The module is attached as a Canvas export package.This module, authored by …
The module is attached as a Canvas export package.This module, authored by a synergy of teams across University of Technology Sydney, helps you to situate sustainability in your discipline.For any feedback or questions, please contact: christina.brauer-1@uts.edu.au, jennifer.wallace@uts.edu.au. Please note, Christina Brauer and Jenny Wallace uploaded this resource, but it was authored by a team of academics, curriculum and learning designers, digital content officers and sustainability experts at UTS.It is an introduction to sustainability concepts, and includes videos, readings, quizzes, polls and a reflection. It is useful to anyone who is interested in discovering and raising awareness around sustainability and the Sustainable Development Goals.Cover image attribution: DSC_0016 by Colleen Morgan is licensed under CC BY 2.0.
***This curriculum is provided by The Edible Schoolyard Project with full permission …
***This curriculum is provided by The Edible Schoolyard Project with full permission to share*** Understanding Organic: Connections to Action in the Garden Classroom is a garden and classroom-based curriculum for middle to high school students that explores the concepts and meanings of organic agriculture. The curriculum consists of a short preparatory unit, a sequence of ten core lessons, and twelve optional extension inquiries that can also be taught as standalone lessons. The ten core lessons utilize hands-on explorations of organic practices and feature textual analysis and open discussions to examine the complex meanings of organic. The final project workbook introduces students to a social action project in which students apply their knowledge and experiences to enact justice-oriented change related to organic. We recommend that you start by reading the curriculum overview linked below before reading individual lessons.
In this assignment, students will create a fictional person with a disability, …
In this assignment, students will create a fictional person with a disability, describe how their needs could be met in a classroom setting, and work with a partner to discuss possible challenges and opportunities. There is an option to turn the material created in this assignment into an assignment as a practice of regenerative Open Educational Resources and Open Pedagogy.
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