All posts by Angie

AASL Best Digital Tools 2021: Scratch

AASL released its list of Best Digital Tools for Teaching and Learning 2021! This year’s list took into special consideration how well these tools work for remote/distance students. The resources enhance learning and encourage the following qualities:

  • Innovation/Creativity
  • Active Participation
  • Collaboration
  • User-Friendly
  • Encourages Exploration
  • Information/Reference

We share these resources every year and you can explore our archive of past recommendations here.

We’ve heard great things about Scratch at CMLE! Coding is such an important skill and we love that this app is for younger students (or total newbies!).

Scratch allows learners and educators to program interactive stories, games, and animations — and share creations with others in the online community.”

Check out this review of Scratch from Common Sense Education which includes feedback from over one hundred teachers who have used the app! In this article, PC Mag says Scratch is their go-to Editor’s Choice when it comes to intro to coding programs. And if you (like me) have a slighter younger student interested in learning to code, check out Scratch JR! PBS Kids even has this app that works with Scratch JR so kids can create games and stories using favorite characters!

Grades: 1-10 (Scratch Jr. K-2)

Students chat in this 2 min video about the ways they enjoy creating with the app!

AASL Best Digital Tools 2021: Copyright & Creativity

AASL released its list of Best Digital Tools for Teaching and Learning 2021! This year’s list took into special consideration how well these tools work for remote/distance students. The resources enhance learning and encourage the following qualities:

  • Innovation/Creativity
  • Active Participation
  • Collaboration
  • User-Friendly
  • Encourages Exploration
  • Information/Reference

We share these resources every year and you can explore our archive of past recommendations here.

Copyright is a big deal and it’s easy to get overwhelmed. If you work in a school library or media center, you might be asked questions or expected to share knowledge about copyright. This FREE resource can help!
Their website has engaging videos, actual feedback from both students and educators, and specific teaching resources for elementary, middle, and high school plus professional development and copyright & distance learning.

Copyright & Creativity is a full suite of free K-12 resources that teach the essentials of copyright and fair use and how they work together to encourage creativity. Resources include in-class lesson plans, plug-n-play lesson slides, learning videos, visual aids, and a professional development course for teachers. Rather than just emphasizing what copyright prohibits, the goal is to offer useful and positive information about what copyright allows and how students can successfully navigate and rely on copyright in their own roles as creators.

Watch this 2 min video to get a sample of the curriculum:

AASL Best Digital Tools 2021: Typing.com

AASL released its list of Best Digital Tools for Teaching and Learning 2021! This year’s list took into special consideration how well these tools work for remote/distance students. The resources enhance learning and encourage the following qualities:

  • Innovation/Creativity
  • Active Participation
  • Collaboration
  • User-Friendly
  • Encourages Exploration
  • Information/Reference

We share these resources every year and you can explore our archive of past recommendations here.

Typing is such an essential skill and this engaging tool makes it fun for students to learn! Plus, it fulfills ISTE and Common Core Standards. If your students like earning badges or winning competitions, they’ll definitely enjoy using this resource!

Grades: K-12

“Typing.com is clean, colorful typing practice for any level  with Common Core and ITSE standards correlations. Scope and Sequence curriculum engages students with gamification opportunities to self-direct towards achievement with class competitions and other games to participate in and badges, stars, and certifications to achieve, print, and share with friends, parents, or colleagues. Class level settings and customizable lesson modules allow educators to  differentiate instruction to accommodate students at any level and pace.”

Common Sense Education has this review of the app and Clever.com gives this overview of the resource which includes many reviews from teachers.

Watch this 4 minute video and learn how to setup the app and use it with your students!

Read Minnesota! Holiday Gift Guide from U of M Press

If you love MN books as much as we do, this is the holiday gift guide for you. The University of Minnesota Press has books from a great variety of genres: children’s books, environmental, memoir, travel guides, natural history, cookbooks, and more. And they’ve gathered them up for you here in this lovely little guide. Check your local library if you want a physical copy or read it online here. I know it instantly gave me plenty of gift ideas as well as titles to add to my TBR! (Plus, right now, you can get 30% off! No, this is isn’t a sponsored post, we’re just excited about MN books 🙂 ).

Some books we’re excited to read:

Yang Warriors by Kao Kalia Yang, illustrated by Billy Thao
“In this inspiring picture book, fierce and determined children confront the hardships of Ban Vinai refugee camp, where Kao Kalia Yang lived as a child. Accompanied by the evocative and rich cultural imagery of debut illustrator Billy Thao, the warriors’ secret mission shows what feats of compassion and courage children can perform, bringing more than foraged greens back to the younger children and to their elders. In this unforgiving place, with little to call their own, these children are the heroes, offering gifts of hope and belonging in a truly unforgettable way.”

A Natural Curiosity: The Story of the Bell Museum by Lansing Shepard, Don Luce, Barbara Coffin, and Gwen Schagrin
“A richly illustrated tour of Minnesota’s premier natural history museum after 150 years. Since its humble start in 1872 as a one-room cabinet of curiosities, the University of Minnesota’s Bell Museum of natural history has become one of the state’s most important cultural institutions. Drawing on a wealth of materials unearthed during the museum’s recent move, this gorgeously illustrated book chronicles the remarkable discoveries and personalities that have made the Bell Museum what it is today.”

Plants Have So Much to Give Us, All We Have to Do Is Ask: Anishinaabe Botanical Teachings by Mary Siisip Geniusz
“The first complete resource for the practical use of plants in the Anishinaabe culture and the stories that surround them In Plants Have So Much to Give Us, All We Have to Do Is Ask Mary Siisip Geniusz makes Anishinaabe botanical information available to native and nonnative healers and educators and emphasizes the Anishinaabe culture that developed the knowledge and practice. Teaching the way she was taught—through stories—Geniusz brings the plants to life with narratives that explain their uses, meaning, and history.”

Waterfall: A Novel by Mary Casanova
“Trinity Baird’s hope for independence is tenuous, especially when her family has the final say—and the power to lock her away. In her third Rainy Lake historical drama, Mary Casanova takes us back to pristine and rugged northern Minnesota. Informed by historical figures, by the burgeoning growth of women’s rights in the early twentieth century, and the complicated issue of mental illness and how “difficult” women were silenced, Waterfall offers a compelling story of a young woman’s fight to find her way.”

The Steger Homestead Kitchen: Simple Recipes for an Abundant Life by Will Steger and Rita Mae Steger with Beth Dooley
“Personal and simple, earthy and warm—recipes and stories from the Steger Wilderness Center in Minnesota’s north woods. This is an inspiring and down-to-earth collection of meals and memories gathered at the Homestead, the home of Arctic explorer and environmental activist Will Steger, located in Minnesota’s north woods. Interwoven with dozens of mouth-watering recipes—for simple, hearty meals shared around home chefs’ own homestead tables—are Steger’s exhilarating stories of epic adventures exploring the Earth’s most remote regions.”

AASL Best Digital Tools: Diverse BookFinder

AASL released its list of Best Digital Tools for Teaching and Learning 2021! This year’s list took into special consideration how well these tools work for remote/distance students. The resources enhance learning and encourage the following qualities:

  • Innovation/Creativity
  • Active Participation
  • Collaboration
  • User-Friendly
  • Encourages Exploration
  • Information/Reference

We share these resources every year and you can explore our archive of past recommendations here.

This week we’re talking about the impressive tool Diverse BookFinder. This resource is focused on sharing BIPOC picture books, with a focus on “who” is portrayed, but also “how” they are being portrayed. Start with the article “What Does a Diverse Collection Look Like?” and try out their Collection Analysis Tool.

Grades: K-3 (target audience) but useful for all ages.


“Diverse BookFinder
 is a catalog of trade picture books published or distributed in the U.S. since 2002 that includes:A Unique Circulating Collection: Diverse BookFinder collects all depictions of Black and Indigenous people and People of Color (BIPOC) in picture books. Anyone with a library card can check these books out through Interlibrary Loan.A Search Tool: Diverse BookFinder is first-of-its-kind online, searchable database making it easier for educators to locate and explore picture books featuring BIPOC characters.A Source of Critical Data: Diverse BookFinder provides real-time data on WHO (which BIPOC characters) is depicted and — using unique book categories — HOW they are depicted in diverse picture books.A Collection Analysis Tool (CAT): Diverse BookFinder offers a free, online tool designed to help libraries diversify their picture book collections.”

Learn more about the details of this app from this article by Literary Fusions. Reading Is Fundamental has this blog post explaining more of the tools Diverse BookFinder offers. And this page from I’m Your Neighbor lists books and other resources similar to Diverse BookFinder.

Watch this one minute video explaining their Collection Analysis Tool: