Game” helps students’ practice attentive reading by choosing the main idea—or "meat"—from a passage of text.

PBS LearningMedia provides educators with a variety of options for blended lessons:

  • Self-paced, online lessons for blended learning
  • Lesson plans that incorporate face-to-face activities with links to PBS LearningMedia resources
  • Independent resources that can be used to create customized blended lessons

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Number Crunching: Four Resources That Use Food to Teach Middle School Math

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By Katie O’Mahoney

As a middle school math teacher, I was constantly looking for ways to incite my students’ interests in math.  Unsurprisingly, and without fail, my students were always the most engaged when the lesson felt relevant and meaningful to their life, and when it centered on food.  However, I often found that such lessons were incredibly time consuming to create.  I always wished that there were vetted resources to refer to that incorporated food into the lesson.  Who doesn’t like to eat and learn at the same time?

My wish has been granted.  Below is a list of interactive lesson plans and videos from PBS LearningMedia that use cooking, baking, and grocery shopping to teach students mathematical concepts.  If you want to make your lesson a little messier and more fun, bring in food for your students to work with and eat at the end of class.  These lessons also serve as a great way to introduce students to topics about healthy eating and nutrition.  Bon appétit!

Ratio and Proportional Reasoning: Food Labels Lesson Plan and Interactive Materials: Grades 5 – 8
In this blended lesson supporting literacy skills, students watch videos, and complete interactive activities to learn how to use fractions to interpret food labels and make healthy eating choices.

Multiplying Fractions by Whole Numbers: Recipes Lesson Plan and Interactive Materials: Grades 5 – 8
In this blended lesson supporting literacy skills, students watch videos and complete interactive activities involving recipes to learn about fractions, and learn how to perform certain operations with fractions.

Big Sale Interactive Game: Grades 6 – 7
In this interactive activity, students learn how to solve unit rate problems to determine the best deal per ounce of grocery items.  Students also learn how to recognize how math concepts, like rate and ratio, can be used in everyday situations.

Cake Designer Video: Grades 3 – 9
In this video a cake designer describes how she uses math in her recipes and designs. Students will relate the importance of mathematics to the field of cake designing.

Katie O’Mahoney is an Intern at KQED Education and a student in the Graduate School of Education at Stanford University.  She has also worked as a middle and high school math teacher in the Bay Area.