Diverse Voices of the Vietnam War: Professional Development Workshop for High School Educators | |||||||||||
Dear ,
We're collaborating with WGBH on a free professional development workshop about teaching the Vietnam War in high school social studies and ELA classrooms. Register now
Join us for an early evening of interaction with new and innovative sources and activities to teach about the war.
A lite supper will be served and all attendees will take home curriculum materials and a gift bag, including a Last Days in Vietnam (American Experience) DVD.
This workshop is for curriculum specialists or high school teachers of US history, World history and English Language Arts, and features materials from our online curriculum resource "Teaching the "American War": Looking at the War in Vietnam Through Vietnamese Eyes".
Registration is limited so please sign up soon. |
|||||||||||
|
This blog offers information, and connections to nurture recent graduates. We welcome your participation on this and on our Facebook Page. The NTC continues to be deeply grateful to MEDITECH for its long history of support for this program. Over the years, MEDITECH has made it possible for the New Teacher Community to serve a vital role in helping our graduates to persist in a challenging, yet deeply rewarding profession.
Wednesday, December 16, 2015
Teaching the Vietnam War: Register Now for this great opportunity!
Thursday, December 10, 2015
Teaching English Abroad?
How great was our 12/5 workshop on "Funding for Teacher Travel, Study and Classroom Materials?"
From time to time we're going to post links to different articles about teaching abroad or other funding opportunities. Here's a great one:
From time to time we're going to post links to different articles about teaching abroad or other funding opportunities. Here's a great one:
PS: SEND US YOUR PHOTO'S!
How Much Can You Earn Teaching English Abroad?
Published on 12/09/2015 by Richelle Gamlam from
GoOverseas.comhttp://www.gooverseas.com/blog/how-much-can-you-earn-teaching-english-abroad?utm_content=bufferf084d&utm_medium=social&utm_source=facebook.com&utm_campaign=buffer
GoOverseas.comhttp://www.gooverseas.com/blog/how-much-can-you-earn-teaching-english-abroad?utm_content=bufferf084d&utm_medium=social&utm_source=facebook.com&utm_campaign=buffer
Read this to find out about how much you can earn teaching in China, Japan, South Korea, Taiwan, Cambodia, Spain, Saudi Arabia, UAE,
-
By Footprints Recruiting
-
By Reach To Teach
-
By LanguageCorps
Monday, December 7, 2015
Notable Children's Books of 2015
More wonderful reading ahead! "The
best in picture books, middle grade and young adult fiction and
nonfiction, selected by the children’s books editor of The New York
Times Book Review."
Notable Children’s Books of 2015
Picture Books
ASK ME. By Bernard Waber. Illustrated by Suzy Lee. 40 pp. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. $16.99.
This posthumous book by the great Waber (“Lyle, Lyle Crocodile”)
features a long, leisurely, lovely conversation between a father and
daughter out taking an autumn walk.
FINDING WINNIE: The True Story of the World’s Most Famous Bear. By Lindsay Mattick. Illustrated by Sophie Blackall. 32 pp. Little, Brown. $18.
Written by a great-granddaughter of the Canadian soldier who bought a
bear cub from a trapper and took her to Europe in World War I, this
delightful account of the story behind A.A. Milne’s “Winnie-the-Pooh” is
also a family history.
LAST STOP ON MARKET STREET. By Matt de la Peña. Illustrated by Christian Robinson. 32 pp. Putnam. $16.99.
In this wise, moving story, C.J. is full of complaints as he and his
peppery grandmother take a bus ride, but Nana helps him see the other
side of things, especially after they arrive to help at a soup kitchen.
THE MENINO: A Story Based on Real Events. Written and illustrated by Isol. Translated by Elisa Amado. 53 pp. Groundwood/House of Anansi. $19.95.
Our reviewer, Samantha Hunt, praised “the humor and the poetry” of this
original take on the strangeness of babies — the alien sounds they
make, the odd way they move — from the point of view of an older
sibling.
IS MOMMY? By Victoria Chang. Illustrated by Marla Frazee. 30 pp. Beach Lane. $15.99.
Children mischievously answer a question about their mommies on each
page in this buoyant, refreshing look at parent-child love.
POOL. Written and illustrated by JiHyeon Lee. 56 pp. Chronicle. $16.99. A wondrous, wordless tale of a girl and boy and the magical world they discover once they brave the depths of a pool.
THANK YOU AND GOOD NIGHT. Written and illustrated by Patrick McDonnell. 32 pp. Little, Brown. $15.99. This playful, extraordinarily charming bedtime book features a girl whose stuffed rabbit hosts a surprise sleepover party.
TOYS MEET SNOW. By Emily Jenkins. Illustrated by Paul O. Zelinsky. 40 pp. Schwartz & Wade. $17.99.
The three toys from the “Toys Go Out” chapter book series get their own
picture book, a transporting look at the wonders of snow.
WAITING. Written and illustrated by Kevin Henkes. 32 pp. Greenwillow/HarperCollins. $17.99.
Five toys wait on a window ledge, each for something different, in this
profound and beautiful take on patience and perspective from the
matchless Henkes.
Middle Grade
CIRCUS MIRANDUS. By Cassie Beasley. Illustrated by Diana Sudyka. 292 pp. Dial. $17.99.
An orphaned fifth grader, falling under the spell of his dying
grandfather’s tales of a magic circus, attempts to cash in a deferred
wish in this shimmering debut novel.
ECHO. By Pam Muñoz Ryan. 592 pp. Scholastic. $19.99.
Muñoz Ryan’s enchanting novel sends a harmonica traveling across years
and over continents and seas to touch, and possibly save, the lives of
three music-obsessed children, each facing serious struggles.
Advertisement
Continue reading the main story
Advertisement
Continue reading the main story
FIRSTBORN. By Tor Seidler. 227 pp. Atheneum. $16.99.
In this artful and affecting novel, a solitary magpie travels with and
becomes attached to a family of wolves who are repopulating the remote
Lamar Valley in Yellowstone National Park.
GOODBYE STRANGER. By Rebecca Stead. 289 pp. Wendy Lamb. $16.99.
A seventh grader recovering from a near-fatal accident navigates
changes in herself and her tight group of friends in this moving novel,
which our reviewer, Meg Wolitzer, called “masterly.”
LISTEN, SLOWLY. By Thanhha Lai. 260 pp. Harper/HarperCollins. $16.99.
The funny, gently heartbreaking story of a 12-year-old
Vietnamese-American girl who travels reluctantly to Vietnam with her
grandmother and learns to love the fractured country and culture her
family came from.
THE MARVELS. Written and illustrated by Brian Selznick. 665 pp. Scholastic. $32.99.
Half wordless illustrated tale, half prose narrative, this captivating
hybrid novel set over several centuries follows a family of theater
legends who may or may not have really existed.
MOST DANGEROUS: Daniel Ellsberg and the Secret History of the Vietnam War. By Steve Sheinkin. Illustrated. 370 pp. Roaring Brook. $19.
A riveting and remarkably effective account of Ellsberg’s life, his
release of the Pentagon Papers and America’s tragic history in Vietnam.
NIMONA. Written and illustrated by Noelle Stevenson. 266 pp. HarperTeen/HarperCollins. $17.99.
A shapeshifting girl becomes a sidekick to a would-be villain in this
winning, genre-convention-busting graphic novel that charts the terrain
between magic and science.
ROLLER GIRL. By Victoria Jamieson. 240 pp. Dial. $20.99.
In this spiky, winning graphic novel, a summer at roller-derby day camp
helps a 12-year-old girl learn to rechannel her anger and let go of her
former, more uncertain self.
STELLA BY STARLIGHT. By Sharon M. Draper. 320 pp. Atheneum. $16.99.
An African-American girl in the Jim Crow South, a budding writer,
witnesses a frightening Ku Klux Klan event and decides to fight with her
family for change in this stirring, heartfelt novel.
THE THING ABOUT JELLYFISH. By Ali Benjamin. 343 pp. Little, Brown. $17.
A shattering debut novel about a grieving, lonely girl, stung by the
treachery of middle-school social alliances, who tries to use the
scientific method to explain her former best friend’s death by drowning.
Young Adult
THE HIRED GIRL. By Laura Amy Schlitz. Illustrated. 387 pp. Candlewick. $17.99.Set
in 1911, this transcendent novel features a literature-loving teenage
narrator, raised poor and Catholic, who flees an abusive home and gains
acceptance and worldly knowledge working as a servant for a Jewish
family.
SHADOWSHAPER. By Daniel José Older. 297 pp. Arthur A. Levine/Scholastic. $17.99.
“Magnificent,” our reviewer, Holly Black, called this sharp urban
fantasy set in Brooklyn, about a young muralist — a shadowshaper, able
to channel friendly spirits into art — facing an assortment of dangers.
SYMPHONY FOR THE CITY OF THE DEAD: Dmitri Shostakovich and the Siege of Leningrad. By M. T. Anderson. Illustrated. 456 pp. Candlewick. $25.99.
A gripping, thoroughly researched biography of the Russian composer
that illuminates the horrors of World War II along with the eternal hope
music can provide.
SIX OF CROWS. By Leigh Bardugo. 465 pp. Holt. $18.99.
This crackling first book in a new series by the author of the Grisha
Trilogy assembles a team of outcasts who must band together to pull off a
heist in order to save the Grisha, a tribe with magical powers.
BECOMING MARIA. Love and Chaos in the South Bronx. By Sonia Manzano. Illustrated. 262 pp. Scholastic. $17.99.
In prose that shines brightly, the “Sesame Street” star recounts her
path from a poor Nuyorican family ravaged by her father’s alcoholism to a
scholarship at a prestigious college theater program.
A version of this review appears in print on December 6, 2015, on page BR34 of the Sunday Book Review with the headline: NOTABLE CHILDREN’S BOOKS OF 2015. http://www.nytimes.com/2015/12/06/books/review/notable-childrens-books-of-2015.html?rref=books/review&module=Ribbon&version=context®ion=Header&action=click&contentCollection=Sunday%20Book%20Review&pgtype=Multimedia
Thursday, December 3, 2015
Best Illustrated Children's Books of 2015
It's a pleasure to share this list with you:
The New York Times Best
http://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2015/10/28/books/review/28-new-york-times-best-illustrated-childrens-books-of-2015.html?_r=0Best Illustrated Children's Books 2015
The New York Times Best
Illustrated Children’s Books of 2015
By THE NEW YORK TIMES
Every year since 1952, the Book Review has convened an
independent panel of judges to select the New York Times Best
Illustrated Children’s Books. Judged purely on artistic merit, it’s the
only annual award of its kind.
This year’s judges were Frank Viva, Monica Edinger and Marjorie Ingall. Viva has written and illustrated several acclaimed books for children, including “Along a Long Road” — a previous Times Best Illustrated winner — “Outstanding in the Rain” and “Young Frank, Architect.” He is a frequent cover artist for The New Yorker and the managing director of the design firm Viva & Co. Edinger has been an elementary- and middle-school educator for more than 25 years and currently teaches fourth grade at the Dalton School in New York City. She is also the author of the picture book “Africa Is My Home” and blogs about children’s books at Educating Alice. Ingall is a columnist for Tablet and a frequent contributor of children’s book reviews to The Times and other publications. Her book “Mamaleh Knows Best: What Jewish Mothers Do to Raise Successful, Creative, Empathetic, Independent Children” will be published next year.
The 2015 New York Times Best Illustrated Children’s Books are, in alphabetical order:
This year’s judges were Frank Viva, Monica Edinger and Marjorie Ingall. Viva has written and illustrated several acclaimed books for children, including “Along a Long Road” — a previous Times Best Illustrated winner — “Outstanding in the Rain” and “Young Frank, Architect.” He is a frequent cover artist for The New Yorker and the managing director of the design firm Viva & Co. Edinger has been an elementary- and middle-school educator for more than 25 years and currently teaches fourth grade at the Dalton School in New York City. She is also the author of the picture book “Africa Is My Home” and blogs about children’s books at Educating Alice. Ingall is a columnist for Tablet and a frequent contributor of children’s book reviews to The Times and other publications. Her book “Mamaleh Knows Best: What Jewish Mothers Do to Raise Successful, Creative, Empathetic, Independent Children” will be published next year.
-
Big Bear Little ChairWritten and illustrated by Lizi BoydThis ingenious take on the “opposites” book shows the youngest children that big, little and tiny are all in how you look at things. Using just black, white and a velvety gray, with a bit of red, Boyd’s delightful cut paper compositions juxtapose the large and the small in unexpected ways: a “big meadow” is big because it’s full of small flowers; a “big seal” towers over a “tiny castle” that’s made of sand.
32 pp. Chronicle Books. $16.99. (Picture book; ages 3 to 5)
-
A Fine Dessert: Four Centuries, Four Families, One Delicious TreatBy Emily Jenkins. Illustrated by Sophie Blackall.Four vignettes, set in England, South Carolina, Boston and San Diego, show how the creamy dessert called blackberry fool has been made and enjoyed over the centuries. Our reviewer, John Lithgow, called out the book’s “abundant charms.” Blackall’s warm, finely detailed illustrations — done in ink, watercolor and blackberry juice — capture the sweep of history and the constancy of family love.
32 pp. Schwartz & Wade Books. $17.99. (Picture book; ages 4 to 8)
-
Funny Bones: Posada and His Day of the Dead CalaverasBy Duncan TonatiuhThis biography of the Mexican artist, who popularized calaveras both as a form of political protest and a popular entertainment, integrates Posada’s own prints with Tonatiuh’s winsome, cleverly layered compositions. “Befitting its subject, the book communicates through its visual aesthetic,” Maria Russo wrote. “Tonatiuh’s eye-catching earth-toned digital collages, with occasional blasts of dusky purple or blue, feature people who look like the swoopy, postmodern descendants of Mexican folk figures.”
40 pp. Abrams. $18.95. (Picture book; ages 6 to 10)
-
-
Leo: A Ghost StoryBy Mac Barnett. Illustrated by Christian Robinson.Leo, a little ghost drawn touchingly by Robinson as an improbably sweet and hopeful-looking crayoned outline, feels unwanted in the house he is haunting. So he moves to the city, where he befriends a girl who thinks he’s strictly imaginary. After Leo thwarts a robbery, his real — that is, ghostly — status is affirmed. Our reviewer, Marjorie Ingall, praised Robinson’s “exciting” art. “I love the palette of ‘Leo,’” she wrote. “Black, white, gray and various shades of moody blue, in a mix of acrylic paint and chunky construction-paper collage.”
52 pp. Chronicle Books. $16.99. (Picture book; ages 3 to 5)
-
Madame Eiffel: The Love Story of the Eiffel TowerBy Alice Brière-Haquet. Illustrated by Csil.In this imaginative telling of the story behind the Eiffel Tower, the engineer Gustave Eiffel is inspired by his love for his ailing wife, Cathy. With a strict palette of black and white with dabs of light rosy red, Csil’s intricate, lacy pen-and-ink illustrations convey Eiffel’s keen attention to detail, along with the allure of Paris and the high-flying ambition of his tower. The effect is romantic and utterly charming, inviting you to look and look at the pages.
24 pp. Little Gestalten. $19.95. (Picture book; ages 4 to 8)
-
The Only ChildWritten and illustrated by GuojingA small child is left alone all day to fend for herself. She dozes off on a city bus and wakes in an unknown forest, a silvery fantasyland up in the clouds where she bonds with a flying deer, enormous whales and a seal pup. Our reviewer, Samantha Hunt, was enchanted by this “dreamy, wordless debut,” lovingly illustrated with smoky, mystical-looking pencil drawings. “The dark current flowing underneath such lush imagery,” Hunt wrote, “is the loneliness of childhood under China’s one-child policy.”
98 pp. Schwartz & Wade. $19.99. (Picture book; ages 5 to 9)
-
-
The SkunkBy Mac Barnett. Illustrated by Patrick McDonnell.A nameless narrator, wearing a tuxedo, is trailed by a mysterious skunk, even while taking a cab, attending the opera, going to a carnival and visiting a graveyard. We never learn why, though like the narrator, we come to see the skunk as more adorable than menacing. The book’s witty retro look is done in a limited palette of black and white with pale peach, gray and a little red. “The great Patrick McDonnell’s drawings are, as always, perfect down to the last scratchy line,” our reviewer, Bruce Handy, said.
32 pp. Roaring Brook Press. $17.99. (Picture book; ages 4 to 8)
-
Sidewalk FlowersBy JonArno Lawson. Illustrated by Sydney Smith.“Something to treasure,” our reviewer, Carmela Ciuraru, called this dazzling wordless book. As a girl and her father walk home through city streets, she notices flowers sprouting in unexpected places. She picks them, accumulating a bouquet that she distributes to a dog, a dead bird, a homeless man and finally, back home, her sleeping toddler sibling. In Smith’s elegant and moving drawings, as Ciuraru wrote, “the only pop of color on the first page is the girl’s bright red hoodie, redolent of Peter’s snowsuit in Ezra Jack Keats’s ‘The Snowy Day.’ More color suffuses these pages as the pair gets closer to home.”
26 pp. Groundwood Books/House of Anansi Press. $16.95. (Picture book; ages 3 to 8)
-
-
The Tiger Who Would Be KingBy James Thurber. Illustrated by JooHee Yoon.Thurber’s 1956 comic fable about a power-mad tiger who starts a deadly war is vibrantly illustrated by Yoon in a dense, blocky print style, all in an electric red, a cool blue-green, black and white. Each page teems with evocative images of animal life. The effect is ferocious and ravishing, capturing the beastliness of war along with emotions that include pride, boredom, shock and sorrow.
40 pp. Enchanted Lion Books. $18.95. (All ages)
-
Tricky Vic: The Impossibly True Story of the Man Who Sold the Eiffel TowerBy Greg PizzoliThis biography of the legendary con man who once managed to sell the Eiffel Tower bursts with cheeky wit and verve. We follow Tricky Vic, as he was known, from his birth as Robert Miller in what is now the Czech Republic to his death in a federal prison in Missouri. In one of many comic touches, a thumbprint stands in for Tricky Vic’s head. “Pizzoli’s jocular, simple but graphically sophisticated collage illustrations draw readers even further into a story it would be hard to be bored by,” Maria Russo wrote.
39 pp. Viking. $17.99. (Picture book; ages 7 to 10)
http://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2015/10/28/books/review/28-new-york-times-best-illustrated-childrens-books-of-2015.html?_r=0Best Illustrated Children's Books 2015
Wednesday, November 18, 2015
Brilliant!
Don't ask kids what they want to be when they grow up but what problems do they want to solve. This changes the conversation from who do I want to work for, what do I need to learn to be able to do that?"
From:
"Where the Jobs Are. How They're Changing and Why Skills Matter"
Career Counseling Advice from Jaime Casap, Google Global Education
Tuesday, October 13, 2015
Let the Teacher Resource Center Support Ocean Science in Your Classrooms!
- Teacher Resource Center
- Professional Development
- Connect with Other Teachers
Teacher Resource Center
Helping Teachers Is Our Top Priority
l
Since 1987, we have offered a meeting place, free consultation appointments, research assistance and access to one of the largest curriculum collections in the region and a 6,000-item collection of loan materials.
Our audience includes teachers for grades pre-K to 12 and also out-of-school instructors such as camp counselors. Most of our visitors are from New England, but they also come from around the world. Our materials can be shipped within New England, and we are happy to assist others with finding resources. You can also sign up for the latest news and updates from the TRC, including information about opportunities for professional development and project funding.
For more information, please contact us at trc@neaq.org
or 617-973-6590.
More About the Teacher Resource Center
Teacher Resource Center brochure (pdf, 288kb)
Signature Corporate Sponsor of the Teacher Resource Center and programs since 2011.
Events Calendar
Come see what's happening
Connect With Us
Search | Contact Us | Jobs | Site Map | Privacy Policy | Aquarium Sponsors | About Us Copyright New England Aquarium 2015
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)