I explored the Activities in WB Online Kids and found a lot
of interesting activities. Activities
included poetry, sign language, math puzzles, animals, among other subject
areas. This would be a great resource
for students and teachers in the elementary setting. Activities are organized in alphabetical
order and on the left the option to filter the activities in four different
ways. The reliable WB tools for
printing, saving, email, text read aloud and translate exist at the top of each
activity page.
I
looked through the Primary Documents under the Research Tools. With CCSS there is a push to use primary
documents in various content areas, this could be a very valuable tool for
students and teachers. I searched civil
rights and had 18 results. There is also
a link to teaching with documents with many results. Within the topic there is teaching activities
such as; Discussion, vocabulary development, document review, and case
study. Each topic result has links to
related information and related encyclopedia content. Each topic has its own outline for teaching
ideas. Very helpful for teachers to
develop or supplement currents lessons.
The
E-Book Centre on WB Online Reference Center looks to have a similar set up as
the WB Advanced. When I searched
juvenile literature I received the same number of results. When looking up Huckleberry Finn I noticed
the outline of the story to the left and to the right the related information
and the related encyclopedia content.
Another similarity where the tools at the top of the article, a nice
standard for World Book. What I had not
seen before (but will go back to double check) is a section for content
standards and the statement that this article aligns with SD content
standards. This article aligns with
language arts in grades 8, 9, and 12.
You can also print out these standards.
On the standards page there is also links for professional links and
lesson plans. Incredible resource for teachers! Going back to WB Advanced I found that only
some eBooks had the SD content standards link but titles in both were
consistent.
great report and great finds, Ms. Rath. The articles in the public library edition are the same as the school edition, but as you note, some of the features are different. Thanks!
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