Tag Archives: PBS LearningMedia

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.


Climate Change Resources for New Science Standards

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Clue into Climate: Water Cycle Animation

As NPR noted recently, the new nationwide science standards due out soon will recommend that U.S. public school students learn about the climatic shift taking place. PBS LearningMedia has hundreds of multimedia resources to support teaching climate change in the classroom.

KQED’s Clue into Climate is a comprehensive unit on climate change exploring fundamental science concepts through the lens of climate science and the use of digital media resources. Aligned to State and National Science Standards for grades 4–8, "Clue into Climate" resources are organized into four content strands and offers educators the option to teach individual lessons or an entire strand.

Strand 1: Increased Greenhouse Gases Contribute to Climate Change
In the lessons in strand 1, students learn how the greenhouse effect works and how increased levels of greenhouse gases entering the atmosphere are altering climate patterns worldwide. By the end of the strand, students will understand the evidence and models that suggest that climate change is occurring and that human activities are the predominant cause of this change.

Strand 2: Climate Change Affects Ecosystems and the Distribution of Organisms

In the lessons in strand 2, students learn how changes in climate affect the distribution of organisms in ecosystems around the world. By the conclusion of these lessons, students will be able to describe how climate is currently changing and to provide examples of how these changes are altering life for both plants and animals. They will appreciate that when faced with ecosystem change, species must either adapt to the changes or move to more suitable habitats, or else they may face extinction.

Strand 3: Climate Change Affects the Water Cycle
In the lessons in strand 3, students examine how climate change affects the water cycle. By the conclusion of these lessons, students will be able to describe the water cycle and analyze how climate change alters this cycle. They will appreciate the role of the cryosphere as a critical component of the water cycle and will understand how sea level changes affect plants and animals as well as human societies.

Strand 4: Climate Change Can Be Mitigated by Using Renewable Energy Sources
In the lessons in strand 4,  students will explore renewable energy sources in depth, examining how different technological advances in using renewable energy may help mitigate climate change. By the conclusion of this strand, they should be able to compare various renewable energy resources, understanding the costs and benefits of the choices we make about energy production and consumption.

Access this unit along with hundreds of climate video clips, interactive games and lesson plans in PBS LearningMedia.

Register for unlimited access to thousands of classroom ready resources in PBS LearningMedia.


Young Inventors, Designers & Innovative Thinkers with PBS LearningMedia

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Scientist Profile: Inventor

Scientist Profile: Inventor

Spark your students' curiosity in engineering and technology by introducing them to the designers, inventors, and clever thinkers featured in PBS LearningMedia. Use their stories to illustrate various themes of study like the engineering design process and the impact of technology. For free access to PBS LearningMedia, register today!

Designing a Wheelchair for Rugby
Grades 6-12 | Video | Inventions
See what happens when a U.S. Paralympic athlete challenges two teams of high school students to build an automated wheelchair. Use this segment to initiate a design challenge in your own classroom.

Wind Energy Fuels Jobs for Oklahoma Youth
Grades 6-13+ | Video | Innovations 
How can your students affect the world around them? Use this video segment about wind energy to illustrate the real-world impact of an innovative idea.

Scientist Profile: Inventor
Grades 4-6 | Video | Inventions

Get your class excited about great ideas! Introduce them to Ryan Patterson, teen scientist and inventor of an electronic sign language translator glove.

Kid Designer: A Comfortable Cardboard Chair
Grades 3-12 | Video | Inventions

Introduce your class to this industrious young designer who demonstrates how to construct a sturdy chair out of cardboard.

A House for Teddy Bear
Grades K-2 | Video | Problem Solving

See these young learners engaged in problem solving and trial-and-error design! Consider replicating this project in your own classroom to reinforce lessons on design, construction, and experimentation.

Sid's Amazing Invention
PreK-1 | Video | Problem Solving

Sid believes that he has invented the ultimate solution to putting away his toys, later to learn that his invention is actually a simple machine called a lever. Invite young learners to explore the function of a lever alongside Sid and his friends.


Science Educators! Free KQED/CSTA Online Trainings

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Katie_PBSLMJoin KQED and CSTA for one of four area specific science webinars and learn the ropes around PBS LearningMedia, a collection of thousands of digital media resources from KQED and other public media stations for the K-12 science classroom. Experienced science educators give an example of a media-rich lesson and present strategies for successfully incorporating multimedia into the classroom.

NOTE: Each webinar is subject area specific (Environmental Science, K- 5, Physics, Biology). Click on webinar titles to register for a free online training session.

PBS LearningMedia for the Environmental Science Classroom-
Thursday, February 28th from 4-5pm
Recording

Science in K-5 Classroom with PBS LearningMedia-
Thursday, March 7th from 4-5pm

Recording

Multimedia for the Biology Classroom with PBS LearningMedia-
Thursday, April 18th from 4-5pm
Recording

PBS LearningMedia for the Physics Classroom-
Thursday, April 25th from 4-5pm

Seven Reasons to Integrate Media into Science Curriculum


Seven Reasons to Integrate PBS LearningMedia into Science Curriculum

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QUEST: Newton's Laws of Motion

QUEST: Newton's Laws of Motion

Multimedia as a tool can enhance and strengthen the impact of activities in the field and in the science classroom.  PBS LearningMedia videos, audio and interactives engage students and can be used to effectively demonstrate science concepts as well as to reinforce media literacy technologies as part of a core science curriculum.  Here are 7 reasons (with resource examples) to intergrate PBS LearningMedia into science curriculum.

1.Visually demonstrate scientific ideas and concepts

Cell Membrane: Just Passing Through This interactive feature illustrates the movement of some materials through the cell membrane and describes the structures that make it possible.

Newton's Laws of Motion  In this video from KQED's QUEST, a scientist demonstrates how Newton's three laws of motion affect all movement in the universe.

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Black History Resources in PBS LearningMedia

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The Migration of the Negro Panel no. 57

The Migration of the Negro Panel no. 57

Celebrate Black History Month in your classroom by highlighting the African American artists, educators, icons, and influential leaders that have impacted our nation's history and culture. Use PBS LearningMedia to enhance your lessons with interviews, historic images and videos - and remember to register online for full access to the library.

Duke Grades 1-4 | Animated Storybook | Icons in Music

Introduce your young students to the toe-tapping genres of ragtime and jazz through the story of iconic musician, Duke Ellington.

This video segment from Weston Woods presents Duke by Andrea Davis Pinkney, illustrated by Brian Pinkney, about Duke Ellington, one of the founding fathers of jazz. When Duke Ellington was young, his parents wanted him to learn to play the piano. Although he began lessons, he was soon lured away by his love of baseball. Later, as a teenager he heard the new musical style called "ragtime" and he was inspired once again to learn to play piano. Soon, he created his own style of music using “hops” and “slides” on the piano. He became a popular entertainer with a flair that attracted many fans.

Rosa Parks
 Grades 3-12 | Interview | Civil Rights Icons

Enhance classroom discussion around the Civil Rights Movement with this interview of Rosa Parks and ask your students to examine her role in the struggle for racial equality.

This interview with civil rights activist Rosa Parks describes her role in the Montgomery Bus Boycott. On December 1, 1955, Parks refused to give up her seat to a white man on a bus in Montgomery, Alabama. Her refusal sparked a massive bus boycott that lasted 381 days, ending on December 21, 1956, after the United States Supreme Court ruled that racial segregation on city buses was unconstitutional.

Picturing America - Jacob Lawrence and Martin Puryear
 Grades 6-12 | Video | Icons in Art

Invite your students to uncover the driving themes behind the paintings in Jacob Lawrence's “Migration Series” and the elements influencing Martin Puryear's sculpture work.

In this video from Picturing America on Screen, students learn about American artists Jacob Lawrence and Martin Puryear. Inspired by the musical storytelling of West Africa’s griots, Jacob Lawrence employed in The Migration of the Negro Panel no. 57 a painted and written narrative to invoke how African-American families “came up” from the South to settle in cities such as New York, Chicago, Detroit, Cleveland, and Pittsburgh.

Suspended above the floor and anchored by almost undetectable wires, Martin Puryear’s 36-foot Ladder for Booker T. Washington seems to float in space as it rises and abruptly narrows at the top. The artistic metaphor of a ladder not easily climbed dovetails with the contradictions in the legacy of slave-turned-educator Booker T. Washington.

Remembering Civil Rights Leader Dorothy Height
 Grades 6-13+ | Video | Civil Rights Icons

Meet the woman that President Obama hailed as the "Godmother of the Civil Rights Movement." Ask your students to consider her impact on the rights of African Americans and women.

This Newshour video clip with accompanying lesson plan highlights civil rights activist Dorthy Height long career during which she received the Presidential Medal of Freedom and the Congressional Gold Medal.  She befriended Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and was present at many great moments in history.

Deconstructing the Documentary Grades 9-12 | Collection

Invite your class to experience Bordentown, the remarkable all-black boarding school described as a "unique educational utopia."

This lesson with accompanying video clips will ask students to analyze the film, to differentiate between narrative (fiction) and documentary storytelling, and to consider the ways in which all films are constructed by filmmaking decisions. They will ultimately consider the ways in which the final product (this documentary film) might or might not reflect the complete “reality” of the topic it presents.

Lucy Laney Grades 9-12 | Video | Icons in Education

Laney, an influential Jim Crow-era educator, believed it was essential to cultivate the minds of her students in order to develop intellectual leaders for the future. Invite your students to consider her philosophy of education.

This video segment from The Rise and Fall of Jim Crow addresses the life and impact of Lucy Laney, the founder of the Haines Normal and Industrial School in Augusta, Georgia. Laney was an influential Jim Crow-era educator.

And there are lots more lesson plans and video clips from The Rise and Fall of Jim Crow in PBS LearningMedia.


PBS LearningMedia Educast Series: Video Tutorials

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PBS LearningMedia, a digital library of media content contributed from public media producers and partners from around the country, has thousands of free assets and is a resource that can serve as a valuable tool for educators to engage students. This new series offers strategies for navigating and making use of this growing repository. Watch this video to get an overview of PBS LearningMedia and learn the basic functions and features of the site.