Resources for High School Level
Content Expectations
Good
Places to Start
Grade Level Content Expectations (GLCE) website.
High School Content Expectations
SCOPE (model curriculum from Oakland ISD)
The Educators Reference Desk
contains more than 2000 unique lesson plans which were written and
submitted by teachers from all over the United States and the world.
Lesson plans cover topics such as, Social Studies, Science,
Vocational Education, Physical Education, Philosophy, Mathematics,
Language Arts, Foreign Language, Arts and Health.
The Gateway to Educational
Materials
provides educators with quick and easy access to thousands of
educational resources found on various federal, state, university,
non-profit, and commercial Internet sites.
The Educator’s Reference Desk has
links to over 3000 resources on a variety of educational issues,
lesson plans, and links to the ERIC database.
FREE, Federal Resources for
Educational Excellence links more than 30 Federal
agencies to make hundreds of federally supported teaching and
learning resources easier to find.
Blue Web’N
is an online library of outstanding Internet sites categorized by
subject, grade level, and
format
(tools, references, lessons, hotlists, resources, tutorials,
activities, projects). You can search by grade level (Refined
Search), broad subject area (Content
Areas), or specific sub-categories (Subject
Area). Each week 5 new sites are added.
Marco Polo provides high quality resources to teachers and
students. Developed by world-renowned organizations who are experts
in their fields, these standards-based resources include lessons
plans, student materials, reviewed Web resources and interactives.
Annenberg/CPB multimedia resources help teachers increase their
expertise in their fields and assist them in improving their
teaching methods. Many programs are also intended for students in
the classroom. All Annenberg/CPB videos exemplify excellent
teaching. A perfect type of professional development. Ranging from
teaching economics, to high school literature and K-2 math and
science.
California’s online resource of
lesson plans:
for all grades
What Works Clearinghouse
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Other
State
Assessments to use for Practice
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Alaska
grades 3,6,8
highschool
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Arizona
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Arkansas
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California
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Colorado
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Connecticut
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Delaware
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Florida
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Illinois
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Maryland
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Massachusetts
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Minnesota
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Michigan
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New York
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North Carolina end of course tests
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Pennsylvania
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Texas
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Utah
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Virginia
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Washington
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Wisconsin
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Middle and High School
Literacy and Teaching Reading through Content Areas
Middleweb aimed for middle school
The Clearinghouse on Reading, English and Communication
The Knowledge Loom: Adolescent
Literacy in the Content Areas:
Go to the site map and click on Adolescent Literacy in Content Areas
Related Resources for lesson plans. Note that the lesson plans are
in alphabetical order, so scroll through the complete list to find
discipline specific lessons.
Building Reading Proficiency At the Secondary Level:
A Guide to Resources,
includes resources available to for struggling secondary readers.
Perspectives on Policy and Practice: Content Area Literacy,
investigates the ways in which schools can promote adolescent
literacy initiatives within the content areas. Explains what
educators need to be aware of before implementing these programs at
the classroom level, and the new academic standards and technology
that must be taken into account when designing an action plan.
Kent ISD Curriculum materials
Reading Strategies for Content Area Teachers
ReadWriteThink has hundreds of lesson plans that can be sorted
by topic, grade or title. This website is supported by
International Reading Association and Teachers of English. There
are also online units.
Adolescent Literacy Resources is designed for educators to gain
knowledge in the field of adolescent literacy, have resources with
which to plan or design an adolescent literacy initiative, and
identify key resources that would be relevant to a particular
project.
Inquiring minds: learning and literacy in early adolescence
examines how to create optimal literacy environments for young
adolescents.
The Strategic
Literacy Initiative (SLI) serves middle and high school educators,
teacher leaders and teacher educators,
Reading for Understanding: A Guide to Improving Reading in Middle
and High School Classrooms, describes the
Reading Apprenticeship® framework developed in collaborative work
with teams of teachers in the San Francisco Bay Area, and the kinds
of successes and struggles teachers and students have experienced
using this approach.
Reading Apprenticeship® framework combines affective and
cognitive aspects to promote adolescents' engagement and achievement
in reading the variety of texts they face in their content area
classes.
Three excellent books in the What Works series by Joellen Killion
are available on the web from the National Staff Development
Council.
These are also
available at the
NSDC website: You can also order the What Works series from the
NSCD bookstore.
Reading lesson plans from NWREL
Lexile Framework for Reading
approach for measuring reader ability and text difficulty. Lexile
measures put readers and reading material on the same scale. Lexiles
tie day to day classroom instruction to high stakes tests and
everyday books and articles, encouraging reading progress.
English as a Second Language and Adult Literacy, National Institute
for Literacy
English HSCE
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Writing
The Clearinghouse on Reading,
English and Communication (make sure you scroll to the
bottom of the list…)
Writing
instruction and assessment specifics from
NWREL’s 6+I Trait Writing. The site has many lesson plans.
Outta Ray’s Head is
a collection of lesson plans that can be easily adapted for any
content area. Excellent for middle school and high school.
Educator’s Reference Desk,
Lesson Plans (type in Writing) or go directly to
http://www.eduref.org/cgi-bin/print.cgi/Resources/Subjects/Language_Arts/Writing.html
ReadWriteThink has
hundreds of lesson plans that can be sorted by topic, grade or
title. This website is supported by International Reading
Association and Teachers of English. There are also online units.
ASCD, links to resources and website. Online training, books,
materials, articles.
Michigan Teacher Network,
National Institute for Literacy,
links to best practices
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High
School Math
Mathematics Internet Sites
(MASER)
The Michigan Council of Teachers
of Mathematics
National Council of Teachers of
Mathematics
Macomb ISD’s links to math
education materialsComputing
Technology for Math Excellence is devoted to resources
for teaching and learning mathematics (K-12 and calculus) and the
standards movement in education
National Science Foundation
funded Math programs.
Problems with a Point
math lessons for grades 6 to 12
COMAP, the Consortium for Mathematics and Its Applications,
develops curriculum materials and teacher development programs
centered on using mathematical tools to explore real-world problems.
What Works Clearinghouse
The Show-Me Project
in
partnership with five NSF-sponsored middle grades curriculum
development satellites provides information and resources with lots
of lesson plans for middle school math.
Math Forum is
a leading center for mathematics and mathematics education on the
Internet. There are great lesson plans for all levels of math. On
the home page, click on Teachers’ Place at the top of the page
Illuminations
is designed to provide teachers, students, and families with
internet resources to improve the teaching and learning of
mathematics by all students.
Figure This demonstrates challenging middle school mathematics
and emphasizes the importance of high-quality math education for all
students. A project for the NCTM and National Action Council for
Minorities. Aimed at diverse students and their parents.
Modeling Middle School
Mathematics is a dynamic project aimed at improving
mathematic instruction grades 5-8. This project, funded by the
National Science Foundation, utilizes emerging technologies to
"bring math to life." Aligned with
NCTM Standards.
Math Mountain
includes math problems for grades 2-6. Also provides a collection of
useful links to other mathematics websites.
Math Counts,
l a program that promotes middle school mathematics.
Middle School Math
Shapes, Shapes Everywhere! A
Second/Third Grade Unit this second/third grade nine-lesson unit integrates
multiple mathematics benchmarks.
Math in The Work Place
exposes students to professions that employ mathematics and
demonstrates the relevance of mathematics in solving real-world
challenges.
Real World Problems
includes teacher-friendly modules ready for use in grades 9 to 12.
Finds ways to incorporate math with every day experiences such as,
analysis of the value of automobile collision insurance and how to
determine the best work schedule to minimize cost of labor while
getting the job done.
The Northwest Regional Lab
has four publications demonstrating research-based strategies for
meeting the needs of students with learning disabilities in math and
science.
The Eisenhower National Clearinghouse for Math, Science, and
Technology. (subscription)
Math HSCEs
Algebra
The
Algebra section of the Internet Math Library at Drexel offers
lesson plans, sections on the history and applications of algebra as
well as ways for teachers to help students pursue careers in
mathematical fields.
University of Illinois has resources on using calculators, as
well as many interactive games.
The Math Forum at Drexel University is an index of algebra
information. For students, it contains over fifty pages of notes put
together by instructors on a myriad of algebra topics ranging from
basic algebra to multilinear algebra. For instructors, this website
has dozens of links to articles published on algebra, as well as
links to lesson plans, tutoring services, and companies that can aid
your classroom with services and materials.
Algebra links references websites that will give straightforward
examples with basic explanations that will help students get out of
a jam while doing their exercises. There are also tomes of real math
questions asked by students and answered by experts.
Algebra Facts points out the most common errors made by students
in their computations. This site will also be helpful in allowing
instructors to see what sorts of mistakes students are making and
understanding their train of thought. .
Purple Math lists only those sites with something immediately
useful (and free) for algebra students.
Algebra
II/Trigonometry
http://library.thinkquest.org/20991/alg2/index.html
The Math for
Morons website is a popular play on the “…for Dummies” series books
that sell by the thousands. This particular website is rich in most
high school mathematical disciplines but there is a focus on
explaining Trigonometry.
http://aleph0.clarku.edu/~djoyce/java/trig/
David E. Joyce of
Clark University has put together a “Short Course in Trigonometry”
that covers most concepts covered in Trigonometry courses.
http://www.pen.k12.va.us/Div/Winchester/jhhs/math/lessons/trig.html
These lesson
plans contain dozens of worksheets with puzzles and activities that
will allow students to think critically and apply their knowledge to
solving the riddles
http://www.scedk12.com/edu/scchs/trig.html
This site is
extremely comprehensive and offers three major outlets of
understanding Trigonometry. There is an “Introduction to
Trigonometry” section where students can look at notes and examples
of well-organized Trigonometry examples. The second section offers
only a few links, but the concepts covered are discussed and
represented well. Finally, an interactive web tutorial is offered
for students to roll up their sleeves and try the equations. This
web tutorial also contains online flash cards, which will come in
handy when it comes time to study for the test.
http://www.mathcentre.ac.uk/students.php/
all_subjects/trigonometry/trigequations/resources/
This website is
published in the United Kingdom and uses advanced visual technology
to present several reinforcement equations complete with
explanations for students to practice with. This website also
contains self-tests and offers other subjects. This website may not
only help them in mathematics, but be a valuable resource for the
rest of their academic careers. Adobe Acrobat is required to obtain
much of the information on this site.
Geometry
http://mathforum.org/geometry/k12.geometry.html links to the
Math Forum housed at Drexel University. It contains a number of
links and resources for students such as free geometry software and
internet projects. For instructors, this site contains lesson plans
as well as mailing lists and discussion boards where mathematicians,
instructors, and students can exchange information and ideas.
http://mtl.math.uiuc.edu/resources/geometry.htm
This is the Math Teachers Link housed at the University of Illinois.
This site has
links with active Java activities.
http://www.ics.uci.edu/~eppstein/geom.html
Here students and
instructors will find “lower level Euclidian” geometrical concepts
presented with real world application problems.
Science
Science Internet Sites (MASER)
ScienceNetLinks
provides a wealth
of resources for K-12 science educators. Linked to AAAS standards.
The Science Spot
contains links
and information for teachers who are interested in enriching their
science classes. Targeted at grades 5-8.
Whelmers: McREL's Accessible Science Series
hands-on science
activities, aligned with the National Science Education Standards.
Most activities use materials found in hardware or grocery stores.
Role-Playing a Committee Hearing on Nuclear Power and Safety
Students will consider what they already know about nuclear power
and its uses and then examine an accident at a nuclear power plant.
National Science Teachers Association
The Northwest Regional Lab has four publications demonstrating
research-based strategies for meeting the needs of students with
learning disabilities in math and science.
Teaching High School Science has a number of free videos with
lesson plans
Cornell University’s Gateway to Math and Science has links to
resources in mathematics and science for educators and students in
grades 9-12
Uncommon Knowledge: Volume 1 Hands-on Math Projects. Projects
that help middle school students with math and science. Especially
praised for girls.
Science HSCEs
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Sample
Assessments for HSCE
Excel spreadsheet for teachers (scroll
to section 5.3 to download spreadsheet by grade)
Toolkit98
is designed to assist classroom teachers to
become better assessors of student learning. The primary users of
Toolkit98 are intended to be those who have responsibility to
coordinate and facilitate professional development in assessment for
teachers.
Annenberg/CPB multimedia resources help teachers increase their
expertise in their fields and assist them in improving their
teaching methods. Many programs are also intended for students in
the classroom and viewers at home. All Annenberg/CPB videos
exemplify excellent teaching. A perfect type of professional
development. Ranging from teaching economics, to high school
literature and K-2 math and science.
Maine has
developed
an extraordinary site on developing local assessments, ie local
tests which complement state exams. These Local assessments may
include portfolios, performances and demonstrations in addition to
other measures of achievement. Schools may find the process
of constructing local assessments valuable.
Kathy
Schrock's Guide for Educators - A collection of assessment
rubrics and graphic organizers that may be helpful to you as you
design your own.
Brualdi, Amy “Implementing Performance Assessment in the Classroom”
Mid Michigan
Consortium:
http://mmc.edzone.net/
Midland Saginaw:
http://www.mcesa.k12.mi.us/instruc.htm (scroll down on the page
to the section on Other Useful links)
Shiawassee RESD
http://www.sresd.k12.mi.us/pages/resources/curric.html
The Gutenberg
Project:
http://www.gutenberg.org/
Oakland ISD:
http://cars.oakland.k12.mi.us/
Wayne
RESA:
http://www.resa.net/
Macomb ISD:
http://www.misd.net/curriculum.htm (includes science GLCE)
California:
http://www.score.k12.ca.us/
Massachusetts
Comprehensive Assessment System:
http://www.doe.mass.edu/mcas/search/intro.html
The Compendium of
Assessment and Research Tools:
http://cart.rmcdenver.com/
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