Articles related to "Student Volunteers"Eager and energetic, students can make wonderful volunteers. Find out how to find volunteers at local high schools and colleges.
How much of your teaching time is wasted shuffling paperwork? By creating collecting and distributing systems, you'll create more time to teach.
Many college students are opting out of the traditional sunny Spring Break, and instead are volunteering their services. Here's the scoop on alternative spring breaks.
Summer travel can be prohibitively expensive for students-- but it doesn't have to be. Here are some cheap travel ideas to help you plan a great vacation.
Is your classroom orderly? Organization is not necessarily about neatness; organization is about automatic preparedness for all tasks.
Maintaining an active student social life on a limited budget can be a challenge. Here are a few easy ways to save money and find cheap student entertainment.
This Oregon liberal arts school offers excellent academic programs, with successful athletic endeavors and an emphasis on volunteering, echoing its pioneer heritage.
Volunteering can actually boost an applicant's chances for admission to a college. Knowing what colleges expect from volunteering experiences can be advantageous.
College admission is a game that does not always publish the rules. Understanding the basic concepts in admission strategies can be advantageous.
Here's an exercise to help your public speaking students learn the benefits of speaking extemporaneously instead of reading word-for-word.
Elementary teachers teach kids how pumpkins grow during an integrated fall vegetable life cycle reading and science lesson plan.
Introduce science students to the three states of matter by growing rock candy sugar crystals.
This lesson plan was written to teach elementary school children how to engage in English conversations about which animals they like.
Budget cuts have produced the growing need for volunteers while at the same time have produced a surplus of volunteers to meet the growing need.
Glyphs are non standard graphs to display a variety of information. The graphs are used to represent educational and personal information.
The looming problem of the high number of Americans without health insurance, leads to a community initiative to help provide for those uninsured.
A handy list of issues and questions for interviewing potential childcare providers
With no advanced preparation, you can teach students about static electricity in fifteen minutes.
The last ten minutes of a lesson can be fun and motivating. Ending it properly can motivate the students and improve your classroom management.
Fall means back to school for students and parents alike. Hosting an Open House doesn't simply open the doors to parents; it opens the lines of communication, as well.
Visiting colleges takes time, money, and energy. In order to make the most out of this opportunity, you will also want to do some prep work ahead of time.
Primary students practice reading and writing skills, create artwork, weigh and measure apples, and count apple seeds during an autumn apple-themed unit.
This lesson was written for elementary school first graders as their very first English lesson, an introduction to English greetings.
This lesson was written for elementary school first graders as their introduction to numbers, 1 to 11, in English.
Tips to help parents evaluate childcare facilities, staff, daycare programs, and daycare center policies.
Elementary teachers can make apple pie play dough with kids during an apple themed unit. Students can make play dough as part of a cooking or reading lesson plan.
Twenty-five students sitting a classroom are not processing information in the same manner. The brain is translating information differently in each person.
There are more applicants to dental schools than seats. Showing desire for dentistry by performing well academically as well as relevant volunteer experience will help.
Elementary students learn break apart number strategies and counting skills with games that promote kinesthetic learning.
In Central Florida, Food Not Bombs made headlines with their dedication to a course of direct action in solving the issues of hunger and homelessness.
The Schumann Resonance generates healing effects when living things are entrained to its frequency.
Having a disability, whether it is physical, mental or emotional, doesn't have to hold back individuals from receiving the same benefits that other college students enjoy
Tips and suggestions for teaching the cultural diversity and sophistication of Native American groups in the Social Studies or History classroom.
Do you have students who can read words on cards, but cannot transfer that skill to reading the same words in sentences? Here are some creative activities to help.
Not all classrooms have the benefit of one computer per child. Assigning projects to student groups is a strategy that can integrate technology into lessons.
When kids with ADD or ADHD are unable to follow directions and listen in the classroom, it can be frustrating to teachers and a disruption to all students.
This lesson was written for elementary school first graders as their introduction to 11 simple colors in English.
This lesson plan was written to teach elementary school children how to correctly give and receive directions for movement, "Go left, right, back, and straight."
Elementary teachers can use the book If You Take a Mouse to the Movies to introduce compound words to their students and play a word match game during reading class.
This lesson plan was written for elementary school children as their introduction to simple sports in English, as well as the "Do you like (something)?" grammar.
This lesson plan was written for elementary school first graders as their introduction to 11 simple vegetables in English.
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