Green Screen by Do Ink makes it easy to create incredible green screen videos and photos. The green screen effect works by combining images from multiple sources into a single video. These images can come from photos or videos in your camera roll, or from the live video camera. With Green Screen by Do Ink, you can tell a story, explain an idea, and express yourself in truly creative and unique ways.
Platform: iOS Cost: $2.99 Grades: All
Read a review of the Green Screen app on Common Sense Education. Teacher Cast has this article about how to use Green Screen on iPads in both a makerspace and classroom. This article on Smore has tips for getting started with Green Screen as well as activity suggestions and videos. And this post on Makerspace Education has free downloadable guides for the app, plus student challenges and resources.
Watch this video (1 min 30 sec) for a kid-guided tour through the app:
We are so excited to reunite with our fantastic library community next Thursday, Sept. 26th at the St. Cloud Public Library! We’ll be in the Bremer Room and our event is from 4-7pm but please feel free to stop in and leave as your schedule allows! Email Angie (ajordan @ cmle. org) with any questions.
This year is going to be even more exciting than usual for CMLE and we want you all to get an inside look at what we’re working on.
And we want to point out that if you work in a member school library, you can pick up your own VR kit to bring back to your school! Just email admin @ cmle.org to begin the application process. (It’s simple, we promise!!) Or, RSVP below and we’ll contact you.
The American Association of School Librarians (AASL) announced their picks for Best Apps for Teaching & Learning 2019. “Apps recognized foster the qualities of innovation, creativity, active participation, and collaboration and are user friendly to encourage a community of learners to explore and discover. “
If you are interested in the best apps for your library, media center, or classroom, you can read our 2019 series here or find all past apps discussed in our archives.
“EarthViewer allows students to visualize changes to Earth’s surface over its four billion year history. Students can interact with a moveable globe, similar to Google Earth, and animate four time scales – modern, ice age, paleo, and ancient Earth. Overlays can be added to show the locations of current borders and cities, important fossil finds, and impact craters. Animated charts comparing temperature, oxygen, carbon dioxide, day length, luminosity, and biodiversity allow students to investigate relationships between these variables over geologic time. EarthViewer also features in depth articles and videos as well as a detailed list of external references and a teacher quick guide are also included.”
Platform: iOS & Android Cost: FREE Grades: 6-12
Read teacher reviews of this app on the Common Sense Education site. EarthViewer is included in this article sharing some of the best free Android apps for STEM and in this article describing ways to incorporate science apps for the classroom by Fizzics Education. It is also included in this article about suggested apps to use when teaching geography from Supporting Education.org.
Watch this one-minute video to see how one educator incorporates the app into her lessons about plate tectonics and continental drift:
Each week we assemble a collection – a bouquet, if you will – of books you can read for yourself, or use to build into a display in your library. As always, the books we link to have info from Amazon.com. If you click a link and then buy anything at all from Amazon, we get a small percent of their profits from your sale. Yay!!! Thanks!!! We really appreciate the assistance! 💕😊
This week, we are investigating unusual jobs. Learning about what other people do for work every day is something I’m always interested in learning about, and these books let us take a look into some unique worlds! If you want more, check out this list on Goodreads: Interesting Jobs Nonfiction
Odd Jobs: Portraits of Unusual Occupations by Nancy Rica Schiff Who blows the bugle at the Kentucky Derby? Who dusts the dinosaur bones at the Smithsonian? Who sniffs dog breath for a living? Who measures the breasts of live models? ‘Odd Jobs’ introduces you to the real people who perform these and other truly peculiar jobs. In sixty-five intimate portraits, photo essayist Nancy Rica Schiff captures the personalities and occupations of these oddball professionals, providing a short profile of each. A photograper for twenty years, Schiff has spent a good portion of that time discovering the behind-the-scenes people who do what others can’t (or won’t) do.
Smoke Gets in Your Eyes: And Other Lessons from the Crematory by Caitlin Doughty Most people want to avoid thinking about death, but Caitlin Doughty—a twenty-something with a degree in medieval history and a flair for the macabre—took a job at a crematory, turning morbid curiosity into her life’s work. Thrown into a profession of gallows humor and vivid characters (both living and very dead), Doughty learned to navigate the secretive culture of those who care for the deceased.
Minding the Manor: The Memoir of a 1930’s English Kitchen Maid by Millie Moran Born in 1916 in Norfolk, Mollie Moran is one of the few people still alive today who can recall working “downstairs” in the golden years of the early 1930’s before the outbreak of WWII. She provides a rare and fascinating insight into a world that has long since vanished. Mollie left school at age fourteen and became a scullery maid for a wealthy gentleman with a mansion house in London’s Knighsbridge and a Tudor manor in Norfolk.
Call the Vet: Farmers, Dramas, and Disasters – My First Year as a Country Vet by Anna Birch When fresh-faced, newly qualified vet Anna arrives in the seemingly sleepy Dorset village of Ebbourne, little does she know that this tiny rural community is about to change her life … Straight in at the deep end, Anna faces two tricky calvings, an emergency call-out to a frightened mare, lots of mad cats (and mad cat women) and one enormous dog with an injured leg and a threatening bark. Spirited and determined, Anna quickly finds her feet and falls in love with rural life, including Ebbourne’s eccentric characters and their animals.
The Hungry Ocean: A Swordboat Captain’s Journey by Linda Greenlaw Known to millions of readers of The Perfect Storm as the captain of the Hannah Boden, sister ship to the Andrea Gail, Linda Greenlaw is also known as one of the best sea captains on the East Coast. Here she offers an adventure-soaked tale of her own, complete with danger, humor, and characters so colorful they seem to have been ripped from the pages of Moby Dick.
State Library Services is sharing this exciting opportunity to bring the program Girls Who Code to your school! Definitely check out their website and get the details below:
Minnesota State Library Services has partnered with Girls Who Code (GWC) this year to bring free computer science learning opportunities to our community. Girls Who Code Clubs are FREE after-school programs for 3rd-5th or 6th-12th grade girls to join a sisterhood of supportive peers and role models and use computer science to change the world. Please note, this program targets, but is not limited to, girls. Participants not only learn hard coding skills and computational thinking, but they’ll also learn project management skills, collaboration, bravery, resilience, how to positively impact their community, and so much more.
When you start a GWC Club, you’ll gain access to free resources, flexible plug and play curriculum, funding opportunities, ongoing support, alumni opportunities for your young learners, and more! There’s no computer science experience needed to get started since GWC is there for you every step of the way. Apply now with the quick 15 min Clubs Application through our partnership or learn more about how to get started by joining the next live 30 min webinar!
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