Check out this album created by Stephanie Connors and posted in the Rural Education group.
The Maine Department of Education & National Council for History Education are excited to announce a series of professional learning opportunities made possible by a grant from the Library of Congress Teaching with Primary Sources program specifically designed for rural Maine PK-12 teachers to acquire strategies for designing and implementing a community civics and inquiry-based project.
Details are included below:
Part A: Teaching with Primary Sources Online Course (December 2, 2024 - March 31, 2025) - Free, asynchronous, online Teaching with Primary Sources Course to acquire new strategies for analyzing primary sources, incorporating inquiry into your instruction, and accessing primary sources from the Library of Congress and more.
Part B: Saturday Colloquia (March 8, 2025, April 12, 2025, May 17, 2025 from 9am - 2:30pm) - Free, synchronous, online professional learning workshops led by expert historians, education specialists, and spotlight educators related to this year's theme: Geography of the Place We Now Call Maine.
Part C: Onsite Colloquium (Summer of 2025) - Free, onsite (TBD) professional learning opportunity in the summer of 2025. Sessions will focus on developing a community civics & place-based inquiry project with students. 15 teachers will be selected and receive up to $750 for project funding.
A flyer is attached with additional information. Sign up today to reserve your spot in 1 or all 3 parts. Stipends available for participation.
Art/Music English/Language Arts Mathematics Science Social Studies/History rural Maine
The Maine Department of Education & National Council for History Education are excited to announce a series of professional learning opportunities made possible by a grant from the Library of Congress Teaching with Primary Sources program specifically designed for rural Maine PK-12 teachers to acquire strategies for designing and implementing a community civics and inquiry-based project.
Details are included below:
Part A: Teaching with Primary Sources Online Course (December 2, 2024 - March 31, 2025) - Free, asynchronous, online Teaching with Primary Sources Course to acquire new strategies for analyzing primary sources, incorporating inquiry into your instruction, and accessing primary sources from the Library of Congress and more.
Part B: Saturday Colloquia (March 8, 2025, April 12, 2025, May 17, 2025 from 9am - 2:30pm) - Free, synchronous, online professional learning workshops led by expert historians, education specialists, and spotlight educators related to this year's theme: Geography of the Place We Now Call Maine.
Part C: Onsite Colloquium (Summer of 2025) - Free, onsite (TBD) professional learning opportunity in the summer of 2025. Sessions will focus on developing a community civics & place-based inquiry project with students. 15 teachers will be selected and receive up to $750 for project funding.
A flyer is attached with additional information. Sign up today to reserve your spot in 1 or all 3 parts. Stipends available for participation.
Art/Music English/Language Arts Mathematics Science Social Studies/History rural Maine
Thank you, I was using my phone and wasn’t quite sure if it had worked or not!
Kelli Burnham , I know you have a busy (and fun!) day going, so I worked a little magic to insert that wonderful image directly into your post. Sometimes when we work with collections from other institutions, those collections have some additional layers that make it a challenge to copy and paste. When that happens, I like to use postimage.org - a free, no-registration required, online image converter that lets me import and copy easily. That's what I used in this case, after downloading the image from the Digital Maine Repository.
Mark Davis , see below my reply to Kelli Burnham . For your Maine Central Railroad ad, I took a screenshot and then imported it into postimage.org before copying it and pasting it into your text box. Let me know if you have any questions!
To add clickable (active) tags here in the TPS Teachers Network, you can click on the #ADD TAG icon below the text box. We have standard tags by grade level and content area, but there's also the option to add customized tags. I can imagine lots of eclipse tags being added today!
Kelli Burnham , I know you have a busy (and fun!) day going, so I worked a little magic to insert that wonderful image directly into your post. Sometimes when we work with collections from other institutions, those collections have some additional layers that make it a challenge to copy and paste. When that happens, I like to use postimage.org - a free, no-registration required, online image converter that lets me import and copy easily. That's what I used in this case, after downloading the image from the Digital Maine Repository.
Try this link to access the flyer above:
Link to Celebrating Rural Maine Professional Learning Flyer