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www.loc.gov/teachers/ Please select one primary source that appeals to you and take it with you to your seat.
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Library of Congress: Professional Development Opportunities for Teachers www.loc.gov/teachers/
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Learning Objectives: Participants will be able to navigate the Library of Congress website in order to… Find professional development opportunities for educators, Access primary sources from www.loc.gov/teachers,www.loc.gov/teachers Understand the value of using primary sources in instruction.
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www.loc.gov/teachers/ Connecting with Primary Sources 1. Take a close look at the primary source you have selected. 2. Compare your item with others. 3. Form groups based on the common theme or time period of your primary sources. 4. Create a title for your group of primary sources.
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147 million items 838 miles of bookshelves 470 languages 22,000 items arrive daily 10,000 items added to the collection daily 24.6 million items online 1.7 million visitors www.loc.gov/teachers/
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Library of Congress Homepage
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For Teachers
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Self-directed Online Modules
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Professional Development Builder
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TPS Partners & NEW Upcoming Professional Development Events -- Summer 2011 FREE Library of Congress Teaching with Primary Sources Workshops for K- 12 Educators. Dates and locations to be announced at www.ncce.org in May. www.ncce.org
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Summer Institutes
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Scenario #1: Your principal has asked you to share what you learned at the NCCE conference with your fellow teachers. You decide to share the ‘Connecting with Primary Sources’ activity. To prepare, you need to find the activity on the Teacher’s page and print out the primary sources. Where do you begin?
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Scenario #2: After the NCCE conference, you decide you want to learn more about using primary sources in the classroom. Traveling to Washington, DC is too far, so you decide to check to see if there are any Teaching with Primary Sources partners hosting workshops in your area. Where do you begin?
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Scenario #3: You return to your school after the NCCE conference and decide you want to learn more about using primary sources in the classroom – particularly how to use maps. You head to the Library of Congress website to see if there are any online modules that might give you more tips for using maps in the classroom. Where do you begin?
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Staying in touch Sign up to receive email updates Subscribe to the RSS feed Read our blog
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Reflect… 3 people to share with… 2 ideas to share… 1 area of the Teachers Page for further exploration…
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Links The Library of Congress: www.loc.govwww.loc.gov Teachers Page: www.loc.gov/teacherswww.loc.gov/teachers Professional Development Opportunities: http://www.loc.gov/teachers/professionaldevelop ment/ http://www.loc.gov/teachers/professionaldevelop ment/ Sara Suiter: ssuiter@loc.govssuiter@loc.gov
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