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    Building Better Lessons

    Teachers find innovative solutions to improve their practice.

    By Learning Forward
    February 2013
    Julie McGough, a 5th-grade teacher at Victor Hodge Elementary School in Azusa, Calif., calls herself as a “pretty good teacher,” while at the same time admitting that when she changed from grades 2 and 3 to 5th grade, she was somewhat uncomfortable with one subject in particular. “I was actually very intimidated by the math,” she said. “I knew how to do it, but I didn’t know how to explain it to students.” And then she found out about LearnZillion. Ask Katie Bryant, an 8th-grade physical science teacher in Georgia, what scared her the most about the new Common Core literacy standards, and she’ll tell you: “They wanted us to incorporate more reading and writing into our curriculum.” The concept intrigued Bryant, but she was

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    Authors

    Julia Harris

    Julia Harris (plettaharris@gmail.com) is a freelance writer and editor who covers K-12 and higher education issues.

    More From the Leading Edge

    • LearnZillion and the Literacy Design Collaborative aren’t the only cool tools in the chest when it comes to innovative approaches to teaching and learning. Here are more places teachers can go for support, help with content, and the opportunity to collaborate with educators across the country.
    • BetterLesson.com is an online community where educators can connect, create, organize, and share curricula. Founded by a group of teachers from Atlanta and Boston public schools, this free site focuses on aggregating and scaling innovative content and practices from high-performing teachers across the country.
    • The Khan Academy (www.khanacademy.org) is a not-for-profit site that hosts more than 3,600 videos on K-12 math and science topics, as well as some topics on finance and history. All materials on the site are free.
    • The Mathematics Design Collaborative (www.groupgenius.org/mathematics) is the mathematics counterpart to the Literacy Design Collaborative.
    • Promethean Planet (www.prometheanplanet.com/en-us) provides lesson planning tips, strategies, content, and resources for a range of topics and grade levels. Membership is free.

    Resources To Go

    The LearnZillion website (https://learnzillion.com) is the hub for educational content, but there’s also a blog where additional video clips and resources are uploaded frequently, along with posts by LearnZillion co-founder Eric Westendorf and links to webinars and media coverage (check out the story about Bill Gates at https://tinyurl.com/cf53v7q). And there’s the option to follow LearnZillion on Twitter (https://twitter.com/LearnZillion) and Facebook (www.facebook.com/LearnZillion).

    Similarly, the Literacy Design Collaborative website (www.literacydesigncollaborative.org) is the host for templates and fully fleshed out sample modules as well as the collaborative’s Guidebook 1.0, which explains the how and why of the framework.

    Additional resources include the Think Tank, a social learning network where Literacy Design Collaborative participants can
    connect, collaborate, reflect, and improve their practice. To watch a video of Susan Weston discussing the collaborative, see https://vimeo.com/27219167.


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    Learning Forward is the only professional association devoted exclusively to those who work in educator professional development. We help our members plan, implement, and measure high-quality professional learning so they can achieve success with their systems, schools, and students.


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