When choosing content for my class to read, watch, and listen to, I've found it useful to think of myself as a curator. A great curator finds the most interesting and relevant material for a specific event and works to present it in a way that engages an audience. As teachers, we effectively curate multiple events for unique audiences five days a week for an entire school year. Textbooks are crucial, but we need more.
Fortunately, the vast amount of free educational material available on the Internet has made classroom curation much easier. Unfortunately, however, the sheer amount of content available can feel so overwhelming that you just might miss that one clip, infographic, chart, or lecture that will both engage your students and meet their specific educational needs.
This is where online education curators come in, and among them Open Culture reigns supreme. Open Culture touts itself as "The best free cultural & educational media on the web," and the claim is not far off. The first time you visit the site, look at the "Essentials" section in the upper right and spend a while exploring. Regardless of what you teach, chances are that the diligent, thoughtful folks at Open Culture have at some point found one or more free online resources that can take your lessons to the next level. Once you manage to pull yourself away from the Essential collections, check the post tags further down the page to narrow your search (I recommend the iPad tag, which I have only scratched the surface on.)
So the next time you fire up your browser to search for a video explaining how people spoke in Shakespeare's time, an infographic about relationships between scientific processes, an interactive timeline for understanding important historical events, or examples of how innovators use math to change the world every single day, don't go it alone; check out a curator!
Christopher Watson teaches 8th grade language arts at Eastwood Middle School. Connect with him on Twitter, where he goes by @schoolpivot, or check out his blog.
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