The Question Formulation Technique (QFT) is a simple, but rigorous, step-by-step process designed to help students produce, improve, and strategize on how to improve their questioning techniques. The QFT allows students to practice three thinking abilities in one process: divergent, convergent and metacognitive thinking.
476 Results
Slide Deck for Introductory Session held January 26, 2022
- Subject:
- Environmental Literacy and Sustainability
- Material Type:
- Unit of Study
- Author:
- Sandy Benton
- Date Added:
- 01/26/2022
This training provides an introduction to adapted gaming technologies and the considerations to consider when making gaming accessible for people with disabilities. Presenters include Drew Pennington who works as an assistive technologist for HOME and Jenesis Lindbo, an Independent Living Specialist with the Center for Independent Living for Western Wisconsin. Brought to you by the WisTech Assistive Technology Advisory Council for Wisconsin.
- Subject:
- Career and Technical Education
- Education
- Educational Technology
- Information and Technology Literacy
- Technology and Engineering
- Material Type:
- Other
- Primary Source
- Reference Material
- Teaching/Learning Strategy
- Unit of Study
- Author:
- Drew Pennington
- Jenesis Lindbo
- WisTech ATCouncil
- Date Added:
- 06/11/2024
This 1-2 hour module provides participants with an introduction to the key shifts required by the Common Core State Standards for ELA / Literacy.
- Subject:
- English Language Arts
- Fine Arts
- Reading Informational Text
- Material Type:
- Teaching/Learning Strategy
- Unit of Study
- Provider:
- Student Achievement Partners
- Provider Set:
- Common Core Reference Collection
- Date Added:
- 09/01/2013
This 1-2 hour module provides participants with an introduction to the key shifts required by the Common Core State Standards for ELA / Literacy.
- Subject:
- English Language Arts
- Fine Arts
- Reading Informational Text
- Material Type:
- Teaching/Learning Strategy
- Unit of Study
- Provider:
- Student Achievement Partners
- Provider Set:
- Common Core Reference Collection
- Date Added:
- 09/01/2013
This 1-2 hour module provides an introduction to the key shifts required by the CCSS for Literacy in the content areas: history / social studies, science, and technical subjects.
- Subject:
- Fine Arts
- Material Type:
- Teaching/Learning Strategy
- Unit of Study
- Provider:
- Student Achievement Partners
- Provider Set:
- Common Core Reference Collection
- Date Added:
- 09/01/2013
Remix this template to upload your ACP lesson and unit plans into WISELearn.
- Subject:
- Career and Technical Education
- Education
- Technology and Engineering
- Material Type:
- Lesson
- Unit of Study
- Date Added:
- 08/12/2019
This site can be used for an Intro to Business class. It is focused on Mean Jeans simulation, but has basic information for other courses if needed.
- Subject:
- Business and Information Technology
- Career and Technical Education
- Material Type:
- Full Course
- Reading
- Unit of Study
- Provider:
- Danyell Franti
- Date Added:
- 03/20/2018
Since information is always influenced by its author, analyzing who's behind the information should be a priority when evaluating online content. But too often, students attempt to evaluate information based on elements other than the source, such as the contents of a website, its appearance, or the evidence it supplies. In this lesson, students learn why the source of information is so important and practice analyzing information based on who's behind it.
Note: Civic Online Reasoning is motivated by three driving questions: Who's behind the information, What's the evidence and What do other sources say? This lesson is an introduction to the first concept. Registration is required and free.
- Subject:
- Civics and Government
- Information and Technology Literacy
- Social Studies
- Material Type:
- Activity/Lab
- Learning Task
- Lesson Plan
- Unit of Study
- Author:
- Stanford History Education Group
- Date Added:
- 06/13/2023
In 2013, Kurt Squire and Constance Steinkuehler led the "Video Games and Learning MOOC" at University of Wisconsin-Madison. This video series, presented by Learning & Literacy Specialist, James Paul Gee, was a part of that course.
This quick-to-view, accessible video series explores the 13 "Good Learning Principles" found within well-designed video games; these learning principles align precisely with similar beneficial learning principles that are widely embraced within successful classrooms and other educational environments. The series' components were originally identified and discussed in James Paul Gee's book "What Video Games Have to Teach Us About Learning and Literacy" (https://us.macmillan.com/books/9781403984531/whatvideogameshavetoteachusaboutlearningandliteracysecondedition).
The videos offer educators of all types that are interested in the learning principles of well-designed games a swift yet comprehensive overview of usable language and pedagogical concepts related to effective games-based learning; this information can be used to spark further research and discussion, or could be utilized to develop new learning pathways and methodologies in libraries and classrooms.
YouTube Video Description: "Video games aren’t just fun, they can be powerful vehicles for learning as well. In this course, we discuss research on the kinds of thinking and learning that go into video games and gaming culture, benefits and drawbacks of digital gameplay, tensions between youth culture and traditional education, and new developments intended to bridge that growing divide."
- Subject:
- Early Learning
- Education
- Educational Technology
- Elementary Education
- Higher Education
- Information and Technology Literacy
- Material Type:
- Lecture
- Lesson
- Primary Source
- Teaching/Learning Strategy
- Unit of Study
- Author:
- Constance Steinkuehler
- Field Day
- James Paul Gee
- Kurt Squire
- Date Added:
- 03/27/2024
This is a compilation of activities to teach students about Invasive Species. Â This includes notes, a video, an article, and research activity.
- Subject:
- Agriculture, Food and Natural Resources
- Career and Technical Education
- Material Type:
- Unit of Study
- Author:
- Craig Kohn
- Jamie Morris
- Date Added:
- 04/24/2018
This webfolio is a follow-up assignment to an Honors English unit on Things Fall Apart by Chinua Achiebe. In this webfolio, students will take on the role of social scientists interested in learning more about the life of Africans in different parts of the continent. They will each have different aspects of African culture and life to research.The webfolio format emphasizes the power of teamwork and the Internet to learn all about an area of Africa. Each team will learn about one region of the continent, and then they will come together to get a better understanding of Africa as a whole by participating in and observing classroom presentations. The culminating project combines individual research and informational genre format into a first-person travel diary, imagining an actual trip through each region of Africa.
- Subject:
- English Language Arts
- Material Type:
- Learning Task
- Reading
- Rubric/Scoring Guide
- Unit of Study
- Provider:
- Weebly
- Date Added:
- 01/18/2017
Lac Courte Oreilles Ojibwe School has an annual sugarbush within a few miles of the school. During the Spring sugarbush season, students are bussed to the site, by class, to do the variety of daily tasks required to successfully produce maple syrup. The LCO middle school students follow the Ojibwe traditions. They hear the traditional stories, learn words and phrases in the Ojibwemowin language, tap trees, collect and boil sap, chop wood and build fires. The students learn about tree identification, photosynthesis, and aging trees using cross sections. They also learn about the importance and uses of Maple trees. The students learn that the environmental conditions needed to make maple syrup are only found in a very small part of the world that includes Wisconsin. The combination of hands-on exploration and culturally - relevant texts personalize the learning experience for this region.
- Subject:
- Ecology
- Environmental Literacy and Sustainability
- Material Type:
- Activity/Lab
- Lesson Plan
- Unit of Study
- Author:
- Rick Erickson
- Tammy Moncel
- Date Added:
- 06/04/2022
Lac Courte Oreilles Ojibwe School has an annual sugarbush within a few miles of the school. During the Spring sugarbush season, students are bussed to the site, by class, to do the variety of daily tasks required to successfully produce maple syrup. The LCO middle school students follow the Ojibwe traditions. They hear the traditional stories, learn words and phrases in the Ojibwemowin language, tap trees, collect and boil sap, chop wood and build fires. The students learn about tree identification, photosynthesis, and aging trees using cross sections. They also learn about the importance and uses of Maple trees. The students learn that the environmental conditions needed to make maple syrup are only found in a very small part of the world that includes Wisconsin. The combination of hands-on exploration and culturally - relevant texts personalize the learning experience for this region. This remix adds content related to the sugarbush operated by the Bayfield High School Alternative Education program.
- Subject:
- Ecology
- Environmental Literacy and Sustainability
- Material Type:
- Activity/Lab
- Learning Task
- Unit of Study
- Author:
- Rick Erickson
- Date Added:
- 11/25/2023
Students learn about complex networks and how to use graphs to represent them. They also learn that graph theory is a useful part of mathematics for studying complex networks in diverse applications of science and engineering, including neural networks in the brain, biochemical reaction networks in cells, communication networks, such as the internet, and social networks. Students are also introduced to random processes on networks. An illustrative example shows how a random process can be used to represent the spread of an infectious disease, such as the flu, on a social network of students, and demonstrates how scientists and engineers use mathematics and computers to model and simulate random processes on complex networks for the purposes of learning more about our world and creating solutions to improve our health, happiness and safety.
- Subject:
- Career and Technical Education
- Technology and Engineering
- Material Type:
- Unit of Study
- Provider:
- TeachEngineering
- Provider Set:
- TeachEngineering
- Author:
- Complex Systems Science Laboratory,
- Debbie Jenkinson and Susan Frennesson, The Pine School, Stuart, FL
- Garrett Jenkinson and John Goutsias, The Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD
- TeachEngineering.org
- Date Added:
- 09/18/2014
This 10-lesson sequence designed for a sixth grade science course explores the following questions: How can humans lessen the harsh effects of extreme heat?How does surface cover affect surface temperature? / Why do different materials experience differences in surface temperature?How might human activities impact the temperatures in the different communities?How can humans mitigate the effects of heat islands?Using the framework from Dr. Gholdy Muhammad outlined in her book Cultivating Genius, each lesson pays special attention to looking at pursuits in identity, skills, intellect, criticality, and joy to support equity in the classroom. Please Remix this template for your purposes.
- Subject:
- Earth and Space Science
- Environmental Literacy and Sustainability
- Physical Science
- Material Type:
- Unit of Study
- Author:
- Victoria Rydberg-Nania
- Leigh Kohlmann
- Kevin Anderson
- Sandy Benton
- Gina Smith
- Date Added:
- 05/17/2022
Students will be singing the blues in this lesson in which they identify themes from "The Gift of the Magi" and write and present blues poetry based on those themes.
- Subject:
- Fine Arts
- Performing and Visual Arts
- Material Type:
- Activity/Lab
- Unit of Study
- Provider:
- ReadWriteThink
- Provider Set:
- ReadWriteThink
- Date Added:
- 10/10/2017
Through this interactive, hands-on lesson, students will read and gain an understanding of Aldo Leopold’s essay, “January Thaw”. This lesson is best taught in January and/or when animal tracks are present outside.
- Subject:
- English Language Arts
- Environmental Literacy and Sustainability
- Material Type:
- Lesson
- Unit of Study
- Date Added:
- 05/30/2019
During writing workshop, students research, write, revise, and share their own comprehensive biographies of African American jazz musicians.
- Subject:
- Fine Arts
- Material Type:
- Activity/Lab
- Unit of Study
- Provider:
- ReadWriteThink
- Provider Set:
- ReadWriteThink
- Date Added:
- 10/10/2017
This realistic fictional story is about Steven and his Aunt Carolyn. The two have always shared a special bond; each time Aunt Carolyn takes a trip, she sends a special postcard to Steven. Now, Aunt Carolyn is coming for the family block party and Steven wants to find a special gift for her.
- Subject:
- English Language Arts
- Fine Arts
- Literature
- Material Type:
- Lesson Plan
- Unit of Study
- Provider:
- Basal Alignment Project
- Provider Set:
- Atlanta District
- Author:
- Javaka Steptoe
- Date Added:
- 09/01/2013