National Geographic Compass: The Oceans Edition

Featured Resource: The Ocean Edition
From Ocean Currents to Sustainable Seafood

From 2009 to 2012, National Geographic Education Programs was honored to receive two grants from Oracle totaling two million dollars. These funds were used to address issues in ocean science and geography, including the impact of human activities on the ocean and ocean conservation.

With the help of Oracle, we were able to create more than 500 unique educational assets to help bring ocean education into the classroom.

This month, we’re highlighting some of our favorites for you!

(PS If you’re having difficulty with the above links, try this one)

Plagiarism Education Week: April 22nd to 26th

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

(Screenshot from Turnitin)

Plagiarism.org and Turnitin are celebrating Plagiarism Education Week with a series of free, live webcasts addressing the following issues:

  • Monday: Causes of Plagiarism

  • Tuesday: Types of Plagiarism

  • Wednesday: Responses to Plagiarism

  • Thursday: Approaches to Plagiarism

  • Friday: Originality and Creativity

Full details are available here.

There is also an associated student contest.  Entries are due by April 23rd.  Find all the details at the posting on the ESA Library Tumblr blog.

2013 Horizon.K12 Project

From the New Media Consortium…

The Horizon.K12 Advisory Board voted for the top 12 emerging technologies as well as the top ten trends and challenges that they believe will have a significant impact on teaching, learning, and creative inquiry in global K-12 education over the next five years. These initial results have been compiled into an interim report, known as the “Short List,” and described in further detail.

This Short List will inform the decisions of the advisory board as they embark on the final round of rankings, in which the list of technologies, trends, and challenges will be cut in half for the final report.

Read the short summary of the Interim Results here.

Map Masters

I know that we have sets of map master outlines in the Geography classrooms, but it’s not always geographer’s who need handy access to a set of good outline maps, and let’s face it, if you Google to try to find a basic outline map, the results are more dodgy than useful.

This set, courtesy of the Arizona Geographic Alliance, is up to date, clean and crisp, and ready to use.  Outline maps for all regions of the world at your fingertips. Access anywhere, anytime, or download the PDF file to your desktop (or device).

Get them here: Arizona Geography Alliance Outline Maps

Science Activity Books

(Screenshot from Science.gc.ca Educational Resources website)

The Activity Books were assembled by the team responsible for Science.gc.ca – the official Government of Canada website for Science and Technology information and resources.

Activities and ideas – as well as all sorts of other educational resources – available for primary, middle and secondary levels.

The History of the World in 46 Lectures

From Open Culture…

When you dive into our collection of 700 Free Online Courses, you can begin an intellectual journey that can last for many months, if not years. The collection lets you drop into the classroom of leading universities (like Stanford, Harvard, MIT and Oxford) and essentially audit their courses for free. You get to be a fly on the wall and soak up whatever knowledge you want. All you need is an internet connection and some free time on your hands.

Today, we’re featuring two classes taught by Professor Richard Bulliet at Columbia University, which will teach you the history of the world in 46 lectures. The first course, History of the World to 1500 CE (available on YouTube and iTunes Video) takes you from prehistoric times to 1500, the cusp of early modernity. The origins of agriculture; the Greek, Roman and Persian empires; the rise of Islam and Christian medieval kingdoms; transformations in Asia; and the Maritime revolution — they’re all covered here. In the second course, History of the World Since 1500 CE (find on YouTube), Bulliet focuses on the rise of colonialism in the Americas and India; historical developments in China, Japan and Korea; the Industrial Revolution; the Ottoman Empire; the emergence of Social Darwinism; and various key moments in 20th century history.

Bulliet helped write the popular textbook The Earth and its Peoples: A Global History, and it serves as the main textbook for the course. Above, we’re starting you off with Lecture 2, which moves from the Origins of Agriculture to the First River – Valley Civilizations, circa 8000-1500 B.C.E. The first lecture deals with methodological issues that underpin the course.

Once you get the big picture with Professor Bulliet, you can find more History topics in our ever-growing collection of Free Online Courses.