THE ENGLISH HISTORY COLLABORATION PROJECt
hu·man·i·ty/(h)yo͞oˈmanitē/
noun
English and History are two subjects that fall under the category of humanities. Seeing the definition above, the two subjects go hand-in-hand.
Both study texts and require teachers to facilitate student learning via speaking, listening, reading, and writing.
The idea is simple: take two teachers from different departments and get them to collaborate on teaching strategies by sharing ideas and applying it to their classrooms.
noun
- the human race; human beings collectively.
- humaneness; benevolence.
- learning or literature concerned with human culture, especially literature, history, art, music, and philosophy.
English and History are two subjects that fall under the category of humanities. Seeing the definition above, the two subjects go hand-in-hand.
Both study texts and require teachers to facilitate student learning via speaking, listening, reading, and writing.
The idea is simple: take two teachers from different departments and get them to collaborate on teaching strategies by sharing ideas and applying it to their classrooms.
This is just an example page for my students.
20time_projectguidelines.docx | |
File Size: | 46 kb |
File Type: | docx |
20time_tedtalkrubric.docx | |
File Size: | 20 kb |
File Type: | docx |
Creating your proposal on Google docs:
- Open a new tab and log into your .net drive by going to drive.google.com and signing into your .net accounts. If you know how to create a new presentation, go ahead. If you are new to Google Docs, follow the directions below.
- Click on this link: http://goo.gl/1vwA1k This is the link to a sample presentation that I will share with you.
- Once you have this opened on your Chromebook, make a copy by going to "File" and then "Make a Copy." This will automatically place a copy of my sample presentation slide into your own "My Drive" location.
- Go to your drive and open it. It's now "yours" and ready for you to make changes to. It's as if I had a worksheet that I wanted you to work on, but I wanted to keep mine nice, so I made copies for you all to manipulate. Except in this scenario, YOU made the copy yourselves. Sure, you could also just create a proposal slide from scratch but having a sample to build off of will save you class time.
- Work on the slide. Add, delete, etc.
- Once you are done making your slide, go up to the "Share" button (it's blue in the right hand corner) and type in [email protected] OR [email protected] (depending on who your teacher is) under "People." Give me "View" permissions so I can just view it but not edit it. Once you do this, all of your slides will show up in my "Shared with Me" section of Drive. No paper. No print outs. All in my drive for safe keeping until your End of Quarter 1 Proposal Presentations! :)