Saturday, August 30, 2025
Rick Steves Classroom
Saturday, August 23, 2025
YouTube: A Teacher's Best Friend
As an educator, I'm always looking for go-to resources. I happened on this graphic about the bounty of teaching channels on YouTube at Educators Technology the other day. (Educators Technology is a resource in and of itself. I wrote about it in early June. I learn something from their Facebook page almost every day!)
I love how this infographic divides the channels by subject area. Likewise, I love how many of my tried and true favorites are listed, which makes this a super one-stop-shopping teacher resource! Just in time for back-to-school!
Saturday, August 16, 2025
New Year, New Mindset: A Garden of Ideas
Summer always feels like an invitation to breathe differently. It's a good respite after 10 long months of teaching. It's a time and space to create life differently, reset, and refresh.
- In Quebec City, I could see the connectedness of both history and people as I stood in this fortified city, gazing upon centuries-old walls that were originally designed to protect, but now serving as an embrace of the many who gather in this multicultural city.
- In Montreal, I stood amongst the 1976 Olympic Park, now reimagined & "repurposed" through innovation to bring joy to visitors by way of the Biodome and surrounding sights that are now a concert stadium, a pool, a planetarium, and more. The same could be said of my experience at Bota Bota Day Spa, a former ferry boat turned health and wellness oasis.
- In the Midwest, I drove stretches of highway from Chicago to the center of the state to reunite with family... much in the same way I walked stretches of beach in Ocean City, Maryland. This opened time and space to think about pace: in life, in the moment, and even ultimately thinking forward to this fall's school year and how I want to run my classes.
Connection. Curiosity. Perspective.
These 3 guiding principles are the same things I want to bring back with me to the upcoming school year and to my classroom.
Teaching, like traveling, is not about the destination, but rather the journey. It's about what grows and happens in between. It's what we take in when we slow down and let the unexpected shape us. Teaching too is like gardening. It is the roots that anchor everything down. They support the growth and harvest ahead.Before the first school bell rings, here are some nature-centric points to ponder while putting up bulletin boards, unpacking boxes, and setting up shop. Plant these questions like seeds in your mind. Growth comes from steady care and the courage to nurture what matters.
🌱 How can I "grow forward" this school year ahead?🌱 What connections can I make (to both people, students, and ideas)?
🌱 Where can I grow in my curiosity and shift my perspective?
🌱 How can I innovate and create when needed, shooting and rooting for potential not perfection?
🌱 How can I remind myself that "letting go" is part of growth: letting go of expectations, self limitations, fear of failure, control (always a hard one), the past and "how things have always been done." One thing I’m letting go of this year…
🌱 How can I make it a year to stretch, branch, and bloom....as a person, as a teacher, as a global citizen in a partisan world, as an educator navigating this ever-expanding edtech world?
🌱 How can I teach smarter not harder, always aligning with these values?
🌱 This year, I want to feel more ______ in my teaching.
🌱 A student strength I want to notice (or encourage) more this year…
🌱 A space in my classroom I want to reimagine or make more alive…
🌱 One edtech tool I’m excited to try (or try differently)…
Saturday, August 9, 2025
Unpacked: Summer's Travel Souvenirs
This summer I've been very fortunate. I've been able to see....
- The beach & waves of the Atlantic Ocean
- The small towns and coastal sights of the Eastern Shore of Maryland
- The mountains and quaint towns of New England
- The traffic of New York City and the New Jersey Turnpike via rental car
- The majesty of Canada's Montmorency Falls while hiking about
- The skyline of Old Montreal from the top of the La Grande Roue de Montréal (ferris wheel)
- The view of historic Vieux-Québec City & across-the-river Lévis by ferry, funicular, and foot
- The quaint homes and busy life of DC's Dupont Circle neighborhood
- The Chicago skyline from the air, flying into Midway airport
- The flat farmlands of the Midwest prairie
Saturday, August 2, 2025
Coral In Crisis
1. Real-Time Coral Bleaching Tools
- Allen Coral Atlas--this website tracks real-time satellite data on bleaching risk, reef habitat, and human stressors.
- NOAA Coral Reef Watch--this website shows weekly heat stress maps, temperature anomalies, and historical comparisons.
- Reef Check – Participate in global reef monitoring efforts.
- iNaturalist – Record marine species sightings, tag reef health, and connect with a global community of observers.
- Marine Debris Tracker – Document plastic waste near coastal and reef areas.
- NBC News' article: 84% of the World’s Coral Reefs Hit by Worst Bleaching Event on Record
- The Guardian's article: ‘Catastrophic’: Great Barrier Reef hit by its most widespread coral bleaching, study finds
- Scientific American's article: Coral Crisis: Great Barrier Reef Bleaching Is "The Worst We've Ever Seen"
Jeopardy-style game, created by me at factile.com: https://www.playfactile.com/jeopardy-game/mcce2bax7w, Image from https://ejfoundation.org/news-media/corals-and-communities-ejf-report-highlights-devastating-impacts-of-climate-crisis-on-reefs
Saturday, July 26, 2025
Easy Actions You Can Do To Tend Our Planet
An environmental question for the ages. If you find yourself asking these same questions, here's a compilation I created from the visuals I found on 1 Million Women's Facebook page. Just as titled, they are "10 easy actions you can do to look after the planet this week." Click through to see all the slides.
Easy to do, and necessary to share.
As you are going into the week ahead, which of the 10 can you do?
- Be a flexitarian
- Rethink your modes of transportation
- Chill out your laundry
- Go LED
- Take action with your local/national leaders
- Shop & use less
- Eat why you buy--fridge-wise
- Push away plastic
- Eco-invest when it comes to your banking
- Come up with your own solutions and share!
Saturday, July 19, 2025
Wonderful Ways to Embrace the Summer
Images created at Canva.com, using Canva images and Ordinary & Happy's Facebook pages https://www.facebook.com/ordinaryandhappy Presentation link: https://www.canva.com/design/DAGrdlXbb1A/ubmcu_vGl5V24clXE88-mg/view?utm_content=DAGrdlXbb1A&utm_campaign=designshare&utm_medium=link2&utm_source=uniquelinks&utlId=hb8637527c4
Saturday, July 12, 2025
Plastic Free July
- Plastic Free July's website:
- To learn, go to their Ideas & solutions
- For inspiration from others, check out their What Others Do page
- Take their Plastic Free pledge where you can get inspired by their visual gallery of pledge cards
- The Story of Stuff's "Fight Plastic Pollution" page
- Plastic Bank's Facebook page
Friday, July 4, 2025
Independence Day & The Declaration of Interdependence
Where are you on your Civics education? When was the last time you read the Declaration of Independence, written July 4, 1776? If it's been awhile, you can read it here at the National Archives.
The 4th of July brings with it all the celebration of a national holiday and a day off of work: parades, pools, barbeques, and fireworks. Bigger than that though, it brings with it the ideas central to our nation: freedom, autonomy, self-determination.
But, in a world growing more complex by the year with digital advancements, AI, social media, innovation, technological growth, environmental issues, climate change, and more--perhaps we're also on the cusp of needing more. Yes, we're celebrating our independence, but maybe there's also a need to celebrate our interdependence. Ways that we are all connected to each other and our planet, requiring not only life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness, but perhaps also an approach and vision toward shared responsibility.
In doing so, we take note on how local actions ripple outwardly to our global community. How our stewardship of the Earth is tied not only to our greater purpose but also our greater connection. A vision toward sustainability and how caring for our shared home will impact everyone with the cleanliness of the water, air, the soil that grows our food, and the energy that powers this planet of ours.
Knowing and understanding this interdependence is what environmental literacy is all about.
Maybe this holiday as we are thinking about flags, fireworks, and freedom, maybe its time to think about freedom not about standing alone, but standing together. Maybe its worth create your own Declaration of Interdependence by filling in the blanks below, in the style of the Declaration of Independence's Preamble:
Saturday, June 28, 2025
The Environmental Cost of AI
Along my research travels, I ran across this infographic from Educators Technology that Med Kharbach, PhD. It describes the environmental impacts of AI. With us all on our computers all the time, we don't think that one more website might have as big of an impact as it does. But clearly, as it shows below, it's not just the website. There's the energy consumptions, carbon footprint, mineral mining & resource depletion, multiple levels of pollution, and transporation costs. It's a lot to consider here while technology's innovation solves many of our problems, it also creates new ones too... all of which highlights the importance of addressing environmental issues and making it a planetary priority!
Images from https://www.facebook.com/photo/?fbid=1092111519614816&set=a.558590699633570
Saturday, June 21, 2025
Pride Month: Out In the Wild

The waving rainbow flags are pretty and the parades and events can be entertaining. But more importantly, they are empowering. Just as the planet needs biodiversity to thrive, so do we as humans. There's no thriving in nature on sameness. We need the richness of diversity to keep our food webs and habitats healthy; in doing so, we keep our plants and animal species from becoming endangered or extinct. Our wild variety is what maintains our environmental resilience. Our communities and cultures, like our ecosystems, are the healthiest and most vibrant when varied and diverse. Skin colors, sexual/gender orientations, religious beliefs, and all the differences in between.
Nature seemingly is neutral--and yet, that isn't always the reality. Politics have creeped into environmental issues in more ways than one--and with the onset of social media, there's certainly way too much politics.
Additionally, the outdoor world isn't as gender-non-specific as you'd imagine. A lot of the outdoor industry is geared to straight, white males. That can make it hard for LGBTQ+ and BIPOC (Black, Indigenous, and People of Color) folks to feel comfortable out in nature. Instead, they can feel more "outsiders" than "out in nature-ers." Outdoor spaces may not always feel safe--both physically and as a place to feel emotionally safe to be out and openly queer. Hate crimes are real, and sadly, LGBTQ+ people are at a higher risk of being victims of these. People not only deserve safe places, but they want and need to feel included, represented, and like they are a part of a community of like-minded individuals...where they are surrounded by connection versus limitations, segregation, or exclusion.
Along those lines, representation and seeing yourself in certain circumstances matter. People matter. Everyone's uniqueness matters. The right to feel comfortable in spaces where you want to be...they matter. Everyone is entitled to the right to be comfortable in their own skin, living a life that works for them, being treated with kindness and respected for who they are. Outdoors or environmental education affinity groups can help to build a more inclusive outdoors, as can the knowledge, the acceptance, and the intersection of LGBTQ+ pride along with racial or environmental justice and outdoor recreation too.There’s a growing field of study known as Queer Ecology. Queer Ecology counters the assumption that nature is rigid or binary. There's a lot of fluidity out there in nature: species that change sex (clownfish and slipper limpets) and same-sex partner paired animals (penguins, bonobos monkeys), and male-birthing seahorses. Imagine if we had that level of openness in our human species and greater communities.
So maybe for the remainder of this Pride Month, now that schools are out and kids, teens, and grown-ups alike are all out and about, playing outside more than before, we can celebrate not only the healthiness of nature's biodiveristy but that of our human kind too. Inviting anyone to climb trees, hike trails, and find their space and place in nature, in a safe way, in a welcoming way, in an everyday way!For more resources that embrace the intersection of pride, planet, environmental & social justice, check out the following:- National Forest Foundations' article: These LGBTQIA+ Leaders are Creating Space for Pride Outdoors
- Sierra Club's article: Out, Proud, & Outdoors: 5 Organizations that Help Members of the Queer Community Experience the Outdoors
- Pride Outside's resource page: Organizations and Initiatives Connecting the LGBTQ Community and the Outdoors
- National Park Foundation's article: Finding Pride Outside: The LGBTQ Community is Overcoming Barriers, Finding Joy, Sharing History, and Creating Space Outdoors
- Children & Nature's Celebrating Pride Month (which includes links to many resources, organizations, and inspirational stories)
- Muddy Paddle Club's post: Why We Need Pride in Outdoor Learning
Timing, as they say, is always everything.
Given this, please take note if you or a loved one need these of a crisis lifeline service, the Trevor Project is here for you. The Trevor Project provides advocacy, affirmation, eduation, and crisis support 24/7 for LGBTQ+ youth. Crisis services include:
- Lifeline—The only national 24/7 crisis intervention and suicide prevention lifeline for LGBTQ+ young people under age 25, available at 1-866-488-7386.
- Chat—A 24/7 free instant messaging service for LGBTQ+ youth that provides live help from trained counselors, open daily.
- Text—A 24/7 free service through which LGBTQ+ young people can text a trained counselor of The Trevor Project for support and crisis intervention, available daily by texting START to 678678.
- To learn more, go to the Trevor Project's website.
Saturday, June 14, 2025
The Invisible Rights That Hold Us: Flag Day 2025
So this Flag Day, while the flags are raised for our country--a country with a long, layered history based on principles, resilience, strength, and democracy while also flawed and imperfect--let’s raise our awareness too of these other rights. These invisible rights. Let's protect them, and in doing so protect each other.
Sometimes that comes quietly in observation, and sometimes we need to speak up when it counts. Here are three places that can help you do that:
- Learn how environmental law protects invisible rights at Earthjustice.
- Explore how enviornmental rights & human dignity are intertwined at The Center for Human Rights and the Environment.
- See how businesses are rethinking their impact in protecting our shared future via climate action at We Mean Business Coalition.
Saturday, June 7, 2025
Ahhhh, Summer! The Glory Days for Teachers!
By the time we get there, there's total truth to the statement: "There's no tired like end-of-the-year-teacher tired."
This year, my school did a total box-up, prepping for the next school year in portables (aka: "educational cottages") as our school undergoes a major rebuilding project. So it takes the above statement to a new level: "There's no tired like end-of the year-teacher tired topped with packing an entire elementary school." The movers started in earnest, carrying away boxes and furniture the day after school got out this week. It's going to be a multi-day event! My room was already packed, so I was helping others with fully-packed rooms of instruments, art supplies, and science equipment. There's a lot of stuff in schools, that's for sure!
So as I'm sitting at the cusp of summer, with the glory of summer days, down time, pool fun, day trips, personal projects, and more ahead... I know a large part of summer for me (in addition to relaxation and recalibration) is also free exploration and time to soak in what I want to learn. I have my books I want to read (because "reading season is here"), but I also have websites and podcasts to explore. Maybe this is because my profession is me: I'm a teacher and a lifelong learner. The two go hand in hand.
One of my first stops is going to be a recent Facebook page/website discovery I've made: Educators Technology. (He's on all the other socials too--check out his About page.) In addition to the topic being the core of my being, Educators Technology has a wealth of resources, graphics, articles, and more to ponder, investigate, and dive into. It's a blog that was started in 2010 by Canadian educator Med Kharbach, PhD, and now 15 years later is highly acclaimed, referenced, and followed by K-12 educators. His simple yet detailed infographics drew me in from his Facebook page.
Here are some great resources for my educator friends out there from Educators Technology. (If necessary, click images for clearer versions). Best part--learning happens on our schedule. Maybe at the pool, possibly the beach with sand between our toes, or between naptime and cocktail hour! Cheers!
Intro image from https://www.secondaryenglishcoffeeshop.com/2017/06/schools-out-for-summer-teacher-challenge.html
Saturday, May 31, 2025
Reading Season Is Here
Summer is here! Longer days of sun, pool-beach-boat plans abound.... and life starts slowing down as June, July, and August heatwaves head our way. Sounds like reading season to me!
I read all kinds of books: mysteries, romance, coming of age tales, non-fiction, work-related reads, chick-lit, biographies, young adults/kids books, and more. This past year, I've become a big fan of audio books, especially when driving about the world or doing laundry. It makes for the perfect escape and travel mate!
If you are a bibliophile like me, you might be looking for a few good books for your lazy, hazy days of summer ahead.Here are 8 booklists where you can find over 120 books to inspire your eco-reading this season:
- Piqosity's Environmental Literature for Earth Day--divided by genre
- Penguin Random House's Environmental Science Books--divided by topic
- Climate Action's Booklist--divided by reading levels
Saturday, May 24, 2025
Black Birder Week 2025: May 25--May 31
To learn more, check out these resources:
Saturday, May 17, 2025
Yay or Nay to "No Mow May"?
- Allow your lawn to flourish with wildflowers (preferably native) to provide safe comfort and nectar for pollinating bees and butterflies.
- Promote biodiversity by creating a yard habitat for a variety of wildlife.
- Improve your soil health by letting your grass grow longer, which in turn aids in water retention.
- Save your own time and effort by letting your lawn go “au naturel.”
- Reduce pollution by leaving your lawn mower in your garage.
- Can create a healthier, more resilient lawn that is more drought resistant.
- If not tended properly, you can inadvertently create an unwelcome pests: ticks, mosquitoes, and rodents, to name a few.
- You grow more weeds than grass or maybe some invasive species take root, which then takes up an unruly life of its own, overtaking the “good grass.”
- You may even get some unwanted tree seed growth that blow your way in the wind. Woody plants over time are harder to get rid of than weeds (should you change your mind later on with the no-mow business).
- Some home owner associations and local municipalities get a little grumbly over the overgrowth. Might be worth checking you HOA rules and bylaws, which might come with fines.
- Long grass gets heavy over time and the blissful meadow you were hoping for may come to look like a neighborhood eyesore and a no-mowed abandoned lot instead. (see HOA above!)
- Niall Garden's YouTube Video: "No Mow: Yes or No? | Everything You Need to Know! | No Mow May"
- AP New's "No Mow May? Good intentions, bad approach, critics say" by Jessica Damiano (May 2023)
- Monarch Gardens LLC's "Just Say No to No Mow May" (April 2023)
- Greenwise Team's "No Mow May: Pros & Cons of This Pollinator Movement" (April 2022)
- Rewinding.com's "The Surprising Downside of #NoMowMay" by Sheila Colla (May 2022)
Saturday, May 10, 2025
Happy Mother's Day 2025
May all who tend each other out there (including you, Mother Earth), have a glorious Mother's Day weekend ahead.
To the human mother, rocking her child in the wee small hours, tending to knees and needs, always taking care of thankless deeds....
To the animal mother, shielding her young, whether furred or winged, sheltering the den, fiercely protective & guarding them time and again....
To Mother Earth herself, cradler of forests, keeper of ocean currents, arms wide to the sky where birds soar and fly high....
Thank you for your gift of giving, your love of living, your shelter, warmth, protection, guidance, and endless strength you share.
It is through your raising--whether by heart, hands, paws, wings, rain, sunshine, breath--that we are fed, taught, and shown the path to grow, to heal, to take root, and to soar.
Happy Mother's Day!
Image created using Magic Media tools of Canva.comSaturday, May 3, 2025
Hummingbird Are Heading Back
Saturday, April 26, 2025
Science Resources for Everyone
Here in the days following Earth Day, as we are starting the roll to the end of the school year, you may still have science on the mind. What a great way to fill the end of the year timeline with some hands-on online student STEM/STEAM activities.
Here are some great science websites to check out:
- Smithsonian Science Education Game Center -- Here you'll find 12 STEM online games and 8 online simulations, all with grade level listings (ranging from Kindergarten to grade 8) with learning objectives & written by curriculum experts.
- Common Sense Media's Resources for Student Science Projects and Experiments -- These 23 online websites & apps lead to grade-level-listed tools where students can put their observation, analysis, data, and research skills to use in a fun way while investing the real world. Each site comes with a full review from Common Sense Media.
- PBS Learning Media: Videos, IInteractives, & Lessons Plans -- Free resources to "bring the world to your classroom" on subjects such as science, social studies, math, language arts, engineering & technology, health & PE, preschool, professional development, and world languages, sortable by grade level bands
Image created at Canva.com
Saturday, April 19, 2025
Earth Day 2025 Resources
Earth Day is around the corner: Tuesday, April 22nd.
Here are some ready resources for you...
- EarthDay.org is always has a wealth of information. In addition to a variety of resources, you can also find Earth Day activities taken around the world, ways to take action, Earth Day statements and imagery to add to your social media, lesson plans, quizzes-toolkits-fact sheets, on the Earth Hub, and more.
- Common Sense Media's "Free Activities for Earth Day and Learning About the Environment" has over 45 links to grade-level activities to investigate by yourself or with students.
- Common Sense Media also has a curated list of 27 climate education tools on their "Climate Change Resources for Students and Teachers"
- Columbia Climate School (from NYC's Columbia University) has a wealth of K-12 lesson plans & resources for teachers. Lots of good stuff here and on their whole website.
- Pick up the book Climate Champions: 15 Women Fighting for Your Future by Rachel Sarah. Written for young adult readers, even adults will learn a lot by these inspiring women. The book is divided into 3 categories: "Challenge the System,""Hold Fast to Science," and "Take a Stand for Justice." One of my favorite environmentalists, Katharine Hayhoe, is Chapter 6!
- Check out PBS's Carmen's Eco-Farm Adventure interactive for 6th through 12th graders.
- Boom Learning's article entitled Activities That Inspire Environmental Stewardship has some great ideas and activities while also good reasons to start environmental stewardship while kids are young.
- For other resources, be sure to check out Earth Day archives here at Green Team Gazette.
Sunday, April 13, 2025
Reduce, Reuse, & Recycle: 3 Decades of Teaching Materials Go In the Bin
It's Earth Month, so what better time to get your declutter on and go knee-deep-in reducing, reusing, and recycling!
I recently spent about 11 hours over the course of a weeekend doing just that--tho maybe more like neck-high-in!
My mission: to purge two 4-drawer file cabinets and a dozen tubs and boxes in my garage. Lighten up and make space.
The contents: 30+ years of teaching materials.
Having been a teacher since the fall of 1991 (with the exception of one year between schools where I was moving, pregnant, and having my first child), I've accumulated and created a lot of materials over the years. The majority of my career has been in homeroom classrooms in about 6 different elementary schools. Ten of the last 11 years, the majority of these teacher materials have been living in my garage--untouched as I moved from teaching 3rd grade (or 2nd... or Kindergarten... or 5th grade) to teaching Technology.
In this day and age, files are definitely more digital than anything, and it was time to "let go." No, not retiring yet, but my garage certainly was getting out of hand--just ask my husband! Plus I was settling on the answer of "no" to these questions: "Would I want to go back to a regular homeroom classroom? Would I ever use all of this again, even if I did?"
11 hours of purging about 33 years of materials gives you a lot of time to trip down memory lane. Upon pulling open the first file drawer, I had a pang. Did I really want to do this? I was thinking about the blood, sweat, toil, tears, and lamination/creation time I was about to get rid of. Yes, I'm doing this. It's time to reduce, reuse (via donation), and recycle!
7 garbage bags, 2 filled large yard lidded-recycle bins, at least a dozen bags and boxes of paper stacks of files to recycle, 20 or more dead binders that housed teaching units, and a half a dozen boxes of books to donate, I was in a lighter place.
Yes--I got to see windows into each and every school I have taught.
Yes--there's a lot of money that I have put into my teaching career.
The biggest yes--there's a lot of irony in recycling binders of environment and green school lesson plans a couple weeks before Earth Day. The "circularity" was striking, though maybe not picture perfect when describing the circular economy of true sustainability. But I did mentally hear the "Circle of Life" song from the Lion King going through my mind.
But, also yes--all of this served me at its time. It was there when I needed it. It all helped mold me into the teacher I am today.
And yes--some of the items (ditto copied resources and even transparency overlays from my early days in mid-1990s teaching) should have already been long gone. Maybe, just maybe, I've been an organized hoarder--or at least compiler of teaching materials. I was "curating" long before Pinterest even thought of it. Mine was just the file cabinet version.
The true moment of circularity for me came when my mission was completed and I realized there were far too many materials to put all out at the curb. Boxes of paper won't weather well when setting them out the night before an early trash/recycling pick up the next day. Given that, I loaded my dozen boxes into the back of the car and trekked to the local recycling center. Up and over the ledge into their bin all the boxes went.
A neat field trip we once took at the Maryland Green School I used to work at was to the local landfill and recycling center. I definitely flashed back as my files when floating in the bin.
Yes, full circle.
Graphic from https://www.pactcollective.org/pactresources/circularity, other images from my camera.