Kategorier: Alle - literacy - culture - resources - language

af Hudson Dean 14 år siden

212

WEBResources.mm

The document outlines various educational resources and tools for enhancing general literacy, language skills, and cultural understanding. It includes a range of digital tools like PowerPoint, PREZI, and MindMapping software such as Mindomo and FreeMind.

WEBResources.mm

WEB Resources

TKI

Learning Areas
Languages

Community

Cultural knowledge

Language knowledge

Communication

Participating and contributing in communities

Managing self and relating to others

Selecting and using language, symbols, and texts to communicate

Phys. Ed.

Skills

Information Skills, Numeracy Skills, and Work and Study Skills

As students develop knowledge and understanding in health education and physical education, the importance of information skills, work and study skills, and numeracy skills increases. Students will be required to collect, retrieve, process, and interpret data and to use appropriate technologies to present it. Health education and physical education encourage students to develop sound working habits, to work independently as well as in groups, and to take increasing responsibility for their own learning.

Social and Co-operative Skills

use negotiation and conflict resolution skills to find positive solutions or to help a group reach consensus.

participate effectively as responsible citizens in a democratic society;

demonstrate a sense of responsibility for the well-being of other people and for the environment;

demonstrate consideration for other people and show such qualities as integrity, reliability, trustworthiness, aroha, fairness, diligence, tolerance, and manaakitanga;

acknowledge individual differences and demonstrate respect for the rights of all people;

recognise, analyse, and respond appropriately to discriminatory practices and behaviours;

exercise leadership skills;

demonstrate the principles of fair play in situations where people are involved in physical activities;

participate appropriately in a range of social, cultural, and physical settings;

accept various roles and take responsibility, as a member of a group, for jointly decided actions and decisions;

demonstrate effective relationships with other people and work in co-operative ways to achieve common goals;

Problem-solving Skills

evaluate processes, decisions, actions, and outcomes.

implement decisions;

make informed choices;

enquire, research, and explore options and consequences;

make connections and establish relationships;

identify, describe, and redefine problems and analyse them from a variety of perspectives;

exercise imagination, initiative, and flexibility;

think critically, creatively, reflectively, and logically;

Communication Skills

use up-to-date information and communication technologies.

present a case clearly, logically, and convincingly;

demonstrate skills of discrimination and critical analysis, particularly in relation to information provided by the media;

respond

advocate;

assert themselves;

listen;

sensitively to the needs and feelings of other people;

express their needs and feelings clearly and confidently;

Self-management and Competitive Skills

take responsibility for their own health, physical activity, and safety, using appropriate skills to protect their bodies from harm and abuse.

exercise self-discipline and take responsibility for their own actions and decisions;

approach challenge, change, stress, conflict, competition, and feelings of success and failure in constructive ways;

manage time and other resources effectively;

set, evaluate, and achieve realistic goals;

demonstrate the skills of self-appraisal and self-advocacy;

show initiative, integrity, commitment, perseverance, courage, tolerance, and adaptability;

demonstrate a sense of self-worth and personal identity;

Physical Skills

apply specialist skills in areas of interest, including recreation, sport, and work.

use physical skills in competitive situations;

demonstrate physical skills in relaxation;

demonstrate physical skills for personal safety and first aid;

use physical skills in play, games, formal exercise, dance, and daily life;

use physical skills for personal expression;

use physical skills to develop and extend their personal capabilities;

use fundamental movement skills, including locomotor, non-locomotor, gross, and manipulative actions;

Concepts

Key learning areas

Healthy communities and environments

Relationships with other people

Movement concepts and motor skills

Personal health and physical development

Technology

Indicators Strands AO's

Nature of technology

Characteristics of technological outcomes

Understand that technological outcomes can be interpreted in terms of how they might be used and by whom and that each has a proper function as well as possible alternative functions.

Understand that technological outcomes are products or systems developed by people and have a physical nature and a functional nature.

Characteristics of technology

Understand that technology is purposeful intervention through design.

Technological knowledge

Technological systems

Understand that technological systems have inputs, controlled transformations, and outputs.

Technological products

Understand that technological products are made from materials that have performance properties.

Technological modelling

Understand that functional models are used to represent reality and test design concepts and that prototypes are used to test technological outcomes.

Technological practice

Outcome development and evaluation

Investigate a context to communicate potential outcomes. Evaluate these against attributes; select and develop an outcome in keeping with the identified attributes.

Brief development

Describe the outcome they are developing and identify the attributes it should have, taking account of the need or opportunity and the resources available.

Planning for practice

Outline a general plan to support the development of an outcome, identifying appropriate steps and resources.

Guidance

Social Studies

Strands & AO's

Level 4

Understand how formal and informal groups make decisions that impact on communities.

Understand how producers and consumers exercise their rights and meet their responsibilities.

Understand that events have causes and effects.

Understand how exploration and innovation create opportunities and challenges for people, places, and environments.

Understand how people pass on and sustain culture and heritage for different reasons and that this has consequences for people.

Understand how the ways in which leadership of groups is acquired and exercised have consequences for communities and societies.

Level 3

Understand how the movement of people affects cultural diversity and interaction in New Zealand.

Understand how early Polynesian and British migrations to New Zealand have continuing significance for tangata whenua and communities.

Understand how people remember and record the past in different ways.

Understand how people make decisions about access to and use of resources.

Understand how people view and use places differently.

Understand how cultural practices vary but reflect similar purposes.

Understand how groups make and implement rules and laws.

Level 2

Understand how the status of Maori as tangata whenua is significant for communities in New Zealand.

Understand how people make significant contributions to New Zealand’s society.

Understand how places influence people and people influence places.

Understand how time and change affect people’s lives.

Understand how cultural practices reflect and express people’s customs, traditions, and values.

Understand how people make choices to meet their needs and wants.

Understand that people have social, cultural, and economic roles, rights, and responsibilities.

Level 1

Understand how the cultures of people in New Zealand are expressed in their daily lives.

Understand how places in New Zealand are significant for individuals and groups.

Understand how the past is important to people.

Understand that people have different roles and responsibilities as part of their participation in groups.

Understand how belonging to groups is important for people.

Economic World

Continuity and Change

Place and Environment

Identity, Culture, and Organisation

NZ Maths

OnlineNumeracyProfDev01

NZMathsContentTutorials

nzmaths_co_nz

NZCERMathsConceptMaps

Number Knowledge

MathsStdYr1-8

have own copy

MathsManipulatives

DecimalMisconceptions

ARB

pw

guide

User

arb

Planners

login

click link

Strands and AO's

Material world

Chemistry and society

Relate the observed, characteristic chemical and physical properties of a range of different materials to technological uses and natural processes.

Properties and changes of matter

Compare chemical and physical changes.

Group materials in different ways, based on the observations and measurements of the characteristic chemical and physical properties of a range of different materials.

Physical world

Physical inquiry and physics concepts

Explore, describe, and represent patterns and trends for everyday examples of physical phenomena, such as movement, forces, electricity and magnetism, light, sound, waves, and heat. For example, identify and describe the effect of forces (contact and non-contact) on the motion of objects; identify and describe everyday examples of sources of energy, forms of energy, and energy transformations.

Planet Earth and Beyond

Astronomical systems

Investigate the components of the solar system, developing an appreciation of the distances between them.

Interacting systems

Investigate the water cycle and its effect on climate, landforms, and life.

Earth systems

Appreciate that water, air, rocks and soil, and life forms make up our planet and recognise that these are also Earth’s resources.

Living world

Evolution

Explore how the groups of living things we have in the world have changed over long periods of time and appreciate that some living things in New Zealand are quite different from living things in other areas of the world.

Begin to group plants, animals, and other living things into science-based classifications.

Ecology

Explain how living things are suited to their particular habitat and how they respond to environmental changes, both natural and human-induced.

Life processes

Recognise that there are life processes common to all living things and that these occur in different ways.

Nature of science

Participating and contributing

Explore various aspects of an issue and make decisions about possible actions.

Use their growing science knowledge when considering issues of concern to them.

Communicating in science

Engage with a range of science texts and begin to question the purposes for which these texts are constructed.

Begin to use a range of scientific symbols, conventions, and vocabulary.

Investigating in science

Ask questions, find evidence, explore simple models, and carry out appropriate investigations to develop simple explanations.

Build on prior experiences, working together to share and examine their own and others’ knowledge.

Understanding about science

Identify ways in which scientists work together and provide evidence to support their ideas.

Appreciate that science is a way of explaining the world and that science knowledge changes over time.

English Online

yr 4-6

What else

Insects

newspapers

AO's

Strands

delivery

presenting

writing

speaking

reception

viewing

reading

listening

Learning Sequences

asTTle

TKI Exemplars
Science
Maths
English

Learning Progressions

NZ Curriculum
resource bank
AO's All subjects and levels

Tools

Thinking Hats
MindMapping
Mindomo
FreeMind
Presentation
PREZI

Albac0re

deanhuds@myvuw.ac.nz

PowerPoint Word Count

Everything

NZ Education recommended links
Educators Reference
has full blown plans
Times Education TES
dig
HudsonDean

Maori

Basic Terms refer: appendix
Back to Kura301
Legends
Proverbs
he-kupu-footer.gif
Wiata
Vocab
100 Words

General Literacy

ESL printables
Smart Kiddies
Bubbledome
Carl's Corner (US)
Sparkle Box UK
KB Teachers

General Maths

SmartKiddies
)tak1
Huddy
Generate worksheets as PDF
The Problem Site
K12 Gina Otto
Hot Chalk
BBC
Figure It Out
Teachers' Notes only. Doesn't include Student Books
Beginning School Mathematics
learnnc.org
cemc2.math.uwaterloo.ca > Mathfrog
nzmaths.co.nz > Measurement-sites
biotechlearn.org.nz > Themes > Biotech at home > Fish into face cream and algae into paint what is niwa up to
nrich.maths.org > Public > Index
nrich.maths.org > Public > Search ? ...
treadwell.co.nz > Www Mch 2005
nationalstrategies.standards.dcsf.gov.uk > Node > 20875
Planning dcsf UK
KutaSoftWare
worksheets
activities
Numeracy World

Pre School

Jan Brett
Tutpup
Star Fall