Brief overview of Shmoop's fun, rigorous Learning Guides & Teacher Resources. How to use Shmoop in the classroom.
Share this PowerPoint at a department meeting with your colleagues.
Shmoop content is written by educators and experts - master teachers and Ph.D. students from Stanford, Harvard, UC Berkeley, and other great universities.
Visit our Teacher Resource Center at: http://www.shmoop.com/teachers
Web & Social Media Analytics Previous Year Question Paper.pdf
Shmoop Overview for Teachers: Fun, Rigorous Resources for Your Classroom
1. Shmoop Overview for Teachers & Librarians http://www.shmoop.com/teachers/ Shmoop University, Inc. Confidential “ Best of the Internet” "The language is totally student-friendly... ...a very cool site."
2.
3. Students & Teachers Say… “ Shmoop has enriched my teaching and made literature accessible to ALL my students!” - Martha, HS teacher “ Shmoop makes me actually want to work. ” - Stephanie, 19 “ Shmoop is intentionally about the joy of learning .” - Paul, HS teacher Quotes from Shmoop focus groups of HS and College students, April 2008 Shmoop University, Inc. Confidential “ This website is my dream come true ” - Noel, 20
4. Things You’ll Learn on Shmoop Shmoop University, Inc. Confidential The Portrait of a Lady (written in 1880) shares a lot in common with TV’s “Gossip Girl” Emily Dickinson was a packrat Ernest Hemingway and James Joyce picked bar fights together in Paris Albert Einstein's 7th-grade teacher told him he "would never get anywhere in life." True story.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
17.
18.
19.
Editor's Notes
The conference organizers asked me to talk about “SERENDIPITY” In life In career and business In learning and teaching