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  2. Resources for Teachers. This resource collection provides practical tips and resources for educators to support online learning through remote instructional practices and techniques while students learn from home. The resources below are grouped and organized by content including, Literacy, Writing and Math Resources, Online Instruction ...

  3. Resources for Learning at Home | U.S. Department of Education

    www.ed.gov/coronavirus/resources-for-learning-at...

    Resources for Learning at Home. Links to the materials below are for convenience as a potential resource for parents, students, schools, teachers, and other educators to use during this challenging time. The Department did not develop them, and we do not control or guarantee the accuracy, relevance, timeliness, or completeness of this information.

  4. ClassDojo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ClassDojo

    ClassDojo allows students, teachers and families to communicate. To use ClassDojo, teachers register for a free account and create "classes" with their students. They can give students feedback for various skills in class. These are customizable, and teachers can change the skills to adapt to the needs of the class or of the school.

  5. Create a Graph Classic-NCES Kids' Zone

    nces.ed.gov/nceskids/graphing/classic

    NCES constantly uses graphs and charts in our publications and on the web. Sometimes, complicated information is difficult to understand and needs an illustration. Other times, a graph or chart helps impress people by getting your point across quickly and visually. Here you will find four different graphs and charts for you to consider.

  6. Talk, Read and Sing Together Every Day! - U.S. Department of ...

    www2.ed.gov/documents/early-learning/talk-read...

    Encourage back-and-forth exchanges. • Tune into children’s interests and experiences and talk about them. • Take turns communicating. • Show that you are interested in what they are doing and listening to what they say. • Provide time for children to respond. 3. Invite children to talk about what they are doing.

  7. Resources for Parents and Families - Office of Elementary and ...

    oese.ed.gov/resources/learning-at-home/resources...

    This web-based resource from REL Central, REL Appalachia, and REL Northwest provides quick tips, evidence-based activities and games, and videos that families and caregivers can use at home to support math learning for children ages 2-8. The new resource complements and extends the What Works Clearinghouse practice guide Teaching Math to Young ...

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