Instructional Videos - LMS
Transcription
Instructional Videos - LMS
FOREIGN LANGUAGE M School Resources www.ket.org/learn 1-800-432-0951 This book is designed to be used by teachers, librarians, media specialists, and school administrators in selecting, viewing, and recording KET’s programs. It is published annually and distributed to Kentucky teachers in K-12 classrooms. This book contains: • instructional television series for students on KET3 and • professional development television seminars for teachers and administrators • distance learning classes for secondary students • order form for teacher’s guides and videotapes • support services for KET resources, video production and technical needs Photo credits: Steve Shaffer and Jeff Gray, KET Special thanks to Rick McComb, Kentucky Department of Education, for providing many photographs for this book. Front and Back Cover Photos Credit: Rick McComb © Copyright 2006 KET, The Kentucky Network All rights reserved Printed with state funds. This book may be reproduced by Kentucky teachers. For downloadable pdf files of the KET Resource book, go to www.ket.org/itvvideos Printed on recycled paper. 2006/2007 M� •1 SOCIAL STUDIES 2006/2007 Introduction Y ou may be among the thousands of Kentucky teachers who have used KET EncycloMedia in the classroom. Or perhaps youʼve incorporated KET3 educational programming into your teaching or participated in professional development opportunities offered via KET4. You may have attended a workshop on media literacy conducted by one of our education consultants, helped students enroll in our outstanding distance learning courses, or used an Arts Toolkit to teach your class about dance, drama, or visual arts. Or you may be new to KET, just beginning to discover what we offer Kentucky teachers and students. In any case, this book is your passport to our rich array of resources and services. As educational technologies advance, youʼll find that KET evolves with them. This year, KET EncycloMedia, the comprehensive online multimedia learning service launched in 2005, has been updated and expanded. Not only does it have a new look, it also offers new instructional features including audio clips, tutorials on educational software, and a writing prompt generator. And this wonderful service is still available free of charge to Kentucky public schools. When you tune in to KET3, youʼll notice more changes. Weʼve extended our broadcast schedule of quality educational programming to 21 hours a day, seven days a week. Weʼve also reorganized the schedule by core content area and established consistent daily air times for popular programs like Cyberchase, Reading Rainbow, and News Quiz: This school year, I hope you and your students take advantage of KETʼs many resources—all designed with your needs and priorities in mind. Whether youʼre looking for exciting professional development tools like Literacy Strategies in Action, a new CD- ROM for primary teachers produced in partnership with the Kentucky Department of Education, or relying on continuing services like Distance Learning, youʼve come to the right place. Please browse through the Resource book, visit us at www.ket.org/education/, and check out KET3 and KET4. I know youʼll like what you see. Malcolm Wall Executive Director For information about KET resources, call the Education Division at (800) 432-0951 or visit our Web site at www.ket.org/education. 2 • 2006/2007 M INTRODUCTION TABLE OF CONTENTS introduction Series and Programs Deleted for 2006/2007 ......................... 7 Kentucky’s Learning Goals & Academic Expectations ....... 8 KET Support Services ............................................................. 10 KET Regional Education Consultants .................................. 11 How To Contact Us at KET .................................................... 11 KET3 Schedule of Instructional Programs Eastern Time/Central Time .............................................. 12 SEE CROSS-REFERENCED LIST OF OTHER INTER-DISCIPLINARY PROGRAMS ........... 27 KET ELECTRONIC FIELD TRIPS instructional videos F ARTS AND HUMANITIES F F ARTS TOOLKIT PROMO: DRAMA (Revised and Expanded) ..................................................... 14 ARTS TOOLKIT PROMO: VISUAL ARTS .......... 15 ARTS TOOLKIT PROMO: DANCE........................... 15 DANCE Dancing Threads: Community Dances from Africa to Zuni (Primary-8) K ................................................................ 15 DanceSense (5-10) K C........................................................... 16 MULTI-ARTS Arts Express (Primary-6) K ..................................................... 16 Winter: Season of Darkness/Season of Light (4-12) K C . 17 Arts Alive (6-9) ........................................................................... 17 Humanities Connections (7-12) K ................................... 17 MULTI-ARTS PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT F Art to Heart (PD for Pre-Primary) K C ............................... 18 MUSIC Mrs. Cabobble's Caboose (Primary) ....................................... 19 Old Music for New Ears (Primary-8) K C .......................... 20 F 2007 World's Largest Concert (Primary-6) C ........................ 21 Hymnody of Earth (5-12) K .................................................... 21 Richard Davis on Jazz Teleconference (PD) K ..................... 21 Sing Out for Freedom (7-12) K C ......................................... 21 2003 Great Kentucky Gospel Shout Out (7-12) K C.......... 22 Exploring the World of Music (9-12) C ................................. 22 THEATER Wind in the Willows (Primary-8) K C................................. 22 Appleseed John (3-7) K C ..................................................... 23 Liz's Circus Story (6-12) K C ................................................ 23 Words Like Freedom/Sturdy Black Bridges (9-12) K C ... 23 VISUAL ARTS The Big A (Primary) C ............................................................. 23 Posie Paints (Primary-3) C ...................................................... 24 Doodle (Primary-12) C............................................................. 24 Art On Air (4-6) K C .............................................................. 24 From the Shadows of the River (4-12) K C ................. 25 Crafting Tradition (5-12) K C ........................................ 25 Art History I: A Century of Modern Art (6-12) ..................... 25 Art History II: A Survey of the Western World (6-12) ......... 26 F Electronic Field Trip Through Geologic Time (4-12) K C . 28 Electronic Field Trip to a Beef Cattle Farm (4-12) K C . 28 Electronic Field Trip to a Coal Mine (4-8) K C .................. 29 Electronic Field Trip to a Horse Farm (4-12) K C ....... 29 Electronic Field Trip to a Newspaper (4-12) K C .............. 29 Electronic Field Trip to a Pig Farm (4-8) K C .............. 29 Electronic Field Trip to a Veterinary Clinic (4-12) K C . 29 Electronic Field Trip to a Watershed (K-8) K C ................. 30 Electronic Field Trip to an Orchard (4-12) K C ........... 30 Electronic Field Trip to Fort Harrod and Fort Boonesborough (4-8) K C ........................................ 30 Electronic Field Trip to Horse Cave Theatre (5-12) K C .. 31 Electronic Field Trip to KET (4-12) K C .............................. 31 Electronic Field Trip to Mammoth Cave (4-12) K C ... 31 Electronic Field Trip to Perryville (4-12) K C ............. 31 Electronic Field Trip to the Aviation Museum of Kentucky (3-12) K C ............................ 32 Electronic Field Trip to the Falls of the Ohio (4-12) K C . 32 Electronic Field Trip to the Forest (4-8) K C ............... 32 Electronic Field Trip to the Kentucky Center for the Arts (6-12) K C ...................................................... 32 Electronic Field Trip to the Kentucky Opera (6-9) K C .. 33 Electronic Field Trip to the Louisville Zoo (4-12) K C ...... 33 Electronic Field Trip to the Mountain Homeplace (4-12) K C ................................................ 33 Electronic Field Trip to the National Weather Service (5-12) K C ...................................... 34 Electronic Field Trip to the Post Office (Primary) K C .. 34 Electronic Field Trip to the Speed Museum (6-12) K C ...35 Electronic Field Trip to Toyota (4-12) K C .......................... 35 Electronic Field Trip to White Hall Historic Site, Home of Cassius M. Clay (4-12) K C ............................. 35 TABLE OF CONTENTS Looking At Picasso (8-12) ......................................................... 26 World of Our Own: Kentucky Folkways (8-12) K C ........ 26 Ellis Wilson—So Much to Paint (9-12) K C ........................ 27 Looking at Painting (9-12) K C ............................................ 27 SEE CROSS-REFERENCED LIST OF OTHER INTER-DISCIPLINARY PROGRAMS ........... 35 FOREIGN LANGUAGE Lyric Language (Primary-6) ..................................................... 36 GERMAN Deutsch macht Spass! (German Can Be Fun!) (4-6) K ....... 36 JAPANESE Teach Me Japanese (Primary-5) ............................................... 37 SIGN LANGUAGE F Signing Time! (Preschool-3) C ................................................ 38 SPANISH Arte y más! (Primary) K .................................................... 38 Saludos (Primary-5) ................................................................... 39 The Spanish Media Collection (Primary-12) ......................... 40 F INDICATES NEW/REVISED FOR 2006/2007 INTRODUCTION 2006/2007 M� •3 TABLE OF CONTENTS Los Constructores de Cerritos del Uruguay: Uniendo el Pasado y el Futuro K .................................... 41 Destinos (9-12) ............................................................................ 41 MATHEMATICS Tumbletown Tales (K-3) ............................................................ 42 Mathica's Mathshop I (Primary) C ................................ 42 Mathica's Mathshop II (Primary) C ............................... 43 Math Can Take You Places (3-6) C ............................................. 43 The Eddie Files (3-6) C............................................................. 43 Cyberchase (3-7) C................................................................... 44 It Figures (4)................................................................................ 44 Math Works (5) ........................................................................... 44 Solve It (6) ................................................................................... 45 Math Vantage (7-9) C ............................................................... 45 Math Basics (9-12) K C .......................................................... 46 Statistics: Decisions Through Data (10-12) C ...................... 46 SEE CROSS-REFERENCED LIST OF OTHER INTER-DISCIPLINARY PROGRAMS ........... 46 PRACTICAL LIVING/VOCATIONAL STUDIES F F Signing Time! (Preschool-3) C ................................................ 47 I'm Safe on Wheels (K-2) .......................................................... 48 Different and the Same (Primary) C ..................................... 48 Head To Toe (Primary) C ....................................................... 48 Just For Me (Primary) C ......................................................... 49 Well, Well, Well with Slim Goodbody (Primary) C ............ 49 The Character Education Series (Primary-4) ......................... 49 Econ and Me (Primary-5) C ................................................... 50 Looking from the Inside/Out (Primary-5) C ...................... 51 Drug Avengers (Primary-6) C................................................ 51 Red Light, Green Light, Have You Heard? (Primary-6) C . 51 Fat Albert & the Cosby Kids (Primary-7) .............................. 52 When I Grow Up (1-4) C .................................................. 53 Inside Story with Slim Goodbody (2-6) C ..................... 53 Bullying/Character Education (3-5) ....................................... 53 Healthy Body Healthy Mind (4-8) C ..................................... 54 Life Skills/Character Education Series (5-9) ......................... 54 Violence: Reversing the Trend (5-10) ................................ 55 TV411 (5-12) C ........................................................................... 55 Middle School Kids Speak Out (6-9) ...................................... 56 Flirting or Hurting: Sexual Harassment In Schools (11-12) C ............................................................... 56 Women's Work (6-12) ................................................................ 56 Careers in Printing (7-12) K C .............................................. 57 Teen Issues (7-12) ....................................................................... 57 College and You—Why Not? Tackling College with a Disability (9-12) K C ...................................................... 58 Street Skills (9-12) K C ........................................................... 58 Career Encounters (10-12) C .................................................. 59 Workplace Essential Skills (9-12) K C ................................. 59 Truth and Consequences: Federal Crimes and Teenagers (11-12) K .................................................... 60 SEE CROSS-REFERENCED LIST OF: CONSUMER DECISIONS CAREER & TECHNICAL EDUCATION OTHER INTERDISCIPLINARY PROGRAMS ................................................. 60 4 • 2006/2007 M INTRODUCTION READING/WRITING BASIC SKILLS/VOCABULARY DEVELOPMENT Cursive Handwriting Series A (Primary) C ........................ 61 Know It All (3-6) ........................................................................ 61 Creating Stories and Music (4-5) K C ................................. 62 Write Ideas (4-6) K .................................................................. 62 Student Lessons with Barry Lane (4-8) K ...................... 63 English Composition: Writing for an Audience (9-12) ........ 63 Latin Roots for English Word Power (9-12) K .................... 64 Everyday Voices (10-adult) K C ............................................ 64 READING MOTIVATION/LITERATURE Between the Lions (Primary) C ............................................. 65 Reading Rainbow (Primary) C .............................................. 65 Teletales (Primary) ..................................................................... 67 Cover to Cover (P-4) C ........................................................... 69 Telling Tales (Primary-8) K C ......................................... 69 Beyond the Page (3-5) C ......................................................... 70 Read On: Cover to Cover (4-5) C .......................................... 70 From the Brothers Grimm (4-8) ............................................... 71 More Books from Cover to Cover (5-6) C ............................ 72 An Electronic Conversation with George Ella Lyon (5-12) K C ........................................... 73 The Short Story (7-12) ............................................................... 73 James Still's River of Earth (7-12) K C................................. 73 bookclub@ket: James Still’s Legacy “River of Earth (9-12)” K C ............................................. 73 Living By Words (9-12) K C ................................................... 74 Shakespeare Shorts (9-12) C ................................................... 74 Signature (9-12) K C ............................................................... 74 SignatureLIVE (10-12) K C.................................................... 75 Voices & Visions (10-12) ............................................................ 75 SEE CROSS-REFERENCED LIST OF OTHER INTER-DISCIPLINARY PROGRAMS ........... 75 SCIENCE Backyard Safari (Preschool-Primary) C................................. 76 Up Close and Natural (Primary) ............................................. 76 Zoo Zoo Zoo (Primary) ............................................................. 77 Take a Look I (Primary-4) C................................................... 77 Forest Family Forever (Primary-5) ................................... 78 Concepts in Nature (Primary-6) ........................................ 78 The World of Nature II (Primary-6) .................................. 79 NASA SCIence Files (3-5) C ................................................... 79 Natureworks (3-6) C ............................................................... 80 Gee Whiz in Agriculture (4-5) C ..................................... 81 Real World Science (4-6) ..................................................... 81 Kentucky Afield for Kids (4-7) ................................................ 82 North American Biomes (4-8) C ............................................ 82 Kentucky's Natural Heritage (6-12) K.................................. 83 Work, Energy, and the Simple Machine (5-8) C ............ 83 Real Science! II (5-10) C .......................................................... 83 Real Science! III (5-10) C ......................................................... 84 Classic Animal Tracks (5-12) C .............................................. 84 The Complete Cosmos (5-12) C ............................................. 85 Explore More (6-8) C ................................................................ 85 NASA Connect (6-8) C ............................................................ 86 Inside the Living Cell (6-9) C................................................. 86 Passport to Weather & Climate (6-9) C ................................ 86 Life in Marine and Freshwater Environments (6-12) C ..... 87 Planet Neighborhood (6-12) C ............................................... 87 Inventing Flight (7-9) C .......................................................... 87 Lab Safety: The Accident at Jefferson High (7-9) .................. 88 The Biology Of... (7-12) C ....................................................... 88 F INDICATES NEW/REVISED FOR 2006/2007 SEE CROSS-REFERENCED LIST OF OTHER INTER-DISCIPLINARY PROGRAMS ........... 90 SOCIAL STUDIES CULTURE AND SOCIETY I Love Music (Primary-6) ......................................................... 91 My Beautiful House (Primary-6) C ........................................ 91 Hand in Hand (2-3) C ............................................................. 92 Native Americans Series (2-5) .................................................. 92 Great Native American Leaders (3-8) ..................................... 92 Great Native American Nations (3-8) ..................................... 93 Native American Exhibit (4-8) K........................................... 93 Passport to Japan - Konnichiwa (4-8) C ................................ 93 A Native Presence (4-12) K C ......................................... 94 Living the Story: The Civil Rights Movement in Kentucky (6-12) C .......................................................... 94 Living the Story: The Rest of the Story (6-12) C ................. 94 Kentucky Archaeology (7-12) .................................................. 95 ECONOMICS Entrepreneurs in Kentucky (1-12) K C................................ 95 Economics: The Production, Distribution, and Consumption of Goods and Services (4-6) ................. 96 Electric Money (8-12) C .......................................................... 96 GEOGRAPHY Kentucky GeoQuest (4) K C ........................................... 96 Rivers of North America "The Ohio River" (4-8) C ............ 97 U.S. Geography: From Sea To Shining Sea (4-8) ............. 97 Maps and Globes (4-12) C ................................................ 97 Rivers of the World (4-12) ....................................................... 98 GOVERNMENT AND CIVICS America's Special Days (Primary) C...................................... 98 My America (1-6) ...................................................................... 99 America's Veterans (2-9) C ................................................... 100 News Quiz (4-8) K ................................................................... 100 The Kentucky Legislature: Behind the Scenes (4-12) C ... 100 The Almost Painless Guide to American Civics (5-12) 101 Under 18: Under the Law (6-8) .............................................. 101 U. S. Constitution (6-12).......................................................... 102 Human Rights: Youth Perspectives (9-12) C .................... 102 A Bill of Rights: What No Just Government Should Refuse (10-12) ........................................................ 102 HISTORY Sacagawea (3-8) ........................................................................ 103 Kentucky's Story (4-5) K C ................................................. 103 Tracks: Impressions of America (4-8) C .............................. 103 F Colonial Williamsburg Electronic Field Trips (4-12) .......... 104 Kentucky in Africa (4-12) K C ..................................... 104 Kentucky's Underground Railroad Passage to Freedom (4-12) K C ............................... 105 Liberty Hall (4-12) C ............................................................. 105 The Prehistoric Mounds of Uruguay: Linking the Past and the Future (4-12) K C ................ 105 Women of Kentucky: Our Legacy, Our Future(4-12) K .... 106 Pyramid (5-9) C ....................................................................... 106 Our Presidents in American History (5-12) ......................... 106 The Remarkable Clarks (5-12) K C .................................... 107 Roman City Modules (5-12) C .............................................. 107 Ancient Civilizations (6-12) C ......................................... 108 Great Campaigns of the Civil War (6-12) ............................. 108 American Voices (7-12) C ...................................................... 108 Events of the 20th Century (7-12) ......................................... 109 Kentucky Chautauqua (7-12) K............................................ 109 The Middle Ages (7-12)........................................................... 109 America Past (8-12) C ............................................................110 Twentieth Century History (11-12) ........................................110 TABLE OF CONTENTS Inside Our Human Body (7-12) C ......................................... 89 Our Earth (7-12) C ................................................................... 89 NASA's Destination Tomorrow (9-12) C.............................. 89 Visualizing Cell Processes (9-12) C ....................................... 90 Viruses on the Rise (10-12) ....................................................... 90 SEE CROSS-REFERENCED LIST OF OTHER INTER-DISCIPLINARY PROGRAMS ..........110 Photo: Rick McComb Photo: Rick McComb INTRODUCTION 2006/2007 M� •5 TABLE OF CONTENTS TECHNOLOGY/MEDIA F F KET School Video Project 2006: My Kentucky Home (K-12) K C .............................................................111 KET School Video Project 2007: My Kentucky Home (K-12) K C .............................................................111 Media Mania (Primary-4) ........................................................111 Making News Quiz (4-12) K C ............................................112 Hollywood Homeroom: Producing Classroom Videos with Hollywood Magic (K-12) ..........................................112 Making Grimm Movies (6-12) ................................................113 Mountain Media (9-12) ............................................................113 Science Essential Science for Teachers: Physical Science (K-6) C ..119 Rediscovering Biology: Molecular to Global Perspectives C .......................................................119 Social Studies Bridging World History (9-12) C ..........................................119 Social Studies In Action: A Methodology Workshop, K-5 C ................................................................119 CEREBELLUM CORPORATION SERIES Principals: Leaders & Learners ...............................................119 DISTANCE LEARNING HIGH SCHOOL COURSES Physics Program K .................................................................114 AP Physics B and Honors Physics Program K .................114 German Program K ...............................................................114 Humanities Program K .........................................................115 Latin Program K .....................................................................115 SECONDARY GED...........................................................116 PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT ANNENBERG/CPB SERIES Arts and Humanities The Art of Teaching the Arts: A Workshop for High School Teachers (9-12) C ........................................117 The Arts in Every Classroom: A Workshop for Elementary School Teachers (K-5) C ..............................117 Connecting with the Arts: A Teaching Practices Library (6-8) C .................................117 Connecting with the Arts: A Workshop for Middle Grades Teachers (6-8) C .....................................117 Foreign Languages Teaching Foreign Languages K-12: A Library of Classroom Practices C ......................................................118 Language Arts/Reading Developing Writers: A Workshop for High School Teachers C 118 F Inside Writing Communities, Grades 3-5 (3-5) K C ..........118 Teaching Multicultural Literature: A Workshop for the Middle Grades (6-8) .....................................................118 Teaching Reading K-2: A Library of Classroom Practices (K-2) C................................................118 F Teaching Reading 3-5 Workshop (3-5) C.............................118 Write In the Middle: A Workshop for Middle School Teachers (5-8) C K .................................... 118/121 Education Theory and Issues Principles for Principals (K-12) C ........................................118 The Learning Classroom: Theory Into Practice (K-12) C119 Mathematics Insights Into Algebra 1: Teaching for Learners (6-12) C..119 Learning Math: Number and Operations C .......................119 F INDICATES NEW/REVISED FOR 2006/2007 6 • 2006/2007 M INTRODUCTION KET SEMINARS Arts and Humanities F Art to Heart K C ................................................................... 120 The Arts: A Content Course for Teachers K C ................. 120 The Arts II: West African Dance K C ................................ 120 The Arts III: Afro-Cuban Dance K ...................................... 120 Reading and Writing Authentic Publishing K C ................................................... 120 How To Improve the Quality of Writing Conferences K C .............................................. 121 F Inside Writing Communities, Grades 3-5 K C ................. 122 Write in the Middle: A Workshop for Middle School Teachers K C ......................................... 121 Social Studies Kentucky's Underground Railroad K C ........................... 121 Special Education About Autism K C ................................................................... 121 Your Child With Special Needs K C ................................... 121 Special Programming Childhood Obesity Prevention K C..................................... 122 Just Ask: A Call-In on Teen Depression K C ..................... 122 Promise Not to Tell? A Teacher’s Guide to Recognizing and Responding to Child Sexual Abuse C........................... 122 F Inside Writing Communities, Grades 3-5 K C ................. 122 Literacy Strategies in Action K ............................................. 123 More Reading Strategies in Action K .................................. 123 Teacher's Guide Order Form .......................................................... 124 Videotape Price List ......................................................................... 125 Videotape Service Order Form ...................................................... 126 Alphabetical Index ........................................................................... 127 F New or Revised for 2006/2007 C Closed Captioned K KET Production On KET EncycloMedia Series and Programs Deleted for 2006/2007 The following programs and series have been deleted from our schedule for 2006/2007. Any copies of these programs, whether recorded from KET broadcast or acquired through KET’s tape duplication service, must be erased by the start of the 2006/2007 year unless arrangements are made with the copyright owner to keep videotape copies for an extended period. A complete list of program deletions is on our web site at www. ket.org/education/updates/deletions2006-07.htm. Call the KET Education office at 1-800-432-0951 with any questions. How to Become an Alcoholic (Or How to Avoid It) Schools may keep their copy on tape for the life of the tape. You may not duplicate or broadcast the program, but you can circulate the copy you have. Many Voices The rights to this series have been withdrawn by the distributor. They do not offer retention rights. You need to erase all copies. MediaWorks This KET-produced series is dated. Therefore, we are pulling it from our schedule. However, you may keep your copy on tape for the life of the tape. Mountain Born: The Jean Ritchie Story Broadcast rights to this series have expired. KET is in the process of renegotiating rights. If rights become available, it will be added back to KET’s schedule. In the meantime, you may keep your copy on tape for the life of the tape. Multicultural Arts Series The rights to this series have been withdrawn by the distributor. They do not offer retention rights. You need to erase all copies. NASA Connect KET is dropping all programs from past seasons that are not part of this season’s lineup. However, you may keep your copies on tape for the life of the tape. If you missed any episodes, you can contact your local ERC (http://spacelink.nasa.gov/ercn/) for a video copy or view them free on the Internet via http://quest.nasa.gov/events/connect/index.html NASA SCIence Files (formerly NASA Why? Files) KET is dropping all programs from past seasons that are not part of this season’s lineup. However, you may keep your copies on tape for the life of the tape. If you missed any episodes, you can contact your local ERC (http://spacelink.nasa.gov/ercn/) for a video copy or view them free on the Internet via http://quest.nasa.gov/events/connect/index.html The Self-Management Skills Series Photo: Rick McComb This series is expensive and the usage is very low. To retain your copy at a cost of $10.00 per program or $200 for the whole series, contact; Maria Caprara Sunburst Visual Media/Teacher’s Media Company/Bureau for At-Risk Youth/Great Events Publishing/Wellness Reproductions/ChildsworkChildsplay 2 Kyline Drive, Suite 101, Department GC14 Hawthorne, NY 10532 Phone: 1-888-367-6368, ext. 6001 Fax: 1-914-347-1531 mcaprara@sunburstvm.com INTRODUCTION 2006/2007 M� •7 KENTUCKY’S LEARNING GOALS & ACADEMIC EXPECTATIONS GOAL 1: Students are able to use basic communication and mathematics skills for purposes and situations they will encounter throughout their lives. KY’S LEARNING GOALS & ACAD. EXPECTATIONS 1.1–Students use reference tools such as dictionaries, alma- nacs, encyclopedias, and computer reference programs and research tools such as interviews and surveys to find the information they need to meet specific demands, explore interests, or solve specific problems. 2.6–Students understand how living and nonliving things change over time and the factors that influence the changes. MATHEMATICS 2.7–Students understand number concepts and use numbers appropriately and accurately. 2.8–Students understand various mathematical procedures and use them appropriately and accurately. 1.2–Students make sense of the variety of materials they read. 1.3–Students make sense of the various things they observe. 1.4–Students make sense of the various messages to which 2.9–Students understand space and dimensionality concepts 1.5-1.9–Students use mathematical ideas and procedures to 2.11–Students understand mathematical change concepts 1.10–Students organize information through development 2.12–Students understand mathematical structure concepts they listen. communicate, reason, and solve problems. and use of classification rules and systems. 1.11–Students write using appropriate forms, conventions, and styles to communicate ideas and information to different audiences for different purposes. 1.12–Students speak using appropriate forms, conventions, and styles to communicate ideas and information to different audiences for different purposes. 1.13–Students make sense of ideas and communicate ideas with the visual arts. 1.14–Students make sense of ideas and communicate ideas with music. 1.15–Students make sense of and communicate ideas with movement. 1.16–Students use computers and other kinds of technology to collect, organize, and communicate information and ideas. GOAL 2: Students shall develop their abilities to apply core con- cepts and principles from mathematics, the sciences, the arts, the humanities, social studies, practical living studies, and vocational studies to what they will encounter throughout their lives. SCIENCE 2.1–Students understand scientific ways of thinking and working and use those methods to solve real-life problems. 2.2–Students identify, analyze, and use patterns such as cycles and trends to understand past and present events and predict possible future events. 2.3–Students identify and analyze systems and the ways their components work together or affect each other. 2.4–Students use the concept of scale and scientific models to and use them appropriately and accurately. 2.10–Students understand measurement concepts and use measurements appropriately and accurately. and use them appropriately and accurately. including the properties and logic of various mathematical systems. 2.13–Students understand and appropriately use statistics and probability SOCIAL STUDIES 2.14–Students understand the democratic principles of jus- tice, equality, responsibility, and freedom and apply them to real-life situations. 2.15–Students can accurately describe various forms of government and analyze issues that relate to the rights and responsibilities of citizens in a democracy. 2.16–Students observe, analyze, and interpret human behaviors, social groupings, and institutions to better understand people and the relationships among individuals and among groups. 2.17–Students interact effectively and work cooperatively with the many ethnic and cultural groups of our nation and world. 2.18–Students understand economic principles and are able to make economic decisions that have consequences in daily living. 2.19–Students recognize and understand the relationship between people and geography and apply their knowledge in real-life situations. 2.20–Students understand, analyze, and interpret historical events, conditions, trends, and issues to develop historical perspective. 2.21–(Incorporated into 2.16) ARTS AND HUMANITIES 2.22–Students create works of art and make presentations to explain the organization and functioning of living and nonliving things and predict other characteristics that might be observed. convey a point of view. 2.5–Students understand that under certain conditions nature 2.24–Students have knowledge of major works of art, music, tends to remain the same or move toward a balance. 8 • 2006/2007 M INTRODUCTION 2.23–Students analyze their own and others’ artistic products and performances using accepted standards. and literature and appreciate creativity and the contributions of the arts and humanities. KENTUCKY’S LEARNING GOALS & ACADEMIC EXPECTATIONS 2.25–In the products they make and the performances they present, students show that they understand how time, place, and society influence the arts and humanities such as languages, literature, and history. that although people are different, they share some common experiences and attitudes. 2.27–Students recognize and understand the similarities and differences among languages. 2.28–Students understand and communicate in a second language. PRACTICAL LIVING 2.29–Students demonstrate skills that promote individual well-being and healthy family relationships. based on ethical values. 3.7–Students demonstrate the ability to learn on one’s own. GOAL 4: Students shall develop their abilities to become responsible members of a family, work group, or community, including demonstrating effectiveness in community service. 4.1–Students effectively use interpersonal skills. 4.2–Students use productive team membership skills. 4.3–Students individually demonstrate consistent, responsive, and caring behavior. 4.4–Students demonstrate the ability to accept the rights 2.30–Students evaluate consumer products and services and and responsibilities for self and others. 2.31–Students demonstrate the knowledge and skills they tion for, and sensitivity to a multi-cultural and world view. make effective consumer decisions. need to remain physically healthy and to accept responsibility for their own physical well-being. 4.5–Students demonstrate an understanding of, apprecia4.6–Students demonstrate an open mind to alternative perspectives. 2.32–Students demonstrate strategies for becoming and remaining mentally and emotionally healthy. 2.33–Students demonstrate the skills to evaluate and use services and resources available in their community. 2.34–Students perform physical movement skills effectively in a variety of settings. 2.35–Students demonstrate knowledge and skills that promote physical activity and involvement in physical activity throughout lives. VOCATIONAL STUDIES 2.36–Students use strategies for choosing and preparing for a career. 2.37–Students demonstrate skills and work habits that lead to success in future schooling and work. 2.38–Students demonstrate skills such as interviewing, writ- ing resumes, and completing applications that are needed to be accepted into college or other postsecondary training or to get a job. GOAL 3: Students shall develop their abilities to become self-sufficient individuals. GOAL 5: Students shall develop their abilities to think and solve problems in school situations and in a variety of situations they will encounter in life. 5.1–Students use critical thinking skills such as analyz- ing, prioritizing, categorizing, evaluating, and comparing to solve a variety of problems in real-life situations. 5.2–Students use creative thinking skills to develop or invent novel, constructive ideas or products. 5.3–Students organize information to develop or change their understanding of a concept. 5.4–Students use a decision-making process to make informed decisions among options. 5.5–Students use problem-solving processes to develop solutions to relatively complex problems. GOAL 6: Students shall develop their abilities to connect and integrate experiences and new knowledge from all subject matter fields with what they have previously learned and build on past learning experiences to acquire new information through various media sources. 3.1–Students demonstrate positive growth in self-concept 6.1–Students connect knowledge and experiences from 3.2–Students demonstrate the ability to maintain a healthy 6.2–Students use what they already know to acquire new through appropriate tasks or projects lifestyle. 3.3–Students demonstrate the ability to be adaptable and flexible through appropriate tasks or projects. 3.4–Students demonstrate the ability to be resourceful and creative. different subject areas. knowledge, develop new skills, or interpret new experiences. 6.3–Students expand their understanding of existing knowledge by making connections with new knowledge, skills, and experiences. 3.5–Students demonstrate self-control and self-discipline. INTRODUCTION 2006/2007 M� •9 KY’S LEARNING GOALS & ACAD. EXPECTATIONS 2.26–Through the arts and humanities, student recognize 3.6–Students demonstrate the ability to make decisions CONSULTANTS/CONTACT Classroom Video Production This hands-on workshop introduces teachers and students to video production and includes information on how to: • Compose shots effectively • Use video equipment • Capture quality audio • Plan and evaluate productions • Write scripts for news, interviews, and original productions • Connect the writing process and the process of creating film and video KATHY QUINN • Explore careers in media Director of Education KET Workshops Whether you would like a brief update on new programs or a longer workshop on using our instructional resources effectively, a KET consultant can assist you at no charge. All our workshops support Kentucky and national academic standards. Workshops tying KET resources to your specific needs can be arranged. Here are some of the workshops we provide: KET Awareness Looking for effective teaching tools for your classroom? This workshop addresses available cross-curricular KET resources: • Instructional Television (ITV) • KET and Annenberg Professional Development • Distance Learning • Online Resources Effective Use of KET Instructional Resources Discover how ITV caters to multiple intelligences and supports Kentucky academic and technology standards. Participants will: • View clips from KET educational resources • Select content-appropriate ITV resources and support materials • Design activities/lesson plans to demonstrate how these resources can be used to meet academic standards KET EncycloMedia Learn how to incorporate KET EncycloMedia multimedia services and features successfully into classroom instruction. KET EncycloMedia Basic offers an overview of services, instructional tips, and hands-on experience with the website and its features. KET EncycloMedia Advanced is designed for users who are familiar with KET EncycloMedia but want to learn about more sophisticated ways to integrate it with various software programs, research techniques, and Internet resources. Telemedia Literacy This workshop demonstrates to teachers and students how to: • Think critically about video and film production • Identify cultural stereotypes, bias in the media, and techniques used to “sell” products and ideas • Appreciate the aesthetics of video and film production • Analyze techniques to enhance instruction across the curriculum Professional Development KET Professional Development sessions provide research-based opportunities to improve teaching and learning. More Reading Strategies in Action Develop your best practice reading strategies. Annenberg/CPB 10 • 2006/2007 M INTRODUCTION Join national experts and master teachers in the classroom for innovative learning in a wide variety of offerings for K-12 teachers. Online support materials are available. Arts Toolkits Bring the arts to life in the classroom as you implement lessons tied to Kentucky Arts and Humanities Core Content. JEFF GRAY Special Projects and Online Resources KET Produced PD Seminars KET produced PD seminars can be found on page 120 of this book. To schedule a KET Workshop or Professional Development, contact the KET Education Division, 600 Cooper Drive, Lexington KY 40502-2296 (800) 432-0951 or contact the KET Education Consultant for your region (see page 11 for contact information). Ready to Learn This training using KET programming as a learning catalyst is targeted for teachers and caregivers of children from birth to 8. To schedule, contact Carrie Grate (800) 432-0951, ext. 7451 or email cgrate@ket.org Technical Support KET has transitioned the delivery of school programming from satellite to its land-based digital television transmitters. If your school has not ordered or installed the proper DTV receivers and antennas, we urge you to do so as soon as possible. Without this equipment in place, you will not be able to access our instructional programming. If your school does not receive a digital signal, and you have not replaced your analog satellite receivers with a digital video player, please contact us for more information about alternative conversion options. For questions concerning digital receivers and antennas, existing reception equipment, and school A/V distribution systems, call the KET School Technical Services Coordinator, Mark Holt at 1-800-432-0951 X 7173 or visit our DTV web pages, www.ket.org/dtv/ schooldtv.htm. State price contract information can be found at www.ket.org/education/ tvcontract.htm. Look Us Up on the Web The KET website at, http:// www.ket.org/learn, offers Kentucky educators the ability to: • View and receive updated satellite and open broadcast schedules • Search the database of ITV programs • Locate available print materials to accompany programs • Download teacher’s guides with correlations to Kentucky Academic Expectations • Utilize additional content for KET Electronic Field Trips • Link to other supporting websites South Central Kathy Davis (606) 679-9424 KET Regional Office 526 Lake Forest Drive Somerset, KY 42503 kdavis@ket.org Voicemail: 1-800-432-0951, ext. 7903 North Central Larry Moore (502) 875-9002 KET Regional Office 220 Pinewood Avenue Frankfort, KY 40601 lmoore@ket.org Voicemail: 1-800-432-0951, ext. 7264 Central Northeast Jessica Lynch Andrews Manager (800) 432-0951, ext. 7274 KET, The Kentucky Network 600 Cooper Drive Lexington, KY 40502-2296 jandrews@ket.org Voicemail: 1-800-432-0951, ext. 7274 Missi Baker (606) 836-0474 KET Regional Office 145 Crestview Road Russell, KY 41169 mbaker@ket.org Voicemail: 1-800-432-0951, ext. 7265 Southeast Cynthia Warner (859) 624-2789 KET Regional Office 1729 Barnes Mill Road Richmond, KY 40475 cwarner@ket.org Voicemail: 1-800-432-0951, ext. 7902 CONSULTANTS/CONTACT West Carol Chapman (270) 683-7829 KET Regional Office 4512 Doe Run Owensboro, KY 42303 cchapman@ket.org Voicemail: 1-800-432-0951, ext. 7905 Carol Chapman/West Region Kathy Davis/South Central Region Larry Moore/North Central Region Missi Baker/Northeast Region Jessica Lynch Andrews/Central Region Cynthia Warner/Southeast Region HOW TO CONTACT KET EDUCATION DIVISION (800) 432-0951 General Information Rhonda Moberly–ext. 7261 email: rmoberly@ket.org Kathy Quinn–ext. 7260 email: kquinn@ket.org Child Development Programming Susan Hines-Bricker–ext. 7278 email: childdev@ket.org Distance Learning Schedules & Information Jane Ireland–ext. 7136 email: jireland@ket.org KET Web Services (K-12 education) KET e-news service Jeff Gray–ext. 7263 jgray@ket.org KTLN Information Mike Clark–ext. 7254 email: mclark@ket.org www.ket.org/KTLN Professional Development Seminars & Tape Orders Darlene Carl–ext. 7271 email: dcarl@ket.org Suzanne Prichard–ext. 7298 email: sprichard@ket.org Satellite Reception Information Mark Holt, ext. 7173 mholt@ket.org Scheduling and Programming (ITV) Rhonda Moberly–ext. 7261 email: rmoberly@ket.org Teacher’s Guide & Videotape Orders (800) 945-9167 email: tapes@ket.org COLLEGE CREDIT TELECOURSES Laura Orsetti (800) 432-0970 email: lorsetti@ket.org Scheduling and Programming (Evening/ Weekend) GED ON TV KET3 Calendar– Mailing Changes SECONDARY GED Janie Williams–ext. 7253 email: jwilliams@ket.org Rhonda Moberly–ext. 7261 email: rmoberly@ket.org Sharon Jackson (800) 538-4433 email: s.jackson@ morehead-st.edu INTERACTIVE LEARNING DIVISION (800) 333-9764 Call this number for help with equipment problems or to reach distance learning teachers or tutors. VIEWER REACTION LINE (800) 926-7765 Automated line for viewers’ comments about KET programs. Tonya Crum-ext. 7009 email: tcrum@ket.org INTRODUCTION 2006/2007 M� • 11 KET3 BROADCAST SCHEDULE 2006/2007 KET3 Digital Schedule of Instructional Television Programs Eastern Time/Central Time KETBroadcastSCHEDULE KET3 DIGITAL Check out the changes to KET3! KET3 has a completely new look this year. As part of KET’s continuing efforts to provide the most effective, diverse, and complete educational resources to Kentucky schools, KET3’s broadcast schedule has expanded to 21 hours a day, 7 days a week, of quality instructional television linked to Kentucky academic standards. In addition, KET3’s broadcast schedule has been reorganized by core content area, with each day of the week linked to particular academic disciplines. The popular programs Cyberchase, Reading Rainbow, Between the Lions, and KET’s News Quiz now have consistent daily air times that will be even easier for teachers to access. Weekend professional development programming blocks, PBS and PBS Kids programming, Inside Kentucky Schools, the U. S. Department of Education’s Education Parents Can Use, and teacher request blocks make KET3 an even more versatile instructional resource for Kentucky schools. Please continue to send us your suggestions and ideas for KET3. Stay tuned, keep in touch, and teach! Monday: Arts & Foreign Language Tuesday: Reading/Writing & Technology/Media Wednesday: Practical Living & Secondary GED Programs Thursday: Social Studies and Electronic Field Trip Programs Friday: Math & Science Saturday: National PBS programs, PBS Kids, and Teacher Requests Sunday: National PBS programs, PBS Kids, and Teacher Requests 12 • 2006/2007 M INTRODUCTION Sundays Weekly Mondays Weekly Tuesdays Weekly National PBS programs, PBS Kids, and Teacher Requests Arts & Foreign Language Reading/Writing & Tech/Media 12 midnight/11:00 pm CT – 4:00/3:00 am CT National PBS programs like Nova, Frontline, Nature, American Experience, and Masterpiece Theatre. 12 midnight/11:00 pm CT – 2:00/1:00 am CT Higher Education 12 midnight/11:00 pm CT – 2:00/1:00 am CT Higher Education 2:00/1:00 am CT– 6:00/5:00 am CT Teacher Requests & Special Programming 2:00/1:00 am CT– 6:00/5:00 am CT Teacher Requests & Special Programming 6:00 – 10:00 am ET/ 5:00 – 9:00 am CT Arts & Foreign Language Programs 6:00 – 10:00 am ET/ 5:00 – 9:00 am CT Reading/Writing & Tech/Media Programs 10:00/9:00 am CT Cyberchase 10:00/9:00 am CT Cyberchase 10:30/9:30 CT News Quiz (R) 10:30/9:30 CT News Quiz (R) 10:45/9:45 am CT a selected 15-minute ITV series 10:45/9:45 am CT a selected 15-minute ITV series 11:00/10:00 am CT Reading Rainbow 11:00/10:00 am CT Reading Rainbow 11:30/10:30 am CT Between the Lions 11:30/10:30 am CT Between the Lions 12 noon – 4:00 pm ET/ 11:00 am – 3:00 pm CT Arts & Foreign Language Programs 12 noon – 4:00 pm ET/ 11:00 am – 3:00 pm CT Reading/Writing & Tech/Media Programs 4:00/3:00 pm – 8:00/7:00 pm CT Professional Development Programs 4:00/3:00 pm – 8:00/7:00 pm CT Professional Development Programs 8:00/7:00 pm – 12:00 am /11:00 pm CT High-Definition TV 8:00/7:00 pm – 12:00 am /11:00 pm CT High-Definition TV 4:00 am –12:00 noon ET/ 3:00 am – 11:00 pm CT Discovery programs (4 hr block), Teacher Requests, & Special Programming (4 hr block) 12 noon – 1:30 pm ET/ 11:00 am – 12:30 pm CT USDOE Education Parents Can Use & Inside Kentucky Schools 1:30 – 4:00 pm PBS Kids programs like Zoom, Maya & Miguel, Dragonfly, Arthur, Postcards from Buster, etc. 4:00/3:00 pm – 8:00/7:00 pm CT Discovery programs & Teacher Requests 8:00/7:00 pm – 12:00 am /11:00 pm CT High-Definition TV Wednesdays Weekly Thursdays Weekly Fridays Weekly Saturdays Weekly Social Studies & Electronic Field Trips Math & Science National PBS programs, PBS Kids, and Teacher Requests 12 midnight/11:00 pm CT – 2:00/1:00 am CT Higher Education 12 midnight/11:00 pm CT – 2:00/1:00 am CT Higher Education 12 midnight/11:00 pm CT – 2:00/1:00 am CT Higher Education 2:00/1:00 am – 6:00/5:00 am CT Teacher Requests & Special Programming 2:00/1:00 am – 6:00/5:00 am CT Teacher Requests & Special Programming 2:00/1:00 am – 6:00/5:00 am CT Teacher Requests & Special Programming Midnight/11:00 pm CT – 4:00/3:00 am CT National PBS programs like Nova, Frontline, Nature, American Experience, and Masterpiece Theatre. 6:00/5:00 am – 10:00/9:00 am CT Practical Living/Vocational Studies & Secondary GED Programs 6:00/5:00 am – 10:00/9:00 am CT Social Studies & Electronic Field Trip Programs 6:00/5:00 am – 10:00/9:00 am CT Math & Science Programs 10:00/9:00 am CT Cyberchase 10:00/9:00 am CT – LIVE then repeats of Colonial Williamsburg EFT 10:30/9:30 CT News Quiz (R) 10:45/9:45 am CT a selected 15-minute ITV series 11:00/10:00 am CT Reading Rainbow 11:30/10:30 am CT Between the Lions 12 noon/11:00 am – 4:00/3:00 pm CT Practical Living & Secondary GED Programs 4:00/3:00 pm – 8:00/7:00 pm CT Professional Development Programs 8:00/7:00 pm – 12:00 am/11:00 pm CT High-Definition TV 11:00/10:00 am CT Reading Rainbow 11:30/10:30 am CT Between the Lions 12 noon/11:00 am – 4:00/3:00 pm CT Social Studies & Electronic Field Trip Programs 1:45/12:45 pm CT NewsQuiz LIVE 2:00 – 4:00 pm Social Studies & Electronic Field Trip Programs 4:00/3:00 pm – 8:00/7:00 pm CT Professional Development Programs 10:00/9:00 am CT Cyberchase 10:30/9:30 CT News Quiz (R) 10:45/9:45 am CT a selected 15-minute ITV series 11:00/10:00 am CT Reading Rainbow 11:30/10:30 am CT Between the Lions 12 noon/11:00 am – 4:00/3:00 pm CT Math & Science Programs 4:00/3:00 pm – 8:00/7:00 pm CT Professional Development Programs 8:00/7:00 pm – 12:00 am/ 11:00 pm CT High-Definition TV 4:00 am – 12 noon Discovery programs (4 hr block), Teacher Requests, & Special Programming (4 hr block) 12 noon/11:00 am – 1:30/12:30 pm CT USDOE Education Parents Can Use & Inside Kentucky Schools KETBroadcastSCHEDULE Practical Living/Vocational Studies & Secondary GED 1:30/12:30 pm – 4:00/3:00 pm CT PBS Kids programs like Zoom, Maya & Miguel, Dragonfly, Arthur, Postcards from Buster, etc. 4:00/3:00 pm – 8:00/7:00 pm CT Discovery programs & Teacher Requests 8:00/7:00 pm – 12:00 am/11:00 pm CT High-Definition TV 8:00/7:00 pm – 12:00 am/11:00 pm CT High-Definition TV 2006/2007 M� • 13 ARTS&HUMANITIES ARTS & HUMANITIES program titles dance Dancing Threads: Community Dances from Africa to Zuni (Primary-8) K DanceSense (5-10) K C multi-arts Arts Express (Primary-6) K Winter: Season of Darkness/Season of Light (4-12) K C Arts Alive (6-9) Humanities Connections (7-12) K multi-arts professional development F Art to Heart (PD for Pre-Primary) K C music Mrs. Cabobble’s Caboose (Primary) Old Music for New Ears (Primary-8) K C F 2007 World’s Largest Concert (Primary-6) C Hymnody of Earth (5-12) K Richard Davis on Jazz Teleconference (PD) K Sing Out for Freedom (7-12) K C 2003 Great Kentucky Gospel Shout Out (8-12)K Exploring the World of Music (9-12) C theater Wind in the Willows (Primary-8) K C Appleseed John (3-7) K C Liz's Circus Story (6-12) K C Words Like Freedom/Sturdy Black Bridges (9-12) K C visual arts The Big A (Primary) C Posie Paints (Primary-3) Doodle (Primary-12) C Art On Air (4-6) K C From the Shadows of the River (4-12) K C Crafting Tradition (5-12) K C Art History I: A Century of Modern Art (6-12) Art History II: A Survey of the Western World (6-12) Looking At Picasso (8-12) World of Our Own: Kentucky Folkways (8-12) K C Ellis Wilson–So Much to Paint (9-12) K C Looking at Painting (9-12) K C Multimedia materials for teaching with the arts Grade Levels: Toolkit Pricing and Order Information: Web Site: 14 • 2006/2007 M�Instructional Videos See Web site or call 1-800-945-9167, or see pages 125-126 www.ket.org/artstoolkit KY Academic Expectations: 2.22, 2.23, 2.24, 2.25, 2.26 The KET Arts Toolkits offer a wealth of teacher-tested materials for teaching the arts and for incorporating the arts across the curriculum. These multimedia kits contain video pieces, including segments from KET instructional programs as well as specially produced new material; CD-ROMs; lesson plans, glossaries, and classroom handouts; and many other resources — all tied to Kentucky's Core Content in the arts. Dance (2004); Visual Arts (2005); and Drama (revised and expanded 2nd edition released in 2006) toolkits are available now for purchase by Kentucky teachers. A Music toolkit is scheduled to be released in 2007. All toolkits allow access to the Arts Toolkit web site. Offers additional lesson plans and resources, online video previews, links to the Kentucky Arts Council Directory of Artists, and other useful resources. Separate MARC records have been created for the VHS and DVD versions of each Arts Toolkit. Go to www.ket.org/cgi-bin/itv/marc_ menu.pl#toolkit DRAMA Toolkit NETA BEST OF THE BEST AWARD WINNER Revised and Expanded! www.ket.org/artstoolkit/drama CONTENTS INCLUDE: * * F New or Revised for 2006/2007 C Closed Captioned K KET Production On KET EncycloMedia Preschool-12 * * * Choice of 4 VHS tapes with 1 DVD, or 3 DVDs. These include performance excerpts from professional and student performances, a video "History of Theater" and other informational video segments, storytelling by top Kentucky storytellers, and an in-depth look at the Japanese art of Kabuki. The toolkit also includes the complete Electronic Field Trip to Horse Cave Theatre. A 3-ring binder containing lessons plans for primary, intermediate, middle school, and high school, plus glossaries and informational materials including a "Responding to Drama" guide, activities and ideas Especially for Primary, guides to producting student theater, a storytelling guide, an updated list of Kentucky Drama Resources, and an index and correlation to Core Content Version 4.0. Reader's theatre of drama from a variety of periods and styles. Color poster "The World's Stage" Stage One's "From Page to Stage" interactive CD-ROM, a comprehensive look at the collaborative process of theater. Photo: Rick McComb DANCE Toolkit www.ket.org/artstoolkit/dance * * * * * Access to new features on the Arts Toolkit Web site, such as additional lesson plans and resources (including a photographic "Tour of the Theater" and a guide to theater careers), online video previews, and links to the Kentucky Arts Council Directory of Artists and other useful online resources. 30 Drama Idea Cards, "mini-lessons" and at-a-glance ideas for content-oriented classroom activities. VISUAL ARTS Toolkit — aligned to both 3.0 and 4.0 versions of the Kentucky Core Content. www.ket.org/artstoolkit/visual CONTENTS INCLUDE: * * * * * * * Visual Arts Video. Classroom-suitable video segments show artists at work, explore cultural connections, model the process of responding to art, and take students on a tour of an art museum. Choose VHS or DVD format. The toolkit also includes a Spectrum of Art DVD that contains additional cultural and artist segments. You'll receive nearly eight hours of video in all! The Kentucky Virtual Art Museum CD-ROM brings together images of art collections from across the state. From works by the "old Masters" to quilts and Kentucky folk art, a world of art is just a click away. Color Transparencies. A set of 6 color transpariences covers a range of periods and styles found in Kentucky's Core Content. A 3-Ring Binder of Lesson Plans and Information. Along with lesson plans (including assessment components) for primary, intermediate, middle school, and high school, the toolkit provides glossaries, a guide to responding to art, information about cultural art and periods and styles, an extensive guide to Kentucky resources, and a cross-reference to Core Content. Full-Color "Purposes of Art" Poster. A beautiful 24"X36" color poster shows examples of art created for a variety of purposes and is ideal for classroom display. Visual Arts Idea Cards. A set of 4"X6" cards offer "mini-lessons" and at-a-glance ideas. Access to Arts Toolkit Web site. Online resources will include additional lesson plans, a Kentuckians in Visual Arts career feature, a Masterworks slide show, video previews, and arts education news. * * * Dance performances, cultural dances, and creative movement lessons on video, in your choice of VHS or DVD format. Many of the video segments are exclusive to the Dance Toolkit. Combined with the DanceSense Enhanced DVD, the toolkit offers nearly 8 hours of video! DanceSense Enhanced DVD. KET's acclaimed 10-program DanceSense series, built around Kentucky Core Content, is included in its entirety on DVD, along with a variety of additional dance video, including a video "History of Dance." The Dance Arts Toolkit is the only source for this material in easy-to-use DVD format. A 3-Ring Binder of informational material. Includes lesson plans for primary, intermediate, middle school, and high school; glossaries; a "Responding to Dance" guide; and guides to dance styles and Kentucky dance resources, plus a cross-referencing of toolkit materials to Kentucky Core Content. A full-color Dance Timeline poster. Put dance on display in your classroom with this beautifully illustrated history of dance. Kentucky Department of Education CD-ROM. Includes an electronic version of the Kentucky Implementation Manual, guides to books and Web sites, and music samples and art works from the Speed Art Museum. Dance Idea Cards. A packet of "mini-lessons" and at-a-glance ideas for content-oriented classroom activities. The Arts Toolkit project is funded in part by awards from the W. Paul and Lucille Caudill Little Arts Endowment for KET, the National Endowment for the Arts, the Charles M. and Mary D. Grant Foundation, and the Federal Title VI Innovative Educational Strategies Program. dance Dancing Threads: Community Dances from Africa to Zuni K Traditional folk dances from various cultures Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: Videocassette: Primary-8 30 minutes Unlimited Downloadable at www.ket.org/education/guides See order form, pg. 125 KY Academic Expectations: 1.15, 2.23, 2.24, 2.25, 2.26 Outstanding performers teach traditional Appalachian, AfricanAmerican, and Native American dances and “play party games,” involving patterns of singing, dancing, poetry, mimicry, and play-acting. Each program features step-by-step instructions as well as a complete student performance of the game or dance. An interview with the performer gives the historical and cultural contexts of the dance. Dancing Threads gives young people a multicultural and historical perspective, encouraging them to value their own and other cultural traditions. Additional background information is provided in the extensive teacher’s guide. continued on next page 2006/2007 M�Instructional Videos� • 15 ARTS&HUMANITIES CONTENTS INCLUDE: ARTS&HUMANITIES PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS 1. Goin’ to Boston — Appalachian storyteller Anndrena Belcher discuss- es changing attitudes toward dance and immigration from the British Isles to North America. 2. Little Johnny Brown — African-American musician and storyteller Paula Larke discusses types of games, oral tradition, African settlement in America, and slave life. 3. Weevily Wheat — Anndrena Belcher discusses Britain’s Bonnie Prince Charlie, genealogy, family traditions, and heroes. 4. Zuni Harvest Dances — Zuni storyteller Arden Kucate discusses history of the Southwestern American Indians, daily life of the Pueblo peoples, and similarities and differences among cultures. BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Monday, September 11 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-4; 2 hours) Block Feed II: Tuesday, October 17 at 2:00/1:00 pm CT (Programs 1-4; 2 hours) Block Feed III: Tuesday, March 20 at 2:00/1:00 pm CT (Programs 1-4; 2 hours) Block Feed IV: Monday, April 16 at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 1-4; 2 hours) DanceSense K C Understanding dance elements, styles, and history Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: Videocassette: Web Site: 5-10 15 minutes Unlimited Downloadable at www.ket.org/education/guides See order form, pg. 125 www.ket.org/dancesense KY Academic Expectations: 1.15, 2.23, 2.24, 2.25, 2.26 This series explores why people dance, the elements of dance, dance styles, dance in a multicultural and historical context, and dance as an art form. It uses performances, archival photographs and footage, and interviews to capture dance’s emotion and energy and to stimulate students’ interest, understanding, and appreciation. PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS/AIR DATES 1. Understanding Dance — explores why people dance. (Apr 25) 2. The Dance of Culture — looks into the origins and functions of dance in various cultures. (Apr 27) 3. Dance in America — looks at how dance has developed in America, focusing on the influences of Native American, African-American, and European dances. (Apr 30) 4. The Elements of Dance — examines the "language" of dance: space, time, and force. (May 1) 5. The Moving Body — explores how bodies move as well as how dancers train and maintain their bodies. (May 2) 6. Making Dance — shows how dances are created and what choreographers are trying to communicate through their dances. Explores the role of improvisation in dance. (May 4) 7. Ballet — explores dance as a means of creative expression, focusing on ballet—its history, vocabulary, and style—as well as the viewer's role in responding to and appreciating a dance performance. (May 7) 8. Modern Dance — explores modern dance's origins and ever-changing approach to expression. (May 8) 9. Jazz Dance — explores jazz dance and the elements of improvisation and syncopation and looks at how dances are constantly evolving. (May 9) 10. Tap and Percussive Dance — explores the classic tap form, its roots in jazz and blues, and looks at other percussive dance forms such as flamenco and clogging. (May 11) 16 • 2006/2007 M�Instructional Videos WEEKLY BROADCAST SCHEDULES Mondays, Tuesdays, Wednesdays, and Fridays April 25-May 11 at 10:45/9:45 am CT BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Monday, August 14 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-10; 2 hours, 30 minutes) Block Feed II: Monday, January 15 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-10; 2 hours, 30 minutes) multi-arts Arts Express K Visual arts, music, and dance as means of communication Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: Videocassette: Primary-6 15 minutes Unlimited Downloadable at www.ket.org/education/guides See order form, pg. 125 KY Academic Expectations: 1.13, 1.14, 1.15, 2.23, 2.24, 2.25 Arts Express introduces children to the visual arts, music, and dance. Real-life footage, animated characters, and dramatic sequences make the series fun and informative and help teach the elements and principles of the art forms. PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS Observing the World Around Us 1. What Is Communication? — shows how the world communicates to us through sound, appearance, and motion 2. Living Creatures — encourages observing the appearances, sounds, and motions of living creatures 3. The World We Live In — encourages observing the appearances, sounds, and motions of the physical world 4. Arts Look at the World — develops observational skills and an awareness of the arts as forms of communication 5. Appearances, Portraits, and Lifestyles — stresses observing and using personal characteristics to make portraits 6. Cultures and Customs — shows how music, dance, and the visual arts communicate to us about many cultures 7. The Past — explores the arts as documentation 8. Fantasies, Dreams, and Wishes — encourages divergent thinking and creativity 9. Feelings — develops observation and expression skills Elements of the Arts 10. Line — how line determines direction, shape, form, and sometimes mood 11. Shape and Form — shows how shape and form are used to depict geometric and natural objects in the visual arts 12. Space — explores the use of space in the visual arts 13. Texture — the elements and principles of the visual arts 14. Light — shows how visual artists use light to portray appearance and express moods 15. Visual Arts — how artists consciously manipulate their media in order to communicate 16. Rhythm — shows how beat and tempo combine to create rhythm 17. Melody and Timbre — variety in pitch; the different timbres of various instruments 18. Music — observes an orchestra in rehearsal; reviews the elements of music 19. Dance — shows how dancers use space, tempo, motion, and direction to communicate 20. Synthesis — explores animation as an art form which combines appearances, sounds, and motions Monday, July 31 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-15; 4 hours) and at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 16-20; 1 hour, 20 minutes) Block Feed II: Monday, January 1 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-15; 4 hours) and at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 16-20; 1 hour, 20 minutes) Winter: Season of Darkness and Light K C Holiday traditions from various cultures Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: 4-12 60 minutes Unlimited Downloadable at www.ket.org/education/guides KY Academic Expectations: 2.23, 2.24, 2.25, 2.26 This 1997 KET production is a multicultural exploration of the way winter is celebrated in this country and how these celebrations have been changed, merged, assimilated, or forgotten over generations. Artists from across the country explain the traditions associated with their cultures through music and stories. The holidays traditions featured are Hanukkah (Jewish), Kwanzaa (African-American), Posadas (Chicano), and European Christmas. BROADCAST SCHEDULE Monday, December 4 at 8:00/7:00 am CT Monday, May 7 at 8:00/7:00 am CT Elements and processes of the arts 6-9 15 minutes Unlimited Call 1-800-457-4509, ext. 4 or www.ait.net/catalog See order form, pg. 125 KY Academic Expectations: 2.23, 2.24 Arts Alive is an introduction to the arts for young viewers. The art forms are treated as unique disciplines which can help children attain self-understanding and a better grasp of their world through experiencing the arts in their daily lives. PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS 1. Alive with the Arts — the power and appeal of the arts 2. Elements of Visual Arts — line, shape, color, and texture 3. Creating Visual Arts — expressing an idea 4. Elements of Dance — space, time, and energy 5. Creating Dance — the choreographer and the dancer 6. Elements of Music — rhythm, melody, and harmony 7. Creating Music — developing an idea 8. Elements of Drama — voice and body movement 9. Creating Theater — how theater is more than actors using the elements of drama Monday, September 4 at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 1-13; 3 hours, 15 minutes) Block Feed II: Monday, February 5 at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 1-13; 3 hours, 15 minutes) Humanities Connections K The elements of the arts Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: 7-12 2-2 1/2 hours Unlimited, teachers must register each year Register for free materials online or call at 1-800-333-9764 Arts & Humanities Core Content Posters: Five color-your-own POSTERS highlight Core Content in Dance, Theater, Visual Arts, Music and Literature. Scaled for 11 x 17 paper, you can print and enlarge your own posters from the humanities web pages-- www.dl.ket.org/humanities (click on “resources”) -or call 1-800-333-9764 to purchase a color set on card stock ($20.00). Videocassette: Web Site: Call 1-800-333-9764 www.dl.ket.org/humanities KY Academic Expectations: 1.13, 1.15, 2.23, 2.24, 2.25, 2.26 Humanities Connections covers the basic elements of visual arts, dance, music, and theater. Each production begins with a teacher video — a collection of ideas for educators who may not be art specialists. Each teacher video is followed by a student video designed for broadcast in the classroom. The Connections series features a companion Web site with detailed episode summaries, vocabulary, works consulted, and a teacher response form. Arts Alive Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: Videocassette: BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Humanities Connections and Class Connections are written to align with The National Standards in the Arts and Humanities and Kentucky's Academic Expectations. PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS/LENGTHS (Note: All Connections broadcasts are segmented with divider slates to enable teachers to select sections most appropriate to their students.) CONNECTIONS THEATER BASICS 101. Teacher audience: What makes theater magical? Discussion of set, lighting, sound, costumes, actors and acting. (39:42) 102. History of Theater: Traces development of theater from Greece to the beginning of the 20th century. Includes discussion of commedia del' arte and Shakespearean stage. Teacher tape ends with "Who's Who in American Theater." (1:00:32) 103. Student audience: See an A+ performance and look for movement, gesture, diction, improvisation. (54:27) 104. The making of The Crucible: Students discuss their roles in creating staging, scenery, props, lighting, sound, costumes, and makeup. Edited version of Acts 1 ,2, 3, and 4 of The Crucible, intercut with comments from students on their roles in the production. (14:53) continued on next page 2006/2007 M�Instructional Videos� • 17 ARTS&HUMANITIES BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: 10. Arts and Self-Expression — expressing who you are 11. Arts and Social Messages — how the arts can influence human thought and behavior 12. Arts and Technology — computer graphics 13. Arts and Work — dance therapy for disabled adults ARTS&HUMANITIES DANCE BASICS 105. Teacher audience: How to talk to students about dance, a classroom project idea, a brief history of ballet, and background for The Nutcracker. (29:45) 106. Student audience: New ways to watch dance: elements of dance: space-time-force, clips from Act 1 The Nutcracker, discussion of divertissements, full performance, Act 2, The Nutcracker. Comparison: How two choreographers handle identical sections of The Nutcracker, last half of Act 2. (1:11:49) MUSIC BASICS 107. Teacher audience: Music can be approached in a huge variety of ways—intellectually, emotionally, or even viewed comparatively with a work of art. This segment examines the musical "ism's." (39:57) 108. Student audience: Basic elements of music. More tools of the musician and a review of all elements. (43:02) VISUAL ARTS BASICS 109. Teacher audience: The art of questioning, an interview with Lexington artist Carolyn Hisel, and how do the visual arts intersect with other arts. (35:22) 110. Student audience: Elements of art, the tools of the artist. A discussion of ten paintings—focusing on how they fit into the culture of their times. (41:10) CLASS CONNECTIONS The following broadcasts are excerpts from Humanities through the Arts. To order tapes, call 1-800-333-9764. This series will not be broadcasted. THE AFRICAN CULTURAL ROOT 201. Broadcast 1: Intro to Africa, African Drummer, African dance (52:50) 202. Broadcast 2: African visual art, the modern primitives (48:06) ANCIENT CIVILIZATIONS 203. Broadcast 1: Intro to Gilgamesh, Gilgamesh, Daily life in ancient Egypt, Giza pyramids, I.M. Pei: The Modern Pyramid (46:14) 204. Broadcast 2: American Indian Culture (43:00) BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Monday, October 9 at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 101-105; 3 hours, 53 minutes); Monday, October 16 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 106-110; 3 hours, 53 minutes) and at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 201-204; 3 hours, 11 minutes); and Monday, October 23 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 205-209; 3 hours, 40 minutes) and at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 210-214; 3 hours, 20 minutes) Block Feed II: Thursday, November 23 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 101-105; 3 hours, 53 minutes); Thursday, November 30 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 106-110; 3 hours, 53 minutes); Thursday, December 7 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 201-204; 3 hours, 11 minutes); Thursday, December 14 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 205-209; 3 hours, 40 minutes) and at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 210-214; 3 hours, 20 minutes) Block Feed III: Monday, March 12 at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 101-105; 3 hours, 53 minutes); Monday, March 19 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 106-110; 3 hours, 53 minutes) and at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 201-204; 3 hours, 11 minutes); and Monday, March 26 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 205-209; 3 hours, 40 minutes) and at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 210-214; 3 hours, 20 minutes) multi-arts professional development Art to Heart K C Exploring creativity and arts activities for young children Grade Level: Taping Rights: Length: Print Materials: Professional Development for teachers of infants through primary Unlimited 30 minutes Downloadable at www.ket.org/ education/guides See order form, pg. 125 www.ket.org/arttoheart GREECE AND ROME 205. Broadcast 1: Classical Architecture, Greek Sculpture, Later Videocassette/DVD: Web Site: Greek Masterpieces, (35:06) 206. Broadcast 2: Roman Portraiture, Roman Architecture (39:28) KY Academic Expectations: 1.13, 1.14, 1.15, 2.26, 3.4, 5.2, 5.5 WORLD RELIGIONS 207. Broadcast 1: Rabbi Jon Adland, Genesis, The Three Daves. (55:30) 208. Broadcast 2: The Church of Hagia Sophia, Dome of the Rock, Children love to move, sing, draw, sculpt, and play–act, and this national series of eight engaging half-hour programs offers parents and teachers of young children insight into the importance of these kinds of activities to early development and learning. The series explores how developmentally appropriate activities in visual arts, dance, drama, and music contribute to learning and physical, cognitive, emotional, and social development in children from birth to age 8. Programs visit schools, child care centers, museums, and community centers to see a wide array of arts activities. Researchers, teachers, artists, and parents offer information and ideas about enjoyable and beneficial arts activities for home and school settings. A viewing guide and Web site include discussion questions and expanded information. Islamic Architecture, The Silk Road. (20:21) MEDIEVAL AND RENAISSANCE 209. Broadcast 1: Origins of Gothic Architecture, Hildegarde of Bingin, Chartres Cathedral, Dante and the Inferno, Intro to the Renaissance. (59:39) 210. Broadcast 2: Giotto, Michelangelo (27:24) BAROQUE-NEOCLASSIC-ROMANTIC 211. Broadcast 1: Intro to the Baroque Era, Caravaggio, Shakespeare's Greatest Hits, Rubens and Rembrandt, Back to Bach. (1:01:54) 212. Broadcast 2: Dance at the Court of Louis XIV, The Palace of Versailles, Monticello, Goya. (30:38) THE FINALE- REALISM THROUGH 20TH CENTURY 213. Broadcast 1: Monet and Debussy, Frank Lloyd Wright, Kabuki Intro, Kabuki Performance, Van Gogh (1:01:54) 214. Broadcast 2: The Ballet Russe, Dorothea Lange, Woody Guthrie, Georgia O'Keeffe (30:38) 18 • 2006/2007 M�Instructional Videos PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS 1. Children’s First Language — introduces the series and offers an over- view of arts activities and play as a foundation for growth and development 2. Visual Arts — shows an array of visual arts activities (from parentchild steppingstones to art inspired by stories and art) as doorways to bonding, self-esteem, and literacy 3. Music — teaching artists guide youngsters in activities ranging from finding their singing voices to learning to play an instrument, demonstrating how music inspires self-expression and self-confidence BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Monday, October 30 at 4:00/3:00 pm CT (Programs 1-8; 4 hours) Block Feed II: Monday, November 13 at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 1-8; 4 hours) Block Feed III: Monday, January 15 at 4:00/3:00 pm CT (Programs 1-8; 4 hours) Block Feed IV: Monday, February 12 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-8; 4 hours) Block Feed V: Monday, April 16 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-8; 4 hours) music Mrs. Cabobble’s Caboose Sing-alongs; musical elements Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: Primary 15 minutes School year See order form, pg. 124 KY Academic Expectations: 1.14, 2.23, 2.24 Mrs. Cabobble’s Caboose encourages active participation in a variety of musical experiences designed to teach basic music concepts such as melody, rhythm, harmony, families of instruments, and more. The programs, hosted by Mrs. Cabobble (Fran Powell) and her cast of characters, invite primary students to sing individually and in groups, to move rhythmically, and to play classroom rhythm instruments. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. Songs: “Mrs. Cabobble’s Caboose,” “How Do You Do?,” “Mister Banjo” Rhythm and Rhymes — gives students a chance to participate in singing rhymes and chants, clapping and hand-jive activities, and totalbody movement Up, Down, and All Around — presents the steps of the music scale and how the upward and downward movements of a melody form the melodic contour of the song. Songs: “Skat!,” “Bought Me a Cat” Let’s Go for a Hike — presents a melodic phrase and asks students to accurately repeat it during the performance of the song, thus creating a “harmony echo” effect. Songs: “Color Me Happy,” “Traffic Signs” Apple Cider Time — presents “dialogue”-style songs and melodic movement by skips rather than by steps of the scale. Songs: “Apple Cider,” “Charlie Chipmunk” Make a Wish — presents the sound of harmony created by movement with the melodic contour in intervals of a third; also allows students to participate in creative dramatization of the songs. Songs: “Make a Wish,” “Ki-Yi-Yippee-Yippee-Yea” (Monday, January 1 at 10:30/9:30 am CT) Photo: Rick McComb PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS/SOME AIR DATES 1. Making New Friends — a musical way to meet and greet new friends. 7. Strike Up the Band — shows how to play various classroom rhythm instruments. Songs: “Strike Up the Band,” “The Rhythm Song” 8. Spook in the Pumpkin Patch — presents two Halloween songs that demonstrate the difference between major and minor modes. Songs: “Pumpkin Patch,” “Spook” (Tuesday, October 31 at 10:45/9:45 am CT) 9. A Lot of Brass — presents the trumpet and trombone as members of the brass instrument family 10. Arrows and Tomahawks — presents songs from Native American culture; rhythm instruments are played to accompany the songs. Songs: “Pow-Wow,” “We Are the Red Men” (Monday, November 20 at 10:45/9:45 am CT) 11. Doin’ the Turkey Trot — presents Thanksgiving songs. Songs: “The Turkey Trot,” “Grandma’s Oven” (Tuesday, November 21 at 10:45/9:45 am CT) 12. Coats and Mittens — presents seasonal songs, the notation of rests, and the rhythmic feel of syncopation. Songs: “Coats and Mittens,” “Popcorn Poppin’” 13. Keep It Movin’ — presents movement activities to enhance motor skills and rhythmic response. Songs: “Keep It Movin’,” “Brother Come and Dance” 14. Decorate and Celebrate — presents information about how different cultures celebrate the Christmas season and how their customs of celebration are reflected in their music. Songs: “Ring-a-Ling-a!,” “The Pi–ata” (Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday, December 18-20 at 10:30/9:30 am CT) 15. Caboose Caroling — gives examples of choral singing and demonstrates the use of the voice as vocal instrument. Songs: “Santa Claus Is Coming to Town,” “Away in a Manger” (Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, December 18-20 at 10:45/9:45 am CT) 16. Fiddle-Dee-Dee — shows different sizes of violins and the sounds they make; demonstrates different playing methods and styles. Song: “I Am a Fine Musician” 17. Round and Round — demonstrates independent singing skills and the combination of multiple sounds. Songs: “Are You Sleeping?,” “Little Tommy Tinker,” “Three Blind Mice” 18. The Music Man — shows three different sizes of saxophone and the different sound each one makes. Song: “When the Saints Go Marching In” 19. Happy Hearts — presents songs to be played and sung in celebration of Valentine’s Day. Songs: “A Valentine,” “Love Somebody” (Wednesday, February 14 at 10:45/9:45 am CT) 20. Blast Off! — presents the scale-wise movement of the melody and demonstrates the elements of melodic contour. Songs: “I Want To Go Up in a Rocketship,” “Riding on a Rainbow” 21. February Holidays — demonstrates the difference between the rhythmic style of a march and the story-telling style of the ballad. Songs: “I’m Proud To Live in America,” “February Birthdays,” “George and Abraham” (Thursday, February 15 at 9:15/8:15 am CT) continued on next page 2006/2007 M�Instructional Videos� • 19 ARTS&HUMANITIES 4. Movement & Dance — explores activities such as movement awareness, cultural and folk dances, and ballet lessons as ways for children to learn about themselves, their community, and their own and other cultures 5. Drama & the Literary Arts — shows storytelling, play-acting, puppetry, and creative dramatics as ways to stimulate the imagination and forge important connections to language development and reading 6. The Artful Environment — explores how to create a stimulating, interesting, and encouraging environment at home and school 7. Arts for Learning — a look at how arts activities connect to learning in other subject areas and the importance of teacher professional development 8. Arts Everyday — explores how the arts are part of everyday life and offers ideas for activities at home and at school ARTS&HUMANITIES 22. Windy Days — presents songs that demonstrate an understanding of melodic contour and how harmony can be produced by combining musical sounds. Songs: “Who Is the Wind?,” “I Wish I Could Fly Like a Kite!” 23. Hoppin’ Down the Bunny Trail — presents songs that call for rhythmic response, creative expression, and dramatization. Songs: “Hoppin’ Down the Bunny Trail,” “(But) That Pesky Rabbit Got Away!” 24. April Showers — presents songs that develop an awareness of the expressive qualities of music. Songs: “Yellow Umbrella,” “Spring Is Filled with Color” (Friday, April 6 at 10:30/9:30 am CT) 25. Remember When — All the characters at the caboose choose their favorite experiences from the year’s activities 26. Raindrops and Froghops — presents songs that encourage aesthetic awareness and musical expression. Songs: “Raindrops,” “Mr. Frog Went A-Courtin’” 27. Butterflies and Fishin’ Poles — introduces music notation by the use of objects to represent the melodic contour of the song. Songs: “Butterfly,” “Who’s Got a Fishin’ Pole?” 28. Summer Fun — demonstrates the expressive qualities of music and how music relates and contributes to the quality of our lives. Songs: “Summer Fun,” “Sunny Day!” WEEKLY BROADCAST SCHEDULE (See above for specific holiday program dates and times.) BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Monday, September 11 at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 1-16; 4 hours) and Monday, September 18 at 1:00 pm/12 noon CT (Programs 17-28; 3 hours) Block Feed II: Monday, February 12 at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 1-16; 4 hours) and Monday, February 19 at 1:00 pm/12 noon CT (Programs 17-28; 3 hours) Old Music for New Ears K C Exposing elementary students to traditional music Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: Videocassette: Primary-8 15 minutes Unlimited Downloadable at www.ket.org/education/guides See order form, pg. 125 KY Academic Expectations: 1.14, 1.15, 2.23, 2.24, 2.25, 2.27 This KET-produced instructional series introduces children to a broad range of music — folk, blues, Cajun, traditional — and cultures — Native American, African-American, and Appalachian, among others. All lyrics are in the teacher’s guide. The series also introduces a variety of traditional instruments, such as the hammer dulcimer, the lap dulcimer, and the jaw harp. PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS/AIR DATES 1. Malcolm Dalglish — “Cooper’s Caper,” “Bushy Tail,” “One Day, One Foot,” “Wide Mouth Frog,” “Woody Knows Nothin’” (A) Sep 8, (B) Feb 6 2. Jean Ritchie — “Shady Grove,” “Bandyrowe,” “Lazy John,” “Goin’ to Boston” (A) Sep 11, (B) Feb 7 3. John McCutcheon — “The Hours After,” “The Rainstorm,” “No More Pie,” “May There Always Be Sunshine” (A) Sep 12, (B) Feb 9 4. Sparky and Rhonda Rucker — “The Gospel Train,” “Oh Susannah,” “Freight Train” (A) Sep 13, (B) Feb 12 20 • 2006/2007 M�Instructional Videos 5. Mike Seeger — “Cluck Old Hen,” “I Had a Rooster,” “Foo Boo Woo Boo John,” “Molly Hare,” “Derby Ram” (A) Sep 15, (B) Feb 13 6. Odetta — “Give Me Your Hand,” “Keep On Movin’ On,” “I’m a Child of God” (A) Sep 18, (B) Feb 16 7. Gray Eagle Band — “The Hound Dog Song,” “Rabbit in a Log,” “Breathitt County Hill Farm,” “Oh Groundhog,” “Christmas Calico/ Sally Goodin” (A) Sep 19, (B) Feb 20 8. Jean Ritchie — “Love Somebody, Yes I Do,” “The Blue Bird Song,” “Skin and Bones,” “What’ll I Do with the Baby-O?” (A) Sep 20, (B) Feb 21 9. Tom Bledsoe, Joy D’Elia, and Rich Kirby — “Twinkle Twinkle Little Star,” “Skip to My Lou,” “The Cuckoo,” “The Devil and the Farmer’s Wife,” “Five Little Ducks Out on a Limb” (A) Sep 22, (B) Feb 23 10. Bob and Susie Hutchison — “She’ll Be Comin’ Around the Mountain,” “Did You Feed My Cow?”, “Taddle-Diddle-Dink-Dink,” “The Old Woman and the Little Pig,” “Sandy River Belle/Whiskey Before Breakfast” (A) Sep 25, (B) Feb 26 11. Odetta — “I’m a Rambler, I’m a Gambler,” “Home on the Range,” “Chilly Winds/Shenandoah” (A) Sep 26, (B) Feb 27 12. The Metro Blues Trio — “Chicken’ la Blues,” “Mother the Queen of My Heart,” “She Caught the Katy” (A) Sep 27, (B) Feb 28 13. The Reel World String Band — “Last Old Train,” “Go Rabbit,” “Stay All Night” (A) Sep 29, (B) Mar 2 14. Mike Seeger — “Quill Ditty,” “All Around the Kitchen,” “When First to This Country,” “Skip to My Lou,” “Susan Girl” (A) Oct 2, (B) Mar 6 15. John McCutcheon — “John Henry,” “Hambone,” “The Awful Hilly Daddy-Willie Trip” (A) Oct 3, (B) Mar 7 16. Malcolm Dalglish — “Danville Klude,” “Spoons Story,” “Bones Lesson/Fine Lady and the Saxophone Pig,” “I Had a Bird,” “Throw the Window Open” (A) Oct 4, (B) Mar 9 17. Taj Mahal — “Fishin’ Blues,” “Shake Sugaree,” “Light Rain” (A) Oct 6, (B) Mar 12 18. The Doucet Family — “Poor Johnnie (Johnny Peux Pas Danser),” “The Fifty Cent Song (La Chanson de Cinquante Sous),” “P’tit Galop pour Mamou” (A) Oct 9, (B) Mar 13 19. Dennis Banks — “The Flip Side,” “A Forty Niner Song,” “An Honor Song” (A) Oct 10, (B) Mar 14 20. Paula Larke — “Rosebud,” “Chicken and the Rooster,” “Zudio” (A) Oct 11, (B) Mar 16 21. The Doucet Family — “La Cravate a’ Zig et Zag,” “Le Hoogie Boogie,” “L’Arc en Ciel,” “Deux Cocodries” (A) Oct 13, (B) Mar 19 22. Taj Mahal — “Funky Bluesy ABC,” “African Blues,” “Stagger Lee,” “You Don’t Have To Go” (A) Oct 16, (B) Mar 20 WEEKLY BROADCAST SCHEDULE Weekly broadcast (A): Mondays, Tuesdays, Wednesdays, and Fridays, September 8-October 16 at 10:45/9:45 am CT Weekly broadcast (B): Mondays, Tuesdays, Wednesdays, and Fridays, February 6-March 20 at 10:45/9:45 am CT BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Monday, November 20 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-16; 4 hours) and at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 17-22; 1 hour, 30 minutes) Block Feed II: Monday, April 23 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-16; 4 hours) and at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 17-22; 1 hour, 30 minutes) www.ket.org/education/newsletters Richard Davis on Jazz K A national sing-along History, elements, and social context of jazz Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: Videocassette: Web Site: Primary-6 30 minutes Unlimited for one year after broadcast Call 1-800-336-3768 or see www.menc.org/guides/ wlc/WLCFront.html www.menc.org KY Academic Expectations: 2.24 Produced by the Music Educators National Conference to launch Music in Our Schools Month, the World’s Largest Concert is a national celebration of music in our schools. K-6 students and their teachers practice selected numbers throughout the year. The broadcast connects these students from across the country in one simultaneous sing-along performance of those musical numbers. BROADCAST SCHEDULE LIVE on Thursday, March 8 at 1:00 pm/12 noon CT Monday, March 12 at 9:30/8:30 am CT TEACHER’S GUIDE A guide with reproducible music, piano accompaniments, and performance instructions is available for $3.00 shipping and handling. Download free from website at www.menc.org/guides/wlc/ WLCFront.html or order from: MENC • 1806 Robert Fulton Drive • Reston, VA 20191 • (703) 860-4000 or 1-800-336-3768 Hymnody of Earth K The poetry of Wendell Berry set to music Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: Videocassette: 5-12 60 minutes Unlimited Downloadable at www.ket.org/education/guides See order form, pg. 125 KY Academic Expectations: 2.24 This production sets the poetry of Kentucky writer and farmer Wendell Berry to music by Malcolm Dalglish. A chorus of young people sing about a deep love for the Earth and the people and creatures who inhabit it. Both the poetry and the combination of words and music offer a wealth of opportunities for classroom discussion about the creation and function of art. The performance features the Bloomington Youth Chorus, the Lexington Children’s Chorus, The Anglicantors, Dalglish (on hammer dulcimer), and Glen Velez (percussion). BROADCAST SCHEDULE Monday, September 11 at 9:00/8:00 am CT Tuesday, October 31 at 6:00/5:00 am CT Tuesday, April 3 at 6:00/5:00 am CT Monday, April 16 at 3:00/2:00 pm CT 5-adult 60 minutes Unlimited Downloadable at www.ket.org/education/guides See order form pg. 125 KY Academic Expectations: 1.14, 2.24, 2.25 This series introduces students and teachers to the elements of jazz, its history and pioneers, its instruments, and its contribution to American life and culture. The host is Richard Davis, a mainstay of the New York jazz scene and a professor at the University of WisconsinMadison. Davis intersperses lecture segments with questions from the KET viewing audience, samples of work by jazz masters, and demonstrations of key jazz elements on his string bass. In addition to music, each program in the series addresses topics in social studies, humanities, and African-American studies. The first four programs in this series aired as live teleconferences during the 1997/98 school year. ARTS&HUMANITIES 2007 World’s Largest Concert C PROGRAM TITLES 1. Elements of Jazz and Jazz History 2. Jazz Pioneers 3. Jazz Instruments: Saxophone and Trumpet 4. Jazz and Social Protest Movements 5. Jazz and the Spiritual Experience 6. Jazz Instruments: Bass and Piano Note: This series is offered on videotape only. See tape order information on pages 125-126. Sing Out for Freedom K C Music of the civil rights movement Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Videocassette: 7-12 60 minutes Unlimited See order form, pg. 125 KY Academic Expectations: 2.23, 2.24, 2.25 The Freedom Singers are one of the best known of the singing groups that traveled the U.S. in the 1950s and ’60s spreading the civil rights message. With full-bodied harmonic voices, they sang the songs of the civil rights movement, often stopping to tell about their personal experiences. This KET production includes highlights of the Freedom Singers’ 1993 concert in Louisville — inspirational gospel, call-toaction songs, and ballads, all sung a cappella. In interviews, group members talk about their experiences with the civil rights movement and nonviolent protest. Note: This program is offered on videotape only. See tape order information on pages 125-126. Photo: Rick McComb 2006/2007 M�Instructional Videos� • 21 ARTS&HUMANITIES Roles of gospel music in African American culture Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Videocassette: 8-12 60 minutes Unlimited See order form, pg. 125 Photo: Rick McComb The 2003 Great Kentucky Gospel Shout Out K C KY Academic Expectations: 2.23, 2.24, 2.25 Gospel music has played a vital role in the life and culture of AfricanAmericans from slavery through the civil rights movement. In the summer of 2003, 25 choirs from across the state competed for recognition as the finest gospel choir in Kentucky and proved how vibrant the music still is today. This program showcases the finalists, including gospel groups from Lexington, Owensboro, Bowling Green, Paducah, and Louisville. The program is hosted by Rev. Bobby Jones from Black Entertainment Television and Dawne Gee, a WAVE-TV anchor. The program also includes special performances, including one by nationally-known singer Kim Burrell. BROADCAST SCHEDULE Monday, December 4 at 6:00/5:00 am CT Exploring the World of Music C Basic elements of music, introduction to music with a global perspective Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: Web Site: 9-12 30 minutes Unlimited $15.00 Annenberg Media, PO Box 2345 South Burlington, VT 05407-2345 phone: 1-800-LEARNER (532-7637), fax: (802) 846-1850 www.learner.org/resources/series105.html KY Academic Expectations: 1.14, 2.24, 2.25, 2.26 Through rare archival footage and contemporary performances, this series presents themes such as music and the environment, music as cultural memory, and the effect of technology on music. It also demonstrates how musical elements can express culture and create an infinite variety of sounds. PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS 1. Sound, Music and the Environment — Explores the definition of music and the impact of culture on music. Examples include Bosnian ganga and becarac singing; Tuvan throat singing; Irish, West African, Trinidadian, and Japanese music; and Western chamber music, jazz, and rock 2. The Transformative Power of Music — The musical healing ceremonies of the Kung people in Namibia and Botswana; Epirote music in traditional Greek weddings; and modern rock, gospel, and folk music 3. Music and Memory — West African griots, the Walbiri people of Australia, folksingers of Ireland and Appalachia, and modern practitioners of early music 4. Transmission: Learning Music — Indian classical music, African village drumming, and modern jazz and gospel 5. Rhythm — American marching band, North Indian tala, the Japanese shakuhachi tradition, West African drumming, and Afro-Cuban dance music 22 • 2006/2007 M�Instructional Videos 6. Melody — Western classical music, the Arabic maqam tradition, Irish dance music and sean-nós singing, and Indian raga 7. Timbre: The Color of Music — Jazz, Indian, West African, Irish, Bosnian, Indonesian gamelan, and Japanese music 8. Texture — Japanese shakuhachi, Trinidadian steel band, Bosnian ganga, West African percussion, and modern Australian choral music 9. Harmony — Jazz, chamber music, Bosnian ganga singing, early music plainchants, and barbershop quartets 10. Form: The Shape of Music — Improvisational jazz, traditional Japanese music, call-and-response forms in West African music and American gospel, and Irish fiddle tunes 11. Composers and Improvisers — American rock, Indian raga, classical and contemporary Western music, jazz, and Arabic classical music 12. Music and Technology — A case study of the flute and an examination of developing recording and composing technologies where the roles of composer, musician, arranger, and conductor begin to fuse BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Monday, August 7 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-8; 4 hours) and at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 9-12; 2 hours) Block Feed II: Monday, January 8 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-8; 4 hours) and at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 9-12; 2 hours theater Wind in the Willows K C KET's production of the Stage One play Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: Primary-8 90 minutes 7 years, education use only (August 2009) Downloadable at www.ket.org/education/guides KY Academic Expectations: 2.22, 2.23, 2.24, 2.25 Stage One, Louisville's professional theater for young people, has adapted the Kenneth Grahame children's classic, Wind in the Willows, for the stage. In this version, the irrepressible Toad is taught again and again that "animals who go rushing around too fast get into lots of trouble." But that doesn't stop him from pursuing his latest fancy, the glorious automobile! Despite the efforts of practical Rat, fickle Otter, ingenuous Mole, and sage Badger, modernization begins to intrude upon their tranquil country life. The KET production includes a short introductory segment that explores how the stage version is transformed into a television program. BROADCAST SCHEDULE Monday, September 25 at 2:30/1:30 pm CT Monday, February 26 at 2:30/1:30 pm CT Appleseed John K C Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: 3-7 One 90-minute program (easily divided into shorter segments for classroom use) 7 years, educational use only (Aug 2010) Downloadable at www.ket.org/education/guides KY Academic Expectations: 2.23, 2.24, 2.25 This play, performed by StageOne: Louisville Children’s Theatre, is set during America’s westward expansion. It centers on a girl’s desire to escape farm life and become an actress. She meets an American hero, John Chapman, better known as Appleseed John. The teacher’s guide provides information on how to use this play to address Drama Core Content and enrich viewing of a professional play. BROADCAST SCHEDULE Monday, September 25 at 1:00 pm/12 noon CT Thursday, October 26 at 12 noon/11:00 am CT Monday, February 26 at 1:00 pm/12 noon CT Thursday, March 29 at 12 noon/11:00 am CT Liz's Circus Story K C NETA AWARD WINNER An autobiographical one-woman play Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: Videocassette: Web Site: 6-12 60 minutes Unlimited Available at Web site See order form, page 125 www.ket.org/circusstory/ KY Academic Expectations: 2.22, 2.23, 2.24, 2.25 Kentuckian Liz Bussey Fentress’s one-woman play spans 23 years, beginning when Liz is 21 and just graduated from the University of Wisconsin. With job prospects dim in her chosen field of theater, she takes a job as ringmistress, organist, and puppet show performer with Wayne Franzen’s Franzen Bros. Circus, a brand-new one-ring circus. Through Liz’s portrayal of herself, Wayne, and an array of other circus characters and animals, she shares the trials and triumphs of the fledgling circus and her own efforts to pursue her dream of working in theater. As a 44-year-old at the play’s end, Liz realizes that her circus experience has taught her humorous, tragic, and life-changing lessons about what individuals can achieve if they believe in their dreams. Originally produced at Horse Cave Theatre, the play was adapted for television by Fentress and directed by Vince Spoelker. A KET production. This program has been flagged for content and/or language. KET strongly encourages teachers to preview this program. Call KET's Education office at (800) 432-0951 for more information. BROADCAST SCHEDULE Monday, November 20 at 3:00/2:00 pm CT Monday, April 23 at 3:00/2:00 pm CT African-American poetry and music Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: Videocassette: 9-12 60 minutes Unlimited until 2010 Downloadable at www.ket.org/education/guides See order form, pg. 125 KY Academic Expectations: 1.14, 2.23, 2.25 Words Like Freedom/Sturdy Black Bridges is a “poetic concert” featuring African-American writing and music. Words Like Freedom focuses on the role of African-American women in the struggle for racial justice and opens with Sojourner Truth’s “Ain’t I a Woman” speech. Sturdy Black Bridges explores the trials and triumphs of black womanhood through the words of African-American women writers, Nikki Giovanni, Yusef Iman, Carolyn Rogers, and Priscilla Cooper. A 1997 KET production. BROADCAST SCHEDULE Tuesday, October 31 at 8:00/7:00 am CT Monday, November 27 at 12 noon/11:00 am CT Tuesday, April 3 at 8:00/7:00 am CT Monday, April 30 at 12 noon/11:00 am CT visual arts The Big A C Looking at, talking about, and creating visual arts Grade Level: Taping Rights: Length: Print Materials: Primary School year 15 minutes See order form, pg. 124 KY Academic Expectations: 2.22, 2.23, 2.24, 2.36 The Big A is a 10-program series designed to teach children the processes of looking at art, talking about art, and creating art. The program host, cartoonist Don Arioli, explores concepts related to art history, art criticism, aesthetics, and art production. Each program features a different art education theme and includes animated and dramatic segments, documentary footage of children, guest artists, and famous works of art. PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS 1. Telling a Story in Art — Host Don Arioli introduces his cartoon side- kick, “Norman the Storyteller,” to show students how artists use their own experiences to tell stories. The program highlights the storytelling aspects of Northwest Coast Indian art. 2. Getting Ideas — The Big A kids use zoo animals as a source for their art ideas. Visits to a sculptor’s and a painter’s studios reveal the steps artists take to turn their ideas into art creations. 3. Exploring Ideas — Students learn how to make use of an “idea book” as a source for creating their own art work. Don explains that before ideas can be turned into art, artists need to explore, experiment, refine, and clarify them. The kids visit a Javanese puppet master and a sculptor to see how artists transform their ideas into art. continued on next page 2006/2007 M�Instructional Videos� • 23 ARTS&HUMANITIES A theatrical production about a young farm girl who meets American hero, John Chapman Words Like Freedom/ Sturdy Black Bridges K C ARTS&HUMANITIES 4. Tools and Materials — Don shows how to get many artistic effects with just one tool. Visits to a Native American artist, a glass artist, and a painter introduce students to the different tools and materials used in creating art and how artists use them to achieve the expressive quality they desire. 5. Teamwork — Don and the children work together to put on a puppet show. Students go through the process of brainstorming, finding and testing solutions, dividing tasks, and completing their show. The program also highlights professional teamwork by showing how filmmakers use special effects to make a film about dinosaurs. 6. Lines, Shapes, Colors, and Textures — Don introduces the elements of design: line, shape, color, and texture. With the help of a billboard artist, he and the kids transform a graffiti-covered tank into a mural full of animated lines and shapes. 7. Putting It Together — Don introduces the concept of composition. A trip to a farmer’s market provides lots of sketches for the kids’ idea books. A visit with a painter teaches the children how to organize a painting through repetition and variety. 8. What Does it Mean? — Don and the children visit an art museum, where they talk with a photographer, an art curator, and a West African artist about how to interpret works of art in terms of their design elements and compositions. 9. I Like It Because — The children visit an art gallery. The gallery owner discusses the works of art on display and encourages them to critique the works in terms of their likes and dislikes. 10. Different Ways of Seeing — For a surprise birthday party for Don, the kids create works of art that show his image in different ways. They also explore using the computer to create art, making a story quilt, and sculpting with clay. BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Monday, October 9 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-10; 2 hours, 30 minutes) Block Feed II: Monday, March 12 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-10; 2 hours, 30 minutes) Posie Paints C Fun, animated series that teaches basic art techniques Grade Level: Taping Rights: Length: Print Materials: Primary-3 School year 15 minutes See order form, pg. 124 KY Academic Expectations: 1.13, 2.23, 2.24 This animated series teaches children the basics of visual art and how successful artists have used various techniques. It challenges students to use the same skills to create their own artistic products. PROGRAM TITLES 1. Line 2. Shape and Form 3. Color 4. Value 5. Texture 6. Space BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Monday, August 14 at 8:30/7:30 am CT (Programs 1-6; 1 hour, 30 minutes) Block Feed II: Monday, January 15 at 8:30/7:30 am CT (Programs 1-6; 1 hour, 30 minutes) 24 • 2006/2007 M�Instructional Videos Doodle C FUNdamental art techniques for everyone Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: Web Site: Primary-12 15 minutes School year See order form, pg. 124 www.mystudiostore.com/doodlemain.htm KY Academic Expectations: 1.13, 2.22, 2.23, 2.24 Doodle is the world’s first 3D animated art teacher who, with the help of his animated friends, sparks the creative process with a fresh, new approach. The series teaches fundamental art concepts, vocabulary, techniques and incorporates the Internet in art history lessons. PROGRAM TITLES 1. Drawing Faces 2. Cartooning & Caricatures 3. Color 4. Painting 5. Drawing the Human Figure 6. Comic Book Art 7. Light & Shadow 8. Perspective 9. Drawing Animals 10. Careers in Art BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Monday, November 6 at 1:00 pm/12 noon CT (Programs 1-10; 2 hours, 30 minutes) Block Feed II: Monday, April 9 at 1:00 pm/12 noon CT (Programs 1-10; 2 hours, 30 minutes) Art On-Air K C Creative art projects in a variety of media Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: Videocassette: Web Site: 4-6 18-30 minutes Unlimited Downloadable at www.ket.org/education/guides See order form, pg. 125 www.ket.org/artonair KY Academic Expectations: 1.13, 2.22, 2.23 Kentucky Arts Council artists-in-residence show students how to express themselves in a variety of art projects. Each program provides step-by-step instructions and features students working on the same projects and reflecting on their own work. The series also features related works by famous artists and video field trips to local artists’ studios and other interesting places. Art On-Air helps students recognize elements and principles of art and design, use a variety of media and tools, see themselves as artists, and learn to value themselves through their creativity. PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS 1. Walking the Dot (with Rebecca Gallion) — contour line drawing 2. Moving Lines (with Alice Noel) — gestural line drawing 3. Color (with Catherine Rubin) — cut paper collage, using color to evoke a mood and communicate ideas 4. Geo-Vistas (with Ruben Moreno) — cardboard sculptures created with geometric shapes 5. Tessellations (with Thomas Freese) — making a tessellating stamp 6. cARTography (with Cynthia Cooke) — using map-making skills to draw an imaginary island Monday, September 25 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-10; 4 hours) and at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 11-12; 1 hour) Block Feed II: Monday, February 26 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-10; 4 hours) and at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 11-12; 1 hour) From the Shadows of the River K C Portrait of a Native American artist 4-12 30 minutes Unlimited Downloadable at www.ket.org/education/guides See order form, pg. 125 KY Academic Expectations: 2.20, 2.25, 2.26 The Wickliffe Mounds near Barlow inspired contemporary Native American artist Truman Lowe, who created four works of art in response to what he saw and felt upon visiting this ancient Indian settlement on the bluffs overlooking the Mississippi River. He returned to create another work on-site with the help of schoolchildren from several Western Kentucky counties. Through interviews with Lowe and others involved in the project, as well as documentary footage shot at the mounds and at Murray State University’s Eagle Gallery, From the Shadows of the River offers insights into the creative process, the mounds and their significance, and other issues surrounding multicultural art. A KET production. Note: This program is offered on videotape only. See tape order information on pages 125-126. Crafting Tradition K C Honoring Kentucky’s hand-made past Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Videocassette: Monday, December 18 at 12:30 pm/11:30 am CT Monday, April 23 at 2:00/1:00 pm CT Art History I: A Century of Modern Art An introduction to the works of influential modern painters BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: Videocassette: BROADCAST SCHEDULE 5-12 60 minutes Unlimited See order form, pg. 125 KY Academic Expectations: 2.23, 2.24, 2.25, 2.26 KET’s Crafting Tradition visits members of five Western Kentucky families to discover how they are preserving the pioneer tradition of handcrafting baskets, fishing nets, quilts, brooms, and furniture. It also explores the importance of maintaining this link to the past. Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: Videocassette: 6-12 15 minutes School year Call 800-457-4509, ext. 4 or visit www.ait.net/catalog See order form, page 125 KY Academic Expectations: 1.13, 2.23, 2.24, 2.25, 2.26 These programs highlight the evolution of European and American art during the last century. Host Denise Hicks discusses selected works, commenting on the artists’ personal histories and pointing out distinctive elements in their work. The series aims to give students the skill and information they need to recognize the works of 60 modern artists by style and subject matter. At the end of each program, the host asks students to identify several paintings by artist. PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS European Artists 1. Impressionism — Edouard Manet, Claude Monet, Auguste Renoir, Edgar Degas, and Mary Cassatt; Post-Impressionists Georges Seurat and Henri Toulouse-Lautrec 2. The Fauves — Vincent Van Gogh and Paul Gauguin; Fauves Henri Matisse, Andre Derain, Maurice Vlaminck, and Raoul Dufy 3. Expressionism — Edvard Munch, Ernst Kirchner, Wassily Kandinsky, Franz Marc, Alexei Jawlensky, and Max Beckmann 4. Cubism — Paul Cezanne; Cubists Pablo Picasso, Georges Braque, Juan Gris, Robert Dulaunay, Fernand Leger, Marcel Duchamp, and Piet Mondrian 5. Surrealism — Salvador Dali, Joan Miro, Henri Rousseau, Rene Magritte, Giorgio De Chirico, and Marc Chagall 6. Modern Mavericks — Gustav Klimt, Paul Klee, George Rouault, Amedeo Modigliani, Giacomo Balla, and Oskar Kokoschka American Artists 7. American Landscapes — Joseph Stella, Charles Demuth, Charles Scheeler, Georgia O’Keeffe, Arthur Dove, and John Marin 8. Realism — Edward Hopper, Ben Shahn, Jack Levine, Horace Pippin, Milton Avery, Andrew Wyeth, Grant Wood, and Thomas Hart Benton 9. Abstract Expressionism — Jackson Pollock, Franz Kline, Willem de Kooning, Adolph Gottlieb, Mark Rothko, Helen Frankenthaler, Morris Louis, and Frank Stella 10. Pop — Roy Lichenstein, Andy Warhol, James Rosenquist, Wayne Thiebaud, Claes Oldenburg, and Robert Indiana BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Monday, August 21 at 8:30/7:30 am CT (Programs 1-6; 1 hour, 30 minutes) and at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 7-10; 1 hour) Block Feed II: Monday, January 22 at 8:30/7:30 am CT (Programs 1-10; 2 hours, 30 minutes) and at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 7-10; 1 hour) 2006/2007 M�Instructional Videos� • 25 ARTS&HUMANITIES 7. Drawing Animals (with Rex Robinson) — a three-step process enabling students to draw anything they want 8. Turning Everyday Objects Into Art (with Alice Noel) — art of assemblage to make portrait boxes 9. Exploring the Third Dimension with Captain Cooke (with Cynthia Cooke) — three-dimensional map making 10. Celebrating Ancestors (with Maude Alexander) — African mask making 11. Combining Words with Art (with Thomas Freese) — creating accordion-fold books 12. Animating Art (with Ruben Moreno) — creating zoetropes ARTS&HUMANITIES Photo: Rick McComb Looking at Picasso The master painter’s early life and works Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Web site: 8-12 20 minutes School year http://picasso.thinkport.org KY Academic Expectations: 2.23, 2.24 Art History II: A Survey of the Western World American and European painting and architecture Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: Videocassette: 6-12 15 minutes School year Call 800-457-4509, ext 4 or visit www.ait.net/catalog See order form, page 125 KY Academic Expectations: 1.13, 2.23, 2.24, 2.25, 2.26 This series hooks students with modern paintings before moving back in time to make the old masters just as interesting. Host Denise Hicks connects the artists’ styles to the literature and history of their times. She also traces religious influences on art, from the Spanish Inquisition and El Greco’s mysticism to the Protestant Reformation, with Dürer’s line drawings and woodcuts, Cranach’s portrait of Luther, and the pictures Hans Holbein painted to help Henry VIII choose another wife. PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS 1. Ash Can Plus — Bellows, Luks, Sloan, Stieglitz, and Marsh 2. Cosmopolitans: Looking Toward Europe — Sargent, Whistler, Homer, This 20-minute program on the early life and works of Pablo Picasso features visits to the conservation lab at the National Gallery of Art, an up-close look at pieces in the gallery’s Picasso exhibition, and commentary by art historians and museum educators. BROADCAST SCHEDULE Monday, September 4 at 9:10/8:10 am CT Monday, February 5 at 9:10/8:10 am CT World of Our Own: Kentucky Folkways K C Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: Videocassette: Web Site: 8-12 30 minutes Unlimited Downloadable at www.ket.org/education/guides See order form, pg. 125 www.ket.org/programs/ket/folkways KY Academic Expectations: 2.23, 2.24, 2.25, 2.26 Eight 30-minute programs highlight the rich cultural heritage of rural and urban Kentucky in this 1998 KET production. Each program features Kentuckians from different communities and walks of life who represent aspects of traditional culture in their work, play, art, and religious lives. PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS 1. Culture of Work, Part 1 — occupational folklife of Kentucky, featuring river workers, tobacco farmers, whiskey tasters, farriers, small businesses, and the lore of truck drivers Eakins, Henri, and Prendergast 3. Colonials: Realistic and Romantic — Copley, West, Catlin, Bingham, Bierstadt, Church, and Ryder 4. English Painting — Hogarth, Gainsborough, Reynolds, Constable, Turner, and Rossetti 5. Spain — El Greco, Velasquez, Goya, and Gaudi 6. German Painting — Grünewald, Dürer, Cranach, and Holbein 7. 17th-Century Dutch Masters — Rembrandt, Hals, Vermeer, de Hooch, and Ruisdael 8. Flemish Painting — Jan Van Eyck, Rogier Van Der Weyden, Bruegel, Memling, and Rubens 9. Italian Renaissance Painting — Leonardo, Michelangelo,Raphael 10. Mannerism: Italy — Parmigianino, Pontormo, Bronzino, Tintoretto, Michelangelo 11. Italian Architecture — Alberti, Brunelleschi, Bramante, Michel-angelo, Giulio Romano, Palladio, Bernini, and Longhena 12. Chateaux of the Loire — Amboise, Azay-Le-Rideau, Blois, Chambord, Chenonceau, and Cheverny 2. Culture of Work, Part 2 3. Culture of Play, Part 1 — traditional ways of passing time, including the Rolley Hole marble game; children’s hand-jive games; thumbpicked, flat-picked, and fiddle music; folk dancing; and 4th of July, Emancipation Day, Dirt Bowl Homecoming, and Halloween celebrations 4. Culture of Play, Part 2 5. Art of the Everyday, Part 1 — the aesthetic of everyday activities: quilting, weaving, chair making, riving shingles, stone masonry, gardening, food preservation, and dog breeding 6. Art of the Everyday, Part 2 7. Customs and Beliefs, Part 1 — rites and traditions marking important events in life, including roadside memorials, funeral traditions, Indian wedding traditions, folk medicine, spiritual yard art, and Cherokee lore 8. Customs and Beliefs, Part 2 BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Monday, August 21 at 1:00 pm/12 noon am CT (Programs 1-12; 3 hours) Block Feed II: Monday, January 22 at 1:00 pm/12 noon am CT (Programs 1-12; 3 hours) 26 • 2006/2007 M�Instructional Videos Thursday, November 23 at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 1-8; 4 hours) Block Feed II: Monday, November 27 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-8; 4 hours) Block Feed III: Monday, April 30 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-8; 4 hours) Ellis Wilson – So Much to Paint K C Looking at Painting K C How to read a painting Grade Levels: Length: Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Web Site: 9-12 60 minutes (easily divided into shorter segments for classroom use) Unlimited www.ket.org/elliswilson KY Academic Expectations: 1.13, 2.23, 2.24, 2.25, 2.26 Taping Rights: Print Materials: Videocassette: Web Site: 9-12 60 minutes (easily divided into shorter segments for classroom use) Unlimited Downloadable at Web site See order form, pg. 125 www.ket.org/painting Ellis Wilson (1899-1977) was an artist whose passion for painting took him from his native Mayfield, KY, to Manhattan, where he worked for 50 years. Using bold color, shape, and form, Wilson captured the beauty and dignity of ordinary black people in more than 300 paintings. In the process, he helped integrate the art world, paving the way for younger African American artists. The program’s Web site provides additional information about Wilson and other African American artists as well as two lesson plans. KY Academic Expectations: 1.13, 2.23, 2.24 This documentary has been flagged for content due to adult subject matter, such as race-based violence and works depicting nudity. The complete program is not recommended for elementary students and should be previewed for middle school. As an alternative to watching the program, students may explore the Gallery and Biography sections of the Web site. PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS 1. Realism — featuring painters Dal Macon, Gaela Erwin, Sheldon BROADCAST SCHEDULE Monday, December 4 at 7:00/6:00 am CT Monday, May 7 at 7:00/6:00 am CT Artist-host Robert Tharsing introduces the art of painting through interviews with Kentucky artists, visits to their studios, and discussion of techniques, elements, and principles in selected paintings. Using works from Kentucky art museums by Kentucky artists and artists from other places and times, the series demonstrates how to “read” a painting. Tapley, and Laurin Notheison 2. Expressionism — featuring painters Mark Priest, Karen Spears, Ann Tower, Guiniver Smith, and Patrick Adams 3. Abstraction — featuring painters Gerald Ferstman, Sam Gilliam, Ivan Schifferdecker, Nancy Cassell, and Henry Chodkowski BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Monday, November 27 at 1:00 pm/12 noon CT Block Feed II: Monday, April 30 at 1:00 pm/12 noon CT See Also... Arte y Más! (Primary) –– page 38 James Still’s River of Earth (7-12) — page 73 Creating Stories and Music (4-5) –– page 62 Kentucky Chautauqua (7-12) — page 109 Electronic Field Trip to Horse Cave Theatre (5-12) — page 31 Making Grimm Movies (6-12) — page 113 Electronic Field Trip to the Kentucky Center for the Arts (6-12) Signature (9-12) — page 74 — page 32 Electronic Field Trip to the Kentucky Opera (6-9) — page 33 SignatureLIVE! (10-12) — page 753 Telling Tales (K-8) — page 69 Electronic Field Trip to the Speed Museum (6-12) — page 35 Humanities Through the Arts (KET Distance Learning) — page 115 2006/2007 M�Instructional Videos� • 27 ARTS&HUMANITIES The life and art of a Kentucky-born painter KET ELECTRONIC FIELD TRIPS ELECTRONIC FIELDFIELD TRIPSTRIPS KET ELECTRONIC program titles Electronic Field Trip Through Geologic Time (4-12) K C Electronic Field Trip to a Beef Cattle Farm (4-12) K C Electronic Field Trip to a Coal Mine (4-8) K C Electronic Field Trip to a Horse Farm (4-12) K C Electronic Field Trip to a Newspaper (4-12) K C Electronic Field Trip to a Pig Farm (4-12) K C Electronic Field Trip to a Veterinary Clinic (4-12) K C F Electronic Field Trip to a Watershed (K-8) K C Electronic Field Trip to an Orchard (4-12) K C F Electronic Field Trip to Fort Harrod and Fort Boonesborough (4-8) K C Electronic Field Trip to Horse Cave Theatre (5-12)K C Electronic Field Trip to KET (4-12) K C Electronic Field Trip to Mammoth Cave (4-12) K C Electronic Field Trip to Perryville (4-12) K C Electronic Field Trip to the Aviation Museum of Kentucky (3-12) K C Electronic Field Trip to the Falls of the Ohio (4-12) K C Electronic Field Trip to the Forest (4-8) K C Electronic Field Trip to the Kentucky Center for the Arts (6-12) K C Electronic Field Trip to the Kentucky Opera (6-9) K C Electronic Field Trip to the Louisville Zoo (4-12) K C Electronic Field Trip to the Mountain Homeplace (4-12) K C Electronic Field Trip to the National Weather Service (5-12) K C Electronic Field Trip to the Post Office (Primary) K C Electronic Field Trip to the Speed Museum (6-12) K C Electronic Field Trip to Toyota (4-12) K C Electronic Field Trip to White Hall Historic Site, Home of Cassius M. Clay (4-12) K C F New or Revised for 2006/2007 C Closed Captioned K KET Production On KET EncycloMedia Electronic Field Trip Through Geologic Time K C Exploring layers of rock at Jenkins Pound Gap Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Teaching Resources: Videocassette: Web Site: 4-12 60 minutes Unlimited Available at Web site See order form, pg. 125 www.ket.org/trips/geotime KY Academic Expectations: 2.1, 2.2, 2.3, 2.6, 2.19 A geologist and a science teacher show students how to identify and date rocks as they explore Jenkins Pound Gap in Letcher County. This is the first site in Kentucky designated as geologically significant. Geologist Frank Ettensohn and teacher Kim Alexander discuss how early settlers used the Pound Gap as an easy crossing through the Pine Mountain Ridge. As students see how layers of rocks formed and moved over time, they’ll see examples from the Devonian through the Mississippian to the Pennsylvanian periods, with lots of explanations and visible examples of aging. Produced 2000, updated 2002 Students will explore: • how weathering and erosion caused the formation of a gap; • what cultural and economic effects the gap had on the region; • how environments move “in and out” through time; • differences between shale, sandstone, coal, limestone and dolomite; & • how to identify properties of rock in terms of color, texture, and hardness. BROADCAST SCHEDULE Thursday, August 17 at 10:00/9:00 am CT Thursday, January 18 at 2:00 pm CT Electronic Field Trip to a Beef Cattle Farm K C Where’s the beef in Kentucky? Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Teaching Resources: Videocassette: Web Site: 4-12 60 minutes Unlimited Available at Web site See order form, pg. 125 www.ket.org/trips KY Academic Expectations: 2.1, 2.3, 2.18, 2.19, 2.36 Photo: Rick McComb The Goggin family has owned and operated a beef cattle farm in Boyle County for three generations. Family members show us around the farm and answer questions like these: • Why do they raise beef cattle? • What role does the veterinarian play in the operation? • How is artificial insemination used? • How do cows digest grass? • What’s a day on the farm like for kids? Co-produced by KET and University of Kentucky College of Agriculture. Produced 1997. Note: This program shows real-life video of the intestines and digestive system of a cow. BROADCAST SCHEDULE 28 • 2006/2007 M�Instructional Videos Thursday, September 21 at 2:00/1:00 pm CT Wednesday, November 22 at 12 noon/11:00 am CT Thursday, February 22 at 2:00/1:00 pm CT Electronic Field Trip to a Coal Mine KC Exploring the coal industry in Kentucky Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Teaching Resources: Videocassette: Web Site: 4-8 60 minutes Unlimited Available at Web site See order form, pg. 125 www.ket.org/trips/coal KY Academic Expectations: 2.1, 2.6, 2.19 BROADCAST SCHEDULE Thursday, August 31 at 10:00/9:00 am CT Thursday, January 18 at 3:00/2:00 pm CT Electronic Field Trip to a Horse Farm K C Daily life with thoroughbreds Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Teaching Resources: Videocassette: Web Site: 4-12 60 minutes Unlimited Available at Web site See order form, pg. 125 www.ket.org/trips/farm KY Academic Expectations: 2.3, 2.19, 2.36 During a field trip to Margaux Farm in Woodford County, students will learn: • what makes the Bluegrass region so good for raising horses and other livestock; • what a farrier does; • what a typical day on a horse farm is like; • how a veterinarian knows that a mare is in foal; and • how thoroughbred horses are bred (limited information) Co-produced by KET and University of Kentucky College of Agriculture. Produced 1996. BROADCAST SCHEDULE Thursday, September 7 at 10:00/9:00 am CT Wednesday, April 25 at 12 noon/11:00 am CT Thursday, May 3 at 12 noon/11:00 am CT BROADCAST SCHEDULE Thursday, September 21 at 6:00/5:00 am CT Thursday, November 7 at 6:00/5:00 am CT Thursday, February 22 at 6:00/5:00 am CT Tuesday, April 10 at 6:00/5:00 am CT Electronic Field Trip to a Pig Farm K C Daily life with pigs Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Teaching Resources: Videocassette: Web Site: 4-12 60 minutes Unlimited Available at Web site See order form, pg. 125 www.ket.org/trips KY Academic Expectations: 2.3, 2.6, 2.19, 2.36 Learn about the swine industry without leaving your classroom. Students whose experience with pigs might consist of watching the move “Babe” might be very curious to learn what life is like on a pig farm. At BLT Farm in Hardin County, students will learn what makes Kentucky so good for raising pigs and other livestock, what a typical day on a pig farm is like, how a veterinarian clips needle teeth, and a little about the life cycle of swine. Collaboratively developed by KET, University of Kentucky College of Agriculture, and the Kentucky Farm Bureau. Produced 1997. BROADCAST SCHEDULE Thursday, September 21 at 3:00/2:00 pm CT Wednesday, November 22 at 1:00 pm/12 noon CT Thursday, February 22 at 3:00/2:00 pm CT Electronic Field Trip to a Veterinary Clinic K C A visit to the animal doctor Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Teaching Resources: Videocassette: Web Site: 4-12 60 minutes Unlimited Available at Web site See order form, pg. 125 www.ket.org/trips/vet KY Academic Expectations: 2.1, 2.3, 2.6, 2.36 Electronic Field Trip to a Newspaper K C Producing a daily newspaper Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Teaching Resources: Videocassette: Web Site: 4-12 60 minutes Unlimited Available at Web site See order form, pg. 125 www.ket.org/trips/news KY Academic Expectations: 1.11, 1.13, 2.36 Learn about the daily workings of a vet clinic without leaving your classroom. During the field trip to Jessamine Veterinary Clinic, William McCaw, Dan Bowling, and Stacey Burdick answer questions and give visitors a glimpse of their daily activities. Students will: • see how difficult it is to be a veterinarian; • learn how a veterinarian cleans animal’s teeth; • find out how veterinarians use computers and other technology; continued on next page 2006/2007 M�Instructional Videos� • 29 KET ELECTRONICFIELDTRIPS KET takes you and your students on a field trip to a coal mine, and you won’t even need a hard hat—in fact, you never have to leave your classroom. Through the magic of satellite and video technology, you will • go underground to a deep mine; • visit a surface mine and see huge earth-moving equipment; • see reclamation projects; • learn how coal was formed; • watch as coal is transported by truck, barge, and train; and • hear questions answered by people involved in Kentucky’s mining industry. Produced 1995 On this field trip, KET introduces you to the staff of the Lexington Herald-Leader. A reporter, a sports writer, a photographer, and an editor share techniques used in creating a newspaper. Get a close-up look at the business of running a newspaper as we explore advertising and sales and see the technology involved. A variety of newspaper professionals also offer advise on developing career skills. Produced 1996. • • • • observe problem-solving skills used to diagnose non-verbal patients; discover careers available to people who want to work with animals; follow several cases from start to finish; and meet a variety of animals: cats, dogs, horses, cows, and even some exotic pets. Produced 1998. BROADCAST SCHEDULE ELECTRONIC FIELDFIELD TRIPSTRIPS KET ELECTRONIC Thursday, September 21 at 12 noon/11:00 am CT Wednesday, November 22 at 3:00/2:00 pm CT Friday, December 8 at 8:00/7:00 am CT Thursday, February 22 at 12 noon/11:00 am CT Friday, May 11 at 8:00/7:00 am CT Electronic Field Trip to a Watershed K C We all live in a watershed Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Teaching Resources: Videocassette: Web Site: K-4, 5-8 2 programs, 15 minutes Unlimited Available at Web site See order form, pg. 125 www.ket.org/trips/watershed KY Academic Expectations: 2.1, 2.2, 2.3, 2.5, 2.6, 2.31 Take a virtual field trip to a Kentucky watershed—including rural, urban, karst, and mountain environments—to learn how our individual actions affect water quality. A watershed is an area that catches rain and snow and drains into a common waterway, such as streams, rivers, lake or groundwater. Large watersheds are made up of many smaller watersheds. There will be two 15-minute field trips, both with computer animation, showing how watersheds work. The first will be targeted to grades K-4 and the second targeted to grades 5-8. The field trips will show ways water gets polluted, ways water systems can clean themselves until pollution overwhelms the cures, and some of the practices schools and families can do to help keep waterways clean in Kentucky. Produced 2006. BROADCAST SCHEDULE Friday, December 1 at 9:00/8:00 am CT (Programs 1-2; 30 minutes) Thursday, December 7 at 9:30/8:30 am CT (Programs 1-2; 30 minutes) Thursday, December 14 at 3:30/2:30 pm CT (Programs 1-2; 30 minutes) Friday, January 5 at 10:30/9:30 am CT (Programs 1-2; 30 minutes) Thursday, February 1 at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 1-2; 30 minutes) Thursday, February 23 at 9:30/8:30 am CT (Programs 1-2; 30 minutes) Electronic Field Trip to an Orchard K C From planting to pruning to marketing Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Teaching Resources: Videocassette: Web Site: 4-12 40 minutes Unlimited Available at Web site See order form, pg. 125 www.ket.org/trips/orchard KY Academic Expectations: 2.2, 2.3, 2.6, 2.36 KET and the University of Kentucky College of Agriculture spent a year documenting the work of orchard owners Mark and Don Haney, who live near Somerset, Kentucky. You’ll learn about: • the crucial role played by honeybees in fruit production, • the importance of pruning trees in winter, • how many apples are produced on one tree, • the economics of operating a successful orchard, • the fun of visiting an orchard to pick your own apples Produced 1999. BROADCAST SCHEDULE Thursday, August 24 at 10:00/9:00 am CT Thursday, January 25 at 9:15/8:15 am CT Electronic Field Trip to Fort Harrod and Fort Boonesborough K C Westward expansion into Kentucky and daily life in a settlement fort Grade Level: Length: Taping Rights: Teaching Resources: Videocassette: Web Site: 4-8 20 minutes Unlimited Available at Web site See order form, pg. 125 www.ket.org/trips/forts Academic Expectations: 1.16, 2.16, 2.19, 2.20 Photo: Rick McComb 30 • 2006/2007 M�Instructional Videos Harrodstown (now Harrodsburg) and Boonesborough, two of Kentucky's 18th century settlements, provide an intriguing glimpse into Kentucky's pioneer past. Students will learn why early settlers moved to Kentucky as well as the routes they traveled. Early settlers encountered many barriers to exploration and settlement, experienced conflict and compromise in their interactions with Kentucky's native peoples, and endured many hardships as they used the natural resources to survive and establish communities on the frontier. Along the way, these early pioneers created a unique culture and forever changed the physical environment of the land they settled. Through the video and Web site, students will visit these reconstructed forts and get to experience what daily life was like for pioneers as they watch re-enactors and craftspeople demonstrate the responsibilities and areas of specialization of the members of a settlement community. Produced 2006. BROADCAST SCHEDULE Tuesday, October 17 at 9:00 am ET Wednesday, October 18 at 3:20 pm ET Friday, October 20 at 3:00 pm ET Monday, October 23 at 9:40 am ET Thursday, February 22 at 9:00/8:00 am CT Thursday, March 1 at 9:30/8:30 am CT Thursday, March 15 at 2:00/1:00 pm CT First hand look at stage production Grade Level: Length: Taping Rights: Teaching Resources: Videocassette: Web Site: 5-12 30 minutes Unlimited Available at Web site See order form, pg. 125 www.ket.org/trips/horsecave Academic Expectations: 2.23, 2.24, 2.36 Tucked away in Kentucky’s cave country is a remarkable regional theater company: Horse Cave Theatre, which has been bringing both stage classics and original dramas to audiences from throughout the region since 1977. Go behind the scenes to explore what it takes to mount a theatrical production and meet the people whose professionalism and dedication to both theater and education make Horse Cave a vibrant part of its community. Produced 2002. BROADCAST SCHEDULE Thursday, October 12 at 10:00/9:00 am CT Monday, December 18 at 1:30/12:30 pm CT Monday, February 5 at 9:30/8:30 am CT Tuesday, April 10 at 8:00/7:00 am CT Electronic Field Trip to KET K C A behind-the-scenes look at TV production Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Videocassette: 4-12 60 minutes Unlimited See order form, pg. 125 KY Academic Expectations: 1.3, 1.13, 2.22, 2.36 The program includes a behind-the-scenes tour through KET’s studios and control rooms, post-production audio and video editing suites, master control center, video graphics and animation facilities, and more, letting students see nearly every step in the production process. Host and tour guide Mary Henson interviews Missy Johnston, host of News Quiz; Tim Farmer, host of Kentucky Afield; and KET production crew members about how they put a program together. Produced 1996. Let’s go spelunking! Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Teaching Resources: Videocassette: Web Site: 4-12 60 minutes Unlimited Available at Web site See order form, pg. 125 www.ket.org/trips/cave KY Academic Expectations: 2.2, 2.3, 2.6, 2.19, 2.36 Tour the world’s largest cave system with National Park Service rangers. They provide fascinating information at each stop. See the beautiful Frozen Niagara, the blind fish, Native American artifacts, the “bottomless” pit, and unique passageways underground. Squeeze through some tight places while exploring Fat Man’s Misery and the Wild Caving tour, and learn about careers in park service and science. Produced 1997. Teachers may choose to watch the trip in the following four segments: 1. Beauty and Diversity of the Cave 2. History and Geology of the Cave 3. Animal Species of the Cave 4. The Role of Water in Caves and Cave Formation BROADCAST SCHEDULE Thursday, September 21 at 8:00/7:00 am CT Friday, December 8 at 7:00/6:00 am CT Thursday, February 22 at 8:00/7:00 am CT Wednesday, May 9 at 9:00/8:00 am CT Friday, May 11 at 7:00/6:00 am CT Electronic Field Trip to Perryville K C Echoes of the Civil War in Kentucky Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Teaching Resources: Videocassette: Web Site: 4-12 30 minutes Unlimited Available at Web site See order form, pg. 125 www.ket.org/trips/perryville KY Academic Expectations: 2.16, 2.20 The Battle of Perryville marks the last major attempt of the Confederate States of America to claim Kentucky. Learn how this battle changed this town forever by exploring what happened on that tragic day, October 8, 1862. The field trip includes descriptions of what life was like for soldiers in 1862, reenactments of war, and an archeological dig with high school students. Produced 1999. BROADCAST SCHEDULE Thursday, August 3 at 10:30 am CT Thursday, September 14 at 9:30/8:30 am CT Thursday, September 21 at 9:30 am CT Thursday, February 22 at 9:30 am CT BROADCAST SCHEDULE Tuesday, November 7 at 7:00/6:00 am CT Wednesday, December 6 at 12 noon/11:00 am CT Thursday, March 1 at 3:00/2:00 pm CT Tuesday, April 10 at 7:00/6:00 am CT 2006/2007 M�Instructional Videos� • 31 ELECTRONICFIELD FIELDTRIPS TRIPS KET ELECTRONIC Electronic Field Trip to Horse Cave Theatre K C Electronic Field Trip to Mammoth Cave K C • • • • find out how glacial action exposed the fossil beds and formed the Ohio River Valley; learn the importance of the Falls to early Native Americans and eventually to the development of the Louisville area; see some of the animals that now call the Falls area home; and tour the Interpretive Center and get a behind-the-scenes look at how realistic displays were created. Produced 1999. BROADCAST SCHEDULE ELECTRONIC FIELDFIELD TRIPSTRIPS KET ELECTRONIC Photo: Rick McComb Electronic Field Trip to the Aviation Museum of Kentucky K C Celebrating 100 years of flight Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Teaching Resources: Videocassette: Web Site: 3-12 15 minutes Unlimited Available at Web site See order form, pg. 125 www.ket.org/trips/aviation Streaming video available at Web site KY Academic Expectations: 2.2, 2.3, 2.4, 2.6, 2.20, 2.36 This fun and educational video celebrating 100 years of powered flight spotlights several exhibits at the museum, located at Blue Grass Airport in Lexington, including the first aircraft built and flown in Kentucky and the Kentucky Aviation Hall of Fame. It also features segments on women in aviation and Kentucky aviation pioneers. A look at the Aviation Museum’s annual Summer Camp for students ages 10-15 demonstrates how the study of aviation fits into many curriculum areas, including science, math, and social studies. Produced 2003. BROADCAST SCHEDULE Thursday, September 21 at 1:30/12:30 pm CT Thursday, November 2 at 1:30/12:30 pm CT Thursday, February 22 at 1:30/12:30 pm CT Thursday, March 8 at 1:30/12:30 pm CT Electronic Field Trip to the Falls of the Ohio K C Visit a fossil bed and a nature preserve Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Teaching Resources: Videocassette: Web Site: 4-12 60 minutes Unlimited Available at Web site See order form, pg. 125 www.ket.org/trips/falls KY Academic Expectations: 2.2, 2.3, 2.6, 2.19, 2.36 Just beyond the Louisville skyline lies a geological and environmental treasure called the Falls of the Ohio. This area is one of the world’s largest exposed Devonian age fossil beds. Here, 265 species of bird and 125 species of fish now live in this nature preserve. On this field trip, students will: • visit the outer beds and see the fossils of many Devonian age creatures; • learn how fossils are formed; 32 • 2006/2007 M�Instructional Videos Thursday, September 21 at 10:00/9:00 am CT Wednesday, November 29 at 9:00/8:00 am CT Friday, February 2 at 3:30/2:30 pm CT Wednesday, May 2 at 2:30/1:30 pm CT Electronic Field Trip to the Forest K C Give your students a "behind the trees" look at a forest! Grade level: Length: Taping Rights: Teaching Resources: Videocassette: Web Site: 4-8 3, 20-minute programs Unlimited Available at Web site See order form, pg. 125 www.ket.org/trips/forest KY Academic Expectations: 2.1, 2.2, 2.3, 2.5, 2.6, 2.18, 2.20, 2.33, 2.36 A simple hike through the woods turns into a learning experience when three teenagers meet up with a forester from the Kentucky Division of Forestry. Through their discussions with the forester, interviews with other experts, and a video exploration of the forest, our hikers and your students will learn about the history of Kentucky forests, the natural and human influences which have shaped them, and their future. Content areas covered include: environmental science, life science, history, geography, and economics. Produced by KET, the USDA Forest Service, Kentucky Division of Forestry, and other partners. This series is correlated to a comprehensive forestry curriculum guide located at the Web site. Produced 2002. BROADCAST SCHEDULE Thursday, September 21 at 7:00/6:00 am CT (Programs 1-3; 1 hour) Friday, December 1 at 3:00/2:00 pm CT (Programs 1-3; 1 hour) Thursday, February 22 at 7:00/6:00 am CT (Programs 1-3; 1 hour) Friday, May 4 at 3:00/2:00 pm CT (Programs 1-3; 1 hour) Electronic Field Trip to the Kentucky Center for the Arts K C Backstage access Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Teacher's Guide: Videocassette: 6-12 60 minutes Unlimited Downloadable at www.ket.org/trips/materials.htm See order form, pg. 125 KY Academic Expectations: 2.23, 2.24, 2.36 This field trip explores the Kentucky Center for the Arts in Louisville, Kentucky’s largest performing arts space, including the Center’s different theaters. Meet actors and musicians and follow a performance from the initial planning to the excitement of opening night. Produced 1999. Electronic Field Trip to the Louisville Zoo K C BROADCAST SCHEDULE Habitats and animal care Thursday, August 10 at 10:00/9:00 am CT Monday, December 18 at 2:00/1:00 pm CT Wednesday, May 16 at 1:00 pm/12 noon CT Perspectives/Careers in Opera Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Teaching Resources: Videocassette: Web Site: 6-9 30 minutes Unlimited Available at Web site See order form, pg. 125 www.ket.org/trips/opera KY Academic Expectations: 2.23, 2.36 A cultural adventure to Louisville for a production of the American opera Susannah. A brief history of opera and descriptions of artistic styles help students develop an appreciation for this unique performance event. A backstage, behind-the-scenes tour shows the sets, costumes, lighting and make-up while providing insight into the many skills necessary to produce live musical and theatrical productions. Produced 2000. BROADCAST SCHEDULE Thursday, October 12 at 10:30/9:30 am CT Monday, December 18 at 3:00/2:00 pm CT Monday, February 5 at 3:15/2:15 pm CT Wednesday, May 16 at 2:00/1:00 pm CT 4-12 60 minutes Unlimited Available at Web site See order form, pg. 125 www.ket.org/trips/zoo KY Academic Expectations: 2.3, 2.6, 2.36 The animals and staff of the Louisville Zoo host a very special behindthe-scenes tour for Kentucky teachers and students. See how training of animals makes caring for them easier for zoo staff. Learn about the successful captive breeding program for the black-footed ferret; watch a zoo veterinarian at work; and learn about an innovative rotation system which allows animals to move between different habitats. Produced 1999. BROADCAST SCHEDULE Thursday, October 12 at 9:00/8:00 am CT Wednesday, November 22 at 2:00/1:00 pm CT Friday, December 8 at 6:00/5:00 am CT Thursday, March 1 at 2:00/1:00 pm CT Friday, May 11 at 6:00/5:00 am CT Electronic Field Trip to the Mountain Homeplace K C Mountain life in the 1850s Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Teaching Resources: Videocassette: Web Site: 4-12 30 minutes Unlimited Available at Web site See order form, pg. 125 www.ket.org/trips/homeplace KY Academic Expectations: 2.16, 2.19, 2.20 Take a trip through time to the nineteenth century in Eastern Kentucky. The Mountain Homeplace is an interpretive working farm in Paintsville, Kentucky. Local author, John David Preston, provides historical perspective on the development of the region. Re-enactors demonstrate what rural life was like from 1850-1875. Produced 1999. On this trip, students will: • learn how wilderness can be turned into a mountain homestead; • visit a one-room school house; • meet the preacher and learn about customs of the rural church; • find out how the blacksmith bends iron and makes a cooking fork; • follow children as they dance folk dances and play dulcimers; and • observe plowing, cooking, spinning and carving the 1850’s way. BROADCAST SCHEDULE Thursday, August 3 at 10:00/9:00 am CT Thursday, September 21 at 1:00 pm/12 noon CT Thursday, February 1 at 8:30/7:30 am CT Thursday, February 22 at 1:00 pm/12 noon CT Photo: Rick McComb 2006/2007 M�Instructional Videos� • 33 ELECTRONICFIELD FIELDTRIPS TRIPS KET ELECTRONIC Electronic Field Trip to the Kentucky Opera K C Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Teaching Resources: Videocassette: Web Site: Electronic Field Trip to the Post Office K C Real world applications in science and technology A look at the postal service in action for primary students! Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Teaching Resources: Videocassette: 5-12 20 minutes Unlimited Available at Web site See order form, pg. 125 Web Site: www.ket.org/trips/weather Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Teaching Resources: Videocassette: Primary 7 minutes Unlimited Available at Web site See order form, pg. 125 KY Academic Expectations: 1.16, 2.1, 2.2, 2.3, 2.4, 2.5, 2.10, 2.31, 2.33 Web Site: www.ket.org/trips/postoffice KET takes students on an electronic visit to the Louisville office of the National Weather Service, one of three regional offices that provide services to Kentucky. Students will learn about: • the history and mission of the National Weather Service; • professionals who work there; • different types of forecasting, equipment and technology; • Doppler radar, and satellites; • safety precautions students should follow; • and much more! Produced 2004. This electronic field trip allows primary students to see what an integral part, the U.S. Postal Service plays in their daily lives. Primary students follow the mail as it moves from mailbox to post office to mailbox. Streaming video available at Web site BROADCAST SCHEDULE Thursday, August 24 at 10:40/9:40 am CT Friday, December 1 at 8:00/7:00 am CT Friday, May 4 at 8:00/7:00 am CT Streaming video available at Web site KY Academic Expectations: 1.11, 2.33, 5.3, 6.3 With its emphasis on communication, this program reinforces the need for strong reading and writing skills and underscores the idea that individual actions can play a significant role in the community at large. The field trip is correlated to Kentucky's Program of Studies, Core Content, and KELP Indicators. The accompanying web page includes ideas for: • classroom activities and performance assessments • ideas for cross curricular units • links to additional support materials • lesson plans and instructional suggestions • Web bibliography detailing content of support sites • Vocabulary list Produced 2005. BROADCAST SCHEDULE Photo: Rick McComb ELECTRONIC FIELDFIELD TRIPSTRIPS KET ELECTRONIC Electronic Field Trip to the National Weather Service K C Thursday, August 31 at 3:15/2:15 pm CT Thursday, November 16 at 1:30/12:30 pm CT Thursday, January 25 at 1:30/12:30 pm CT Thursday, March 1 at 1:40/12:40 pm CT Thursday, March 29 at 1:30/12:30 pm CT TV411 Learning Kits Financial Literacy and Read All About It Life skills in a lively format. Call 1-800-228-3382 for more information 34 • 2006/2007 M�Instructional Videos Electronic Field Trip to the Speed Museum K C Careers in visual art Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Teaching Resources: Videocassette: Web Site: 6-12 60 minutes Unlimited Available at Web site See order form, pg. 125 www.ket.org/trips/speed Hot Ticket! The 2006-2007 KET Resource Book Get your FREE PDF copy today! www.ket.org/itvvideos KY Academic Expectations: 2.23, 2.24, 2.25, 2.36 BROADCAST SCHEDULE Thursday, September 28 at 10:00/9:00 am CT Monday, December 18 at 3:30/2:30 pm CT Wednesday, May 16 at 12 noon/11:00 am CT Electronic Field Trip to Toyota K C Advanced technology and teams at work Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Teaching Resources: Videocassette: Web Site: 4-12 60 minutes Unlimited Available at Web site See order form, pg.125 www.ket.org/trips/toyota KY Academic Expectations: 2.3, 2.36, 2.37 KET’s visit to Toyota Motor Manufacturing Kentucky Inc., in Georgetown takes students to places that are off limits to most tour groups. Your class will see the whole process of building a vehicle, from steel to the test track. As your students watch Toyota employees at work, they’ll also see and hear what’s expected on the job in the world of automotive manufacturing. On the tour learn more about: • die casting—how a 17-ton steel coil becomes car parts; • automation/technology and robotics; • inspection processes; • power train assembly/engines; • recycling of materials; • business terms like kaizen, kanban, and jidoka; and • 85 m.p.h. test-track runs! Produced 1997. Electronic Field Trip to White Hall Historic Site, Home of Cassius M. Clay K C Visit the home of an emancipationist Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Teaching Resources: Videocassette: 4-12 40 minutes Unlimited Downloadable at www.ket.org/trips See order form, pg. 125 Web Site: www.ket.org/trips/whitehall Streaming video clips available at Web site KY Academic Expectations: 2.14, 2.16, 2.20 Located in Madison County near Richmond, White Hall was home to emancipationist Cassius Marcellus Clay (1810-1903), a naturalist, newspaper publisher, and well-known orator who served as U.S. minister to Russia from 1861-1869. Clay is credited with urging President Lincoln to sign the Emancipation Proclamation freeing American slaves. As students move through White Hall’s stately rooms, they learn about Clay’s long and varied career and his involvement in the Mexican-American and Civil Wars. They’ll also learn about his daughter, Laura Clay, who was active in the women’s rights movement of the 19th and early 20th century. Produced 2000. BROADCAST SCHEDULE Tuesday, October 31 at 12 noon/11:00 am CT Thursday, February 1 at 9:00/8:00 am CT BROADCAST SCHEDULE Thursday, September 14 at 12:25/1:25 pm CT Wednesday, November 29 at 8:00/7:00 am CT Wednesday, May 9 at 8:00/7:00 am CT See Also... Colonial Williamsburg Electronic Field Trips (4-12) – page 104 2006/2007 M�Instructional Videos� • 35 ELECTRONICFIELD FIELDTRIPS TRIPS KET ELECTRONIC This field trip gives a behind-the-scenes look at the operation of the J.B. Speed Art Museum, in Louisville, Kentucky’s oldest and largest art museum. Hosted by KET’s former Humanities instructor Liz Jewell Coogle, the program begins on the loading dock as crates arrive for a traveling exhibition of Rodin sculpture. From there we’ll look at the many and varied professions that are required to mount an exhibit, care for the art, and make the museum an interesting and inviting place to visit. Produced 1999. FOREIGN LANGUAGE program titles Lyric Language (Primary-6) german Deutsch macht Spass! (German Can Be Fun!) (4-6) K japanese Teach Me Japanese (Primary-5) sign language F Signing Time! (Preschool-3) C spanish ¡Arte y más! (Primary) Saludos (Primary-5) The Spanish Media Collection (Primary-12) Los Constructores de Cerritos del Uruguay: Uniendo el Pasado y el Futuro (4-12) K Destinos (9-12) F New or Revised for 2006/2007 C Closed Captioned K KET Production On KET EncycloMedia Lyric Language FOREIGNLANGUAGE Introduction to the Spanish, French, German, and Japanese languages Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: Videocassette: Primary-6 20 minutes Unlimited See order form, pg. 124 See order form, pg. 125 KY Academic Expectations: 2.27, 2.28 This series combines original music and bilingual lyrics with the fun of live-action video adventure to introduce children to foreign language vocabulary. The song lyrics, printed on the television screen and simultaneously sounded out, alternate between English and the other language to provide instant word comprehension. Children can sing along to practice pronunciation. Subtitles are provided in both English and the featured language. The accompanying teacher’s guide, designed for both monolingual and bilingual teachers, provides reproducible student activity pages. The games and activities may be used to motivate students to pursue a foreign language or to teach English as a Second Language (ESL) while developing multicultural awareness. PROGRAM TITLES 1. Spanish I, Program 1 2. Spanish I, Program 2 3. Spanish II, Program 1 4. Spanish II, Program 2 5. French I, Program 1 6. French I, Program 2 7. French II, Program 1 8. French II, Program 2 9. Japanese I, Program 1 36 • 2006/2007 M�Instructional Videos 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. Japanese I, Program 2 German I, Program 1 German I, Program 2 German II, Program 1 German II, Program 2 BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Monday, July 31 at 1:20/12:20 pm CT (Programs 1-8; 2 hours, 40 minutes) and Monday, August 7 at 2:00/1:00 pm CT (Programs 9-14; 2 hours) Block Feed II: Monday, January 1 at 1:20/12:20 pm CT (Programs 1-8; 2 hours, 40 minutes) and Monday, January 8 at 2:00/1:00 pm CT (Programs 9-14; 2 hours) german Deutsch macht Spass! (German Can Be Fun!) K Introduction to the German language Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: Videocassette: 4-6 30 minutes Unlimited See order form, pg. 124 See order form, pg. 125 KY Academic Expectations: 2.27, 2.28 This fun and interactive series begins with an introduction to the very basic expressions and an overview of the Federal Republic of Germany, one of the major German-speaking countries. As the series progresses, students will add to their understanding of simple expressions and vocabulary. Print materials include exercises and activities for reinforcement and extended practice. Audio cassettes with recordings accompany the exercises. PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS 1. Course introduction; greetings; asking for and giving names; boy/ girl/prouncing vowel: a,e,i,o,u; Story Corner: medieval map and legends 2. Review introductions and greetings; pronouns for “you” and “I”; alphabet; names of places “Where do you live?” Story Corner: life in a medieval fortress 3. Review alphabet; colors; introduce “Familie Rosenmeyer” who live in the Rhine region; Story Corner: medieval family life 4. Names for member of the family; numbers 0-20; the verb “to be”; “How old are you?”; Story Corner: medieval titles 5. The calendar; an invitation to the North Sea; verbs; to live, to come; the song “Laurentia”; Story Corner: the life of the knight 6. The seasons and weather; verbs: to swim, to play, to have; a vacation on the sea; Story Corner: the hero Siegfried 7. A comparison of the capital cities: Berlin/Washington, D.C.; zoo animals; Story Corner: medieval treasure 8. A shopping trip in town; currency; expressing likes and dislikes; ordering in a café; Story Corner: medieval treasure 9. What is a saga or epic? Who are the characters of the epic The Song of the Nibelungs? What are the forces of good and evil? Where does this saga take place? 10. The telling and retelling of the tale! BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Monday, December 4 at 9:00/8:00 am CT (Programs 1-2; 1 hour) and at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 3-10; 4 hours) Block Feed I: Monday, May 7 at 9:00/8:00 am CT (Programs 1-2; 1 hour) and at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 3-10; 4 hours) japanese Teach Me Japanese Beginning Japanese Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: Videocassette: Web Site: Primary-5 15 minutes School Year Downloadable at web site See address below www.hardin.k12.ky.us/isd/japan/default.htm KY Academic Expectations: 2.27, 2.28 This series exposes viewers to basic Japanese vocabulary, culture, and customs. Students learn and participate with Yuki and Keiko, puppets on the show, as Ms. Shiffler teaches them Japanese. Music, origami, dance, and storytelling are included in the series. A vocabulary of approximately 150 Japanese words is taught. This series is developed and produced by Hardin County educators and has been used successfully there for several years. 8. “Cherry Blossoms” Sakura are the national flowers of Japan.When they bloom, parties are held all over the country. Shifflersan has a party of her own. 9. “Children’s Day” May 5th is set aside to honor all Japanese children. Yuki is honored and flies a carp streamer. 10. “Happy Birthday, Yuki” Keiko and Shifflersan give Yuki a special birthday party. 11. “Down on the Farm” Yuki puts on his overalls and heads for the farm. Even the animals can speak Japanese. 12. “Monkey See, Monkey Do” Yuki and friends go on a field trip to the zoo. 13. “Lava, Lava Everywhere” Yuki is assigned a science project about volcanoes. He makes a model of an erupting Mt. Fuji. 14. “I Love My Sports” Yuki teaches Shifflersan about his favorite sports, while Shifflersan teaches Yuki how to say it Japanese. 15. “Keiko’s New Clothes” A frantic Keiko discovers she has nothing to wear to her friend’s party, and learns that it is easier to say “clothes” in Japanese than it is finding that special outfit. Keiko is thankful she has unifoms to wear to school and doesn’t have to decide what to wear to everyday. 16. “I Get Around” After her best friend Yuki has gone to Japan, Keiko makes a visit to the travel agency to investigate the price of a ticket to Japan. Keiko also learns about other modes of transportation in Japan. 17. “Through the Woods” While taking a hike, Shifflersan tries to teach Keiko the importance of being healthy and that the Japanese have one of the highest life expectancies in the world because of their healthful lifestyle. 18. “Sayonara Keiko” Keiko’s friends gather to send her off in style to Japan with a goodbye party. Luckily, her passport arrives just in the nick of time. continued on next page PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS 1. “Help Me Please” Yuki is a Japanese/American boy who wants to FOREIGNLANGUAGE Photo: Rick McComb learn about his home country. Yuki meets Shifflersan at the movies and they begin their friendship and their study of Japanese. 2. “I Am Not Wearing A Dress” While at a fashion show, Yuki and his friends discover the traditional clothing of Japan. 3. “A Taste of Japan” Shifflersan and Yuki visit a Japanese restaurant and learn how to make sushi. 4. “Do I Ever Get a Break?” Yuki discovers that children in Japan have a much longer school year than American students. 5. “Happy New Year Oshogatsu” Yuki and his friends ring in the New Year Japanese style by celebrating the biggest holiday of the year. 6. “I Do Not Play With Dolls” Keiko teaches Yuki about the traditional Doll Festival. 7. “What Day is It?” Yuki learns how to say the days of the week in Japanese. KET4—The Annenberg/CPB Channel Just for teachers! Flexible, convenient PD workshops Challenge yourself at: www.ket.org/education/ket4.htm 2006/2007 M�Instructional Videos� • 37 With an unparalleled multi-sensory approach (encouraging learning through three senses: visual, auditory, and kinesthetic), Signing Time! reaches children with diverse learning styles and abilities by encouraging interaction through signing, singing, speaking, and dancing. Featuring the remarkable Rachel Coleman, her daughter Leah (who is deaf), Alex (Leah's cousin, who can hear) and their animated pet frog "Hopkins", the Signing Time! series teaches hundreds of ASL vocabulary-building signs that are useful in daily life. Charming animation, children who sign, and delightful songs make any time Signing Time! Dale Mings Hardin County Educational and Community Television 110 South Main Street Elizabethtown, KY 42701 270-769-8948 email: dmings@hardin.k12.ky.us Photo: Rick McComb Tapes may be purchased from: 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. Leah's Farm My Great Backyard The Zoo Train My Day My Neighborhood Welcome to School Time to Eat BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Monday, August 14 at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 1-8; 4 hours) and Monday, August 21 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 9-13; 2 hours, 30 minutes) Block Feed II: BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Monday, December 18 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-16; 4 hours) and at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 17-18; 30 minutes) Block Feed II: Thursday, April 5 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-16; 4 hours) and at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 17-18; 30 minutes) Block Feed II: Monday, May 14 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-16; 4 hours) and at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 17-18; 30 minutes) sign language FOREIGNLANGUAGE PROGRAM TITLES 1. My First Signs 2. Playtime Signs 3. Everyday Signs 4. Family, Feelings & Fun 5. ABC's 6. My Favorite Things Signing Time! C Wednesday, November 15 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-8; 4 hours) and at 12 noon (Programs 9-13; 2 hours, 30 minutes) Block Feed III: Wednesday, December 13 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-8; 4 hours) and at 12 noon (Programs 9-13; 2 hours, 30 minutes) Block Feed IV: Monday, January 15 at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 1-8; 4 hours) and Monday, January 22 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 9-13; 2 hours, 30 minutes) spanish ¡Arte y más! Learning American Sign Language A KET primary-level Spanish language course Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: Web Site: Grade Levels: K-Primary Length: 10 minutes Taping Rights: Unlimited Print Materials: Downloadable at www.ket.org/education/guides Videocassette/DVD: See order form, pg. 125 Preschool-3 30 minutes School Year See Web site www.signingtimekids.org KY Academic Expectations: 1.3, 1.12, 2.34, 4.1, 5.3, 6.1, 6.2, 6.3 Play, sing, and sign along with Singing Time! while learning American Sign Language. This multi-sensory program introduces children to a "hands on" second language. It is natural and fun for them to use their bodies to communicate. Research shows that, when empowered with even a few simple ASL signs: • • • babies and toddlers can express their needs through sign long before they can speak (resulting in fewer tantrums!) school-aged children can develop larger vocabularies and better reading skills while learning a second language children with special needs or developmental delays can find their own "voice" 38 • 2006/2007 M�Instructional Videos KY Academic Expectations: Aligned with the National Standards for Foreign Language Learning, the Kentucky Content for World Language Proficiency and addresses the KY Core Content for Arts and Humanities !Arte y más! is aligned with national standards in foreign language instruction, which support an immersion approach to teaching children a second language. Immersion philosophy centers on contentbased instruction completely in the target language. The lessons are based on Kentucky’s Arts and Humanities core content. !Arte y más! consists of two levels of introductory instruction--Level 1 which is 26 programs dealing with introductory language and movement concepts, and Level 2 which is an additional 34 programs dealing with music, visual arts, and drama. In addition, there is a professional development component that focuses on understanding the theory of how children acquire a second language and practical implementation tips for classroom usage. Level 1 also contains Program 0 which is conducted entirely in English and introduces students and teachers to !Arte y más! The lessons are guided by four underlying principles: 1) the lessons reflect direct instruction in Kentucky Arts and Humanities Core Content; 2) all instruction is in Spanish; 3) children are actively engaged with the content, not passive viewers; and 4) teachers participate with the children. BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Monday, August 28 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (PD program, Programs 0-19; 3 hours, 35 minutes) and at 12 noon (Programs 20-42; 4 hours); and Monday, September 4 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 43-60; 3 hours, 10 minutes) Block Feed II: (Programs through 26 only!) Monday, January 29 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (PD program, Programs 0-19; 3 hours, 35 minutes) and at 12 noon (Programs 20-42; 4 hours); and Monday, February 5 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 43-60; 3 hours, 10 minutes) Saludos 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25. 26. 27. 28. 29. 30. 31. 32. 33. 34. 35. 36. Vamos a comer (Let’s eat) Vamos a repasar II (Let’s review II) La biblioteca (The library) Las partes del cuerpoóPart I (The parts of the body: Part I) Las partes del cuerpoóPart II La clase (The classroom) ¿Cómo está el tiempo? (How’s the weather?) Entra a mi casa (Enter my house) Vamos a repasar III (Let’s review III) Vamos a dibujar (Let’s draw) Vamos al campo (Let’s go to the country) Vendo gorras (I sell caps) Vendo frutas (I sell fruits) Vamos de compras (Let's go shopping) Vamos a repasar IV (Let's review IV) ¿Qué hora es? (What time is it?) Los meses del año (The months of the year) Las cuatro estaciones (The four seasons) Una visita (A visit) ¿Qué haces en casa? (What do you do at home?) Vamos a repasar V (Let's review V) Memorias (Memories) BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Monday, October 2 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-16; 4 hours) and at 12 noon (Programs 17-32; 4 hours); and Monday, October 9 at 8:30/7:30 am CT (Programs 33-36; 1 hour) Block Feed II: Monday, March 5 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-16; 4 hours) and at 12 noon (Programs 17-32; 4 hours); and Monday, March 12 at 8:30/7:30 am CT (Programs 33-36; 1 hour) continued on next page Beginning Spanish Primary-5 15 minutes Unlimited See below See order form, pg. 125 FOREIGNLANGUAGE Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: Videocassette: KY Academic Expectations: 1.12, 2.27, 2.28 Saludos introduces Spanish to the English-speaking student. The emphasis is on oral communication, with each program introducing a limited number of new words and grammatical structures. The objectives are to create a positive attitude toward learning a foreign language, to teach correct Spanish pronunciation, to teach a practical set of Spanish phrases, to present the history and culture of some Hispanic countries, and to develop cross-cultural understanding. Photo: Rick McComb PROGRAM TITLES 1. ¡Hola! ¿Cómo estás? (Hello! How are you?) 2. ¿Cómo te llamas? (What is your name?) 3. Mi familia (My family) 4. La visita de abuelita (Grandmother’s visit) 5. ¿Cuántos años tienes? (How old are you?) 6. La ropa de niñas (Clothing for girls) 7. Los regalos (The presents) 8. Vamos a repasar (Let’s review) 9. Más números (More numbers) 10. El supermercado (The supermarket) 11. La carta (The letter) 12. La fiesta mejicana (The Mexican party) 13. Los d’as de la semana (The days of the week) 14. Los animales (The animals) 2006/2007 M�Instructional Videos� • 39 TEACHING MATERIALS A master set of guide materials is available for Saludos. It contains teacher’s information for each program, plus student activity sheets, words and music to all songs, copies of all recipes, reproducible student activity sheets, and audiocassettes for each lesson. The set is available for $25. Order from: Great Plains National Instructional Television Library • P.O. Box 80669 • Lincoln, NE 6850l • (800) 228-4630 or Order at Web site: www.gpn.unl.edu (Type "Saludos" in keyword search, click on first entry (Saludos), scroll to bottom of page to teacher's guide, and click on "Saludos Teacher's Guide" to order. The Spanish Media Collection Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Videocassette: Primary-12 4-28 minutes Unlimited See order form, pg. 125 KY Academic Expectations: 2.27, 2.28 The Spanish Media Collection features Spanish-language adaptations of 31 outstanding children’s books which are familiar to any elementary or public library. From students learning English as a Second Language to students learning Spanish, this series has multiple uses for the creative teacher who wants to introduce Spanish or English vocabulary, emphasize translation skills, and provide rich language experience to students. BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Monday, September 18 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-27; 4 hours) and at 12 noon CT (Programs 28-31; 1 hour) Block Feed II: Monday, February 19 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-27; 4 hours) and at 12 noon CT (Programs 28-31; 1 hour) FOREIGNLANGUAGE PROGRAM TITLES/LENGTHS 1. La Maravillosa Grace (Amazing Grace) (9:00) 2. La Oruga Y El Renacuajo (The Caterpillar and the Polliwog) (8:00) 3. “Charlie Necesita Una Capa” (“Charlie Needs a Cloak”) (8:00) 4. Jorge El Monito Ciclista (Curious George Rides a Bike) (11:00) 5. Danielito Y El Dinosauro (Danny and the Dinosaur) (10:00) 6. El Dia En Que La Boa De Jimmy Se Comio’ La Lavada (The Day Jimmy’s Boa Ate the Wash) (6:00) 7. Doctor De Soto (Doctor De Soto) (11:00) 8. Owen (Owen) (15:00) 9. El Sombrero (The Hat) (7:00) 10. Aqui Viene El Gato! (Here Comes the Cat! ) (12:00) 11. El Hipopotamo Tiene Calor (Hot Hippo) (6:00) 12. La Cocina De Noche (In The Night Kitchen) (8:00) 13. Chrysanthemum (Chrysanthemum) (10:00) 14. Joey Se Escapa (Joey Runs Away) (8:00) 15. La Gallinita Roja (The Little Red Hen) (8:00) 16. Los Patitos Encuentran Un Hogar (Make Way For Ducklings Hen) (12:00) 17. La Navidad De Max (Max’s Christmas Hen) (5:00) 18. Miguel Muligan Y Su Pala De Vapor (Mike Mulligan and His Steam Shovel Hen) (11:00) 19. Millones De Gatos (Millions of Cats) (11:00) 20. Monty (Monty) (8:00) 21. El Hombre De La Luna (Moon Man) (9:00) 22. Chato’s Kitchen (Chato’s Kitchen) (12:00) 23. El Huevo Mas Bonito Del Mundo (The Most Wonderful Egg in the World) (6:00) 24. Silvestre Y La Piedrecita Magica (Sylvester and the Magic Pebble) (12:00) 25. Max El Prodigio Musical (Musical Max) (10:00) 26. Nora, La Bulliciosa (Noisy Nora) (7:00) 27. La Historia Del Patito Ping (The Story About Ping) (11:00) 28. El Muneco De Nieve (The Snowman) (28:00) 29. La Sopa De Piedras (Stone Soup) (12:00) 30. Los Tres Bandidos (The Three Robbers) (6:00) 31. El Paseo De Rosita (Rosie’s Walk) (5:00) Photo: Rick McComb 40 • 2006/2007 2004/2005 M�Instructional Videos Los Constructores de Cerritos del Uruguay: Uniendo el Pasado y el Futuro K Exploring archaeology in South America Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Videocassette: Web site: 4-12 27 minutes Unlimited See order form, pg. 125 www.dinacyt.gub.uy/proykent/novedades.htm KY Academic Expectations: 2.21, 2.19, 2.20. 2.28 Produced in Spanish and English, this program explores the rich 11,000year history of Uruguay in South America, and learn about the preHispanic mound-building societies that once flourished there. Viewers accompany Uruguayan public school students as they collect scientific data at a mound, and then visit the school to see how the students used their archaeological field experience to explore topics in social studies and language learning. The video and its bilingual website are designed as teaching tools; both resources are useful for raising students’ awareness of the importance of preserving our cultural heritage. Note: The schedule for the English version The Prehistoric Mounds of Uruguay: Linking the Past and the Future is located on page 105. BROADCAST SCHEDULE Monday, August 28 at 9:35/8:35 am CT Monday, January 29 at 9:35/8:35 am CT UNIT III: Progams 7-11 Un viaje a Madrid, España Vocabulario: clothing; numbers (21-99); interrogatives; months; seasons; colors; descriptive adjectives Gramática: saber; conocer; present tense (irregular verbs, stem-changing verbs, reflexive pronouns); more on possession; demonstratives; more on using adjectives; ser and estar UNIT IV: Programs 12-18 Un viaje a Argentina Vocabulario: numbers (100-1000); food groups (meat, fish, fruits, vegetables, others); writing and written works Gramática: preterite tense; direct and indirect object pronouns; prepositions; pronoun objects of prepositions; using adjectives; verbs used reflexively and nonreflexively; gustar and verbs like it; two object pronouns together UNIT V: Programs 19-26 Un viaje a Puerto Rico Vocabulario: directions; more family members; weather; changes in state or condition; parts of a house; domestic appliances; more descriptive adjectives Gramática: present and past progressive; imperfect; imperfect and preterite together; por and para; affirmatives and negatives; idioms with tener; comparisons; estar and sentirse with adjectives; acabar de; hace, hace É que; al + infinitive BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Destinos An introduction to Spanish 9-12 30 minutes School year See below See order form, pg. 125 KY Academic Expectations: 1.12, 2.27, 2.28 In Destinos, students learn Spanish in the diversified cultural context in which it is spoken throughout the world. Destinos uses the natural conversations and intriguing situations of a continuing story as the vehicle for language learning. The course is designed to help develop proficiency in all the communication skills—listening, speaking, reading, and writing. Monday, October 30 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-8; 4 hours) and at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 9-16; 4 hours); and Monday, November 6 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 17-24; 4 hours) and at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 25-26; 1 hour) Block Feed II: Monday, April 2 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-8; 4 hours) and at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 9-16; 4 hours); and Monday, April 9 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 17-24; 4 hours) and at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 25-26; 1 hour) SUPPORT MATERIALS To order teacher and student support materials that accompany this series, call (800) 462-6595.- The following information is necessary to include when ordering any of the support materials:- Destinos Copyright Year 1992, Programs 1-26. While all characters speak only in Spanish, early episodes use both Spanish and English narration. By episode 13, students hear only Spanish. At the end of each episode, Raquel reviews the highlights of the story, using flashbacks and on-screen questions and answers to help students remember what has happened. PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS UNIT I: Programs 1-2 Vocabulario: cognates; family members Gramática: ser; articles and gender; possession 2004/2005 M�Instructional Videos� • 41 FOREIGNLANGUAGE Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: Videocassette: UNIT II: Programs 3-6 Un viaje a Sevilla, España Vocabulario: numbers (0-20); academic subjects; animals; days of the week; telling time Gramática: hay; estar; ir; present tense (regular verbs); subject pronouns; personal a; interrogatives; adjectives MATHEMATICS program titles MATHEMATICS Tumbletown Tales (K-3) Mathica’s Mathshop I (Primary) C Mathica’s Mathshop II (Primary) C Math Can Take You Places (3-6) The Eddie Files (3-6) Cyberchase (3-7) C It Figures (4) Math Works (5) Solve It (6) Math Vantage (7-9) C Math Basics (9-12) C Statistics: Decisions Through Data (10-12) C F C K New or Revised for 2006/2007 Closed Captioned KET Production On EncycloMedia Tumbletown Tales Entertaining Primary Series Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: K-3 2-4 minutes School Year Downloadable at www.ket.org/education/guides KY Academic Expectations: 2.7, 2.8, 2.10, 2.11 Tumbletown Tales is an entertaining series in which Tumbleweed, a fun-loving hamster, uses mathematics to solve real-life problems in the world of fuzzy rodents. Tumbleweed models a variety of strategies in the problem-solving process and practices skills related to the big ideas in the math curriculum. Short, entertaining programs offer opportunities for students to discuss concepts such as capacity, perimeter, quanitity, division, data analysis and patterning. Students will be delighted at the tiny world of Tumbleweed and the many inhabitants of Tumbletown. PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS/LENGTHS 1. The Not-So-Fantastic Voyage — Estimation (2:41) 2. Play Rodent Ball!!! — Patterns (3:37) 3. Wagons, Boats and Automobiles — Fractions (3:05) 4. A Room with a Choo — Division (3:00) 5. Birthday Crate — Maps-directions (2:56) 6. Green Thumb Conundrum — Color arrangements-math creativity (3:07) 7. Silo Road — Volume and capacity (2:53) 8. Mix Master — Cereal ingredients and proportions (2:26) 9. De'Fence — Calculations for building (3:00) 10. Traffic Co-Op — Charting traffic control for solutions (4:00) 11. Field of Seeds — Counting by rows (3:30) 12. The Even Littler Hobo — Directions in paces, etc. rabbit paces, hamster 13. 14. 15. 16. paces, etc. (3:52) Trading Cages — Using math in decorating (3:50) A Seed by Any Other Weight — Weights and measurements (3:46) Keeping Up with Zeus — Shapes (3:57) Chomp-etition — Substraction (3:50) 42 • 2006/2007 M�Instructional Videos 17. Tumbleweed: Domestic Animal — Shapes and measurements (3:25) 18. Current Sea-Worthy — Money -coins (3:38) 19. Pile Driver — Organization skills (3:32) BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Friday, October 13 at 1:00 pm/12:00 noon CT (Programs 1-19; 1 hour, 25 minutes) Block Feed II: Friday, November 24 at 1:30/12:30 pm CT (Programs 1-19; 1 hour, 25 minutes) Block Feed III: Friday, March 16 at 1:00 pm/12:00 noon CT (Programs 1-19; 1 hour, 25 minutes) Mathica’s Mathshop I C Recognizing and solving math problems Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: Primary 15 minutes School year Downloadable at www.ket.org/education/guides KY Academic Expectations: 2.7, 2.8, 2.9, 2.10 Fairy-tale-style programs put math into a meaningful context and engage viewers in story-related problems involving number, measurement, and geometry. PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS 1. Help Wanted — Number: counting by 2s, 5s, and 10s to 25; number facts of 7. Geometry: solids and their properties—cube, cone. The King Comes Calling — Number: counting by 10s; sorting. Geometry: plane figures —rectangle and triangle. 3. Food for Thought — Measurement: mass. Geometry: solids and their properties—sphere, cylinder, rectangular prism, cube. 4. All-Star Elf — Number: ordinals. Measurement: linear and volume. Data management: interpretation of graphs. 5. Sweet Dreams — Number: patterns, subtraction. Fractions: wholes, halves, and quarters. 6. Winter Wonders — Number: doubling numbers, patterns. Geometry: plane figures. Measurement: area. Math in the environment. 7. Best Wishes — Number: subtraction of numbers to 50, place value, counting by 3s and 4s. Measurement: linear. Geometry: plane figures— triangle, square, trapezoid, rhombus, hexagon. Data management: interpreting graphs. 8. Mary, Mary Extraordinary — Number: sorting; division; equal shares; probability. Data management: interpreting graphs. 9. A Sure Cure — Number: patterns, sequence, more than, less than. Measurement: estimating capacity. 10. A Rich Reward — Number: addition of equal groups, counting by 2s. Measurement: time, days of the week, hours. Geometry: plane figures. 2. BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Friday, October 13 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-10; 2 hours, 30 minutes) Block Feed II: Friday, March 16 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-10; 2 hours, 30 minutes) Photo: Rick McComb Mathica’s Mathshop II C Recognizing and solving math problems Primary 15 minutes School year Downloadable at www.ket.org/education/guides KY Academic Expectations: 2.7, 2.8, 2.9, 2.10 Ten more programs continue the story of Mathica, an elf in the Land of Tales, and introduce new math skills in stories involving characters from traditional tales of many cultures. PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS 1. Captain Blunder’s Treasure — Number: seriation, patterns, attributes of the number 9. Measurement: volume. Problem solving: permutations and combinations. 2. A Merry Band — Number: two- and three-digit numbers, adding twodigit numbers, sorting, mental math. Data management: interpreting information from a chart or graph. 3. Wicked Weather — Geometry: 3-D solids and their properties. Problem solving: number strategy game involving unequal groups. 4. Big Business — Number: counting by 50s, the 99 game. Measurement: mass—gram, kilogram; volume/capacity—liter; linear measures—centimeter, meter. 5. Courting Trouble — Number: multiplication-arrays, equal groups, mental math. Problem solving: making a diagram or chart. 6. Away with Wishes — Number: subtracting two-digit numbers, sorting and classifying, number patterns. 7. Tea Times Trouble — Number: multiplication, division—fair shares. Measurement: area—comparison. Geometry: 2-D shapes—square and triangle. 8. Super Gnome — Number: multiplication. Measurement: mass—comparison of kilogram measures; linear measures—centimeter, meter. Data management: interpreting a bar graph. 9. Winter Warm-Up — Number: fractions of a whole, division. Geometry: 2-D shapes—tangrams. 10. A Bundle of Joy — Number: probability. Measurement: time—minutes, hours. Geometry: 2-D shapes—pentominoes. BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Friday, October 13 at 8:30/7:30 am CT (Programs 1-6 (1 hour, 30 minutes) and at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 7-10; 1 hour) Block Feed II: Friday, March 16 at 8:30/7:30 am CT (Programs 1-6 (1 hour, 30 minutes) and at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 7-10; 1 hour) The Math Can Take You Places curriculum uses travel as a backdrop and five professionals in travel-related positions to show how algebraic thinking is used during everyday situations in the workplace. Studies have found that math concepts presented in real-world situations are critical to students' understanding and long-term retention. The mathematical applications in the program are patterning, equivalency, reasonableness, measurement and problem solving. PROGRAM TITLES 1. What's Cooking (Patterns) 2. All Aboard (Problem Solving) 3. Amazing Amusement (Domain/Range/Reasonableness) 4. The Tall and Long of It (Measurement/Area and Perimeter) 5. Time Flies (Equivalency) BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Friday, August 25 at 3:00/2:00 pm CT (Programs 1-5; 52 minutes) Block Feed II: Friday, October 27 at 2:30/1:30 pm CT (Programs 1-5; 52 minutes) Block Feed III: Friday, January 26 at 3:00/2:00 pm CT (Programs 1-5; 52 minutes) Block Feed IV: Friday, March 23 at 3:00/2:00 pm CT (Programs 1-5; 52 minutes) The Eddie Files C Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: 3-6 20-22 minutes School year Call Jady Wade at NETA, 1-803-799-5517 KY Academic Expectations: 2.7, 2.9, 2.10, 2.36 Math Can Take You Places C Through the eyes of “Eddie,” a 5th grade student in East Harlem math teacher Kay Toliver’s class, viewers discover how people use key math concepts and skills in the workplace. Four “Fileboxes,” each with 4 episodes and accompanying teacher guide. Using Math Skills in Careers PROGRAM TITLES Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: Web Site: 3-6 10 minutes School Year email math@kera.org www.mathcantakeyouplaces.org KY Academic Expectations: 2.7, 2.8, 2.10, 2.11, 2.12, 2.13, 2.36 File Box #1 101. Welcome to Math 102. Estimation 103. Geometry 104. Fractions File Box #2 201. Distance, Time and Speed 202. Statistics 203. Circles 204. Decimals continued on next page 2006/2007 M�Instructional Videos� • 43 MATHEMATICS Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: MATHEMATICS File Box #3 301. Length and Area 302. Patterns 303. Volume 304. The Counting Principle File Box #4 401. Ratios 402. Variables 403. Charts and Graphs 404. Percents BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Friday, August 11 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 101-303; 3 hours, 50 minutes) and at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 304-404; 1 hour, 51 minutes) Block Feed II: Friday, January 12 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 101-303; 3 hours, 50 minutes) and at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 304-404; 1 hour, 51 minutes) Cyberchase C Adventures in mathematics Grade Levels: 3-7 Length: 30 minutes Taping Rights: School year Web Site: www.pbs.org/cyberchase KY Academic Expectations: 2.7, 2.8, 2.9, 2.10 Three kids take a wild ride through cyberspace in this animated series. Summoned out of the library by a computer named Motherboard, they use the power of math and logic to defeat the schemes of a villain who is on a quest to take over the cyberworld. Each episode focuses on one “big idea.” For the 2006-2007 school year, KET will air Cyberchase Mondays, Tuesdays, Wednesdays, and Fridays at 10:00/9:00 am CT on KET3. Program numbers will be announced on each KET3 Monthly Calendar Update. Program titles and descriptions are located http://www.ket. org/itvvideos/offering/math/cyberchase.htm Please note that the distributor does not allow block feeds of this series. PROGRAM TITLES 1. Deciding When To Use Subtraction 2. Deciding How Close To Measure 3. Problem Solving: Acting It Out 4. Using Estimation 5. Understanding Place Value 6. Deciding When To Use Multiplication 7. Using Fractions 8. Problem Solving: Drawing a Picture 9. Looking at Objects—Different Positions 10. Using Mental Computation 11. Deciding When To Use Division 12. Problem Solving: Making a Table 13. Using Multiplication and Division 14. Relating Fractions and Decimals 15. Predicting Your Change 16. Using Bar Graphs 17. Understanding Remainders 18. Problem Solving: Recognizing Relevant Information 19. Finding Equivalent Fractions 20. Finding Area by Covering 21. Making Sense of a Big Number 22. Estimating When Dividing 23. Comparing Decimals 24. Using Probability 25. Changing Scale on a Graph 26. Problem Solving: Keep On Trying 27. Problem Solving: Many Ways To Go 28. Problem Solving: Using a Guide BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Friday, September 8 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-16; 4 hours) and at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 17-28; 3 hours) Block Feed II: Friday, February 9 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-16; 4 hours) and at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 17-28; 3 hours) Math Works Real-life problems involving mathematics Mondays, Tuesday, Wednesdays, and Fridays at 10:00/9:00 am CT (July 31, 2006 - May 18, 2007) Grade Level: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: Videocassette: It Figures Math Works extends to 5th graders the mathematics instruction begun in the 4th-grade series It Figures. Dramatic vignettes in each program show students how to solve problems involving mathematics. WEEKLY BROADCAST SCHEDULE Basic mathematical skills Grade Level: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: Videocassette: 4 15 minutes Unlimited See order form, pg. 124 See order form, pg. 125 KY Academic Expectations: 2.9, 2.10, 2.12, 2.13 It Figures helps students develop mathematical skills, understand mathematical ideas, learn problem-solving strategies, and communicate about mathematics. In each program, children confront a problem that mathematics can help solve. At mid-point, the story pauses for a review of the topic presented in an animated “fractured fairy tale.” 44 • 2006/2007 M�Instructional Videos 5 15 minutes Unlimited 1-800-457-4509, ext. 4 or www.ait.net/catalog See order form, pg. 125 KY Academic Expectations: 2.7, 2.9, 2.10, 2.12, 2.13 PROGRAM TITLES 1. Measurement: Finding Areas of Rectangles 2. Problem Solving: Identifying the Problem 3. Mental Computation: Using Mental Computation for Addition 4. Decimals: Place Value in Decimals 5. Geometry: Exploring Geometric Shapes 6. Estimating: Estimating by Rounding 7. Problem Solving: Simplifying the Problem 8. Decimals: Relating Fractions and Decimals 9. Measurement: The Difference Between Perimeter and Area 10. Problem Solving: Using Tables 11. Fractions: Adding and Subtracting Fractions 12. Statistics: Sampling 13. Geometry: Exploring the Movement of Objects in Space 14. Problem Solving: Looking for a Pattern 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Friday, August 25 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-16; 4 hours) and at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 17-28; 3 hours) Block Feed II: Friday, January 26 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-16; 4 hours) and at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 17-28; 3 hours) Solve It Fractions: Subtracting Mixed Numbers Estimation: Estimation Strategies for Division Problem Solving: Guess-Check-Revise Geometry and Measurement: Measuring Angles Problem Solving: Using Logical Reasoning Ratio/Proportion/Percent: Scale Drawing and Models BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Friday, November 10 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-12; 3 hours) and at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 13-18; 1 hour, 30 minutes) Block Feed II: Friday, April 13 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-12; 3 hours) and at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 13-18; 1 hour, 30 minutes) Math Vantage C Preparing for the transition to algebra and geometry Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: 7-9 10-15 minutes School year See order form, pg. 124 KY Academic Expectations: 2.9, 2.11, 2.12, 2.13 Mathematics for grade 6 Grade Level: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: Videocassette: 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 6 15 minutes Unlimited 1-800-457-4509, ext. 4 or www.ait.net/catalog See order form, pg. 125 KY Academic Expectations: 2.7, 2.9, 2.10, 2.11, 2.13 Both adults and children use specific strategies to solve math problems— making a drawing, constructing a table, looking for a pattern. Special video techniques and young hosts emphasize that knowing how to find an answer is as important as the answer itself. PROGRAM TITLES 1. Estimation: Reasonableness of Answer 2. Mental Computation: Using Mental Computation for Multiplication 3. Ratio/Proportion/Percent: The Meaning of Percent 4. Problem Solving: Drawing and Interpreting Tables 5. Measurement: Precision and Estimation 6. Statistics: Understanding Mean, Median, and Mode 7. Fractions: Multiplication with Fractions and Mixed Numbers 8. Decimals: Ordering Decimals 9. Geometry and Measurement: Measuring Volume 10. Estimation: Estimation Strategies for Multiplication 11. Problem Solving: Solving a Simpler Problem 12. Statistics: Sampling To prepare 7th, 8th, and 9th grade students for algebra and geometry, the series promotes active involvement; practical applications and enrichment activities; multidisciplinary and multicultural curriculum; problem-solving and reasoning skills; distributing integrated practice of mathematical concepts and skills; and encouraging students to read and communicate mathematics, thereby taking responsibility for their own learning. PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS PATTERNS UNIT: This unit emphasizes the problem-solving technique of finding patterns while instructing students in basic math concepts. 1. Discovering Patterns — the use of patterns to explain, create, and predict 2. Patterns with Ten — the use of patterns in base ten place value, exponents, scientific notation, and the metric system 3. Sequences and Ratios — the patterns of the Fibonacci Sequence and Golden Ratio in the world around us. These topics introduce sequences and ratios and reinforce measuring skills 4. Tessellations/Transformations — tessellations in quilt patterns, architecture, and nature 5. Networks, Paths, and Knots — mathematics as an evolving subject that develops through experimentation and discovery of patterns Photo: Rick McComb SPATIAL SENSE UNIT: This unit develops the ability to visualize and identify properties of two- and three-dimensional shapes. 6. 2D Visions in a 3D World — the necessary spatial skills for visualizing, representing, and interpreting object drawings and objects 7. What’s Your Angle? — various types of angles and their prevalence, importance, and use in the world around us 8. Trusting Triangles — triangles as a common shape used for structural support, as a means to indirectly measure distance, and as a basic shape with which the area of any polygon can be found 9. A World of Quadrilaterals — categorizing quadrilaterals in various descriptive categories. Perimeter, area, and properties of quadrilaterals are illustrated with examples in the world around us 10. Going Around in Circles (circles, curves, and spheres) — the properties of circles and curves and the area and circumference of circles through the action and motion of car races and amusement parks 11. Containers: Surface Area and Volume — surface area, volume, and the relationship between the two continued on next page 2006/2007 M�Instructional Videos� • 45 MATHEMATICS 21. 22. 23. 24. 25. 26. 27. 28. Decimals: Comparing Decimals Problem Solving: Using Diagrams Mental Computation: Using Mental Computation for Subtraction Place Value: Large Numbers Estimating: Other Estimation Strategies Fractions: Adding and Subtracting Fractions and Mixed Numbers with Unlike Denominators Statistics: Collecting Data Problem Solving: Using Graphs Probability: Possible Outcomes Decimals: Understanding the Placement of the Decimal Point Measurement: Dividing Regions Into Subregions for Finding Area Statistics: Analyzing Data Ratio: Forming Ratios Problem Solving: Using Maps MATHEMATICS DATA ANALYSIS UNIT: This unit illustrates methods of collecting, interpreting, and presenting data in meaningful ways. Theories of probability are also demonstrated. 12. Data: How Do You Get It? — examples of common ways to collect data, including surveys, observation, examination of past records, experiments, and simulations 13. Data: How Do You Show It? — a variety of possible data displays and the arenas in which they may be most appropriate 14. Data: What Does It Mean? — the challenges and techniques in accurately interpreting a variety of data displays 15. Chances Are — using data to make decisions and predictions based on the theories of probability LANGUAGE OF MATHEMATICS UNIT: This unit helps develop an understanding of integers and the elements of algebraic statements. 16. Integers — representing and using integers in various problem situations: adding, subtracting, multiplying, and dividing with integers; the number line; absolute value 17. Digitizing with Binary Power — various number systems, with special emphasis on using base two to communicate with computers; using place value to translate quantities between different base systems 18. Algebraic Expressions — translating word problems into numeric or algebraic equations; evaluating algebraic expressions; combining like terms 19. Algebraic Sentences — creating algebraic sentences to describe patterns from tables, graphs, and situations; solving one- and two-step singlevariable equations; finding and plotting ordered pairs; graphing onevariable inequalities on a number line PROPORTIONAL REASONING UNIT: This unit develops an understanding of comparisons, scale representations, and percentages as relationships of elements. 20. Rates and Ratios: Comparisons — using rates and ratios in numerous outdoor arenas 21. Proportions: Expressing Relationships — the process for finding missing values in proportions explained 22. Proportions: The Stretching and Shrinking Machine — proportional reasoning in various types of art 23. Percents: Say It with Hundredths — visualization for understanding percentages as comparisons to 100 BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Friday, September 29 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-19; 3 hours, 50 minutes) and at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 20-23; 56 minutes) Block Feed II: Friday, March 2 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-19; 3 hours, 50 minutes) and at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 20-23; 56 minutes) Math Basics K C Understanding the “big ideas” of math Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: Videocassette: 9-12 30 minutes Unlimited See order form, pg. 124 See order form, pg. 125 KY Academic Expectations: 2.7, 2.8, 2.10, 2.12, 2.13 Using a bold new approach based on the National Council of Teachers of Mathematics standards, the series helps adult students develop number sense and the confidence they need to succeed at mathematics and to prepare for GED study. It is also appropriate for general and remedial math classes at the middle and high school levels. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. Many Ways To Measure Solving Problems Estimation Many Kinds of Numbers Names for the Same Number How Much? Dimensions Patterns and Statistics Putting It All Together BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Friday, November 24 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-8; 4 hours) and at 12 noon/1:00 am CT (Programs 9-11; 1 hour, 30 minutes) Block Feed II: Friday, April 27 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-8; 4 hours) and at 12 noon/1:00 am CT (Programs 9-11; 1 hour, 30 minutes) Statistics: Decisions Through Data C Introducing statistical strategies Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: 10-12 15 minutes School year See order form, pg. 124 KY Academic Expectations: 2.12, 2.13 This introduction to statistics is a series of modules built around video units, offering students a variety of settings for problem solving. The material may be used to supplement a full course on statistics. Although the programs should be used in sequence, the series is designed for modular use, with individual units introduced whenever the curriculum calls for a particular statistical concept. PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS 1. What Is Statistics? — A puzzle graphic introduces the ideas that sta- 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. tistics is a way of solving puzzles using data, and that statistics can be divided into three main areas: describing data, producing data, and drawing conclusions from data. Stemplots — The distribution of a variable is a pattern of values. The stemplot is described as a graphical method of looking at the overall patterns of data. Histograms — The video uses graphics to briefly show how to make a histogram, with emphasis on how to choose the classes. More information is given on patterns of distribution as skewness is considered. Measures of Center — As histograms display male and female earnings, the median and the mean are introduced as alternative methods of comparing data. On-screen graphics present the recipe for calculating the median. Boxplots — A measure of spread or variability is presented with the use of boxplots. Standard Deviation — The concept of the standard deviation is explained as a function of variance. BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Friday, October 13 at 2:30/1:30 pm CT (Programs 1-6; 1 hour, 30 minutes) Block Feed II: Friday, March 16 at 2:30/1:30 pm CT (Programs 1-6; 1 hour, 30 minutes) PROGRAM TITLES 1. Beginning 2. Getting Up to Speed See Also... 46 • 2006/2007 M�Instructional Videos NASA Connect - page 86 NASA SCIence Files - 79 Workplace Essential Skills - page 59 PRACTICAL LIVING & VOCATIONAL STUDIES program titles F F New or Revised for 2006/2007 C Closed Captioned K KET Production On KET EncycloMedia SEE CROSSREFERENCE LIST OF: •CONSUMER DECISIONS •CAREER AND TECHNICAL EDUCATION other interdisplinary programs-page 60 Learning American Sign Language Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Preschool-3 30 minutes School Year Web Site: www.signingtimekids.org Print Materials: See Web site KY Academic Expectations: 1.3, 1.12, 2.34, 4.1, 5.3, 6.1, 6.2, 6.3 Play, sing, and sign along with Signing Time! while learning American Sign Language! This multi-sensory program introduces children to a "hands on" second language. It is natural and fun for them to use their bodies to communicate. Research shows that, when empowered with even a few simple ASL signs: • • • babies and toddlers can express their needs through sign long before they can speak (resulting in fewer tantrums!) school-aged children can develop larger vocabularies and better reading skills while learning a second language children with special needs or developmental delays can find their own "voice" With an unparalleled multi-sensory approach (encouraging learning through three senses: visual, auditory, and kinesthetic), Signing Time! reaches children with diverse learning styles and abilities by encouraging interaction through signing, singing, speaking, and dancing. Featuring the remarkable Rachel Coleman, her daughter Leah (who is deaf), Alex (Leah's cousin, who can hear) and their animated pet frog "Hopkins", the Signing Time! series teaches hundreds of ASL vocabulary-building signs that are useful in daily life. Charming animation, children who sign, and delightful songs make any time Signing Time! PROGRAM TITLES 1. My First Signs 2. Playtime Signs 3. Everyday Signs 4. Family, Feelings & Fun 5. ABC's 6. My Favorite Things 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. Leah's Farm My Great Backyard The Zoo Train My Day My Neighborhood Welcome to School Time to Eat BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Monday, August 14 at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 1-8; 4 hours) and Monday, August 21 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Progrmas 9-13; 2 hours, 30 minutes) Block Feed II: Wednesday, November 15 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-8; 4 hours) and at 12 noon (Programs 9-13; 2 hours, 30 minutes) Block Feed III: Wednesday, December 13 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-8; 4 hours) and at 12 noon (Programs 9-13; 2 hours, 30 minutes) Block Feed IV: Monday, January 15 at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 1-8; 4 hours) and Monday, January 22 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 9-13; 2 hours, 30 minutes) 2006/2007 M�Instructional Videos� • 47 PRACTICALLIVING/VOC.STUDIES F Signing Time! (Preschool-3) C I’m Safe on Wheels (K-2) Different and the Same (Primary) C Head To Toe (Primary) C Just For Me (Primary) C Well, Well, Well with Slim Goodbody (Primary) C The Character Education Series (Primary-4) Econ and Me (Primary-5) C Looking from the Inside/Out (Primary-5) C Drug Avengers (Primary-6) C Red Light, Green Light, Have You Heard? (Primary-6) Fat Albert & the Cosby Kids (Primary-7) When I Grow Up (1-4) C Inside Story with Slim Goodbody (2-6) C Bullying/Character Education (3-5) Healthy Body Healthy Mind (4-8) Life Skills/Character Education Series (5-9) Violence: Reversing the Trend (5-10) TV411 (5-12) C Middle School Kids Speak Out (6-9) Flirting or Hurting Sexual Harassment in Schools (6-12) C Women’s Work (6-12) Careers in Printing (7-12) K C Teen Issues (7-12) College and You—Why Not? Tackling College with a Disability (9-12) K C Street Skills (9-12) K C Career Encounters (10-12) C Workplace Essential Skills (10-12) K C Truth and Consequences: Federal Crimes and Teenagers (11-12) K Signing Time! C PRACTICALLIVING/VOC.STUDIES I’m Safe on Wheels Head to Toe C Riding equipment safety Health, life sciences Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: K-2 10 minutes School Year 1-800-962-7546 Primary 15 minutes School year Call 1-800-457-4509 or www.ait.net KY Academic Expectations: 2.29, 2.31 KY Academic Expectations: 2.3, 2.29, 2.31, 4.4 I’m Safe on Wheels is a fully animated video teaching the five key areas to safe riding: • Correct helmet fit and use • Safe clothing • Safe places to ride • Maintaining safe equipment • Safe riding skills In addition this video addresses skateboard, inline skates, scooters, tricycles, Big Wheels and other riding equipment. Introduce the workings of the human body to children in early elementary grades. Develop students' knowledge and the attitudes and practices needed to achieve and maintain good health. Encourage the avoidance of risky health behaviors, and reinforce existing positive health habits. This series builds upon children's natural interest in how the body looks, works, breaks down, heals, and grows and emphasizes children's personal involvement in achieving and maintaining their own good health. BROADCAST SCHEDULE younger children safe 2. Cells: Your Starting Place — parts and functions of the cell; genetic traits; the importance of good health habits 3. In a Heartbeat — how the circulatory system works; protecting the heart by avoiding tobacco; the importance of exercise 4. Muscles: Holding You Together — how muscles help bodies move and do many different things; teaches why muscles need exercise 5. Standing Tall — examines how the skeleton bones and joints support and protect a body and give it shape; investigates activities that keep bones strong, healthy, and safe 6. Fueling Up — how the body breaks down and uses food; eating well for good nutrition 7. From Fuel to Waste — how the organs of the excretory system work (digestive, urinary, skin); ways to keep these organs healthy 8. Fresh Air — how the body breathes; asthma and other respiratory problems; protecting the respiratory system by avoiding pollutants, including cigarette smoke 9. Control Center — how the nervous system works; protecting the brain by avoiding drugs; the importance of sleep 10. Fighting Germs and Diseases — how germs cause diseases; health care workers, institutions, and procedures that deal with disease; immunization; disease prevention 11. Sounds — the structure and function of the ear; health care workers and tests involving the ear; cleaning and protecting the ear 12. Sights — structure and function of the eye; eye care professionals; eye examinations; wearing glasses; eye protection 13. A Healthy Smile — structure and function of teeth; dental care workers; dental health procedures; the importance of dental care 14. Staying Healthy — childhood development; the importance of eating well, exercise, sleep, and rest 15. Safety First — a review and celebration of the human body; ways to guard against intentional and unintentional injury Wednesday, August 23 at 1:50/12:50 pm CT Wednesday, January 24 at 1:50/12:50 pm CT Different and the Same C Helping children identify and prevent prejudice Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: Primary 12-15 minutes School year See order form, pg. 124 KY Academic Expectations: 2.16, 2.17, 2.29, 3.6, 4.1, 4.5 This series of stories uses puppets and actors from various ethnic backgrounds to tackle difficult issues of racism. The characters work together to solve the problem presented in each story; basing their solutions on awareness, fairness, inclusion, and respect. PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS 1. Sticks and Stones — name calling/racial slurs; hurting others as a reaction to being hurt Cinderella and Me — exclusion from popular culture Long Distance — speaking a different language Play Ball — stereotyping The Club — standing up against prejudice directed at someone else Tug of War — choosing a friend across racial/ethnic lines Proud To Be Me — the tug-of-war between assimilation and maintaining a strong cultural identity 8. I’m American, Too — exclusion based on definitions of nationality 9. Words on the Wall — hate crimes 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Wednesday, October 25 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-9; 2 hours, 15 minutes) Block Feed II: Wednesday, March 28 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-9; 2 hours, 15 minutes) 48 • 2006/2007 M�Instructional Videos PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS 1. In the Beginning — the development of a human baby; how to keep BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Wednesday, September 6 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-15; 3 hours, 45 minutes) Block Feed II: Wednesday, February 7 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-15; 3 hours, 45 minutes) Just for Me C Making wise decisions Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: Videocassette: Primary-4 15 minutes Unlimited Call 1-800-457-4509, ext. 4 or www.ait.net/catalog See order form, pg. 125 KY Academic Expectations: 2.29, 2.30, 2.32, 3.1, 5.4 PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS 1. Who Are You? — shows how thoughts, feelings, and experiences can 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. affect a child’s self-concept negatively or positively and how self-concept, in turn, affects the decisions children make My Choice — demonstrates that a decision-making process, well learned and wisely implemented, can be an important tool for resolving personal health issues The Real Me — shows how family values and support combined with refusal skills can help children cope with negative peer pressure I Do Care — dramatizes the importance of adhering to the rules; respecting the needs, feelings, ideas, and environment of others; and taking responsibility for behavior My Family, My Self — presents dramatic evidence of the influence of family members on one another and strategies for strengthening family bonds I Don’t Buy It! — humorously demonstrates how commercials and ads can influence children’s ideas, values, and behavior; helps viewers “break through to the truth” BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Wednesday, October 4 at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 1-15; 3 hours, 45 minutes) Block Feed II: Wednesday, March 7 at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 1-15; 3 hours, 45 minutes) The Character Education Series Guidance character development Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: Primary-4 12-20 minutes School Year Downloadable at www.ket.org/education/guides KY Academic Expectations: 2.29, 2.32, 3.1, 3.6, 4.4 This series deals with respect, honesty, consideration, accepting differences, and sportsmanship. continued on next page Photo: Rick McComb Wednesday, October 4 at 8:30/7:30 am CT (Programs 1-6; 1 hour, 30 minutes) Block Feed II: Wednesday, March 7 at 8:30/7:30 am CT (Programs 1-6; 1 hour, 30 minutes) BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Well, Well, Well with Slim Goodbody C Motivation of healthy attitudes and behaviors Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: Videocassette: PRACTICALLIVING/VOC.STUDIES Just for Me uses six video programs and print lessons to present themes common to many health education texts and widely used drug prevention curricula: handling relationships with family members, peer pressure and support, self-esteem, responsibility for self and others, making decisions, and the influence of the media. PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS 1. Wellness — total good health 2. Go, Grow, Glow — use of food for energy and growth 3. Food Power — variety of foods for a healthy body 4. Clean Power — cleanliness and dental hygiene 5. Exercise To Energize — importance of exercise 6. Relax — sleep and relaxation 7. Feeling Good — mental health 8. Senses — using senses to learn 9. You Are Special — unique characteristics of individuals 10. Safety Counts — indoor safety rules 11. Play It Safe — outdoor safety rules 12. Emergencies — coping with emergencies 13. Healing Helpers — first aid and medicine 14. The Wellness Team — student and doctor as a team 15. Sharing Your World — community health and cleanliness Primary 15 minutes School year Call 1-800-457-4509 or www.ait.net See order form, pg. 125 KY Academic Expectations: 2.29, 2.31, 2.32, 2.33, 3.2 Help young students understand the concept of “wellness,” learn ways of caring for the mind and body, and develop self-respect. Slim Goodbody, along with his friends, encourages children to take an active part in protecting, maintaining, and improving their own good health. By emphasizing wellness, safety, nutrition, exercise, and handling feelings in a healthy way, Slim helps students realize that choices made now will affect them the rest of their lives. 2006/2007 M�Instructional Videos� • 49 PRACTICALLIVING/VOC.STUDIES PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS/LENGTHS GRADES K-2 1. I Had It First! – learning to share makes everyone feel good and takes many forms. (13:00) 2. I’m Telling! – demonstrates the difference between "telling" in situations where someone could be hurt or "tattling" when it would be better to try to solve a problem yourself. (16:00) 3. I’m So Frustrated! – offers strategies for solving problems without resorting to inappropriate or destructive behavior. (20:00) 4. It’s OK to Say NO – teaches techniques for saying "no" when others pressure you to do something you don't want to do or you think is wrong. (14:00) 5. Learning About Honesty – addresses the forms dishonesty can take, the ways in which it harms others, and whether it’s ever okay to lie. (18:00) 6. Learning to Care – promotes empathy by encouraging students to imagine themselves in someone else’s place. (15:00) 7. Respecting Differences – shows children how to accept and respect differences in ability, likes and dislikes, and culture. (16:00) 8. Say Please – dramatizes the importance of being polite. (14:00) 9. What’s Respect – teaches how to spot disrespectful behavior and how to be respectful to people, property, rules, differences, abilities, and the environment. (13:00) GRADES 2-4 10. Feeling Good About ME – helps viewers learn to value their own uniqueness and take positive steps toward self-esteem. (16:00) 11. Feelings: Glad, Mad, Sad – distinguishes between feeling and acting and explores the range of feelings between a simple “good and bad.” (18:00) 12. How to Say NO –teaches children to become more comfortable saying “no” to destructive behavior. (19:00) 13. Stressbusters –helps children understand stress and what they can do about it. (14:00) 14. What If You Lose When You Play to Win – shows how negative attitudes toward losing affect relationships and how good sportsmanship and honest behavior win respect. (14:00) 15. What Is Honesty? –defines honesty, creates guidelines for staying honest, and develops tools for distinguishing between fantasy and truth, stealing and borrowing, cheating and competing, and politeness and lying to protect others. (14:00) 16. What It’s Like to Be Different – helps develop sensitivity to others by showing how it feels to be different and encouraging the celebration of differences. (14:00) 17. When It’s Hard to Be a Friend – dramatizes problems with friends and uses thought-provoking questions to give students a chance to discuss their own experiences with friendship. (12:00) 18. When Should You Tell? Dealing with Abuse – shows abused children that they are not alone and that telling an adult they trust can help. It also provides information about steps to take and resources to rely on. (14:00) 19. You Can Count On Me: Building Character – explores responsible behavior, the problems caused by irresponsibility, and the best way to handle obstacles. (15:00) BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Wednesday, September 27 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-15; 4 hours) and at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 16-19; 1 hour) Block Feed II: Wednesday, February 28 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-15; 4 hours) and at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 16-19; 1 hour) Econ and Me C Basic economic concepts Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Teaching Materials: Videocassette: Web Site: Primary-5 15 minutes Unlimited Call 1-800-436-3266 See below www.econ.org KY Academic Expectations: 2.16, 2.18, 2.30, 2.33, 5.1, 5.4 With Econ and Me, teachers can teach economic concepts to 7- to 10year-olds; help students gain insight into today’s world; help students make reasoned decisions; and reinforce language arts, mathematics, and problem-solving skills. The Kentucky Council on Economic Education provides training for teachers in the use of these video programs. Call 1-800-436-3266 for information. PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS/AIR DATES 1. Scarcity — Scarcity occurs when people can’t have everything they 2. 3. 4. 5. want and must make choices. Econ tells Sean and his friends that they have an economic problem — a scarcity of space. (Dec 6) Opportunity Cost — Opportunity cost is the most valuable alternative people give up when making a choice. Jennifer sees that the swing set was her opportunity cost for choosing the clubhouse. (Dec 8) Consumption — It’s important to consider the benefits of each opportunity in relation to its cost. Econ tells the children that they can use their $4.00 to buy goods, save their money, or pay someone to perform a service. (Dec 11) Production — Producers combine resources to make goods and services, considering costs and benefits. (Dec 12) Interdependence — We all depend on each other. When we specialize to increase our well-being, we give up some of our independence. (Dec 13) WEEKLY BROADCAST SCHEDULE Mondays, Tuesdays, Wednesdays, and Fridays, December 6-13 at 10:45/9:45 am CT BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Wednesday, October 18 at 2:00/1:00 pm CT (Programs 1-5; 1 hour, 15 minutes) Block Feed II: Thursday, November 9 at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 1-5; 1 hour, 15 minutes) Block Feed III: Wednesday, March 21 at 2:00/1:00 pm CT (Programs 1-5; 1 hour, 15 minutes) Block Feed IV: Thursday, April 12 at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 1-5; 1 hour, 15 minutes) new at ket.org... KET Shool Resources Coordinator page www.ket.org/education/schoolcoordinator.htm 50 • 2006/2007 M�Instructional Videos Looking from the Inside/Out C Health and guidance about emotional skills Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: Videocassette: Primary-5 15 minutes unlimited Downloadable at www.ket.org/education/guides See order form, page 125 KY Academic Expectations: 2.29, 2.32, 3.5, 4.1, 4.3, 5.4 PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS 1. I Don’t Get It — confusion. The characters decide whether to partici- pate in a gang-related activity. 2. That’s Me! — pride. Competition arises between siblings. 3. I’ll Decide — independence. The kids decide about products advertised on TV. 4. Sticks and Stones — embarrassment. Students cope with ridicule at school. 5. Oh, Yeah? — anger. Even friends disagree sometimes! 6. Now What Do I Do? — frustration. The characters try to resolve misunderstandings with parents. 7. Alone in a Crowd — loneliness. Moving to a new town or school makes the “new kid” feel isolated. 8. A Helping Hand — caring. The students learn about the satisfaction of helping others. 9. In Harm’s Way — fear. Bullying and name-calling inspire fear. 10. Learning To Say “No” — stress. The kids learn what it feels like to be pressured and how to say “no” in spite of it. 11. Saying Goodbye — love. Characters cope with deaths of pets and loved ones. 12. Will He or Won’t He? — distrust. Characters must deal with family violence. 13. Changes — sadness. Parents’ divorces lead to feelings of sadness. 14. Worrywart — worry. The students must make a difficult decision about a health-related behavior. 15. I Know I Can — determination. Perseverance helps the students identify and accomplish a big task. BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS FOR GRADES 1-3: 1. From the Future … the Drug Avengers! — advises children to take medicine only from a parent or other trusted adult 2. Body Talk — cautions students about eating unknown substances 3. Up and Down — demonstrates that bad days come and go and that lows are a normal part of growing up 4. Street Talk — advises children not to feel responsible for curing family members who abuse alcohol or drugs 5. Uh Oh Video — listening to the “uh oh” feeling tells children when something is wrong. FOR GRADES 4-6: (Program 1 should be shown first as an introduction.) 6. Fast Friends — taking drugs doesn't make you "one of the crowd" 7. Picture Perfect — Advertising can present misleading images about products. 8. Trick or Treat — helps students develop refusal skills 9. Double Scare — stresses the unpredictable effects of substances 10. Rock Solid — advises that students don’t need drugs to have fun BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Wednesday, September 6 at 2:30/1:30 pm CT (Programs 1-10; 1 hour, 20 minutes) Block Feed II: Wednesday, February 7 at 2:30/1:30 pm CT (Programs 1-10; 1 hour, 20 minutes) Red Light, Green Light, Have you Heard? C Personal safety Grade levels: Length: Taping Rights: Primary-6 16 minutes School Year KY Academic Expectations: 2.29, 2.31, 5.4 Wednesday, November 8 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-15; 3 hours, 30 minutes) Block Feed II: Wednesday, April 11 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-15; 3 hours, 30 minutes) Drug Avengers C Viewers learn that a red light person is a stranger who can be dangerous while a green light person is someone they can trust to help keep them safe. BROADCAST SCHEDULE Wednesday, November 8 at 9:30/8:30 am CT Wednesday, April 11 at 9:30/8:30 am CT Drug abuse prevention Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: Primary-6 5-8 minutes Unlimited See order form, pg. 124 KY Academic Expectations: 2.30, 2.31, 2.32, 3.5, 4.4 2006/2007 M�Instructional Videos� • 51 PRACTICALLIVING/VOC.STUDIES This primary health series is designed to help students discover their emotions and feelings. A cast of continuing characters provides positive reinforcement by serving as role models in contemporary situations. Four categories of skills — decision making, communication, stress management, and goal setting — are developed throughout the programs. Each program also emphasizes basic knowledge of human emotions and their universality. This animated series introduces drug education to the youngest students, teaching them easy, sensible ways to refuse drugs. The year is 2050, and the planet Earth has a terrible drug problem. Earth’s leaders organize a group of young Drug Avengers to go back in time and teach today’s children about the dangers of drug abuse. Program 1 is an introductory episode. Programs 2-5 are intended for primary students; programs 6-10 are designed for grades 4-6. Fat Albert & the Cosby Kids © Dealing with everyday problems Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: Videocassette: Primary-7 15 minutes Unlimited Downloadable at www.ket.org/education/guides See order form, pg. 125 PRACTICALLIVING/VOC.STUDIES KY Academic Expectations: 2.31, 2.32, 3.6, 4.4, 5.4, 5.5 This series has Fat Albert and his friends dealing with the day-to-day problems confronted by children everywhere. Featuring Bill Cosby, the shows emphasize values and how to work through problem situations. In addition to speaking through the animated Fat Albert gang, Bill Cosby directly addresses viewers, guiding them in understanding the dilemmas and solutions dealt with by Fat Albert and his friends. PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS CONFLICT 1. Nobody Likes a Bully — The Cosby Kids realize that the neighborhood bully just wants attention and friendship. 2. Talk — Don’t Fight — A fight between gangs results in a death, making all of them realize the price they have paid. 3. The Hero — Cool or Fool? — A man the kids look up to gets them into trouble before they finally wise up. PREJUDICE 4. I Can Do It Myself! — The gang tries to make friends with a distant, independent boy who is confined to a wheelchair but refuses their help. 5. Everybody’s Different and That’s OK! — The kids finally accept a girl from the South, even though she is very different in many ways. 6. Old Folks Are A-Okay! — After being treated to soda and cookies on Halloween, Fat Albert and the gang learn that they have the wrong impression of old people. 7. Who Is an American? — The kids learn that being a good American has little to do with where you were born or what accent you have. FAMILY 8. Mom Deserves Some Thanks — After struggling to get his chores done, Fat Albert learns to appreciate all the things his mother does. 9. Mom and Pop Split Up — The gang helps Flora through her parents’ divorce. 10. Baby on the Way — After initially resisting the idea of having a new baby brother or sister, Dumb Donald decides that he loves having his new baby sister around. 11. Dad’s Job Is Cool — The gang’s teacher has them spend a day on the job with their dads. 52 • 2006/2007 M�Instructional Videos SCHOOL 20. Study Makes the Grade — Donald is tempted to cheat on an upcoming test. 21. Give School a Chance — Rudy drops out of school, but is convinced by a local bum that success in life begins with a good education. 22. You Can Make It If You Try — Thurman, a real klutz at sports, shares tips with the gang on how to study; they, in turn, teach him some athletic skills. 23. Reading Is the Way To Grow — A gifted football athlete hides the fact that he can’t read, but finally admits that he must learn how. OTHER ISSUES 24. Only Fools Break the Rules — The gang follows a boy into all kinds of dangerous mischief at an abandoned amusement park. 25. Going Into Business — The boys are duped by a fraudulent ad for a free bicycle. (A) Mar 8, (B) Mar 16 26. Kids and Alcohol Don’t Mix — Fat Albert helps a friend, who is also an outstanding soccer player, deal with a severe alcohol problem. 27. Clean Is Keen — Russell and Fat Albert have to tell their friend Suede Simpson that he needs to take a bath. 28. Four Eyes — Heywood finally admits that he can’t see well and needs glasses. When he becomes a baseball hero, the gang realizes he has changed from a clumsy Humpty-Dumpty to the coolest kid in school. 29. Folk Tales — After the gang’s TV breaks, they discover that the library contains many stories they can read and tell to each other. 30. Write a Poem — Share Your Feelings — Fat Albert helps Richard overcome his fear of letting people know that he writes poetry, then reads one of Richard’s poems at a school assembly. BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Wednesday, August 30 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-16; 4 hours); and 12 noon (Programs 17-30; 3 hours, 32 minutes) Block Feed II: Wednesday, January 31 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-16; 4 hours); and 12 noon (Programs 17-30; 3 hours, 32 minutes) Photo: Rick McComb SAFETY 12. Signs Are for Safety — Fat Albert convinces Cool Roy that moving and changing signs is dangerous. 13. Bicycle Rules — Safety First — After a serious bike accident, the boys finally learn that a cyclist who ignores the rules is a danger to himself and a threat to others. 14. Beware of Strangers — Hank sleeps through class and misses some important tips about how to avoid becoming a victim of dangerous strangers, then finds himself in a bad situation. 15. Help Police Your Neighborhood — The gang learns all about how to form a neighborhood watch and how the police work to keep people safe. RESPONSIBILITY 16. Do Your Job Right — The gang pressures Weird Harold to give them some free ice cream at the ice cream parlor where he has a summer job. But Harold learns that his job responsibilities come first. 17. Heart Attack — Save a Life! — Rudy chooses not to learn CPR and then runs into a situation where he doesn’t know how to treat a man having a heart attack. Film approved by the American Heart Association. 18. Responsibility — The Only Way — Weird Harold spends all his money on his video game obsession and then can't help pay for the gang's annual picnic. 19. TV or Not TV? — Monroe learns the hard way that he can’t spend all of his time watching TV. When I Grow Up C Career exploration 1-4 15 minutes School Year www.unitedlearning.com (type title of series in search box) KY Academic Expectations: 2.33, 2.36, 2.37 This series takes students on location to a variety workplaces to learn what several careers entail. 2. 3. 4. 5. police work: concern for community safety; respect for law; and reading, writing, communication, and investigative skills. I Want To Be a Firefighter – takes students to a fire station where firefighters talk about the science, math, and reading skills they use every day. I Want To Be a Teacher – makes connections between school work and an eventual teaching career and demonstrates the teamwork, organization, and diplomacy teachers need to be successful. I Want To Be a Veterinarian – gives viewers a behind-the-scenes look at a dog’s wellness exam and shows the role of teamwork and good science and math skills in veterinary science. I Want To Be a Librarian – focuses on the skills needed by librarians: reading, researching, and reviewing, along with organization, communication, and math skills. Wednesday, October 4 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-10; 2 hours, 30 minutes) Block Feed II: Wednesday, March 7 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-10; 2 hours, 30 minutes) Bullying/Character Education Series Essential building blocks of good character BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Wednesday, October 11 at 2:00/1:00 pm CT (Programs 1-5; 1 hour, 10 minutes) Block Feed II: Wednesday, March 14 at 2:00/1:00 pm CT (Programs 1-5; 1 hour, 10 minutes) Inside Story with Slim Goodbody C Understanding the human body Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: 2-6 15 minutes School year Call 1-800-457-4509 or www.ait.net KY Academic Expectations: 2.3, 2.4, 2.31 Students will get a delightful and instructive tour of the “human factory” in Slim Goodbody. Each program provides information about a specific physical system. Series host Slim Goodbody sings and dances his way through sets that feature huge soft-sculpture models of the human heart, lungs, brain, and digestive system. KET strongly advises that teachers preview Program 9 before using it with students. PROGRAM TITLES 1. Lubba Dubba: The Story of Your Heart and Blood 2. Breath of Life: The Story of Respiration 3. Down, Down, Down: The Story of Digestion 4. The Team That Hustles: The Story of Bones and Muscles 5. Smart Parts: The Story of the Brain and Nervous System 6. Sensational Five: The Story of Your Senses 7. The Little Giants: The Story of Your Glands Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print materials: 3-5 13-24 minutes School Year Downloadable at www.ket.org/education/guides KY Academic Expectations: 3.5, 3.6, 4.3, 4.4, 4.5 This series deals with the essential building blocks of good character: respect, responsibility, tolerance, empathy, courage and integrity. It helps students deal with bullying and harassment by making them aware of positive techniques they can use. PROGRAM TITLES/LENGTHS 1. I Was Just Kidding! (14:56) 2. What It’s Like to Be Different (13:51) 3. You Can Try, So Can I (11:13) 4. Put Yourself in Someone Else’s Shoes (13:43) 5. Problems at School (23:08) 6. Respect: It Starts With You (20:13) 7. Should I Speak Up? Character Education (12:47) 8. Stress: I Can Handle It (18:14) 9. What is Courage? Building Character (14:14) BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Wednesday, September 6 at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 1-9; 2 hours, 30 minutes) Block Feed II: Wednesday, February 7 at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 1-9; 2 hours, 30 minutes) 2006/2007 M�Instructional Videos� • 53 PRACTICALLIVING/VOC.STUDIES PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS 1. I Want To Be a Police Officer – illustrates the qualities needed for Symphony: The Story of Your Whole Body 9. Protection Against Infection: The Inside Story of the Immune System and AIDS 10. Attention to Prevention: The Inside Story of Substance Abuse Photo: Rick McComb Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Web Site: 8. The Body Healthy Body Healthy Mind C Building a healthy you Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print materials: Web Site: 4-8 14-26 minutes each School Year Web site or 1-800-431-2050 www.hrmvideo.com PRACTICALLIVING/VOC.STUDIES KY Academic Expectations: 2.29, 2.31, 2.32, 5.1 Healthy Body, Healthy Mind is an 18-part series emphasizing the importance of building not only a healthy body, but also a healthy mind. Some of the many topics included are: good character traits, avoiding the use of alcohol and other drugs, good nutrition and the long lasting value of exercise. PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS/LENGTHS 1. Don't Drain Your Brain — This video shows the damaging effects of alcohol on the brain. (15:00) 2. Brick By Brick: Respecting Yourself — Helps students understand the importance of their own self worth and value systems. (23:00) 3. Brick By Brick: Respecting Other — Respecting Others explores the simple rule of respecting others (25:00) 4. Brick By Brick: Respecting Your World — Respecting Your Worl and Caring for the environment is this video's theme. (25:00) 5. Danger Zone: Dangers in Your House — This video focuses on the dangers of common household items which students can use to make their own drugs. Note: Please preview before showing to students. (17:00) 6. Danger Zone: Alcohol, Tobacco & Marijuana — Shows the damaging effects these substances can have on the growing body and mind. (20 :00) 7. Danger Zone: The Power of No — This video focuses on 4 short dramas in which elementary children are confronted with a decision on whether to try a substance or choose to talk to an adult about the substance. The scenarios involve alcohol, tobacco, cough syrup and air freshener. The message is clear: learning important refusal skills can save your health as well as your life. (20:00) 8. To The Max: Understanding the New Diet and Exercise Guidelines — This fast paced and entertaining video shows young, elementary students how they can begin to improve their health by eating smarter, eating smaller portions, exercising more and understanding basic information about nutrition and food labeling. (14:00) 9. Ten Reasons to Get and Stay in Shape — This video combines upto-date information with an upbeat, engaging, kid-friendly format to teach young students the reasons why physical fitness is essential to a healthy lifestyle. (16:00) 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. Videos 10, 11, 12, and 13 are a part of The Gateway Drugs Action Pack. The Gateway Drugs Action Pack is a comprehensive drug curriculum aimed at elementary students to educate and inform them of the extreme dangers of tobacco, alcohol, marijuana and inhalants. The age-specific series centers around four videos which will rivet your students’ attention with songs, quizzes, computer animated graphics and a question-and-answer series with the amazing Dr. Brainiac. Each video works to bring home the message to your students to stay away from drugs. Gateway Drugs: What’s Wrong with Alcohol? (20:00) Gateway Drugs: What’s Wrong with Tobacco? (21:00) Gateway Drugs: What’s Wrong with Inhalants? (14:00) Gateway Drugs: What’s Wrong with Marijuana? (17:00) Leader of the Pack – This video helps young viewers recognize the dangers of tobacco use through the power of storytelling and compelling cartoon characters. (16:00) Portion Distortion: Seeing the Healthy Way to Eat — This program teaches children how to choose the right food portions for their body type and metabolism. (18:00) 54 • 2006/2007 M�Instructional Videos 16. Good Conduct: Courtesy is Contagious — Young hosts and school age children deliver the message that good manners, thoughtfulness and helpfulness make for a winning personality. (16:00) 17. Good Conduct: Cool Kids in Control — Dramatizations show the consequences of losing one’s cool and also demonstrates positive approaches that students can take when dealing with anger, frustration and excitement. (19:00) 18. Good Conduct: Honesty Counts — Thought-provoking scenarios engage students in discussion about the benefits of honesty and the consequences of deceit. (21:00) BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Wednesday, August 23 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-12; 3 hours, 53 minutes) and at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 13-18; 1 hour, 50 minutes) Block Feed II: Wednesday, October 18 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-12; 3 hours, 53 minutes) and at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 13-18; 1 hour, 50 minutes) Block Feed III: Wednesday, January 24 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-12; 3 hours, 53 minutes) and at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 13-18; 1 hour, 50 minutes) Block Feed IV: Wednesday, March 21 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-12; 3 hours, 53 minutes) and at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 13-18; 1 hour, 50 minutes) Life Skills/Character Education Series Building healthy, successful relationships Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print materials: 5-9 18-25 minutes School year Downloadable at www.ket.org/education/guides KY Academic Expectations: 2.29, 2.36, 3.5, 3.6, 4.3, 4.4, 4.5 This series focuses on the number one problem for middle schoolers: bullying and harassment. It helps students develop the traits of good character that enable them to stand up for themselves and build healthy, successful relationships. PROGRAM TITLES/LENGTHS 1. Gossiping, Taunting, Bullying: It’s All Harassment (24:00) 2. Building Character (25:00) 3. Respect for Differences (24:00) 4. Suppose It Was Me (18:00) 5. Talking About Responsibility (23:00) 6. Stress: You Can Handle It (22:00) 7. Choosing Your Friends (19:00) 8. Talking About Sexual Harassment (21:00) 9. Own Your Anger (22:00) 10. Alcohol: Truth and Consequences (22:00) 11. What Would I Be Good At? Exploring Careers (22:00) BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Wednesday, October 11 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-11; 4 hours) Block Feed II: Wednesday, March 14 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-11; 4 hours) Violence: Reversing the Trend 4. Explaining ambiguous newspaper headlines, Keeping a Journal, Using 5. 6. 7. 8. A look at violence and its ramifications Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: 5-10 15-20 minutes School year See order form, pg. 124 9. KY Academic Expectations: 2.29, 3.1, 5.4 This compelling series takes a hard look at violence and its ramifications. Aimed at both urban and non-urban audiences, Violence: Reversing the Trend “tells it like it is” from many perspectives. Young people recount how violence has deeply affected their lives, and experts confirm the devastating impact of violence. 10. 11. 12. 13. 17. 18. 19. 20. BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: 21. 22. 23. 24. 25. 26. 27. 28. 29. 30. Wednesday, November 22 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-5; 1 hour, 40 minutes) Block Feed II: Wednesday, April 25 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-5; 1 hour, 40 minutes) BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Photo: Rick McComb TV411 C Wednesday, September 13 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-8; 4 hours) and at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 9-16; 4 hours); and Wednesday, September 20 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 17-24; 4 hours) and at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 25-30; 3 hours) Block Feed II: Wednesday, February 14 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-8; 4 hours) and at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 9-16; 4 hours); and Wednesday, February 21 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 17-24; 4 hours) and at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 25-30; 3 hours) Essential reading, writing, math skills TV411 Financial Literacy Kit Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Web Site: grades 5-12 Cost 45.00, Kit includes six video clips on DVD and 1 vhs tape with 20 Minding Your Money workbooks. To order, call-1-800-228-3382 5-12 30 minutes School Year www.tv411.org KY Academic Expectations: 2.29, 2.30, 2.31, 2.33, 2.37, 2.38 KY Academic Expectations: 2.29, 2.30, 2.31, 2.33, 2.37, 2.38 TV411 focuses on parenting, money matters, and health. Subjects include reading comprehension, research techniques, writing to others, filling out forms, calculating percentages, using fractions, test taking, and more. By teaching students to track and control spending, save money, shop sensibly and use credit responsibly, this kit will help learners achieve their financial goals. Unit 1: What's on the Stub?: Understanding Your Paycheck Unit 2: Reading the Fine Print: Don't Be Fooled Unit 3: Rent-to-Own: Is It Really a Deal? Unit 4: Wise Decisions: Selecting and Using Credit Cards Unit 5: Getting on Track: Making a Budget Unit 6: A Home of Your Own: From Dream to Reality PROGRAM TITLES 1. The Thesaurus, Synonyms and Antonyms, Personal Portfolio & The Paycheck 2. Apostrophes, The Library Card, Percentages, Decimals, and Probability 3. Prefixes, Compound words and phrases, Creating a Medical Bible, Strategy for learning to read difficult words 2006/2007 M�Instructional Videos� • 55 PRACTICALLIVING/VOC.STUDIES 14. 15. 16. PROGRAM TITLES 1. Violence: The Ripple Effect 2. Crossing the Line: The Truth About Gangs 3. Violence: Myth vs. Reality 4. Weapons and You 5. Getting Along Transitions, Reading Books Suffixes, Ask the Librarian, Baby on the way, Math Skills How to take a phone message, The Resume, Using Percentages Reading a Map, Using the Dictionary, Math- how to find an average How to navigate around the Yellow Pages, Diabetes, The Cover Letter, Deciphering the food label Preparing for a public speech, Reading to your children, Relationships between addition and multiplication Subject-Verb Agreement, Understanding the Fine Print Test Taking Tips, Using an Atlas, Understanding a Lease, The writing process Choosing a Dictionary, Word Meaning, Choosing a School for Your Child, Draft and revise a personal greeting card The Library, Metaphors and Similes, Credit Card Application, Percentages and Fractions Writing a Letter, Foreign Words, Using a Highlighter, Reading a Map Picking a book, Using a glossary, Making a schedule, Journaling Renting versus owning an appliance, Time Management, Estimating a Job Buying a House, Using a Thesaurus, Reading A Utility Bill Strategies for understanding a difficult newspaper article, Percentiles and Rankings, Summarizing a poem Learning Styles, Reading and using the unit price labels Understanding the concept of probability, Words with Multiple Meanings, A look at Dyslexia Body Works Personal Finances The Learning Journey On the Job Navigating the System Family Matters Writing Express Yourself Math for Life Media TV411 Read All About Kit grades 5-12 Cost 45.00, Kit includes eight video clips on VHS only and reproducible masters for each unit. To order, call-1-800-228-3382 PRACTICALLIVING/VOC.STUDIES KY Academic Expectations: 2.29, 2.30, 2.31, 2.33, 2.37, 2.38 Learners can strengthen their reading skills and increase their awareness and enjoyment of the daily newspaper with this engaging practical kit. Unit 1: Navigating the Newspaper: Finding Articles of Interest Unit 2: Getting the Big Picture: How to Skim the Newspaper Unit 3: What's Happening?: Looking for the Main Points of a News Story Unit 4: Extra! Extra!: Making Sense of Ambiguous Headlines Unit 5: To Read or Not to Read: Book Reviews Can Help You Decide Unit 6: Life Stories: Reading Newspaper Obituaries Unit 7: Help Wanted: Making Sense of the Classifieds Unit 8: What's the Catch: Reading the Fine Print in Newspaper Ads Middle School Kids Speak Out Adolescent issues Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: Web site/Prog 1: Web site/Prog 2: 6-9 60 minutes School Year See below http://www.uwgb.edu/newist/guys/index.htm http://www.wpt.org/butterfly/ KY Academic Expectations: 2.29, 2.31, 2.32, 3.5, 5.4 These documentaries tell what middle school girls and boys are thinking, doing, and feeling. The documentaries will help them and others gain a full understanding of the forces at work on their minds and bodies during their adolescent years, and how they can react to emerge stronger, wiser and more confident. Flirting or Hurting? Sexual Harassment in Schools C Definition, effects, and how to respond Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: 6-12, staff development 60 minutes School year See order form, pg. 124 KY Academic Expectations: 2.29, 2.32, 3.6, 4.4 This award-winning program on sexual harassment in schools contains three video modules. The first two, “What Is Sexual Harassment?” and “Stopping Sexual Harassment,” use reenactments and dramatized interviews to define sexual harassment; show the various effects it can have on students; and show students how to respond to offensive behavior, whether they are targets or bystanders. The third module, designed for teachers, is hosted by Nan Stein of the Wellesley College Center for Research on Women. This program has been flagged for content and/or language. KET strongly encourages teachers to preview the program before showing it to students. Call KET's Education office at (800) 432-0951 for more information. BROADCAST SCHEDULE Wednesday, October 25 at 8:15/7:15 am CT Wednesday, March 28 at 8:15/7:15 am CT Women’s Work Inspiration and exploration of non-traditional careers for women Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: 6-12 10 minutes School Year KY Academic Expectations: 2.36, 2.37, 4.6 PROGRAM TITLES 1. Middle School Boys Speak Out 2. Beyond the Butterfly: Middle School Girls Speak Out This series profiles six young women working in male-dominated fields--science, math, and technology--and introduces viewers to interesting careers they may not have considered. BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS 1. Kathy Doughty: Emergency Task Force In 1999 – a large metropolitan Wednesday, August 23 at 2:00/1:00 pm CT (Programs 1-2; 2 hours) Block Feed II: Wednesday, January 24 at 2:00/1:00 pm CT (Programs 1-2; 2 hours) Teacher Materials: A teacher's guide is available for $10 from: NEWIST/CESA7 2420 Nicolet Drive, IS 1040, Green Bay, WI 54311 Phone: 920-465-2599, Toll-free: 800-633-7445, Fax: 920-465-2723 E-mail: newist@uwgb.edu 56 • 2006/2007 M�Instructional Videos city's Emergency Task Force responded to 441 high risk calls. Kathy Doughty, the only female member of her team, explains the types of calls the ETF handle and the equipment and training used by the team. 2. Jen Miller: Firefighter – The first known female firefighter was Molly Williams in New York City in the year 1818. Jen Miller is training to become a professional firefighter in the hope of following in her footsteps. One of six females in a class of 41, Jen enjoys the teamwork and satisfaction that firefighting offers. 3. Bonnie Black: Hercules Pilot – Bonnie flies missions all over the world, dropping food and supplies to troops. She thrives on the daily challenges and immediate gratification flying brings to her life. 4. Julie Lewis: Contractor – Julie, a self-employed home renovtion contractor, talks about a typical day on the job and how she came to work in this field. For Julie, the benefits outweigh the difficulties. As she states: "I've learned that I can really do whatever I want." 5. Kim Parker: Biomedical Engineer -- Kim researches rehabilitative theories and methods for children with disabilities in order to build effective prosthetic equipment. We see her at work, assessing, designing, and refining equipment and working directly with the children who benefit from her dedication and expertise. 6. Ellen Besen: Animator Since 1995 – the proportion of female computer animators in North America has increased from 10 to 25 percent. Ellen Besen, an independent animation filmmaker, discusses one of her films, and we hear from several animation students. Wednesday, November 8 at 3:20/1:20 pm CT (Programs 1-6; 40 minutes) Block Feed II: Wednesday, April 11 at 3:20/1:20 pm CT (Programs 1-6; 40 minutes) Jobs in graphic design and production Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Videocassette: 7-12 15 minutes Unlimited See order form, pg. 125 KY Academic Expectations: 2.36, 2.37 This KET production presents an overview of the Graphic Arts/ Printing Trade and highlights the various job categories from graphic design to print production. It also looks at professionals in the printing industry as they describe their jobs and what they like most about what they do. Students take a field trip to a graphic design studio, printing plant and trade school. BROADCAST SCHEDULE Wednesday, August 16 at 3:00/2:00 pm CT Wednesday, January 17 at 3:00/2:00 pm CT Teen Issues Health/social issues Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: 7-12 16 minutes School year Downloadable at www.ket.org/education/guides KY Academic Expectations: 2.29, 2.31, 2.32, 4.4, 5.5 This 13-part series imparts a wealth of information on a variety of issues facing teenagers today. Interviews are conducted with young people who are being faced with many of these challenges. A variety of experts offer advice to help viewers understand each topic in depth and also provide a clear message that dealing with these teen issues is in reality often a matter of life or death. These programs have been flagged for content and/or language. KET strongly encourages teachers to preview the programs before showing them to students. Call KET’s Education office at (800) 432-0951 for more information. PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS 1. HIV and Teens: Remembering Krista Blake — Krista Blake contracted 2. Photo: Rick McComb 3. 4. 5. 6. HIV when she was 16 from a hemophiliac boyfriend. At 19, she developed AIDS. The program follows Krista over a three-year period as she speaks out about AIDS, and as her disease progresses. Steroids — In this program, interviews with former users and health professionals present concrete information about steroids, including the physical and psychological effects. Marijuana — Viewers learn about the physical effects of marijuana and how effective educational programs can prevent the spread of its use. Eating Disorders — Young men and women with eating disorders such as anorexia nervosa and bulimia are interviewed. Viewers are shown warning signs to look for in friends and family members. Cults — Interviews with experts in the field and detailed testimony about one family’s involvement in a cult give teens the tools necessary to distinguish the difference between a group and a cult. Teen Dads — Four teenage fathers who have chosen to play an active role in their children’s lives are profiled in this video about responsibility, hard decisions, and planning ahead. continued on next page 2006/2007 M�Instructional Videos� • 57 PRACTICALLIVING/VOC.STUDIES BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Careers in Printing K C PRACTICALLIVING/VOC.STUDIES 7. Sexual Harassment – This program focuses on helping teen viewers identify sexual harassment and how it can be stopped. 8. Living with HIV — A teenage boy born with the HIV virus explains what it is, how it is and is not transmitted, and what life is like for him. 9. Teens with Cancer — Casey Moore was diagnosed with childhood leukemia when she was 8 years old. Viewers receive a firsthand account of her family’s struggle to learn more about the disease. 10. Drinking and Driving — This program presents the story of a teenager who died in an alcohol-related accident. Visits to a sobriety checkpoint and a county morgue, along with graphic footage of alcoholrelated car crashes, show the dramatic results of drinking and driving. 11. Dropouts — Viewers get an in-depth look at the process of dropping out and learn the alternatives available to teens who want to get an education, including night school and alternative school. Two young people who quit school discuss regrets and plans for their futures. 12. Inhalants — This program describes the dangers of inhalant abuse. Viewers meet the parents of a boy who lost his life to inhalants before his 13th birthday. A doctor discusses the deadly risks. 13. Heroin — A toxicologist explains the physical effects of heroin use, how easy it is to become addicted, and the not-so-glamorous symptoms of withdrawal. Stories of overdose and addiction illustrate the drug’s devastating effects. BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Wednesday, November 8 at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 1-13; 3 hours, 15 minutes) Block Feed II: Wednesday, April 11 at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 1-13; 3 hours, 15 minutes) College and You — Why Not? Tackling College with a Disability K C Street Skills K C Driver safety education Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: Videocassette: Web Site: 9-12 30 minutes Unlimited Downloadable at www.ket.org/education/guides See order form, pg. 125 www.ket.org/streetskills KY Academic Expectations: 2.1, 2.31, 4.4, 5.1 Street Skills, a 1997 KET production, is a four-part drivers education series designed to help teenagers become safer, more responsible drivers. PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS 1. The Art of Driving — breaks down the act of driving into its compo- nent parts, covering basic driving skills and the rules of the road 2. Nature’s Laws — focuses on the physical and biological forces that affect driving ability, including speed, gravity, traction, fatigue, alcohol, and drugs 3. The Car — surveys different kinds of mechanical problems that can develop and gives advice on maintenance and repair 4. The Road — examines the special challenges offered by different kinds of roads and driving problems related to weather conditions BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Wednesday, October 11 at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 1-4; 2 hours) Block Feed II: Wednesday, March 14 at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 1-4; 2 hours) Overcoming barriers to higher education Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Videocassette: 9-12 25 minutes Unlimited See order form, pg. 125 KY Academic Expectations: 2.36, 2.38 Addresses barriers that sometimes discourage students with disabilities from pursuing a college education. Students with learning or physical disabilities talk about their experiences at a wide range of colleges and universities. BROADCAST SCHEDULE Wednesday, August 16 at 9:30/8:30 am CT Wednesday, January 17 at 9:30/8:30 am CT Photo: Rick McComb 58 • 2006/2007 M�Instructional Videos Challenging and rewarding careers Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: 10-12 30 minutes School year KY Academic Expectations: 2.36, 2.37, 5.3, 5.4, 6.3 Photo: Rick McComb Career Encounters C Career Encounters is a cumulative series of documentary-style programs which explore some of today’s most challenging and rewarding career fields. Under the guidance of qualified advisors, the producers travel to the workplaces of America to find professionals and technicians who can explain what they do, how they got where they are and why they find their work so rewarding. BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Wednesday, August 16 at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 1-6; 3 hours) Block Feed II: Wednesday, January 17 at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 1-6; 3 hours) Workplace Essential Skills K C NETA AWARD WINNER Skills and advice for finding, getting, and keeping a job Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: Videocassette: Web Site: 10-12 30 minutes Unlimited See below See below www.ket.org/enterprise/work/workplace.htm KY Academic Expectations: 1.2, 1.11, 2.7, 2.8, 2.10, 2.36, 2.37, 2.38 Workplace Essential Skills shows students what to expect from the job application process, what skills and attributes employers look for, and how those skills are put to work in real on-the-job situations. The first eight programs in particular are designed to help the learner develop career goals and realistic plans for attaining those goals. Produced by KET as part of the PBS LiteracyLink project, the series also includes instructional programs in writing, reading, and mathematics at a 6th to 7th grade reading level. Designed for adults who are looking for a job or want to improve their skills in order to get or keep a better job, these programs may be used as remedial help to students who need to improve basic skills in these areas. PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS FINDING A JOB 1. Planning To Work — career planning; role of work in people’s lives 2. Matching Skills and Jobs — skills assessment; job search skills and tools 3. Applying for Jobs — understanding and using application forms and processes 4. Resumes, Tests, and Choices — effective resumes; factors to consider in choosing a job 5. Interviewing — successful interview preparation and presentation NEW TO THE JOB 6. Ready to Work — understanding and demonstrating work-readiness skills 7. Workplace Safety — developing safety-conscious attitudes and skills 8. Learning to Work — strategies for the orientation and training phase COMMUNICATION SKILLS 9. The Language of Work — effective workplace speaking and listening strategies and skills 10. Communicating With Co-Workers and Supervisors — conflict-resolution strategies 11. Working Together — definition and qualities of the successful team; key personal skillls and strategies 12. Communicating with Customers — developing excellent customer service skills WRITING SKILLS 13. A Process for Writing — the importance of writing in the workplace, using the writing process 14. Supplying Information: Directions, Forms, and Charts — developing accuracy and completeness 15. Writing Memos and Letters — audience and purpose; appropriate formats READING 16. Reading for a Purpose — purposes, structures, and strategies for workplace reading 17. Finding What You Need: Forms and Charts — the role and importance of accuracy; locating specifics 18. Following Directions — the variety of directions in the workplace and their roles and importance 19. Reading Reports and Manuals — usage; organization; comprehension skills continued on next page 2006/2007 M�Instructional Videos� • 59 PRACTICALLIVING/VOC.STUDIES PROGRAM TITLES 1. Automotive Technician 2. Women in Computing 3. Pharmacy 4. Political Science 5. Radiological Technologists 6. Information Technology MATH 20. Number Sense — developing number sense, uses of mathematics in the workplace 21. Solving Problems — addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division 22. Fractions, Decimals, and Percents — workplace uses, ration, rate, and proportion 23. Measurements and Formulas — different units of measurement; appropriate applications 24. Trends and Predictions: Graphs and Data — presentation of data; the role and importance of evaluation PRACTICALLIVING/VOC.STUDIES BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Wednesday, October 25 at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 1-8; 4 hours); and Wednesday, November 1 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 9-16; 4 hours) and at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 17-24; 4 hours) Block Feed II: Wednesday, March 28 at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 1-8; 4 hours); and Wednesday, April 4 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 9-16; 4 hours) and at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 17-24; 4 hours) TEACHING MATERIALS 7DVDs or 25 VHS tapes including the 24 student programs and the 30-minute orientation program ($125), student workbooks (18), and a teacher’s guide (24) are all available from KET. Kentucky schools may call KET Tape Duplication (800) 228-3382, for information. Truth and Consequences: Federal Crimes and Teenagers K Laws, court processes, and penalties Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Videocassette: 11-12 50 minutes Unlimited See order form, pg. 125 KY Academic Expectations: 2.16, 2.29, 4.4, 5.4 In this program, high school students will learn about the serious penalties for crimes involving drugs and firearms with the help of United States Probation Officers Mike Kearns and Jeanne Arnold. Using real-life examples involving teens, their presentation also covers federal conspiracy laws and the court process, from the arrest through sentencing. A young offender convicted of a drug-trafficking offense offers personal testimony on the consequences of a bad decision. This program first aired on February 27, 1998. Note: This program is offered on videotape only. See tape order information on pages 125-126. See Also... Consumer Decisions Economics: The Production, Distribution, and Consumption of Goods and Services (4-6) — page 96 Electronic Field Trip to the Falls of the Ohio (4-12) — page 32 Electronic Field Trip to Mammoth Cave (4-12) — page 31 Gee Whiz in Agriculture (4-5) — page 81 Kentucky Afield for Kids (4-7) — page 82 Natureworks (3-6) — page 80 Real World Science (4-6) — page 81 The World of Nature II (Primary-6) — page 79 Career and Technical Education The Eddie Files (4-6) — page 43 An Electronic Conversation with George Ella Lyon (6-9) — page 73 Electronic Field Trip to a Beef Cattle Farm (4-12) — page 28 Electronic Field Trip to a Coal Mine (4-12) — page 29 Electronic Field Trip to the Kentucky Center for the Arts (6-12) — page 32 Electronic Field Trip to KET (4-12) — page 31 60 • 2006/2007 M�Instructional Videos Electronic Field Trip to the Kentucky Opera (6-9) — page 33 Electronic Field Trip to the Louisville Zoo (4-12) — page 33 Electronic Field Trip to a Newspaper (4-12) — page 29 Electronic Field Trip to an Orchard (4-12) — page 30 Electronic Field Trip to a Pig Farm (4-12) — page 29 Electronic Field Trip to the Speed Museum (6-12) — page 35 Electronic Field Trip to Toyota (4-12) — page 35 Electronic Field Trip to a Veterinary Clinic (4-12) — page 29 Entrepreneurs in Kentucky (1-12) — page 95 Gee Whiz in Agriculture (4-5) — page 81 Kentucky Afield for Kids (4-7) — page 82 Making Grimm Movies (6-12) — page 113 Real Science II (5-10) — page 83 Real Science III (5-10) — page 84 World of Our Own: Kentucky Folkways (8-12) — page 26 Other Inside Our Human Body (7-12) — page 89 Under 18 Under the Law (6-8) — page 101 READING & WRITING basic skills/ vocabulary development Cursive Handwriting Series A (Primary) C Know It All (3-6) Creating Stories and Music (4-5) K C Write Ideas (4-6) K Student Lessons with Barry Lane (4-8) K English Composition: Writing for an Audience (9-12) C Latin Roots for English Word Power (9-12) K Everyday Voices (10-adult) K C reading motivation/literature Between the Lions (Primary) C Reading Rainbow (Primary) C Teletales (Primary) Cover to Cover (Primary-4) C Telling Tales (Primary-8) K C Beyond the Page (3-5) C Read On: Cover to Cover (4-5) C From the Brothers Grimm (4-8) More Books from Cover to Cover (5-6) C An Electronic Conversation with George Ella Lyon (5-12) K C The Short Story (7-12) James Still's River of Earth (7-12) K C bookclub@ket: James Still’s Legacy “River of Earth” (9-12) K C Living By Words (9-12) K C Shakespeare Shorts (9-12) C Signature (9-12) K C SignatureLIVE! (10-12) K C Voices & Visions (10-12) C K New or Revised for 2006/2007 Closed Captioned KET Production On KET EncycloMedia basic skills/ vocabulary development Cursive Handwriting Series A C Handwriting instruction—Zaner-Bloser Grade Level: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: Videocassette: Primary 15 minutes Unlimited See order form, pg. 124 See order form, pg. 125 KY Academic Expectations: 1.11 The emphasis in Cursive Handwriting is on demonstration and practice of cursive letters and words. Direct instruction, letter animation, and graphics introduce letters and words that can easily be practiced by the students during and after the television lesson. Specific instruction is given for both right- and left-handed students on correct cursive writing, paper and pencil position, and posture. The letter formations shown in this series are basically similar to the Zaner-Bloser method of handwriting. The programs should be used in sequence. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22. H, X, W K, M, N, U V, Y, Z, Q F, T, I G, S B, P, R C, O A, D, E J, L Numbers Days of the Week, Months BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Tuesday, August 8 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-16; 4 hours) and at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 17-22; 1 hour, 30 minutes) Block Feed II: Tuesday, January 9 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-16; 4 hours) and at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 17-22; 1 hour, 30 minutes) Know It All C An introduction to the process of gathering, presenting, and evaluating information Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: 3-6 15 minutes School year Downloadable at www.ket.org/education/guides KY Academic Expectations: 1.1, 1.10, 5.3, 5.4 Student programs introduce a four-step learning process to help students gather, present, and evaluate information in science, social studies, humanities, and language arts. Professional development programs focus on introducing learning skills, collaborative teaching, and information literacy standards developed by the American Association of School Librarians and the Association for Educational Communications Technology. PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS 1. Asking the Right Questions — Discovering how to narrow a topic, refine and reframe questions, and clarify what information is needed. 2. Knowing What to Do — Developing a rubric to guide an information search. 3. Choosing the Right Information — Learning how to evaluate information sources for validity, accuracy, and relevance. 4. Thinking Up Ideas — Using brainstorming techniques to find a variety of information sources. 5. Saying It Another Way — Learning how to paraphrase. 6. Getting It All Together — Understanding how to put together and use organizational schemes. 7. Sharing Your Results — Learning about the various ways to present information, and how the format can affect the search and results. 8. Thinking About What You Did — Asking questions to assess a product—why might it fail, what might be wrong with the information, and what is needed to help a project succeed. 9. Thinking About How You Did — Evaluating a final product by reviewing the four-step process and revising as necessary. continued on next page 2006/2007 M�Instructional Videos� • 61 READING&WRITING F PROGRAM TITLES 1. Introduction 2. i, u, t 3. w, r, s 4. p, j 5. e, l, f 6. h, b, k 7. a, o 8. d, q, c, g 9. v, m, n 10. x, y, z 11. Review TEACHER PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT PROGRAMS: 1. Primary Learners — Strategies for introducing learning skills in the early grades. 2. Intermediate Learners — Engaging students in two step-by-step information-processing strategies: (1) thinking up ideas and (2) writing authentically correct historical fiction. 3. Collaborative Teaching — Creating a “learning community” in your school. 4. Information Literacy — Standard for Student Learning — Observing the process of the information literacy standards for student learning developed by the American Association of School Librarians and the Association for Educational Communications Technology. PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS 1. Character—The Center of Attention — Host Robert Franz, writer BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Tuesday, August 22 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-9 & PD Programs 1-4; 3 hours, 15 minutes) Block Feed II: Tuesday, January 23 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-9 & PD Programs 1-4; 3 hours, 15 minutes) Creating Stories and Music K C Exploring the connections between writing and composing Grade Levels: Length: Tuesday, August 29 at 8:30/7:30 am CT (Programs 1-3; 1 hour, 30 minutes) Block Feed II: Tuesday, October 24 at 2:00/1:00 pm CT (Programs 1-3; 1 hour, 30 minutes) Block Feed II: Monday, November 20 at 1:30/12:30 pm CT (Programs 1-3; 1 hour, 30 minutes) Block Feed II: Tuesday, January 30 at 8:30/7:30 am CT (Programs 1-3; 1 hour, 30 minutes) Block Feed II: Tuesday, March 27 at 2:00/1:00 pm CT (Programs 1-3; 1 hour, 30 minutes) Write Ideas K KY Academic Expectations: 1.11, 1.13, 2.23, 2.24, 2.25 Creative ideas for writing poetry A writer, a composer, a conductor, and an audience of young people discuss character, setting, and conflict/resolution (common elements of both stories and compositions), and illustrate the creation of these elements through words and music. Featured are Kentucky writer George Ella Lyon reading from her books, the premiere of a work by composer Lawrence Dillon, and musical performances by young Kentucky musicians. Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: Videocassette: 4-8 3 minutes Unlimited Downloadable at www.ket.org/education/guides See order form, pg. 125 KY Academic Expectations: 1.11 Photo: Rick McComb Photo: Rick McComb READING&WRITING Taping Rights: Print Materials: Videocassette: 4-5 20-30 minutes (in approx. two 15-minute segments) Unlimited Downloadable at www.ket.org/education/guides See order form, pg. 125 George Ella Lyon and composer Lawrence Dillon discuss how characters can be created through words and music. 2. Setting the Scene — George Ella Lyon reads an excerpt from Here and Then illustrating setting, and the Central Kentucky Youth Orchestra shows how music describes setting by performing “Sunrise” from Peer Gynt. 3. Conflict and Resolution — George Ella Lyon reads her book One Lucky Girl, which describes a real-life conflict, and the Louisville Youth Orchestra plays a storm scene from Beethoven’s 6th Symphony. 62 • 2006/2007 M�Instructional Videos Write Ideas is a series of 10 short video exercises designed to spark children’s imagination and help them find clever, enticing ideas to write about. Program host Aleda Shirley is a poet who spent more than five years teaching creative writing to young people in the Jefferson County Public School System. This KET-produced series is a compact, video version of the successful techniques she used. PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS 1. Colors — Aleda asks students to think of the most vibrant colors they have seen. 2. The Third Eye — Aleda tells students that the third eye is simply an eye that can see things their regular eyes can’t. 3. Wishes — Aleda asks students to write several long, detailed sentences about their wishes—their unusual, crazy, even weird wishes. 4. Animals — Aleda lets students choose any animal they want and imagine what it’s like being that animal—and then write lots of long, detailed sentences about their ideas. 5. Letter to the Moon — Aleda tells students they suddenly have the power to talk to the moon and suggests things they might tell it. 6. Seeing Music — A musician joins Aleda to play some instrumental music. She asks students to write down what they see when they listen to music or imagine what the music would be if it were not music. 7. Simultaneous Events — Aleda asks students to imagine things that might be going on in other places at the very minute they are watching the show and writing their sentences. 8. Quiet Times — Aleda tells students to think about the times in their lives or the times they can imagine that seem most quiet to them and asks that they explain why these times seemed so quiet. 9. Being Things — Aleda asks students to choose an object they would like to be and then to write about what it is like to be that object. 10. Negative Imagery — Aleda asks students to select any object and describe what it isn’t, rather than what it is; to tell what it can’t do, rather than what it can do. BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Student Lessons in Revision with Barry Lane K Creative writing exercises Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: Videocassette: 4-8 30-40 minutes Unlimited See below See order form, pg. 125 KY Academic Expectations: 1.11, 5.2 These programs are designed for teachers to use in the classroom or to watch themselves for professional development. Using humor and engaging examples, nationally known author and educator Barry Lane leads viewers through exercises to help them develop more creative writing pieces. PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS/LENGTHS 1. Growing Leads and Digging Potatoes: The Art of Beginning — With a little help from the wolf and the three pigs of lore, Lane demonstrates exercises that help writers develop creative and engaging leads. (22:21) BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Tuesday, August 15 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-6; 2 hours, 40 minutes) Block Feed II: Tuesday, January 16 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-6; 2 hours, 40 minutes) TEACHING MATERIALS Purchase book After the End, by Barry Lane Heinemann ISBN 0435087142 English Composition: Writing for an Audience Target Audience: Grades 9-12 Length: 30 minutes Taping Rights: Unlimited Print Materials: Textbook $59.95; Study Guide for Textbook $53.95; Faculty Guide for Textbook $29.95; Study Guide for Programs $43.95; Faculty Guide for Programs $29.95 (Video programs and guides can also be purchased individually.) Call 1-800-LEARNER (532-7637) for more information. Videocassette: Video streaming or purchase information at www.learner.org/resources/series128.html KY Academic Expectations: 1.1, 1.2, 1.3, 1.4, 1.11, 5.1, 5.3, 5.4, Special Note: Odd-numbered programs cover “Thinking and Writing Strategies.” and even-numbered programs cover the “Writing Process.” PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS 1. School Writing/Real World introduces the series’ key concepts. 2. Finding Something To Say introduces invention, drafting, and revi- sion. 3. Description offers tips to help students develop their descriptive skills. 4. Reading as a Writer explores the role of reading in the writing process. 5. Narrative Writing shows the relationships among narrative writing, personal writing, and academic writing with tips for telling a good story. continued on next page 2006/2007 M�Instructional Videos� • 63 READING&WRITING Tuesday, August 22 at 9:30/8:30 am CT (Programs 1-10; 30 minutes) Block Feed II: Tuesday, October 24 at 3:30/2:30 pm CT (Programs 1-10; 30 minutes) Block Feed III: Tuesday, January 23 at 9:30/8:30 am CT (Programs 1-10; 30 minutes) 2. The Myth of the Boring Subject: Revising Research Writing — Lane shares strategies such as “Question CPR” and the “Revisor’s Checklist” to help students write more interesting research papers. (31:01) 3. Digging for Details — In writing, as in other things, it’s all in the details. In this program, Lane introduces the “binocular” strategy and questioning exercises to help writers find the interesting details in a story. (27:28) 4. Snapshots and Thoughtshots — Lane discusses why writers use images and thoughts in stories to connect with their readers and demonstrates ways students can add them to their own work. (19:45) 5. Exploding Moments & Shrinking Centuries — This program provides writing exercises to help students expand small moments in time by using vivid detail, thoughtshots, and snapshots. Alternatively, there are exercises for compressing a long period of time into a single sentence or scene. (25:23) 6. Don’t Make a Scene, Build One: Revising Dialogue — Mark Twain wrote, “Don’t say the old lady screamed. Bring her on and make her scream.” Barry Lane shares activities to help students write more realistic and engaging dialogue. (25:26) READING&WRITING 6. Voice addresses how writers choose their language and tone based on their audience. 7. Process Analysis provides examples of “process analysis/how-to” writing in action. 8. Revision offers a variety of strategies to help the student writer revise. 9. Writing Under Pressure teaches students how to adapt the skills learned in English composition to timed writing in other classes and to writing under deadlines at work. 10. Freewriting and Generating looks at ways to generate ideas and overcome writer’s block. 11. Computers in Composition explores how computers are changing our approach to written documents. 12. Organizing Devices addresses organization strategies for prewriting and drafting. 13. Comparison and Contrast demonstrates how this strategy applies to invention and drafting. 14. Peer Feedback examines how students and professionals rely on peers during revision. 15. Definition explores the role that definition plays in a variety of writing contexts. 16. Collaborative Writing shows how professionals can write as a team. 17. Persuasion compares the art of persuasion to formal academic argument, with input from political activists, journalists, and ad execs. 18. Reading as a Thinker teaches students how to read and understand challenging college textbooks. 19. Argument explores the process of writing a simple statement and supporting it with evidence. 20. Quotes and Citations shows how to paraphrase, quote, and use MLA or APA citations in academic and other writing. 21. Research demonstrates how to use research during each stage of the writing process. 22. Editing: Sentences helps students correct their own writing weaknesses, particularly sentence structure problems that can make otherwise coherent writing confusing. 23. Critical Thinking examines how the concept of “critical thinking” affects the relationship among students, their textbooks, and their teachers as well as its importance in good reading and writing. 24. Editing: Word Usage addresses errors in word choice. 25. Writing Across the Disciplines demonstrates how to apply the writing processes and rhetorical strategies learned in English composition across the curriculum. 26. Editing: Mechanics helps students proofread for problems that could ruin the credibility of their writing. BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Tuesday, September 19 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-8; 4 hours) and at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 9-16; 4 hours); and Tuesday, September 26 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 17-24; 4 hours) and at 12 noon (Programs 25-26; 1 hour) Block Feed II: Tuesday, February 20 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-8; 4 hours) and at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 9-16; 4 hours); and Tuesday, February 27 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 17-24; 4 hours) and at 12 noon (Programs 25-26; 1 hour) Latin Roots for English Word Power K Latin and Greek roots of English words Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: Videocassette: 9-12* 30 minutes Unlimited See Web site See order form, pg. 125 Web Site: www.ket.org/education/latin KY Academic Expectations: 1.2, 1.4, 2.27, 6.1, 6.3 More than 50% of the words we use today are derived from Latin. Students who want to increase their “word power” in English can do so either by studying Latin in a traditional way or by learning some basic root words, prefixes, and suffixes. Joan Jahnige, KET’s satellite Latin II teacher, designed this six-part series to help high school students improve vocabulary decoding skills by learning some of those basic Latin roots. *Though designed for high school students looking toward college entrance tests, this series will also be valuable enrichment for advanced middle school students. PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS 1. Overview — explores how languages evolve; introduces a variety of English words taken from Latin; shows how new words can be coined using roots, prefixes, and suffixes 2. Growing Words from More Latin Roots — more combinations of word parts 3. Latin in Medicine and Science — looks at medicine in ancient Rome and Greece 4. Legal Latin/Latin in Government — compares ancient Rome’s legal and political systems to ours 5. Latin in Daily Use: Sports, Food, Art, and Music 6. Wrap-Up — decoding unfamiliar words BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Tuesday, September 26 at 1:00 pm/12:00 noon CT (Programs 1-6; 3 hours) Block Feed II: Tuesday, February 27 at 1:00 pm/12:00 noon CT (Programs 1-6; 3 hours) Everyday Voices K C The how-to's of creative writing Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Videocassette: 10-adult 30 minutes Unlimited See order form, pg. 125 KY Academic Expectations: 1.11, 2.22, 2.36, 3.4, 5.2 In this 2001 KET production, Kentucky author George Ella Lyon leads a group of adult workshop participants through exercises designed to spark creativity and provide ideas for writing. Each program focuses on a specific form of writing, from poetry to the personal narrative. 64 • 2006/2007 M�Instructional Videos Lyon is the author of the novel With a Hammer for My Heart as well as Come a Tide and other children's books. For additional background on the writer, pair Everyday Voices with An Electronic Conversation with George Ella Lyon, in which she talks about the inspirations for her own work and her writing process. PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS 1. Journaling — creative and easy ways to begin keeping a journal and 2. 3. 4. 5. how it can lead to other forms of writing. Writing Fiction — a series of exercises designed to help the aspiring writer create a convincing fictional character. Children's Books — details and ideas on how to get started writing for children. Poetry — fun and stimulating exercises that demonstrate the howto's of writing poems. Personal Narrative — an exploration of memories that can serve as inspiration for writing a personal narrative. EMMY AWARD WINNER Motivational reading of children’s literature Grade Level: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: Web Site: Primary 30 minutes See below Call GPN at 1-800-228-4630 gpn.unl.edu/rainbow KY Academic Expectations: 1.2, 1.3, 1.4 BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: (additional academic expectations will vary with topics covered in each program) Tuesday, August 1 at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 1-5; 2 hours, 30 minutes) Block Feed II: Tuesday, January 2 at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 1-5; 2 hours, 30 minutes) reading motivation/ literature Between the Lions C EMMY AWARD WINNER Reading motivation and library skills for beginning readers Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: Web Site: Reading Rainbow C Primary 30 minutes School year Available at Web site www.pbskids.org/lions Between the Lions opens up a world of literature and learning for children aged four to seven. Each episode centers on a book or other written material that Theo and Cleo and their cubs, Lionel and Leona, and their friends discover in the library. Some of their friends are Click the Mouse, the library’s cyborg communications expert; Cliff Hanger, a swashbuckling comic book hero who escapes from sticky situations through quick thinking and literacy skills; Tiger Words , a multi-talented sports figure who plays with vowels and consonants instead of golf balls and tees; Martha Reads and the Vowelles, a rhythm and blues group that sings only vowel sounds; and the stalwart knights of “Gawain’s World” whose jousting matches create words instead of wounds. WEEKLY BROADCAST SCHEDULE Mondays-Fridays, July 31- May 18 at 11:30/10:30 pm CT READING RAINBOW Taping Rights: A public school (K-12) may record Reading Rainbow off the air for audiovisual use only; tapes may not be used on ITFS, cable, or other multi-site distribution systems. The programs recorded off the air may be used only at the recording site; programs may not be circulated to other schools. Programs recorded off the air may not be duplicated without acquiring duplication rights from GPN. Public schools have off-air recording rights as long as their public television station is airing the Reading Rainbow programs. If the station ceases to air Reading Rainbow, the school must contact GPN (see address below) concerning the date the tapes must be erased or rights acquired. GPN does not grant off-air duplication and circulation rights to any regional, county, or district media center, unless such rights are purchased from GPN. GPN, Box 80669, Lincoln, NE 68501 (800) 228-4630 / (402) 472-2007 Reading Rainbow schedule on next page Photo: Rick McComb For the 2006-2007 school year, KET will air Between the Lions MondaysFridays at 11:30/10:30 pm CT on KET3. Program numbers will be announced on each KET3 Monthly Calendar Update. Program titles and descriptions are located at www.ket.org/itvvideos/offering/reading/ lions.htm. Please note that the distributor does not allow block feeds of this series. For the 2006-2007 school year, KET will air Reading Rainbow MondaysFridays at 11:00/10:00 am CT on KET3. Program descriptions are located at http://www.ket.org/itvvideos/offering/reading/rainbow. htm Please note that the distributor does not allow block feeds of this series. 2006/2007 M�Instructional Videos� • 65 READING&WRITING KY Academic Expectations: 1.2, 1.3, 1.4 The content of this series is based on careful selection of the best available books for children. The rationale is straightforward: Children become involved in good literature by reading books with intrinsic value and interest. The programs are great motivators for children to obtain the books. READING RAINBOW SCHEDULE FOR SCHOOL YEAR 2006-2007 WEEKLY BROADCAST SCHEDULES READING&WRITING Mondays-Fridays, July 31 - May 18 at 11:30/10:30 am CT 7/31/06 8/1/06 8/2/06 8/3/06 8/4/06 8/7/06 8/8/06 8/9/06 8/10/06 8/11/06 8/14/06 8/15/06 8/16/06 8/17/06 8/18/06 8/21/06 8/22/06 8/23/06 8/24/06 8/25/06 8/28/06 8/29/06 8/30/06 8/31/06 9/1/06 9/4/06 9/5/06 9/6/06 9/7/06 9/8/06 9/11/06 9/12/06 9/13/06 9/14/06 9/15/06 9/18/06 9/19/06 9/20/06 9/21/06 9/22/06 9/25/06 9/26/06 9/27/06 9/28/06 9/29/06 10/2/06 10/3/06 10/4/06 10/5/06 10/6/06 10/9/06 10/10/06 10/11/06 10/12/06 10/13/06 10/16/06 10/17/06 10/18/06 10/19/06 10/20/06 10/23/06 409 The Paper Crane 609 Bored — Nothing to Do! 610 Sports Pages 705 Sunken Treasure 703 The Bicycle Man 1008 Summer 405 Abiyoyo 1208 Hip Cat 905 Berlioz the Bear 310 Mama Don't Allow 810 Sophie and Lou 510 Mufaro's Beautiful Daughters 1001 Follow the Drinking Gourd 1112 Uncle Jed's Barbershop 1503 Mr. George Baker 1106 The Wonderful Towers of Watts 709 Galimoto 1010 Appelemando's Dreams 807 The Wall 1114 Owen 1406 Badger's Parting Gift 102 Miss Nelson is Back 103 Bea and Mr. Jones 104 Bringing the Rain to Kapiti Plain 105 Louis the Fish 106 Digging Up Dinosaurs 107 Liang and the Magic Paintbrush 109 Three Days on a River in a Red Canoe 110 The Gift of the Sacred Dog 609 Bored — Nothing to Do! 1408 Max 1409 Enemy Pie 1410 Our Big Home: An Earth Poem 1501 Visiting Day 1502 Unique Monique 1005 June 29, 1999 1503 Mr. George Baker 1405 My America: A Poetry Atlas of the United States 1209 Regina's Big Mistake 1114 Owen 1104 My Shadow 902 The Piggy in the Puddle 807 The Wall 610 Sports Pages 708 The Legend of the Indian Paintbrush 111 Gregory the Terrible Eater 203 Ox-Cart Man 404 Germs Make Me Sick! (No Broadcast due to special programming) 402 The Milk Makers 309 Watch the Stars Come Out 1504 Beegu 1505 Two Old Potatoes and Me 1407 The Tin Forest 1301 Math Cure 1109 The Sign Painter's Dream 1110 Archibald Frisby 1007 Borreguita and the Coyote 1303 Saturday Sancocho 1402 Pet Stories: You Don't Have to Walk 1004 And Still the Turtle Watched 66 • 2006/2007 M�Instructional Videos 10/24/06 10/25/06 10/26/06 10/27/06 10/30/06 10/31/06 11/1/06 11/2/06 11/3/06 1003 1002 808 702 604 608 507 1403 1210 11/6/06 11/7/06 11/8/06 11/9/06 11/10/06 11/13/06 11/14/06 11/15/06 11/16/07 11/17/06 11/20/06 11/21/06 11/22/06 11/23/06 11/24/06 11/27/06 11/28/06 11/29/06 11/30/06 12/1/06 12/4/06 12/5/06 12/6/06 12/7/06 12/8/06 12/11/06 12/12/06 12/13/06 12/14/06 12/15/06 1108 TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA 1504 1505 1501 1502 1503 1204 905 904 903 809 602 607 510 415 1208 TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA 1408 1409 1410 1401 12/18/06 12/19/06 12/20/06 12/21/06 12/22/06 12/25/06 12/26/06 12/27/06 12/28/06 12/29/06 1/1/07 1/2/07 1/3/07 1/4/07 1/5/07 1/8/07 1/9/07 1/10/07 1/11/07 1/12/07 1/15/07 1/16/07 1/17/07 1/18/07 1/19/07 1/22/07 1/23/07 1/24/07 1/25/07 1201 1104 1006 902 810 601 805 606 509 414 412 TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA 1504 1505 1501 1502 1503 1407 1211 1109 1206 1001 1009 1003 807 Is This a House for Hermit Crab? If You Give a Mouse a Cookie Sam the Sea Cow Jack, the Seal and the Sea Ludlow Laughs Tooth-Gnasher Superflash Duncan and Dolores Lemonade For Sale Giving Thanks: A Native American Good Morning Message Alejandro's Gift The Biggest Test I Lost My Tooth in Africa Boxes For Katje Game Day Show Way Beegu Two Old Potatoes and Me Visiting Day Unique Monique Mr. George Baker Hotel Animal Berlioz the Bear Through Moon and Stars and Night Skies Seashore Surprises Rechenka's Eggs Stay Away From the Junkyard! Desert Giant: The World of the Saguaro Cactus Mufaro's Beautiful Daughters My Little Island Hip Cat The Biggest Test I Lost My Tooth in Africa Boxes for Katje Game Day Show Way Max Enemy Pie Our Big Home: An Earth Poem The Shaman's Apprentice: A Tale of the Amazon Rain Forest How Much is a Million? My Shadow Nosey Mrs. Rat The Piggy in the Puddle Sophie and Lou Humphrey the Lost Whale: A True Story Snowy Day: Stories and Poems Dive to the Coral Reef Mummies Made in Egypt Meanwhile Back to the Ranch Rumpelstiltskin The Biggest Test I Lost My Tooth in Africa Boxes for Katje Game Day Show Way Beegu Two Old Potatoes and Me Visiting Day Unique Monique Mr. George Baker The Tin Forest The Carousel The Sign Painter's Dream Zin! Zin! Zin! A Violin Follow the Drinking Gourd Once There Was a Tree Is This a House for Hermit Crab? The Wall READING RAINBOW SCHEDULE FOR SCHOOL YEAR 2006-2007 (continued) 805 708 605 1/31/07 2/1/07 2/2/07 2/5/07 2/6/07 2/7/07 2/8/07 2/9/07 2/12/07 2/13/07 2/14/07 2/15/07 2/16/07 411 410 801 808 TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA 1504 1505 1403 1210 2/19/07 2/20/07 2/21/07 2/22/07 2/23/07 2/26/07 2/27/07 2/28/07 3/1/07 3/2/07 3/5/07 3/6/07 3/7/07 3/8/07 3/9/07 3/12/07 3/13/07 3/14/07 3/15/07 3/16/07 3/19/07 3/20/07 3/21/07 1203 1107 405 1101 907 106 704 604 603 609 409 TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA 1408 1409 1410 1501 1502 1503 1401 3/22/07 3/23/07 3/26/07 3/27/07 1209 1114 1102 1005 Snowy Day: Stories and Poems The Legend of the Indian Paintbrush Dinosaur Bob and His Adventures With the Family Lazardo A Three Hat Day The Runaway Duck Opt: An Illusionary Tale Sam the Sea Cow The Biggest Test I Lost My Tooth in Africa Boxes for Katje Game Day Show Way Beegu Two Old Potatoes and Me Lemonade For Sale Giving Thanks: A Native American Good Morning Message Bread Is for Eating Martha Speaks Abiyoyo The Lotus Seed The Furry News: How to Make a Newspaper Digging Up Dinosaurs Florence and Eric Take the Cake Ludlow Laughs Little Nino's Pizzeria Bored — Nothing to Do! The Paper Crane The Biggest Test I Lost My Tooth in Africa Boxes for Katje Game Day Show Way Max Enemy Pie Our Big Home: An Earth Poem Visiting Day Unique Monique Mr. George Baker The Shaman's Apprentice: A Tale of the Amazon Rain Forest Regina's Big Mistake Owen Hail to Mail June 29, 1999 710 809 705 602 TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA 1504 1505 1407 1211 1202 1110 1007 1305 1004 1010 810 610 601 608 510 408 702 708 607 407 TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA 1504 1505 1501 1502 Fox on the Job Rechenka's Eggs Sunken Treasure Stay Away From the Junkyard! The Biggest Test I Lost My Tooth in Africa Boxes for Katje Game Day Show Way Beegu Two Old Potatoes and Me The Tin Forest The Carousel Always My Dad Archibald Frisby Borreguita and the Coyote Worksong And Still the Turtle Watched Applemando's Dreams Sophie and Lou Sports Pages Humphrey the Lost Whale: A True Story Tooth-Gnasher Superflash Mufaro's Beautiful Daughters Chickens Aren't the Only Ones Jack, The Seal and the Sea The Legend of the Indian Paintbrush Desert Giant: The World of the Saguaro Cactus Keep the Lights Burning, Abbie The Biggest Test I Lost My Tooth in Africa Boxes for Katje Game Day Show Way Beegu Two Old Potatoes and Me Visiting Day Unique Monique Teletales Motivational reading of folk and fairy tales Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: Videocassette: Primary 15 minutes School year 1-800-457-4509 or www.ait.net See order form, pg. 125 KY Academic Expectations: 1.2, 1.3, 1.4 Complementing the primary-level language arts curriculum, this series shows how folk and fairy tales promote active listening, sharpen comprehension skills, and extend vocabulary. Their simple, direct plots provide superb examples of structure, organization, and chronological sequencing and can be used to help students develop logic skills. The stories can be a springboard for teaching the analysis skills such as thinking critically, interpreting information, and predicting results. Teletales also will enhance the various social studies, as distant lands and distant times are brought near. continued on next page Photo: Rick McComb 2006/2007 M�Instructional Videos� • 67 READING&WRITING 1/26/07 1/29/07 1/30/07 3/28/07 3/29/07 3/30/07 4/2/07 4/3/07 4/4/07 4/5/07 4/6/07 4/9/07 4/10/07 4/11/07 4/12/07 4/13/07 4/16/07 4/17/07 4/18/07 4/19/07 4/20/07 4/23/07 4/24/07 4/25/07 4/26/07 4/27/07 4/30/07 5/1/07 5/2/07 5/3/07 5/4/07 5/7/07 5/8/07 5/9/07 5/10/07 5/11/07 5/14/07 5/15/07 5/16/07 5/17/07 5/18/07 READING&WRITING Photo: Rick McComb PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS 1. The Charmed Ring (India) — Kind-hearted Sindhu is repaid in the end for the friendship he bestows on a cat, a dog, and a snake. 2. The Willow Tree (England/China) — Li-Ho defies her greedy father and elopes with the gardener’s son rather than submit to a prearranged marriage with the wealthy prince. 3. Stan Bolovan (Romania) — To make enough money to feed his hundred children, Stan takes a job as a dragonslayer—but finds it more profitable to outsmart the dragon. 4. Hansel and Gretel (Germany) — Two hungry, helpless children use their wits to defeat a nearsighted witch. 5. Soongoora and Simba (Africa) — A clever rabbit’s craving for honey repeatedly gets him into trouble with a lion. 6. The Bargain (Ireland) — When a crafty old farmer tricks Myles into working for nothing, a “little green man” helps Myles’ brother Donal turn the tables. 7. The Chenoo (Native American) — Team warns his wife Mimku never to touch a leather pouch in their wigwam. When their little son Wasis shoots an arrow into the pouch, a terrible creature is released—a Chenoo. 8. Molly O’Mally (Wales/England) — Spunky, daring Molly takes on the task of retrieving several precious items a cruel giant has stolen from her king. 9. Long Nose (Germany) — Jem endures laughter and derision until he discovers how to undo the witch’s spell that made his nose grow and his neck disappear. 10. Bianchinetta (Italy) — Bianchinetta is pushed into the sea by the evil Shamina, who then masquerades as Bianchinetta to gain entrance to the prince’s palace. 68 • 2006/2007 M�Instructional Videos 11. The Sorcerer’s Boy (Russia) — A sorcerer who misrepresents himself as a teacher turns Peter into a toad, a dove, and a horse. 12. Half Chick/The Squire’s Bride (Spain/Norway) — In one tale, selfishness and impatience bring a strange chicken to an ignominious end atop the tallest tower in Madrid. In the other, a proud and stubborn Norwegian squire gets a surprise on his wedding day when his bride-to-be turns out to be a horse. 13. Caliph Stork (Iraq) — The caliph of Baghdad finds himself trapped in the body of a stork, and only the evil magician with designs on his throne knows the magic word that will restore him to his human form. 14. Fiddy Wow Wow (Denmark) — Ordinary people, including a schoolteacher, are reduced to speaking nonsense after touching a magic stone. 15. Paka’a (Hawaii) — Paka’a invents the sailing canoe and wins power over the winds of the ocean. How he uses his power affects everyone, especially the king. BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Tuesday, October 3 at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Progams 1-15; 3 hours, 45 minutes) Block Feed II: Tuesday, March 6 at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Progams 1-15; 3 hours, 45 minutes) Cover-to-Cover C Reading/language arts Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: Primary-4 15 minutes School year Call ITS at 703-476-4468 KY Academic Expectations: 1.2, 1.3, 1.4 Cover-to-Cover is a reading motivation series designed for today’s 3rd- and 4th-grade students. Each program gives a “taste” of a book through two readings in which scenes and characters are colorfully illustrated by artists. A cliffhanger ending piques students’ interest and promotes reading. PROGRAM TITLES 1. Ralph S. Mouse, by Beverly Cleary 2. Junie B. Jones and Some Sneaky Peeky Spying/Junie B. Jones and A Little Monkey Business, by Barbara Park 3. The Year of the Panda, by Miriam Schlein/Dolphin Adventure: A True Story, by Wayne Grover 4. A Lion To Guard Us, by Clyde Robert Bulla 5. The Big Wave, by Pearl Buck 6. Pretty Polly, by Dick King-Smith 7. Which Way Freedom? by Joyce Hansen 8. The Boys Start the War, The Girls Get Even, by Phyllis Reynolds Naylor 9. Yang the Youngest and His Terrible Ear, by Lensey Namioka 10. The Animal, the Vegetable, and John D. Jones, by Betsy Byars 11. Shape-Changer, by Bill Brittain 12. A Brown Bird Singing, by Frances Wosmek 13. Goblins in the Castle, by Bruce Coville 14. The War with Grandpa, by Robert Kimmel Smith/All About Sam, by Lois Lowry 15. Mayfield Crossing, by Vaunda Michequx Nelson 16. Guests, by Michael Dorris told by Anndrena Belcher (A) Oct 24, (B) Mar 21 2. The Two Gals — a story about a good sister and a bad sister, told by Anndrena Belcher (A) Oct 25, (B) Mar 23 3. The Buzzard and the Monkey — an African-American tale, told by John O’Neal, in which the buzzard learns a lesson (A) Oct 27, (B) Mar 26 4. The Possum and the Snake — a story about character and deception, told by John O’Neal (A) Oct 30, (B) Mar 27 5. Jack and the Giants — a “Jack tale” which pits Jack against four giants, told by Rich Kirby and Tom Bledsoe (A) Nov 1, (B) Mar 28 6. Soap/Cat and Rat — A forgetful little boy and how forgetfulness gets him into trouble, and how the rat lost his tail and got it back again, told by Tom Bledsoe and Rich Kirby (A) Nov 3, (B) Mar 30 7. Little Deer and Mother Earth — a Cherokee tale with an environmental message, told by Marilou Awiakta (A) Nov 6, (B) Apr 2 8. Rising Fawn and the Fire Mystery — a tale from Cherokee history told by Marilou Awiakta (A) Nov 7, (B) Apr 3 9. The Parable of the Eagle — Mama Yaa’s version of the African fable about how the eagle learned to fly (A) Nov 8, (B) Apr 4 10. Anansi’s Rescue from the River — a story about Anansi, the trickster hero of Ashanti Land on the west coast of Africa, told by Mama Yaa (A) Nov 13, (B) Apr 13 11. Wicked John — the story of a really mean man, told by Tom Bledsoe, Rich Kirby, and Joy D’Elia (A) Nov 14, (B) Apr 16 12. Jack and the Magic Mill — a cautionary tale about greed, told by Tom Bledsoe, Rich Kirby, and Joy D’Elia (A) Nov 15, (B) Apr 17 13. Ashpet — a mountain version of the Cinderella story, told by Anndrena Belcher (A) Nov 17, (B) Apr 18 14. Mutsmag — the story of a humble gift and a brave little girl, told by Anndrena Belcher (A) Dec 1, (B) Apr 20 15. Balaam Foster’s Fiddle/The Banjo and the Loom — a tale about a pact with the devil, plus a poem, told by Anndrena Belcher (A) Dec 4, (B) Apr 23 16. Passing It On — documentary with Anndrena Belcher (A) Dec 5, (B) Apr 24 Tuesday, August 15 at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 1-16; 4 hours) Block Feed II: Tuesday, November 28 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-16; 4 hours) Block Feed III: Tuesday, January 16 at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 1-16; 4 hours) Block Feed II: Tuesday, May 1 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-16; 4 hours) Telling Tales K C Appalachian, African, and Native American stories told by master storytellers Mondays, Tuesdays, Wednesdays, & Fridays, October 24-December 5 at 10:45/9:45 am CT (Some interruptions for special programs.) Weekly broadcast (B): Mondays, Tuesdays, Wednesdays, and Fridays, March 21-April 24 at 10:45/9:45 am CT (Some interruptions for special programs.) BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Tuesday, October 3 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-16; 4 hours) Block Feed II: Tuesday, December 5 at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 1-16; 4 hours) Block Feed III: Tuesday, March 6 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-16; 4 hours) Block Feed IV: Tuesday, May 8 at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 1-16; 4 hours) Primary-8 15 minutes Unlimited Downloadable at www.ket.org/education/guides See order form, pg. 125 KY Academic Expectations: 1.2, 1.3, 1.4, 2.24 This KET-produced series features Appalachian, African-American, and Native American stories told by master storytellers. 2006/2007 M�Instructional Videos� • 69 READING&WRITING WEEKLY BROADCAST SCHEDULES Weekly broadcast (A): BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: Videocassette: PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS/AIR DATES 1. Hardy Hard Head — a “Jack tale” in which Jack bets with a witch, Beyond the Page C 4. Capture students' imagination with live author and illustrator chats from award-winning books Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Teacher Materials: 3-5 18 minutes School year Downloadable at www.ket.org/education/guides KY Academic Expectations: 1.2, 1.3, 1.4 Beyond the Page explores award-winning children’s literature in a multimedia environment to spark children’s imaginations. This series lets students explore books from the inside out by including chats with the authors and illustrators! When you go Beyond the Page, you’ll find it easy to: • Make reading enjoyable by bringing the books to life. • Boost comprehension and reading confidence • Spark interest in currciulum-related topics, as well as multicultural lessons Heo--A Chinese-American family is about to celebrate baby Henry's First Moon, his one-month birthday. Big sister Jenny helps her grandmother with the preparations--and helps us appreciate a joyous cultural tradition. Join both the author and the illustrator of this award-winning book for a revealing chat, then take a field trip to Chinatown. 2. I Love Saturdays y domingos — by Alma Flor Ada, illustrated by Elivia Savadier--Her paternal grandaprents are of European descent; her maternal abuelito y abuelita (grandfather and grandmother) are Mexican-American. One very lucky little girl enjoys the love of both sets of grandparents, each of whom provides a deep connection to their rich cultural heritage. Sit in on an interview with renowned educator and author Alma Flor Ada, Director of the Center for Multicultural Literature, and enjoy a field trip featuring dynamic grandparents. 3 Under the Lemon Moon — by Edith Hope Fine, illustrated by Rene' King Moreno --Who is the night man? Why has he taken Rosalinda's beautiful lemons and left her beloved tree to suffer? A young girl in the rural Mexican countryside finds a way to save her ailing arbolita (little tree)--and offers hope and redemption to someone in need. Meet the author of this compassionate, award-winning book, then learn about the rewards of helping others with a field trip about volunteering. It's a special day when a little girl and her father go to visit the house where the great poet Langston Hughes lived--especially when the little girl is a poet herself! Take a field trip to Harlem and enjoy a chat with the author and illustrator of this rhythmic tale, which serves as a wonderful introduction to the work and world of an American cultural hero and central figure of the Harlem Renaissance. 5 Float Like a Butterfly — by Ntozake Shange, illustrated by Edel Rodriguez--Trace the remarkable life journey of world-famous icon and boxing champion Muhammad Ali. Integrate Ali's story into language arts lessons with an interview with Obie award-winning author Ntozake Shange and an inspiring field trip. 6. Honk! — by Pamela Duncan Edwards, illustrated by Henry Cole--A ballet-smitten swan named Mimi drives everyone crazy practicing plies and grand jetes---until she finallly gets to perform on stage. Appreciate the discipline of dance with a visit to a ballet studio and explore the nature of collaboration through a chat with the author and illustrator. 7. Freedom River — by Doreen Rappaport, illustrated by Bryan Collier-This ALA Notable Children's Book and Coretta Scott King illustrator Honor Book tells the true story of ex-slave John Parker, who risked his freedom and life to help others escape slavery. Integrate the book into social studies lessons with a segment on the Underground Railroad and enjoy a chat with the author and illustrator. 8. The Web Files — by Margie Palatini, illustrated by Richard Egielski--In this deliciously tongue-in-cheek parody of TV's classic detective shows, Ducktective Web, a feathered flatfoot, must quack the case of the purple almost-pickled peppers. An interview with the author and a field trip to meet a real detective extend the lesson. BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Tuesday, August 29 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-8; 2 hours, 20 minutes) Block Feed II: Tuesday, November 21 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-8; 2 hours, 20 minutes) Block Feed III: Tuesday, January 30 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-8; 2 hours, 20 minutes) Block Feed IV: Tuesday, April 24 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-8; 2 hours, 20 minutes) Read On: Cover-to-Cover C Motivational reading Photo: Rick McComb READING&WRITING PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS 1. Henry's First-Moon Birthday- by Lenore Look, illustrated by Yumi Visiting Langston — by Willie Perdomo, illustrated by Bryan Collier-- Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: 4-5 15 minutes School year See order form, pg. 124 KY Academic Expectations: 1.2, 1.3, 1.4 Read On: Cover-to-Cover is relevant to today’s 4th and 5th graders while building on the style and charm of the past Cover-to-Cover series. Like those series, Read On uses “cliffhangers,” music, and narration to bring stories to life. However, there is a new emphasis on multicultural stories, computer graphics, and other contemporary production techniques. PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS 1. McMummy, by Betsy Byars — Mozie promises to take care of Dr. Orloff’s greenhouse for the summer, but one of the plants terrifies Mozie. 2. Number the Stars, by Lois Lowry — A Danish Christian family saves a Danish Jewish family from the Nazis in 1943. 70 • 2006/2007 M�Instructional Videos BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Tuesday, August 29 at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 1-16; 4 hours) Block Feed II: Tuesday, November 28 at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 1-16; 4 hours) Block Feed III: Tuesday, January 30 at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 1-16; 4 hours) Block Feed IV: Tuesday, May 1 at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 1-16; 4 hours) From the Brothers Grimm Motivational reading Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: Videocassette: Web Site: 4-8 20 minutes (Programs 17-20 are 25 minutes each) School year 1-800-804-7466 or go to Web site See order form, page 125 www.davenportfilms.com KY Academic Expectations: 1.2, 1.3, 1.4, 2.24, 5.1 American versions of classic folktales are featured in the live-action film adaptations of From the Brothers Grimm. Each program has a different historic American setting chosen from authentic locations around the Virginia countryside. The series stimulates interest and understanding of folk literature and presents the classic folktale in an accessible format. PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS 1. The Frog King or Faithful Henry — a story about the importance 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. of valuing others, as well as the awkwardness of growing up. Suggested curriculum theme: using point of view. Bearskin (or The Man Who Didn’t Wash for 7 Years) — a story about endurance, force of character in adversity, and spiritual transformation through suffering. Suggested curriculum theme: the use of visual symbols in literature. Hansel and Gretel: Appalachian Version — focuses on how children’s inner resources and mutual loyalty can help them deal with their fears. Suggested curriculum theme: the use of plot to bring about character development. Rapunzel, Rapunzel — a story, set around the turn of the century, about a young girl’s struggle with independence. Suggested curriculum theme: the use of fantasy in literature. Bristlelip — an adaptation of the Grimm’s tale called “King Thrushbeard,” this is a comical tale focusing on the importance of empathy and kindness. Suggested curriculum theme: how characters in a story affect one another. The Goose Girl — a story, set in the late 17th century, about the endurance and the ultimate triumph of virtue through honorable means. Suggested curriculum theme: how characters use events to make important choices. Jack and the Dentist’s Daughter, Part I — an American folktale adapted from a tale in an Appalachian story cycle; a clever hero wins his true love by using his head. Suggested curriculum theme: using identification with a story’s main character to address life issues. 8. Jack and the Dentist’s Daughter, Part II 9. Soldier Jack, Part I — an adaptation of an American “Jack tale” set in rural America after World War II. Jack receives two magical gifts: a sack that can catch anything and a jar that can show whether a sick person will die or get well. Suggested curriculum theme: character traits; the courage to live or die. (Note: “Soldier Jack” has some scary scenes. Teacher discretion is advised with students under 8 years old.) 10. Soldier Jack, Part II 11. Ashpet, Part I — an American version of the Cinderella story, set in the South shortly after World War II. Suggested curriculum theme: magic and fantasy in the folktale. 12. Ashpet, Part II 13. Ashpet, Part III 14. Mutzmag, Part I — an Appalachian variant of “Molly Whuppy,” brought to the U.S. by Scottish immigrants. Mutzmag and her sisters escape from a witch and a dumb but brutal giant. Suggested curriculum themes: heroes and heroines; past and present. (Note: “Mutzmag” is recommended only for middle and secondary students.) 15. Mutzmag, Part II 16. Mutzmag, Part III continued on next page 2006/2007 M�Instructional Videos� • 71 READING&WRITING 3. Strider, by Beverly Cleary — Leigh and Barry find an abandoned dog, Strider, and agree to joint custody, but Leigh wants Strider all to himself. 4. Sing Down the Moon, by Scott O’Dell — A Navajo girl survives slavery and a forced march from her home in Arizona to New Mexico in 1863. 5. Me, Mop, and the Moondance Kid, by Walter Dean Myers —The Dominican Academy Orphanage in urban New Jersey turns out good kids who play terrible ball—until Sister Carmelita gets involved. 6. A Jar of Dreams, by Yoshiko Uchida — Rinko Tsujimura learns firsthand the sting of prejudice when her family’s new home laundry business threatens the owner of the biggest established laundry in Berkeley, CA. 7. The Knights of the Kitchen Table/The Not-So-Jolly Roger, by Jon Scieszka — The Knights of the Kitchen Table introduces three adventurous boys who travel back in time to encounter wizards, giants, and dragons in King Arthur’s court. In The Not-So-Jolly Roger, the boys meet the most evil of all pirates—Blackbeard. 8. Teacher’s Pet/Attaboy, Sam — In Johanna Hurwitz’s Teacher’s Pet, Cricket can’t understand why her teacher hasn’t discovered her brilliance, outstanding leadership qualities, and natural gift for practically everything. Attaboy, Sam by Lois Lowry tells how 4-year-old Sam sets out to make perfume for his mother with all her favorite smells: chicken soup and one of his father’s pipes, for starters. 9. El Guero, by Elizabeth Borton de Trevi — In 1875, Porfirio, called El Guero or the Blond One, must travel the length of Baja California to tell the authorities that corrupt Mexican soldiers have imprisoned his father. 10. On the Banks of Plum Creek, by Laura Ingalls Wilder — The Ingalls family moves into an underground sod house on the banks of Plum Creek on the Minnesota prairie. 11. Chevrolet Saturdays, by Candy Dawson Boyd — Joey, an African American, refuses to accept his stepfather and to let go of his natural father, even though his parents are divorced. This contemporary story is set in California. 12. The Haymeadow/Hatchet, by Gary Paulsen — In The Haymeadow, John is sent alone to be shepherd to 6,000 sheep for the summer. He and the sheep share the haymeadow with rattlesnakes, coyotes, bears, and spectacular storms. In Hatchet, Brian is flying up to Canada to visit his father when the pilot of the small plane dies at the controls. 13. Daphne’s Book, by Mary Downing Hahn — Daphne is missing a lot of school because she is afraid to leave her baby sister at home alone with their guardian/grandmother, who is deteriorating mentally. 14. Dragonwings, by Laurence Yep — In 1909, six years after the Wright brothers’ triumphant first flight, the feat was repeated by a Chinese American with his airplane, Dragonwings, in Oakland, CA. 15. Shades of Gray, by Carolyn Reeder — Will loses his whole family in the Civil War and hates the thought of having to go live with an uncle who refused to fight in the war. 17. Willa: An American Snow White, Part I — a version of the ancient “Snow White” story set in 1915 America. The jealous queen is Regina Worthington, an aging beauty whose stage career has soured. Snow White is her beautiful and talented stepchild, Willa. The cottage of the seven dwarves has been changed into a traveling medicine show run by a failed Shakespearean actor and his two oddball companions. They sell “Chief Tonka’s Elixir of Life,” a highly alcoholic concoction that is supposed to reverse aging—among other reputed cures. (Note: “Willa” is recommended for the middle school grades.) 18. Willa: An American Snow White, Part II 19. Willa: An American Snow White, Part III 20. Willa: An American Snow White, Part IV BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Tuesday, September 12 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-12; 3 hours, 53 minutes) and at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 13-20; 3 hours, 5 minutes) Block Feed II: Tuesday, February 13 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-12; 3 hours, 53 minutes) and at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 13-20; 3 hours, 5 minutes) More Books from Cover-to-Cover C Blending dramatic narration, artwork, sound effects, and music to bring books to life Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: 5-6 15 minutes School year 1-703-476-4468 READING&WRITING KY Academic Expectations: 1.2, 1.3, 1.4 Host John Robbins introduces each book (one or two per program), and the narration takes viewers up to a crucial point in the story. Students must read the book to learn the ending. The goals are to introduce 5th and 6th graders to a variety of exciting and well-written books, stimulate the desire to read, broaden each student’s reading experience, expand reading abilities, and instill the simple enjoyment of leisure reading. PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS 1. The Wish Giver, by Bill Brittain — genre: fantasy; reading level: inter2. 3. 4. 5. mediate. Three characters are profoundly affected by their wishing experiences when their wishes are granted. Summer Birds, by Penelope Farmer — genre: fantasy; reading level: difficult. A strange new boy in town teaches the other children how to fly; one boy returns to an island with him at the end of the summer to live the life of a bird. Won’t Know Till I Get There, by Walter Dean Myers — genre: contemporary realism; reading level: intermediate/difficult. When his parents announce that they are going to adopt a child, 14-year-old Stephen Perry is calm about it until he learns that the child is 13year-old Earl Goins, who has a record that includes armed robbery. The Agony of Alice, by Phyllis Reynolds Naylor — genre: contemporary realism; reading level: easy/intermediate. While packing her things for her family’s move to a new house, 11-year-old Alice McKinley thinks of all the embarrassing incidents in her past. Stone Fox, by John Reynolds Gardiner — genre: modern legend; reading level: easy. Ten-year-old Willy enters a dogsled race against Stone Fox, an Indian. The money he hopes to win will help save his grandfather’s farm. 72 • 2006/2007 M�Instructional Videos 6. Mama’s Going To Buy You a Mockingbird, by Jean Little — genre: contemporary realism; reading level: intermediate. Jeremy deals with the death of his father and befriends Tess, an unpopular girl at school. 7. The Ghost Squad Breaks Through/Who Kidnapped the Sheriff? — E.W. Hildick’s The Ghost Squad Breaks Through is a detective story for intermediate reading levels in which ghosts develop a new communication device and plan to use it to foil crimes and solve mysteries. Who Kidnapped the Sheriff? by Larry Callen is a seriocomic collection of self-contained but connected pieces about Patrick O’Leary and Violet Deever and their encounters one summer with the citizens of Tickfaw. Reading level: easy/intermediate. 8. The Castle in the Attic, by Elizabeth Winthrop — genre: fantasy; reading level: intermediate. In this tale of castles, knights, tokens, evil spells, and dragons, the characters are all made very small by the power of a magic token. 9. Baby-Sitting Is a Dangerous Job, by Willo Davis Roberts — genre: suspense; reading level: intermediate. Sitter Darcy Stevens and the three children she is taking care of are kidnapped and held in a rundown old house. 10. Come Sing Jimmy Jo, by Katherine Paterson — genre: contemporary regionalism; reading level: intermediate. Shy 11-year-old James sings every Friday night on a country music television show, but nearly quits singing when his parents record a song written to be sung by James. 11. The Not-Just-Anybody Family, by Betsy Byars — genre: eccentricism, contemporary and regional; reading level: easy/intermediate. The Blossom children break into jail to see Pap, their grandfather. The children’s mother learns of her family’s antics while in Texas, where she has a job in a rodeo, and returns home to take care of things. 12. Tom’s Midnight Garden, by Philippa Pearce — genre: fantasy; reading level: intermediate. At his Uncle Alan and Aunt Gwen’s old house, Tom discovers a secret garden, which he visits every night. No matter how much time he spends in the garden visiting his playmate Hatty, ordinary clocks measure none of it. 13. Midnight Is a Place, by Joan Aiken — genre: Dickensian adventure; reading level: difficult. After a fire kills his guardian and destroys Midnight Court, the run-down old mansion where 13-year-old Lucas is living, he and his friend Anna Marie must fend for themselves in the streets of the dreary city of Blastburn. 14. The Root Cellar, by Janet Lunn — genre: time travel; reading level: intermediate. Having been sent to live on a farm belonging to her aunt and uncle, Rose Larkin experiences time travel when she enters a root cellar and, upon coming back out, finds herself living in 1862 amid the Civil War. 15. The Whipping Boy, by Sid Fleishman — genre: humor; reading level: intermediate. Prince Brat, also known as Prince Horace, is a royal mischief maker who ties the lords’ and ladies’ wigs to their chairs and hog-greases the knights’ saddles. He also refuses to learn to read and write. For his pranks and failures he is punished — via his whippy boy, Jemmy. 16. The Dark Is Rising, by Susan Cooper — genre: fantasy; reading level: difficult. Eleven-year-old Will Stanton is transported to a strange time and place where he is told that because he was born one of the Old Ones, he must devote himself to the conflict between the forces of Light and Dark. His quest is to find and guard the six great Signs of the Light, which will awaken one of the forces to be used against the Dark. BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Tuesday, August 22 at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 1-16; 4 hours) Block Feed II: Tuesday, December 5 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-16; 4 hours) Block Feed III: Tuesday, January 23 at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 1-16; 4 hours) Block Feed IV: Tuesday, May 8 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-16; 4 hours) An Electronic Conversation with George Ella Lyon K C James Still’s River of Earth K C Questions and answers about writing Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: Videocassette: Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Videocassette: 5-12 51 minutes Unlimited See order form, pg. 125 KY Academic Expectations: 1.2, 1.4, 2.24 Kentuckian George Ella Lyon, author of more than 20 books for children and adults, answers questions from students in this KET production, which originally aired live. Topics include where story ideas come from, how being a Kentuckian influences her writing, writing strategies, techniques for crafting dialogue, and the relationship between words and pictures in children’s picture books. BROADCAST SCHEDULE Tuesday, August 15 at 9:00/8:00 am CT Tuesday, January 16 at 9:00/8:00 am CT The Short Story Literary appreciation of varied writers Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: Videocassette: 7-12 15 minutes Unlimited See order form, pg. 124 See order form, pg. 125 KY Academic Expectations: 1.2, 1.3, 1.4, 2.24 PROGRAM TITLES 1. “The Yellow Wallpaper,” by Charlotte Gilman 2. “The Lull,” by Saki 3. “Dave’s Necklace,” by Charles W. Chesnutt 4. “The Village Singer,” by Mary Wilkins Freeman 5 “The Birthmark,” by Nathaniel Hawthorne 6. “The Tell-Tale Heart,” by Edgar Allan Poe 7. “Mrs. Ripley’s Trip,” by Hamlin Garland 8. “The Real Thing,” by Henry James 9. “The Boarded Window,” by Ambrose Bierce 10. “The Dilettante,” by Edith Wharton 11. “Two Thanksgiving Day Gentlemen,” by O. Henry 12. “The Bet,” by Anton Chekhov 13. “The Two Little Soldiers,” by Guy de Maupassant 14. “Diary of Adam and Eve,” by Mark Twain 15. “Tennessee’s Partner,” by Bret Harte 16. “The Queen of Spades,” by Alexander Pushkin 7-12 60 minutes Unlimited Downloadable at www.ket.org/education/guides See order form, pg. 125 KY Academic Expectations: 1.2, 1.3, 1.4, 2.24 James Still’s River of Earth is a portrait of one of Kentucky’s most distinguished and honored writers as well as an introduction to his work; it also gives students insight into the history and culture of the Appalachian region from which that work springs. Still’s publishing career spans 70 years and includes novels such as River of Earth, story collections such as Pattern of a Man, children’s books, collections of mountain lore and sayings, poetry collections such as The Wolfpen Poems, and, most recently, The Wolfpen Notebooks: A Record of Appalachian Life. Through interviews with Still and people who knew him—including scholars, friends, and relatives —this KET production highlights the uniqueness of the man and the importance of his vision. The program also includes archival photographs; reminiscences; and readings from Still’s poetry, stories, and novels. BROADCAST SCHEDULE Tuesday, September 5 at 6:00/5:00 am CT Tuesday, February 6 at 6:00/5:00 am CT bookclub@ket: James Still’s Legacy “River of Earth” K C A panel discusssion of the life and works of James Still Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: Videocassette: 9-12 60 minutes Unlimited Download James Still's River of Earth teacher's guide at www.ket.org/education/guides See order form, pg. 125 KY Academic Expectations: 1.2, 1.11 Students, teachers, and writers come together to discuss the life and works of a great Kentucky writer, James Still. They discuss the powerful influence Still and his book, River of Earth, has had on other writers. The program also includes a documentary of Still’s life. This broadcast will lend itself to reading and writing instruction. In the area of reading, it will encourage students to respond critically to and analyze River of Earth In writing, it will provide students with models and ideas for writing fictional narratives and poetry. BROADCAST SCHEDULE Tuesday, September 5 at 7:00/6:00 am CT Tuesday, February 6 at 7:00/6:00 am CT BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Tuesday, August 1 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-16; 4 hours) Block Feed II: Tuesday, January 2 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-16; 4 hours) 2006/2007 M�Instructional Videos� • 73 READING&WRITING Dramatized by professional actors and supported by striking costumes and vivid sets, The Short Story introduces junior/senior high school students to the best American writers and compares their works with those of the best writers from other countries. Various themes of humor, suspense, allegory, romance, reality, and morality portray points of view born of the periods in which the stories were written. Portrait of a Kentucky poet Living by Words K C Shakespeare Shorts C A Celebration of 50 Years of Creative Writing at the University of Kentucky Excerpts of plays for classroom analysis of characterization Grade Level: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: 9-12 90 minutes Unlimited Downloadable at website Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: Web Site: www.ket.org/livingbywords Videocassette: See order form, pg. 125 9-12 20 minutes School Year 1-800-228-4630 KY Academic Expectations: 1.3, 1.4, 2.24 KY Academic Expectations: 1.2, 1.4, 1.11, 2.24, 2.25, 2.26 Join five of Kentucky’s best-loved authors—Bobbie Ann Mason, Wendell Berry, Gurney Norman, Ed McClanahan and James Baker Hall—for a celebration of creative writing. This 90-minute special features readings the five writers gave in the fall of 2001 as part of the 50th anniversary of the University of Kentucky’s Creative Writing Program. Educational Use: Teachers will want to preview the program in advance. It is divided into “chapters” which allows for easier use in the classroom. Visit the Living by Words website at <www.ket.org/livingbywords> for additional information about all five writers, essays on Kentucky’s literary tradition, and advice from the writers. This program has been flagged because one poem has the word “s...” BROADCAST SCHEDULE Tuesday, August 1 at 2:30/1:30 pm CT Supported by clips from past television and film versions, leading television actors discuss the motivation of major characters in chosen scenes from five plays. A full performance of each scene introduces viewers to character motivation, key lines, and themes such as the supernatural, persuasion, kingship, guilt, and insanity. PROGRAM TITLES 1. Romeo and Juliet 2. Julius Caesar 3. A Midsummer Night’s Dream 4. Twelfth Night 5. Macbeth (the character of Lady Macbeth, projected 50 years into the future) 6. Macbeth 7. To Kill the King — Playing Macbeth 8. The Supernatural — Playing Macbeth 9. Sanity and Insanity — Playing L.A. BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Tuesday, January 2 at 2:30/1:30 pm CT Tuesday, October 17 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-9; 3 hours) Block Feed II: Tuesday, March 20 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-9; 3 hours) Signature K C READING&WRITING Profiles of contemporary Southern writers Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: Videocassette: 9-12 60 minutes Unlimited Downloadable at www.ket.org/education/guides See order form, pg. 125 KY Academic Expectations: 1.2, 1.3, 1.4, 2.24, 2.36 This series humanizes and demystifies the creative process through interviews with six mid-career writers and their colleagues, friends, relatives, and critics; visits to places related to their work; and readings from that work. The teacher’s guide includes biographical information, brief bibliographies, and writing activities for students. PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS 1. Bobbie Ann Mason — Mason visits her hometown of Mayfield and Photo: Rick McComb 74 • 2006/2007 M�Instructional Videos talks about its influence on her work. The program includes readings from the novels In Country and Feather Crowns as well as several short stories, plus an excerpt from the Hollywood film of In Country. 2. Ed McClanahan — The author reads from his novel, The Natural Man, and the autobiographical work, Famous People I Have Known, and talks about influences from Charles Dickens to Ken Kesey. Visits to boyhood haunts in Northern Kentucky prompt stories of the origins of McClanahan’s ideas and characters. 3. Marsha Norman — Backstage scenes of the production of a Broadway version of The Red Shoes frame the story of this Louisville playwright. Norman and others read from ‘night, Mother, which won the Pulitzer, and the Tony Award-winning musical The Secret Garden, for which Norman wrote the script. 4. Lee Smith — Growing up in Grundy, Virginia, near the Kentucky border, 9-year-old Lee Smith wrote—and sold, for a nickel apiece— stories about her neighbors. Since 1968, she has published nine novels, including Fair and Tender Ladies and Oral History and two short story collections. The sense of place infusing her novels reveals her insight into and empathy for Appalachian people and culture. 5. George C. Wolfe — The New York theatre scene is literally and figuratively miles away from the segregated but nurturing African-American community of 1960s Frankfort and the childhood of this Tony Awardwinning playwright/director. This program explores the juxtaposition of past and present in the life and work of the man who wrote The Colored Museum, wrote and directed Jelly’s Last Jam and Bring In ’Da Noise, Bring In ’Da Funk, directed Angels in America, and led the New York Shakespeare Festival/Joseph Papp Public Theater. 6. Barbara Kingsolver — Like the lead character in her first novel, The Bean Trees, Kingsolver left her Kentucky hometown to settle in Arizona, where she has written critically acclaimed novels, poetry, short stories, and nonfiction. This portrait examines how Kingsolver’s “wallflower” youth in Carlisle led to her “fierce wish to look inside people” as well as an “aptitude for listening.” BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Tuesday, October 10 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-4; 4 hours) and at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 5-6; 2 hours) Block Feed II: Tuesday, March 13 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-4; 4 hours) and at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 5-6; 2 hours) SignatureLIVE! K C Conversations with writers 10-12 60 minutes Unlimited See order form, pg. 125 www.ket.org/signaturelive KY Academic Expectations: 1.2, 1.3, 1.4, 2.24, 2.36 Young writers talk about writing with Ed McClanahan and Bobbie Ann Mason in these two programs taped live before a KET studio audience of high school and college students. PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS 1. Elizabeth Bishop — From her childhood in Nova Scotia to her travels in 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. Brazil, this program illustrates the geographic spirit of Bishop’s life and works with scenes from her poems. Mark Strand, James Merrill, Octavio Paz, and Mary McCarthy offer personal memories and commentary. Emily Dickinson — Dramatic scenarios and New England landscapes illuminate the passionate genius of Dickinson, whose poems represent a broad range of imaginative experience. Adrienne Rich, Joyce Carol Oates, and Dickinson biographer Richard Sewall comment. T.S. Eliot — Eliot’s life, influence, and poetry—from the bold originality of “Prufrock” to the probing, meditative style of “Four Quartets”—are explored with photos; archival footage; and discussion with friends, critics, and scholars. Robert Frost — Frost’s image as elder statesman is contrasted with his vigorous, poetic exploration of the darker forces of nature and the human condition. Readings and interviews yield compelling insights into his work. Langston Hughes* — Hughes wrote of the beauty, dignity, and heritage of blacks in America. Interviews, music, and dance performances convey his work and influence, discussed by James Baldwin and biographer Arnold Rampersad. Walt Whitman* — Brilliant readings of Whitman’s poems demonstrate his American vision and style and vividly convey their poignancy and sheer power. Whitman’s sources, including Emerson, the King James Bible, opera, and political oratory, are revealed. * These programs have been flagged for content and/or language. KET strongly encourages teachers to preview these programs. Call KET’s Education office at (800) 432-0951 for more information. BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Tuesday, October 24 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-4; 4 hours) and at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 5-6; 2 hours) Block Feed II: Tuesday, March 27 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-4; 4 hours) and at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 5-6; 2 hours) PROGRAM TITLES 1. Ed McClanahan 2. Bobbie Ann Mason BROADCAST SCHEDULE Tuesday, October 10 at 2:00/1:00 pm CT (Programs 1-2; 2 hours) Tuesday, March 13 at 2:00/1:00 pm CT (Programs 1-2; 2 hours) Voices & Visions Modern American poetry Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: Videocassette: 10-12 60 minutes Unlimited See order form, pg. 125 See below See Also... Making News Quiz — page 112 KY Academic Expectations: 1.1, 1.3, 1.4, 2.24 2004/2005 M�Instructional Videos� • 75 READING&WRITING Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Videocassette: Web Site: Six of America’s most memorable poets are portrayed in these programs, originally produced for a college-level telecourse. Nobel Prize winner Joseph Brodsky, writer Mary McCarthy, the late author James Baldwin, and poet Adrienne Rich join other notable writers, scholars, and performers in exploring the work, lives, and times of individual poets. Drama, dance, performances, interviews, archival footage, onlocation cinematography, and recordings of poets reading their own works heighten appreciation and understanding of the literary texts. SCIENCE program titles SCIENCE Backyard Safari (Preschool-Primary) C Up Close and Natural (Primary) Zoo Zoo Zoo (Primary) Take a Look I (Primary-4) C Forest Family Forever (Primary-5) Concepts in Nature (Primary-6) The World of Nature II (Primary-6) NASA SCIence Files (3-5) C Natureworks (3-6) C Gee Whiz in Agriculture (4-5) C Real World Science (4-6) Kentucky Afield for Kids (4-7) North American Biomes (4-8) C Kentucky’s Natural Heritage (4-12) K Work, Energy and the Simple Machine (5-8) C Real Science! II (5-10) C Real Science! III (5-10) C Classic Animal Tracks (5-12) C The Complete Cosmos (5-12) C Explore More (6-8) NASA Connect (6-8) C Inside the Living Cell (6-9) C Passport to Weather and Climate (6-9) C Life in Marine and Freshwater Environments (6-12) C Planet Neighborhood (6-12) C Inventing Flight (7-9) C Lab Safety: The Accident at Jefferson High (7-9) The Biology Of... (7-12) C Inside Our Human Body (7-12) C Our Earth (7-12) C NASA's Destination Tomorrow (9-12) C Visualizing Cell Processes (9-12) C Viruses on the Rise (10-12) F C K New or Revised for 2006/2007 Closed Captioned KET Production On KET EncycloMedia Backyard Safari C Biology in the world around us Grade Levels: Preschool-Primary Length: 30 minutes Taping Rights: School year Print Materials: Go to http://gpn.unl.edu, then type "Backyard Safari" in the Search box, Click on the top Backyard Safari link and scroll toward the bottom of the page. The teacher's guide is available for $10.00. KY Academic Expectations: 2.1, 2.2, 2.3, 2.6 76 • 2006/2007 M�Instructional Videos The primary goal of this science and natural history series is to excite children about investigating the natural world by exposing them to scientific practices in a positive way. The programs help children see themselves as scientists who can go outside and learn directly from the world around them. PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS 1. That's My Baby — Everyone begins as a baby, but not all babies need the same care to become self-sufficient. 2. Birds — If you learn what to look and listen for, you begin to identify the world's amazingly varied birds. 3. Butterflies — These colorful insects go through a process called metamorphosis, from egg to caterpillar to chrysalis to butterfly. 4. Clouds — By observing clouds, we can begin to understand the weather. 5. Color — Like us, animals often use colors to send messages. 6. Dinner Tools — Each animal has the right kind of tools to gather and eat its favorite foods. 7. Dinosaurs — We can learn what dinosaurs looked like and how they lived by piecing together dinosaur fossils and by observing some animals alive today. 8. Home-Sweet-Home — Animals make or find the materials to create homes that are right for them. 9. Paper — Paper has a multitude of properties, forms, and uses. Although most often made from wood, it can also be made from a variety of other materials. 10. Rocks and Minerals* — Rocks and minerals come in a wide array of colors, textures, sizes, and shapes. 11. Trees — A tree is a busy place. It’s a living, growing plant and a home and habitat for many different animals. 12. Water — Water in its three different states is present everywhere on Earth. All living things need water to survive. 13. Working Together — Some animals, such as bees, ants, and termites, work together to maintain a viable, adaptable society. *This program has been flagged for visual content. KET strongly encourages teachers to preview this program. Call KET's Education office at (800)-432-0951 for more information. BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Friday, August 18 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-8; 4 hours) and at 12 noon (Programs 9-13; 2 hours, 30 minutes) Block Feed II: Friday, January 19 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-8; 4 hours) and at 12 noon (Programs 9-13; 2 hours, 30 minutes) Up Close and Natural Natural science and ecology Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: Videocassette: Primary 15 minutes Unlimited Call 1-800-457-4509, ext. 4 or visit www.ait.net/catalog See order form, pg. 125 KY Academic Expectations: 1.10, 2.2, 2.3, 2.6 Filmed at the Squam Lake Science Center in New Hampshire, this series is designed to develop awareness and appreciation of the wonders of the natural world around. The series explores the center’s lakes, fields, and forests; introduces the animals that live there; and encourages students to sharpen their observation, description, and clarification skills. PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS 1. Introduction — seasonal changes; habitats; life cycle changes; differ- BLOCK FEED Block Feed I: Friday, September 22 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-15; 3 hours, 25 minutes) Block Feed II: Friday, February 23 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-15; 3 hours, 25 minutes) Zoo Zoo Zoo Animals in the zoo Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: Videocassette: Primary 15 minutes Unlimited See order form, pg. 124 See order form, pg. 125 KY Academic Expectations: 2.2, 2.3, 2.4, 2.5, 2.36 PROGRAM TITLES 1. All About Eyes 2. All About Feet 3. All About Ears 4. All About Tails 5. Animal Costumes 6. Animal Defenses 7. The Importance of Predators 8. Do Animals Talk? 9. How and What Animals Eat 10. How Animals Move 11. How Animals Help Each Other 12. Zoo Babies 13. Animal Houses 14. Animal Groups 15. Who Works at the Zoo? 16. Where Animals Live SCIENCE ences between living and non-living things 2. Animals Without Backbones — invertebrates such as earthworms, crayfish, and spiders 3. Insects — insect body parts, life cycles 4. Fish — types of fish; scales, fins, and gills; how different fish behave 5. Toads, Frogs, and Salamanders — metamorphosis; the double life of amphibians; how to tell a frog from a toad 6. Turtles — specialized bodies and behavior adapt turtles to diverse habitats 7. Snakes — A garter snake and a seven-foot eastern indigo snake with scutes, scales, a hinged jaw, and a one-piece skin 8. What Is a Bird? — what birds have in common and some special adaptations 9. Mammals — a baby raccoon and two fawns introduce the distinctive characteristics of mammals — even dolphins 10. Winter at Squam Lake — how animals such as the snowy owl, black bear, and white-tailed deer adapt to winter’s cold 11. Life in the Winter Forest — winter homes in the many-layered forest habitat 12. The Pond — new Spring life in the pond, including animals too small to see with the naked eye 13. Marsh and Swamp — the food chain; the importance of the wetlands as breeding places 14. In the Field — how a fox kit, a woodchuck, an opossum, a skunk, and a kestrel survive 15. Outside Your Door — studying creatures close to home: millipedes, centipedes, spiders, bees, sowbugs, spittle bugs Zoo animals are presented to young viewers in programs built around themes such as predators, ears, eyes, tails, feet, etc. Special features of the animals, their behavior, and their relationships to one another are emphasized. The photography helps young viewers see the close-up details of each animal. BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Friday, November 17 at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 1-16; 4 hours) Block Feed II: Friday, April 20 at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 1-16; 4 hours) Take a Look I C Plant and animal life, astronomy, geology, and meteorology Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: Primary-4 10 minutes School year Downloadable at www.ket.org/education/guides KY Academic Expectations: 1.10, 2.1, 2.2, 2.3, 2.4, 2.6 Take a Look I introduces students to Jeffrey, a city kid spending his summer on a farm. Jeffrey’s guide in his science exploration is Kate, a writer of science books for children. She takes viewers on visits to see science in the real world and demonstrates a variety of experiments teachers can perform with students in the classroom. The series’ use extends beyond basic science into the areas of art, music, writing, and research. PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS 1. Plants — Kate shows Jeffrey the parts of a plant — the root, stem, leaf, and flower — and their functions. We see what a plant needs to live by visiting a greenhouse and by experimenting at home. 2. Flowers and Seeds — Jeffrey discovers why flowers have more to do than just look pretty. We identify the different parts of flowers, then watch as they bloom in spring. 3. Growing Things — We learn how some plants grow from rhizomes, runners, and bulbs instead of seeds. We also see some unusual ways seeds travel to new places and how to grow an avocado plant from a seed. 4. Insects — At a beekeeping farm, Kate and Jeffrey see how honey is made and identify the three kinds of bees in the hive. Children demonstrate how to catch and study insects. continued on next page 2006/2007 M�Instructional Videos� • 77 SCIENCE 5. Eggs — Jeffrey learns about the parts of an egg by looking inside one, and Kate’s egg chart shows what each part does. Experiments with eggs show how strong they are, and how weak they can be! 6. Birds — Kate and Jeffrey examine the special shapes of birds’ beaks and find out how they are suited to diet. We see how to make two simple bird feeders. 7. Flight — Jeffrey learns more about birds’ bones, feathers, and wings and how they are designed for flight. Also, we learn how to build a high-flying kite. 8. Seasons — Visits to a marsh on a summer morning and a winter day show Jeffrey and Kate the changes that the seasons bring. 9. Playground Science — Kate and Jeffrey mix fun and science while learning about gravity and balance points at the playground. We see how to make a mobile from string and straws. 10. Boats — Simple backyard experiments show why some objects float and some sink. We look at many different types of boats and see how to make a sailboat. 11. Mixtures — Kate shows Jeffrey the difference between suspension and solution mixtures and ways to experiment with them at home. A visit to a soda pop factory reveals how a popular solution is made. 12. Sun and Other Stars — Jeffrey learns about the sun and its relationship to other stars, as well as the sun’s effects on Earth. Kate explains how a sundial works and how to build your own. 13. The Moon — Kate and Jeffrey study the four phases of the moon and make a calendar to chart the moon’s progress. We watch astronauts exploring the moon to learn more about its surface. 14. Rocks — Jeffrey identifies three types of rocks — sedimentary, metamorphic, and igneous — and learns about their origins. We see how pottery is made by visiting a china factory. 15. Crystals — Kate and Jeffrey examine the shapes of some common crystals, then make their own sugar crystals. We trace the progress of diamond crystals from the mine to their final forms in jewelry and machines 16. Fossils — Jeffrey and Kate study fossils, some millions of years old, to discover how they were made. We learn how the study of fossils provides clues to Earth’s history 17. Wind — Kate makes a weather vane and shows Jeffrey how the wind creates weather. She conducts some experiments to simulate the movement of air currents, explaining how storms can start 18. Rain — Although rain dampens Jeffrey’s day, he finds out why the water cycle is important for all living things 19. Waste — Jeffrey sees how garbage is part of the life cycle and plants a “reverse garden” to watch how things decay. Kate stresses the value of recycling 20. Energy — Kate uses moving toys to show Jeffrey the basic principles of energy, the different forms it can take, and how it is found everywhere. Forest Family Forever Rainforests and how to save them Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: KY Academic Expectations: 2.3, 2.5, 2.6 Forest Family Forever tells the story of a thousand-year-old grandfather tree who teaches his sapling grandson about the wonders of a rainforests and what kids can do to save them, in a blend of live footage and animation. BROADCAST SCHEDULE Friday, December 1 at 8:25/7:25 am CT Friday, May 4 at 8:25/7:25 am CT Concepts in Nature Wild animal behavior Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: Friday, September 22 at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 1-20; 3 hours, 20 minutes) Block Feed II: Friday, February 23 at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 1-20; 3 hours, 20 minutes) This series looks at the behavior of wild animals as they interact with their environments and one another. Viewers will learn that animals have specific and unique living situations, diets, and actions. PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS 1. Animal Predators and the Balance of Nature — types of predators; 2. 4. Photo: Rick McComb 5. 6. 7. 8. relationships among predator, prey, and environment; omnivores, carnivores, and herbivores; factors that help maintain nature’s balance; and the role people play Instincts in Animals — what instincts are; how instincts direct animals through their lives, from finding food to finding mates; and the difference between instincts and learned behavior Why Do Animals Love Geography? — why animals live where they do and how they adapt to their environments; the difference between physical and human geography; how humans affect animals including where and how to live. Adapting to Changes in Nature — how animals cope with routine and unpredictable changes, from the seasons to climate changes to habitat destruction. Footage of deer, a great horned owl, rabbits, and bears demonstrates why some animals seem to adapt better than others. Why Do Animals Look the Way They Do? — footage of elephants, hummingbirds, barn owls, porcupines, and walking sticks showing that even the most unusual features can have survival advantages Animal Communication — animals' use of vocalization, body language, and even odors to exchange information about vital matters such as food, danger, and reproduction Animal Families — importance of families to success and survival of animal species Where Animals Live — animal shelters ranging from burrows and caves to lodges and nests; ecosystems, habitats, and niches; footage of animals at home BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: 78 • 2006/2007 M�Instructional Videos Primary-6 15 minutes School year Downloadable at www.ket.org/education/guides KY Academic Expectations: 2.2, 2.3, 2.6, 2.19 3. BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Primary-5 15 minutes School year Downloadable at: www.rainforestheroes.com/kidscorner/ rainforests/fff_video.html (The website offers a free video of this program along with other supplemental materials.) Friday, October 20 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-8; 2 hours) Block Feed II: Friday, March 23 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-8; 2 hours) The World of Nature II Animal habits and habitats; environmental messages Primary-6 15 minutes School year Downloadable at www.ket.org/education/guides KY Academic Expectations: 2.1, 2.2, 2.3, 2.5, 2.6 This series explores animal habits and habitats from around the world. Shot on location, the programs feature close-up views of animals in the wild as they go about their daily lives. Each program studies an animal or group of animals; all convey a strong environmental message. PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS 1. Operation Burrowing Owl — When European settlers moved into the 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. Canadian wilderness, they threatened many species, including the burrowing owl. Operation Owl is trying to protect this creature by re-creating its natural habitat. Coral Reef: Rain Forest of the Sea — The Christmas tree worm, the parrot fish, and the hermit crab are three of many sea creatures that find refuge and food in a coral reef. Overrun with Rabbits – British settlers introduced rabbits to Australia for sport, altering its wildlife forever. With few predators, the rabbits overwhelmed large areas, and efforts to eradicate them have often caused more harm than good. Nature’s Foresters — To prepare for winter, squirrels, mice, and chipmunks bury more nuts and seeds than they’ll be able to recover, ensuring new seedlings in the spring. Gray Jays: Nesting in the Snow — The gray jay’s ability to eat a variety of foods and store provisions for winter allows it to thrive in Algonquin Park all year round. Nest building and caring for young are also observed. Hippos: Killing the Land, Feeding the Lakes — In Uganda, hippos enrich river and lake beds with their dung, but destroy important grasses. Hippo social structure, care for the young, physical traits, enemies, and territorial battles are examined. Australia’s Plants: Surviving Down Under — Designed to survive, Australia’s plants employ some unusual methods to ensure pollination. The trigger plant, the kangaroo’s paw, and the giant banksia are among the plants featured. The Plight of the Asian Elephant — As Thailand's forests diminish and floods become more frequent, the Asian elephant is losing its home. Saving the Ferruginous Hawks — In Alberta, a research scientist catches and bands ferruginous hawks to keep track of their growth and change. Wrongly believing their livestock was being attacked, ranchers used to shoot the hawks. Cicadas: The 17-Year Invasion — In a Chicago suburb, residents prepare for the invasion of millions of cicadas that emerge from the ground every 17 years. The nymphs crawl out at night to the nearest tree, where they transform themselves into adult cicadas. The Success of the Sea Gull — The gull’s ability to eat almost anything and live almost anywhere has led to an overpopulation of this tough scavenger, while other birds, not as adaptable, become endangered. Komodo Dragon: The Largest Lizard — Characterized by a large mouth, dry skin, and sharp claws, the Komodo dragon's most drastic feature is size. Identified only in 1912, the dragon has carried on its hunting and breeding rituals on Komodo Island for centuries. Raccoons: Wild in the City — With ravines, big trees, and old homes, Toronto, Canada is an ideal environment for raccoons. While some people lovingly feed the raccoons, others hire experts to remove them from attics and chimneys. Spreading the Pollen — Close-up footage shows how flowers are designed to ensure that insects and birds are dusted with pollen as they extract nectar. BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Friday, October 20 at 8:00/7:00 am CT (Programs 1-8; 2 hours) and at 12 noon (Programs 9-20; 3 hours) Block Feed II: Friday, March 23 at 8:00/7:00 am CT (Programs 1-8; 2 hours) and at 12 noon (Programs 9-20; 3 hours) NASA SCIence Files C Problem-solving in math, science, and technology. Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: Web Site: 3-5 60 minutes Unlimited Downloadable at Web site http://scifiles.larc.nasa.gov/treehouse.html KY Academic Expectations: 2.1, 2.2, 2.3 This national standards-based series integrates and enhances the teaching of math, science, and technology. It includes a resource-rich teacher guide and a user-friendly Web site linking students, teachers, and parents to NASA programs, projects, and researchers. The programs feature a group of “tree house detectives” who use problem-solving skills and scientific inquiry to find answers to real-life mysteries. (Note: NASA is repeating shows from previous seasons this coming year. The following are the programs listed in their schedule. NASA may air new programs towards the end of the broadcast season. Watch the KET3 Monthly Calendar Update for details.) PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS (Note: The Program numbers over the years have been wrong. Below in parenthesis is NASA's program number for your convenience.) 1. (301) The Case of the Great Space Exploration — New discoveries by NASA and a new vision for space exploration create excitement as the detectives set off to learn what it will take to become a space explorer. 2. (401) The Case of the Physical Fitness Challenge — The detectives are eager to win the Presidential Physical Fitness Award and decide to learn more about being fit. They visit NASA to learn more about muscles, bones, and physical activity and why fitness is the key to space exploration. continued on next page 2006/2007 M�Instructional Videos� • 79 SCIENCE Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: 15. Pikas: Ice Age Survivors — In cold, mountainous regions, the pika spends most of its summer gathering grass to prepare for winter. Physical characteristics, habitat, territorial defense, and enemies are also described. 16. Kuroshio: The Ocean River — The Kuroshio is a giant current that sweeps through the Pacific from Japan to North America and back again, sustaining thousands of sea creatures and a complete food chain. 17. Insect Disguises — Rainforest insects use color, shape, and movement to ward off predators and attract "dinner." 18. Giant Rhinoceros Hornbill: Nesting — High in the trees of tropical Thailand, a pair of hornbills court, mate, build a nest, and nurture their chick until it is ready to fly. 19. Salmon: The Upstream Battle — Rapids, predators, pollutants, and dams are obstacles salmon face when they journey from the Pacific up the Fraser River to their spawning grounds. The process of spawning is shown. 20. Tokyo Bay: Fight for Survival — Pollution and the destruction of most of the natural coastline have made Tokyo Bay an inhospitable environment for sea life. While many creatures have perished, spider crabs, mantis shrimp, and marble sole have adapted.. SCIENCE 3. (203 of NASA Why Files?). The Case of the Inhabitable Habitat — The detectives enter a contest to design a habitat that can keep humans alive on Mars. 4. (104) The Case of the Galactic Vacation — The detectives go galactic with their latest project, creating travel brochures for our solar system. 5. (203) The Case of the Prize-Winning Plants — The detectives attempt to grow plants for the upcoming fair, experimenting with soil, plant and animal life cycles, and genetics. 6. (303) The Case of Zany Animal Antics — Curious why the animals are behaving so differently, the detectives join forces with NASA and animal experts to discover the cause. Learn about the classification and life cycles of animals, migratory patterns, habitats, and much more. 7. (404) The Case of the Deafening Sound — The tree house detectives find that NASA is an expert in the sound business. They learn how sound travels, how human beings hear, and what NASA is doing to quiet the skies. 8. (103) The Case of the Biological Biosphere — One of the detectives is taking a trip abroad. Come help the detectives learn about the human body as they discover that no man, not even a kid, is an island. 9. (202) The Case of the Disappearing Dirt — Thee tree house detectives discover that their favorite beach is shrinking. They dig in and learn about erosion, rocks, and natural preservation. BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Friday, September 15 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-4; 4 hours) and at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 5-8; 4 hours); and Friday, September 22 at 3:30/2:30 pm CT (Program 9; 1 hour) Block Feed II: Friday, February 9 at 2:00/1:00 am CT (Programs 1-4; 4 hours); Friday, February 16 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 5-8; 4 hours); and Friday, February 23 at 5:00/4:00 am CT (Program 9; 1 hour) Natureworks C Science biomes Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: Website: 3-6 15 minutes School year Downloadable at website www.nhptv.org/natureworks KY Academic Expectations: 1.10, 2.1, 2.2, 2.3, 2.5, 2.6 Each episode of this series consists of five segments: 1. An introduction on basic concepts including habitat, adaptations, and biomes. 2. A focus featuring a particular animal or plant. 3. Field work featuring student researchers, scientists, and naturalists. 4. A review which sums up material presented in each program. 5. Natural footage with no narration to allow students to see and enjoy nature at work. PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS 1. Adaptation — how plants and animals — in particular, opossums and beavers — are adapted to their environment and how the New England Aquarium’s critical care ward cares for beached Kemp’s Ridley sea turtles. 2. Coloration — how the structural adaptation of coloration contributes to plant and animal survival. A visit with a wildlife photographer highlights the role of color in photography. 80 • 2006/2007 M�Instructional Videos 3. Natural Communication — how animals communicating through visual, auditory, chemical, and tactile signals with specific looks at the red fox and songbirds. A visit to a pond with a herpetologist shows how frogs communicate. 4. Migration — the many reasons for migration, banding to track bird migration, the migration of three raptors (broad-winged hawks, redtailed hawks, and snowy owls), and an annual hawk count. 5. Habitat — the artificial habitat at the Squam Lakes Natural Science Center aviary. Featured is the common loon: we see its habitat and join a biologist as she builds and floats a loon raft. 6. Marine Communities — how life in the ocean is organized in layers and a visit to the Wells Reserve estuary to monitor soft shell clams and green crab experiments. 7. Fresh Water Communities — life in lakes, streams, and wetlands, with a special look at the snapping turtle. 8. Terrestrial Communities — tundra, rainforest, grassland, taiga, temperate deciduous forest, and desert biomes. We learn how the redtailed hawk is adapted to a different habitat and examine the plant diversity along the Appalachian Trail. 9. The Wildlife Web I (producers and herbivores) — how plants make food and how plants and herbivores depend on each other with an up-close look at the moose and its habitat and methods for improving melons. 10. The Wildlife Web II (herbivores and carnivores) — how herbivores and carnivores depend on each other for survival and up-close looks at the insect-eating brown bat, the gray wolf, and a bat cave. 11. Decomposers and Scavengers — the role of decomposers and scavengers. The Appalachian Mountain Club demonstrates recycling in the wilderness. 12. Population Dynamics — the concept of population and its limiting factors that impact porcupine and white-tailed deer populations. A University of New Hampshire professor shows how he helps control deer numbers. 13. Species Diversity — how species diversity helps maintain a healthy environment. The naturalists see how many different insects they can locate. We look at life on the forest floor, and a Keeping Track member shows how to determine animal diversity. 14. Niche — animals’ roles in their environment, in particular the niches of pileated woodpeckers and of coral reefs. A conservation officer demonstrates how he tries to control beavers’ impact in urban areas. 15. Invasive Species — how invasive species can change an environment, with a special consideration of milfoil in aquatic communities and the mute swan. Shoals Marine Lab researchers show the impact of invasive seaweed in the waters off their island. 16. Life at Risk — factors that could endanger plant and animal species, particularly the wood turtle and the peregrine falcon. A US Fish and Wildlife Service employee shows how she monitors the health of dwarf wedge mussels. 17. How to Use Natureworks in the Classroom BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Friday, November 17 at 5:50/4:50 am CT (Programs 1-17; 4 hours, 8 minutes) Block Feed II: Friday, April 20 at 5:50/4:50 am CT (Programs 1-17; 4 hours, 8 minutes) Photo: Rick McComb 10. Water Heroes! — young people who help protect their watersheds from hidden pollution. A visit to Kentucky’s Hidden River Cave illustrates the dangers of non-point-source pollution. 11. From Moo to You? — an exploration a dairy food plant and a comparison of the nutrient values of milk and soft drinks. BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Gee Whiz in Agriculture C Science with a twist Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: Videocassette: Web Site: 4-5 30 minutes Unlimited Downloadable at www.ket.org/guides See Web site www.ca.uky.edu/CALE/ products_geewhizctlg.php KY Academic Expectations: 2.1, 2.2, 2.3, 2.4, 2.5, 2.6. 2.36 Gee Whiz in Agriculture demonstrates practical applications in basic math, the metric system, nutrition, scientific method, and introduces agronomy, anatomy, animal science, aquaculture, chemistry, ecology, and other sciences. The series fits the 4th- and 5th-grade science curriculum and meets specific education objectives in science and math. Gee Whiz presents numerous career opportunities and shows that agriculture today is much more than milking cows and planting corn. Gee Whiz in Agriculture is presented by the University of Kentucky College of Agriculture Cooperative Extension Service, Kentucky State University, the USDA, AG-SAT, and KET. PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS 1. Why Can a Cow Eat Grass? — an in-depth look at the digestive tracts 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. of cattle from birth to maturity, focusing on differences between bovine and human digestive systems. Wood You Take Care of Me? — the forestry industry and its impact upon our environment. Students get a firsthand look at a logging operation and take a trip through a furniture factory. Yams in Space! — how today’s research will help us grow food in space tomorrow. What’s Bugging You? — the role of insects in our environment, with close-up and personal accounts of several unique insects. How Do Horses Run So Fast? — the differences and similarities between human and equine athletes using skeletons, X-rays, heart monitors, real-time and slow-motion video comparisons, and computerized imaging. Wool Ewe Keep Me Warm? — sheep, the wool industry, the chemistry of wool and fiber production, and the unique properties of this versatile fiber. How Do You Grow a Fish Sandwich? — a fish-eye view of fish and lettuce production in an ecologically closed system shows how land and water life systems depend on each other for nourishment. Chickens and Piglets and Lambs, Oh My! — the growth and development of farm animals, from fertilization to birth to adolescence. Now Ear This! — an exploration of products that contain corn, plant genetics and breeding, and new techniques for growing corn with fewer chemicals. Real World Science Earth, life, and physical science Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: 4-6 15-20 minutes School year Downloadable at www.etvconsortium.com/catalog KY Academic Expectations: 1.10, 2.2, 2.3, 2.4, 2.5, 2.6 This series uses colorful graphics, animation, and diagrams to make science relevant to a child’s everyday life. Peer hosts introduce liveaction, concrete situations to demonstrate scientific principles. PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS 1. Dinosaurs — Animatronic dinosaurs help recreate life 60 million 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. years ago. Students learn the names and features of common dinosaurs and discover how fossils are formed and how they teach us how dinosaurs lived and died. — Viewers see the diversity of the plant kingSeeds and Plants dom and learn to identify seed plants. Diagrams show the different parts of a plant, while animation demonstrates how nutrients and water move through the plant. — Students discover why habitats are important. Habitats Viewers explore the tundra, desert, grasslands, forests and waterways of the world, and learn about the plants and animals that live there. — Students learn to define and recognize the Simple Machines six simple machines: the inclined plane, the wedge, the screw, the lever, the wheel and axle, and the pulley. Rocks and Minerals — Footage of various rock formations and a “field trip” to a quarry, mine and cave give students the ability to recognize specific rocks and minerals. Graphics and animation show Earth's layers and how rocks are formed. The Solar System — Viewers learn about ancient astronomers, telescopes, observatories and space exploration; planets, orbits, gravity, revolution, and rotation; and the sun, comets, asteroids and meteors. Weather and Climate — Learn how water, air and heat interact to make weather happen. Atmosphere, condensation, evaporation, and precipitation are explained through animated diagrams. — By visiting a recycling center, Trash and the Environment landfill and town dump, kids learn what happens to trash. The program focuses on environmental problems created by solid waste and ways to alleviate them. BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Friday, September 29 at 1:00 pm/12 noon CT (Programs 1-8; 2 hours, 40 minutes) Block Feed II: Friday, March 2 at 1:00 pm/12 noon CT (Programs 1-8; 2 hours, 40 minutes) 2006/2007 M�Instructional Videos� • 81 SCIENCE Friday, September 1 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-8; 4 hours) and at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 9-11; 1 hour, 30 minutes) Block Feed II: Friday, February 2 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-8; 4 hours) and at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 9-11; 1 hour, 30 minutes) Kentucky Afield for Kids SCIENCE Life science, safety, and environmental issues Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: Videocassette: Web Site: 4-7 30 minutes Unlimited Downloadable at Web site See order form, pg. 125 kentuckyawake.org KY Academic Expectations: 2.1, 2.2, 2.3, 2.5, 2.6, 2.19, 2.20 Co-produced by KET and the Kentucky Division of Fish and Wildlife Resources, Kentucky Afield for Kids covers a variety of topics relating to the outdoors, such as wildlife careers, safety, endangered species, and many more. This series takes a look back at 12 programs produced during previous seasons. PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS 1. (146) Water World (September, 1999) — Splash into the aquatic arena where water quality determines the number and types of animals and the food web starts with algae, bass, and caddis flies. 2. (188) Red Fish, Blue Fish, Two Hundred Forty-two Fish (March, 2005) — Join fisheries biologists as they study how fish interact in a pond, how to raise fish in a hatchery, where fish go during different times of the year, and how new exotic fish are affecting Kentucky's waters. 3. (182) Slime, Mud, and Feathers: Swamp Things! (February, 2004)— Get down and dirty to discover the many animals that live in swamps; from slimy salamanders to long-legged herons. 4. (153) Wanted: Predators (April, 2000) — Take a look at the predator's role in nature and learn why "the best snake is NOT a dead snake". 5. (149) Hear'Em Honking (December, 1999) — Geese fly by here every year. Where are they going? Where have they been? And what do they mean to people who live along their path? 6. (150) New Year's Resolution: Do Something for the Birds (January 2000) — Feeders, baths, nesting boxes and bushes help you enjoy Kentucky birds the next time you look out the window. 7. (177) Symbols of Wildlife (March, 2003) — Learn about the history and cultural importance of some of our wild symbols, such as the bald eagle, monarch butterfly, and the gray squirrel. 8. (184) The Forest Ecosystem (October, 2004) — Forests provide habitats for plants and animals, add oxygen to the atmosphere, and play a role in the water cycle. Listen to how various people — from birdwatchers to scientists — see the woods. 9. (185) Kentucky's Furry Critters (December, 2004) — Join a research team to learn about mammal adaptations and population changes and how biologists and others work together to protect our furry friends. 10. (186) Kentucky's Feathered Rainbow (January, 2005) — More than 350 types of birds live at least part of the year in Kentucky. Learn about the adaptations that have made these animals so successful. 11. (187) Are you an Outdoor Survivor? (February, 2005) — Learn safety tips and survival techniques so you can enjoy all the great outdoors has to offer. 12. (145) Step by Step: Plans for Building a Safe Haven for Wildlife (May, 1999) — Learn how to inventory your home and school to create better habitats for wildlife and a healthier environment. BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Friday, August 4 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-8; 4 hours) and at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 9-12; 2 hours) Block Feed II: Friday, January 5 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-8; 4 hours) and at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 9-12; 2 hours) 82 • 2006/2007 M�Instructional Videos Kentucky Afield for Kids North American Biomes C Life Science, ecology Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: 4-8 10 minutes School year Downloadable at www.envmedia.com KY Academic Expectations: 1.10, 2.1, 2.2, 2.3, 2.4, 2.5, 2.6 This series provides a comparative study of North American biomes, examining each biome's diverse plant and animal communities and their interrelationships. The series begins with an overview of the criteria that distinguish one biome from another, and helps students understand plant and animal adaptations. PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS 1. Introduction to North American Biomes — an exploration of the term 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. biome and an overview of North America’s major biomes, (forests, grasslands, deserts, seashores, rivers and streams, and wetlands.) Forests — the flora and fauna and the ecology of North America's forest types: coniferous, deciduous, and mixed forest. Grasslands — an exploration of the natural diversity of major grasslands (tallgrass, mixed grass, and shortgrass) and of processes that maintain them. Deserts — the common traits and special characteristics of North America's four major deserts: the Great Basin, Chihuahuan, Mojave, and Sonoran. Seashore — the characteristics of North America’s Atlantic, Gulf, and Pacific coasts. Rivers and Streams — tracing a North American river from its headwaters to the sea and describing the natural processes and plants and animals seen along the way. Wetlands — the many different types of wetlands in North America, from lakes to floodplains. Conserving North American Biomes — how various biomes have been treated and mistreated and how to get involved in their protection and restoration. BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Friday, October 6 at 12:25 pm/11:25 am CT (Programs 1-8; 1 hour, 20 minutes) Block Feed II: Friday, March 9 at 12:25 pm/11:25 am CT (Programs 1-8; 1 hour, 20 minutes) Kentucky’s Natural Heritage K Real Science! II C Biological and geological characteristics of unique environments Careers in science 4–12 15 minutes Unlimited See order form, pg. 125 KY Academic Expectations: 2.2, 2.3, 2.5, 2.6, 2.19, 2.20 Kentucky’s Natural Heritage examines unique environments with a wide range of biological and geological characteristics, including virgin forest, naturally carved sandstone arches, cascading waterfalls, and cypress swamplands. PROGRAM TITLES 1. Lilley Cornett Woods 2. The Red River Gorge 3. Cumberland Falls 4. Murphy’s Pond 5. Swan Lake 6. Mammoth Cave 7. Panther Glade — prairie remnants 8. The Bluegrass NOTE: This series is offered on videotape only. See tape order information on pages 125-126. Work, Energy, and the Simple Machine C Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: Videocassette: Web Site: KY Academic Expectations: 2.1, 2.2, 2.3, 2.4, 2.36 This series lets students spend a day in the field with actual scientists and highlights some of the fascinating aspects of their jobs. Each program includes information on required coursework and degrees for various scientific professions, as well as ways students might explore the career immediately. PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS 1. On the Water — A herpetologist and an oceanographer investigate ani- 2. 3. 4. Six simple machines and their many uses Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: 5-8 15 minutes School year Downloadable at unitedlearning.com 5. KY Academic Expectations: 2.1, 2.3, 2.4 This series will acquaint students with information about the six simple machines and their many uses. Students will see examples of simple machines being used in everyday situations. PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS 1. Work and Energy — This program introduces students to concepts associated with work and energy and introduces the six simple machines and compound machines. 2. Lever, Wheel and Axle, Pulley — The lever, wheel and axle, and pulley are compared and contrasted. 3. Incline Plane, Wedge, Screw — This program identifies and defines these closely related simple machines and discusses their relationships. 4. Compound Machines — This program is about compound machines — machines made up of two or more simple machines. 5-10 20 minutes School year See order form, pg. 124 See order form, pg. 125 www.realscience.org 6. mal life in two diverse bodies of water — the Florida Everglades and the Atlantic Ocean. (Note: This segment shows the process of determining the sex of an animal and should be previewed by the teacher before viewing by students.) Weathering the Storm — Learn how meteorologists use technology to predict the weather and visit Lassen Volcanic National Park outside Redding, CA to learn about hydrothermal vents and the historic 1917 eruption. Eyes on the Skies — Tour NASA’s Goddard Space Center in Maryland and study tropical storms using satellite data. Then search for evidence of extraterrestrial intelligence at the SETI Institute in Northern California. On the Brink — See the director of the University of Washington School of Fisheries explain how salmon eggs are fertilized in a “return pond.” Next, witness the release of California condors into the wild at Los Padres National Forest. (Note: This segment graphically shows salmon being killed to harvest eggs and milt.) Bugs and Babies — Feed tarantulas with an entomologist at the Smithsonian Institution’s National Museum of Natural History in Washington, DC. Then, spend a day with an obstetrician-gynecologist to see how modern technology is helping in the delivery of babies. (Note: This segment shows a seven-month-pregnant woman’s bare stomach during an ultrasound exam.) Quest for Cures — Learn about chromosomes with a cytogeneticist at Kaiser Permanente in San Jose, CA. Then see how a biochemist at the University of California, Irvine uses leeches to study blood clotting. BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Friday, September 1 at 1:30/12:30 pm CT (Programs 1-6; 2 hours) Block Feed II: Wednesday, November 29 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-6; 2 hours) Block Feed III: Friday, February 2 at 1:30/12:30 pm CT (Programs 1-6; 2 hours) Block Feed IV: Wednesday, May 9 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-6; 2 hours) BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Friday, November 10 at 1:55/12:55 pm CT (Programs 1-4; 1 hour, 2 minutes) Block Feed II: Friday, April 13 at 1:55/12:55 pm CT (Programs 1-4; 1 hour, 2 minutes) 2006/2007 M�Instructional Videos� • 83 SCIENCE Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Videocassette: Real Science! III C SCIENCE Science careers Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: Videocassette: Web Site: 5-10 30 minutes School year See order form, pg. 124 See order form, pg. 125 www.realscience.org KY Academic Expectations: 2.1, 2.2, 2.3, 2.4, 2.36 More programs take students into the work world of real scientists, to learn what they do for a living and how to pursue a similar career. Each program includes action tips and curriculum advice. PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS 1. Deep Subs — Dive to the bottom of the sea in a Navy rescue sub- 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13 marine, meet animals that live in submarine canyons, and see how engineers at Grand Coulee Dam use a remote-operated sub to check the dam’s structure. Blast Off — Tour the Johnson Space Center in Houston and see the life-sized space station model; go deep into space to explore the accomplishments of the Hubble Space Telescope. Flying Doctors — Follow a dentist and a team of doctors to an island off the Mexican coast, where they set up a four-day clinic and treat more than 100 patients. Meet a surgeon from Interplast, an organization that provides plastic surgery to children in poor countries. Fire and Water — Travel with a naturalist from the New Orleans Aquarium to check on Louisiana's endangered sea turtles. Then join a forestry professor to watch a controlled fire burn in a Montana forest. Disease and Discovery — Look for ticks on Nantucket Island with a Harvard epidemiologist studying Lyme disease. Then see how a cardiologist at Stanford University Hospital uses an echo machine to examine hearts. Trailblazers — Hit the trails in Glacier National Park with a Montana geologist to learn about glaciers. Then visit the National Geographic Society to see how cartographers use computers to make maps. Computer Dreams — Lean how a neurologist analyzes brain waves at the Stanford Sleep Center. Next spend a day at Apple Computer to learn how programmers design school software. Rad CAD — Meet three engineers who use computer-assisted design systems in their work. Then discover the latest innovations in engineering at the San Francisco Bay Bridge, the MIT artificial intelligence laboratory, and a NASA wind tunnel. Fueling the Future — Find out how Toyota trucks are designed and manufactured at the NUMMI car factory in Fremont, CA. Next, a chemist from Catalytica shows the fuels of the future. High Flyers — Take off on an adventure with hurricane hunters at Keesler Air Force Base in Biloxi, MS. Then visit an engineer from McDonnell Douglas who is helping to design the space station. Swamp Story — Head into a Louisiana marsh on an airboat with an ecologist from the National Biological Service, check in at the San Jose Water Company to find out how scientists test our drinking water, and learn how computer engineers at PIXAR made the animated film Toy Story. Getting Physical — See how a trainer from the San Francisco 49ers football team helps players recover from injuries. Then learn about the monitor lizard breeding program from a physiologist at the San Diego Zoo. Blast from the Past — Dig for artifacts at the site of a Jamestown plantation with a University of Virginia archaeologist. Ride Disneyland's Indiana Jones ride with one of the engineers who designed it. 84 • 2006/2007 M�Instructional Videos BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Friday, October 27 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-8; 4 hours) and at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 9-13; 2 hours, 30 minutes) Block Feed II: Wednesday, November 29 at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 1-8; 4 hours) and Wednesday, December 6 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 9-13; 2 hours, 30 minutes) Block Feed III: Friday, March 30 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-8; 4 hours) and at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 9-13; 2 hours, 30 minutes) Block Feed IV: Wednesday, May 9 at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 1-8; 4 hours) and Wednesday, May 16 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 9-13; 2 hours, 30 minutes) Classic Animal Tracks C ‘Music videos’ in life science, geography, and ecology Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: 5-12 3 minutes School year Downloadable at www.envmedia.com/guides/guides.htm KY Academic Expectations: 2.3, 2.4 Exquisite animal footage filmed around the globe, classic pop tunes, and on-screen descriptions combine to create a series of short educational and entertaining programs lead students toward an understanding of animals, their behavior, and their habitats. (Note: This series offers good writing prompts.) PROGRAM TITLES 1. Emperor Penguin 2. Blue Wildebeest 3. Mute Swan 4. Alligator 5. Meerkat 6. Tiger 7. Hummingbird 8. Wandering Albatross 9. Army Ant 10. Chimpanzee BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. Red Kangaroos African Elephant Grey Squirrel Hippo Frog and Toad Common Vampire Bat Elephant Seal Giraffe Barn Owl Hare Tuesday, September 5 at 8:00/7:00 am CT (Programs 1-29; 1 hour, 30 minutes) Block Feed II: Friday, December 1 at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 1-29; 1 hour, 30 minutes) Block Feed III: Tuesday, April 10 at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 1-29; 1 hour, 30 minutes) Block Feed II: Friday, March 30 at 2:30/1:30 pm CT (Programs 1-29; 1 hour, 30 minutes) 21. 22. 23. 24. 25. 26. 27. 28. 29. Macaw Flamingo Killer Whale Polar Bear The Lion Sea Otter Coral The Vulture The Red Deer Photo: Rick McComb The Complete Cosmos C Science, Astronomy 5-12 11 minutes School year Downloadable at www.etvconsortium.com/catalog/ KY Academic Expectations: 1.10, 2.1, 2.2, 2.3, 2.4 Using up-to-date content and high quality graphics, this series explores the unique characteristics of the planets and visits the sun and the moon. PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS SUN AND THE INNER PLANETS 1. Our Star is Born — birth, life, and death of the sun plus information on interior dynamics and exterior fireworks, sunspots, corona, solar wind, and recent discoveries 2. Mercury — the most comprehensive portrait ever of this scorched little planet, depicting double sunrises, craters, cracks, and (perhaps) polar ice 3. Venus — an exploration of Venus’ poisonous, crushing atmosphere; searing heat; volcanoes; and runaway Greenhouse Effect 4. Blue Planet — the evolution of the Earth and of life with a look at internal structure, continental drift, day length, seasons, oceans, climate, weather, and El Niño 5. Moon — the story of earth’s natural satellite — its origin, influence on earth, the Apollo landings, and the recent discovery of water MARS AND THE OUTER PLANETS 6. Red Planet — cold, arid Mars, the next destination for the space program, with its polar caps, volcanoes, enormous canyon, and evidence of former oceans 7. Jupiter — a journey to the turbulent gas giant, bigger than all the other planets combined, and its mini solar system of 16 moons 8. Saturn — the many rings and moons of this gas giant, with a preview of a landing on Titan, a moon resembling primitive earth 9. Uranus and Neptune — the outer giants, particularly Uranus’ crazy tilt and chaotic moon 10. Realm of the Comets — the origin of comets in the Oort Cloud and the Kuiper Belt and a discussion of whether tiny Pluto is really a planet BLAST OFF! 11. Earth Patrol — satellites that monitor the planet’s health, ozone layer, melting ice caps, weather, deforestation, and navigation 12. Space Frontier — human space exploration from Yuri Gagarin’s first orbit of Earth, to the race for the moon and the Apollo Landings 13. High Life — triumphs, tragedies, and everyday practicalities aboard the Russian space station Mir and America’s space shuttles 14. Robots — robotic scouts exploring the solar system, including Mars, Jupiter, and Saturn’s moon, Titan 15. Where Next — a spaceport in earth orbit, the colonization of the moon and Mars, and the taming of Venus plus an elevator into space SPACE WATCH 16. Pioneers — the story of astronomy from ancient Babylonian sky watchers through Copernicus, Kepler, Galileo, Newton, Hubble, and space-age cosmology 17. Eclipse and Aurorae — how solar winds conjure an aurora, an explanation of lunar and solar eclipses, and the 1998 eclipse of the sun 18. Impact! — comets and asteroids — what would happen if the space rock that killed off the dinosaurs hit New York today? 19. Light Fantastic — how wavelengths other than visible light—from gamma rays to radio—fill the universe BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Friday, October 6 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-23; 4 hours) and at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 24-25; 21 minutes) Block Feed II: Friday, March 9 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-23; 4 hours) and at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 24-25; 21 minutes) Explore More C Scientific issues that impact our future Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: 6-8 30 minutes School Year www.iptv.org/exploremore KY Academic Expectations: 2.1, 2.2, 2.3, 2.5, 2.6 This video series is a part of a balanced multimedia resource encouraging students to unravel timely issues and make informed decisions. Each fast-paced program incorporates expert interviews, meaningful 3D modeling and animation, and an engaging young host. PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS 1. Explore More: Genetic Engineering — Genetic engineering could change the way we live. This program outlines several issues, surveys stakeholders and experts in the field, and presents questions for viewers. 2. Explore More: The Future of Energy — This program explores current and future methods of generating energy and factors influencing energy consumption and distribution. 3. Explore More: Loess Hills — By exploring the unique plants and animals of Iowa's Loess Hills, deposits of silt left by receding glaciers, viewers are encouraged to examine how they value the natural environments in their own communities. 4. Explore More: Water Quality — Viewers learn about current and future threats to water quality and are encouraged to develop their own solutions to this critical challenge. BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Friday, August 4 at 2:00/1:00 pm CT (Programs 1-4; 2 hours) Block Feed II: Friday, January 5 at 2:00/1:00 pm CT (Programs 1-4; 2 hours) 2006/2007 M�Instructional Videos� • 85 SCIENCE Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: 20. Life Quest — searching for life elsewhere in the universe: on Jupiter’s moon, Europa, and in the future, on Saturn’s moon, Titan, and in deep space 21. Milky Way — our galaxy, light years, the life and death of stars, supernovae, and the clouds where stars are born 22. Hubble’s Eye — peering back through time to the depths of the cosmos with the Hubble Space Telescope 23. Infinity — the structure of the universe (galaxies, clusters, strands) and measuring the distance to nearby galaxies and the farthest quasar 24. Big Bang, Big Crunch — theory of the Big Bang, the cataclysmic explosion from which the universe continues to expand 25. Black Holes, Dark Matter — detecting invisible black holes and dark matter, the missing 90% of the universe SCIENCE NASA Connect C Inside the Living Cell C Careers in math and science at NASA. Cell Biology, Cell Processes, Life Science Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: Web Site: Grade Levels: Length: Print Materials: Taping Rights: Web Site: 6-8 30 minutes Unlimited Downloadable at Web site http://connect.larc.nasa.gov KY Academic Expectations: 2.1, 2.2, 2.3, 2.4, 2.8, 2.10, 2.13 Endorsed by the National Council of Teachers of Mathematics, NASA Connect supports the national math, science, and technology standards. The concept of proportional reasoning is an ongoing mathematical thread throughout the series. Each program includes a lesson, focus questions, hands-on activity, and Web-based component designed to help students make connections between NASA research and the math, science, and technology they learn in the classroom. (Note: NASA is repeating shows from previous seasons this coming year. The following are the programs listed in their schedule. NASA may air new programs towards the end of the broadcast season. Watch the KET3 Monthly Calendar Update for details.) PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS (Note: The Program numbers over the years have been wrong. Below in parenthesis is NASA's program number for your convenience.) 1. (502) Better Health from Space to Earth — Students investigate what we can learn in space about how our bodies function here on Earth. 2. (601) Good Stress: Building Better Muscles and Bones — NASA researchers and scientists collect and analyze physiological data to understand how muscle and bones are constantly changing, especially in a microgravity environment. 3. (701) The Right Ratio of Rest: Proportional Reasoning — focuses on circadian rhythms, their impact on daily life, and why NASA is studying them. Lessons and Web activities develop students’ proportional reasoning skills and their understanding of how fractions, decimals, and percents are related. 4. (602) Rocket to the Stars — NASA engineers and scientists use algebra to study the transfer of energy on Earth and in space. 5. (402) Measurement, Ratios, and Graphing: Who Added the ‘Micro’ to Gravity? — NASA researchers and scientists use measurement, ratios, and graphing to demonstrate the principles of microgravity. 6. (504) The Venus Transit — Students learn the importance of using scale models to represent the size and distance of objects in the solar system and beyond and about the Venus Transit, an event which helped astronomers determine the scale of the solar system. 7. (604) Hidden Treasures: Landscape Archeology — NASA archeologists and scientists use remote sensing and problem solving to determine how ancient civilizations adapted to their environment and what factors may have led to their disappearance. 8. (703) The Path of Totality: Measuring Angular Size and Distance — examines the history, mythology, and science of total eclipses. Students learn how to use simple tools to measure and approximate the size and distance of objects in the sky. 9. (404) Data Analysis & Measurement: Dancing in the Night Sky — NASA engineers and researchers use data analysis and measurement to study the regions of the Earth’s geospace or space environment. BLOCK FEED Block Feed I: Friday, September 22 at 2:00/1:00 am CT (Programs 1-8; 4 hours) and at 9:30/8:30 am CT (Program 9; 30 minutes) Block Feed II: Friday, February 16 at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 1-8; 4 hours) and Friday, February 23 at 3:30/2:30 pm CT (Program 9; 30 minutes) 86 • 2006/2007 M�Instructional Videos 6-9 15 minutes Downloadable at website School year www.ebiomedia.com/teach/ guides.html#LivingCell KY Academic Expectations: 2.2, 2.3, 2.4, 2.5, 2.6 This highly visual tour of the processes that keep life operating is designed to interest students and provide them with a new understanding fundamental units of life. Correlated to the National Science Standards, each program also includes free, downloadable teaching guides. The series can be used as an introduction to the in-depth cell biology program Visualizing Cell Processes in grades 10 and up. PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS 1. The Cell—Unit of Life — the structure of the cell and its organelles 2. The Outer Envelope — the cell membrane, membrane behavior and cell walls, osmosis, transport proteins, endocytosis 3. How Cells Obtain Energy — ATP; the cell's energy carrier; mitochondria, the cell's powerhouses; photosynthesis; light reactions of photosynthesis; light-independent reactions 4. How Cells Are Controlled — how enzymes and other proteins are made 5. How Cells Reproduce — DNA structure, DNA replication, mitosis, mutation and DNA repair BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Friday, November 3 at 2:00/1:00 pm CT (Programs 1-5; 1 hour, 15 minutes) Block Feed II: Friday, April 6 at 2:00/1:00 pm CT (Programs 1-5; 1 hour, 15 minutes) Passport to Weather and Climate C Science, social studies, geography, mathematics, language arts Grade Levels: Length: Print Materials: Taping Rights: Web Site: 6-9 15 minutes See order form, page 124 School year passporttoknowledge.com/ptweather/ptwc.html KY Academic Expectations: 1.10, 2.1, 2.2, 2.3, 2.4, 2.6 This series uses students’ natural fascination with thunder and lightning, tornadoes, and winter storms to bring science concepts to life. Using dramatic footage from the U.S. and the world, the series explores the forces that shape Earth’s weather and climate. PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS 1. What Makes Earth’s Weather and Climate? — Learn how the sun and seasons, land and ocean, and pressure and altitude shape clouds, storms, hurricanes, and tornadoes. 2. In and Out of a Hurricane! — Fly through a hurricane with NOAA researchers, and track Texas-size storms with NASA’s satellite eyes. See how hurricanes transform latent energy into ferocious winds. 3. Tornado Detectives — Go on location with NOAA’s “VORTEX” project as they use Doppler radar and mobile mesonets to learn how and why tornadoes spin out of supercell thunderstorms. BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Friday, December 1 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-8; 2 hours) Block Feed II: Friday, May 4 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-8; 2 hours) Life In Marine and Freshwater Environments C Biology Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: 6-12 30 minutes School year Downloadable at www.ebiomedia.com/prod/ WatBiomes.html KY Academic Expectations: 2.3, 2.4, 2.5, 2.6 PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS 1. The Biology of Lakes, Ponds and Wetlands — This program explores life in weedy shallows, open water, vernal pools, and bottom environments of ponds and wetlands. Featured organisms include hydras, planarians, micro-annelids, micro-crustaceans, bryozoans, aquatic insects, rotifers, and protists. 2. The Biology of Seashores — Focused on foundational biology concepts, this program is divided into modules organized into three main parts: 1) Conditions on the Shore: Tides, Seashore Conditions: Abiotic Factors, and Seashore Conditions: Biotic Factors 2) Adaptations for Intertidal Life: Adaptations for Wave Shock, for Defense, for Feeding, Adaptations: Predation and the Role of Chemicals, and Reproductive Strategies 3) Seashore Habitats and Inhabitants: Rocky Shore Habitats, Sandy Beach Habitats, Mudflat and Estuary, and Docks and Piling Habitats BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Friday, December 1 at 2:00/1:00 pm CT (Programs 1-2; 1 hour) Block Feed II: Friday, May 4 at 2:00/1:00 pm CT (Programs 1-2; 1 hour) Planet Neighborhood C Solving environmental problems using science and technology Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: 6-12 10 minutes School Year Call 1-703-476-4468 KY Academic Expectations: 2.1, 2.2, 2.3, 2.6, 2.18, 2.30 Planet Neighborhood provides a multidisciplinary blend of science, technology, social studies, civics and economics curricula. The series increases student consciousness of current environmental challenges and opportunities for change. Each program illustrates new technology applications and demonstrates everyday conservation techniques. PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS 1. The Home - how to reduce garbage by "smart shopping," recycling and composting. 2. The Car - new methods that use old car materials to produce today's models and cheaper materials that encourage auto makers to "design for disassembly" and facilitate recycling. 3. Wetlands Technology - how to clean polluted water more economically and efficiently through two new approaches: contained ecosystems and constructed wetlands. BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Friday, November 3 at 3:15/2:15 pm CT (Programs 1-3; 30 minutes) Block Feed II: Friday, April 6 at 3:15/2:15 pm CT (Programs 1-3; 30 minutes) Inventing Flight C Science and history of the Wright brothers' invention of powered flight Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: Website: 5-12 10 minutes School Year Available at Web site www. ait.net KY Academic Expectations: 2.1, 2.3, 2.4, 2.20 Inventing Flight is a multimedia series on the science and history of the Wright brothers' invention of powered flight. The series enables teachers across the globe to use this historic event to showcase inquirybased science. PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS 1. Visions of Flight — the influences of flight on art, history and thought through time 2. Wright Time, Wright Place — the life and times of the Wright Brothers 3. Total Control—Pitch, Yaw, and Roll — how the Wright Brothers discovered the secret of control in flight 4. Wings That Work — camber, shape, and velocity: how a wing creates lift 5. Power Plus-Thrust and Drag — how streamlined design and efficient propellers help airplanes take off 6. After the Flyer — how the Wright brothers' discoveries have changed the world continued on next page 2006/2007 M�Instructional Videos� • 87 SCIENCE 4. Winter Storms–White Hurricanes — Explore how temperature and humidity determine whether snow, sleet, or freezing rain will fall and how snowstorms affect daily life and the economy. 5. Thunder and Lightning — Learn about the generation and discharge of static electricity in cumulus clouds, why we see lightning before we hear thunder, and storm safety tips for students. 6. El Niño and La Niña: The “Boy” and the Buoys — El Niño and La Niña are the second most powerful influence on global weather and climate. Learn how a network of buoys in the Pacific led to the world’s first climate forecast. 7. Earth’s Variable Climate — Answer questions about climate change and variation and the Greenhouse Effect by tracking ancient temperature and humidity records found in tree rings and fossils. 8. Tracking and Recording Weather and Climate — Find out how to decode weather maps using math skills, where to access information, how to build simple weather instruments, and how NOAA and NASA use super-computers and satellites to study weather and climate. BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: SCIENCE Friday, September 8 at 3:00/2:00 pm CT (Programs 1-6; 1 hour) Block Feed II: Friday, February 9 at 3:00/2:00 pm CT (Programs 1-6; 1 hour) Lab Safety: The Accident at Jefferson High Chemistry laboratory safety Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: 7-9 20 minutes School year See order form, pg. 124 The Biology Of … C Behaviors and relationships in the microscopic world Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: 7-12 28 minutes School year Downloadable at www.ebiomedia.com KY Academic Expectations: 1.10, 2.2, 2.3, 2.4, 2.5, 2.6 This series is a collection of short segments that illustrate the behavior and ecological interactions of microorganisms. PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS/LENGTHS 1. The Biology of Ciliates — “Ciliated super cells” like Paramecium, KY Academic Expectations: 2.1, 2.31 This program introduces students to proper lab safety techniques and attitudes, demonstrates how to use tools and apparatus in a typical high school science lab, shows how to prepare for lab work, and demonstrates how to handle emergencies. BROADCAST SCHEDULE Friday, November 10 at 1:30/12:30 pm CT Friday, April 13 at 1:30/12:30 pm CT Photo: Rick McComb 88 • 2006/2007 M�Instructional Videos Vorticella, and Stentor, play vital roles in aquatic ecosystems. Observations include one minute in the life of a Paramecium, an aggregation of Paramecia, cilia responding to contact with bacteria and with a salt crystal, and Trichocysts. (29:09) 2. The Biology of Flagellates and Amoebas — This program presents in-depth observations of the flagellated and amoeboid protists most often seen in school labs, along with many of the more exotic species found in nature. (22:50) 3. The Biology of Nematodes, Rotifers, Bryozoans, and ‘Some Minor Phyla’ — A wealth of organisms occupy the fringes of animal evolution, including some interesting human parasites. Most creatures are easily found in ecosystems ranging from birdbaths to ponds. (18:48) 4. The Biology of Cnidarians — These delicate creatures, the two-celllayer branch of animal evolution, include three classes (hydrozoans, scyphozoans, and anthozoans). The program emphasizes their life cycles, morphology, adaptations, and ecological interactions and shows Hydra investigations students can do in school labs. (15:55) 5. The Biology of Plants — From photosynthesis to ecology, this video presents a mini-course in plant biology. Topics include the emergence of plants from water onto land as seen in the evolution of non-vascular plants (mosses and liverworts), transport systems (ferns and horsetails), seeds (gymnosperms) and flowers (angiosperms). (18:00) 6. Viruses — These strange parasitic entities, little more than packages of genetic information, subvert cells into producing more viruses. This program explores the discovery of viruses, their structures, how they are studied, their modes of infection, and their uses as gene vectors in genetic engineering. (17:45) 7. Bacteria — This video examines the range of behavior seen in bacteria; how they obtain nutrients; how to use sterile techniques for culturing them; the roles they play in maintinaing the biosphere including oxygen production (by cyanobacteria), decompostition, nitrogen fixation; and how pathogenic bacteria trick human hosts into passing on their infection. (16:40) 8. The Biology of Flatworms — This program provides detailed observations on structure, behavior, and life cycles of planarians and other free-living flatworms, flukes and tapeworms (14:54) 9. The Biology of Molluscs — This program looks at the four major phyla of Mollusca Polyplacophora; Gastropoda (snails, limpets, nudibranchs, and slugs), Pelecypoda (clams and mussels), and Cephalopoda (squid and octopus). (14:54) 10. Biology of Annelids — Phylum Annelida is made up of segmented worms divided into three classes: Oligochaetes (earth worms and aquatic worms), Polychaetes (Nereis and thousands of other mostly marine species, and Leeches. (15:14) 11. The Biology of Arthropods — This program highlights the structure and behavior of Crustaceans, Arachnids, and Uniramians (including centipedes, millipedes, and insects). (25:15) 12. The Biology of Echinoderms — Animals observed are: seastars (Class Asteroidea), brittle stars and basket stars (Class Ophiuroidea), urchins and sand dollars (Class Echinoidea) and sea cucumbers (Class Holothuoidea) (15:05) 13. The Biology of Chordates — The unique features of Phylum Chordata are investigated in modern animals including tunicates, lancelets (Branchiostoma or Amphioxus), hagfish, and cartilagenous fish. (18:10) BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Friday, November 3 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-12; 3 hours, 47 minutes) and at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 13-18; 2 hours) Block Feed II: Friday, April 6 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-12; 3 hours, 47 minutes) and at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 13-18; 2 hours) Our Earth C Earth Science, Rock Cycle, Fossils,Tectonics Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: KY Academic Expectations: 2.1, 2.2, 2.3, 2.4, 2.5, 2.6, 2.36 Presented by young scientists, Our Earth looks at the science of geology - fossils, Earth core, tectonic forces, and the impact of sun, wind and water. It also discusses why we need to understand geology. PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS 1. How Old is It? — During England's industrial revolution, early geolo2. 3. 4. Inside Our Human Body C Exploring the human machine Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: 7-12 15 minutes School year Call 1-800-457-4509, ext. 4 or visit www.ait.net/catalog KY Academic Expectations: 1.10, 2.3, 2.4 This series takes students on a fascinating field trip through the human body. Dynamic computer graphics and footage of advanced medical procedures uncover the secrets of the world’s most amazing and efficient machine. 7-12 15 minutes School year email billits@msn.com or call 703-476-4468 5. 6. 7. gists studied and compared rock strata and drew an amazing conclusion: our Earth is incredibly old. Fossils — Fossils offer a three-part challenge: to reconstruct the organism, to reconstruct its world; and to understand its place in time and evolution. The Fires Below — The interior of the Earth is very hot, with a metallic core surrounded by a rocky mantle. Huge slow convection currents rise up, often resulting in earthquakes and volcanoes. Pushing and Shoving — Tectonic forces and their end products are discussed. Wear and Tear — The forces of the sun, wind, and water changes the face of the earth. Rock Recipes — Igneous, Sedimentary, and metamorphic rocks are discussed. Who Needs Geology? — The program discusses the importance of geology and why we need to understand many of its basic findings. BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Friday, October 6 at 1:45/12:45 pm CT (Programs 1-7; 1 hour, 45 minutes) Block Feed II: Friday, March 9 at 1:45/12:45 pm CT (Programs 1-7; 1 hour, 45 minutes) PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS 1. Engineering Human Life — DNA, RNA, chromosomes, and the excit- NASA's Destination Tomorrow C 2. Inside look at NASA research and new technologies relating to our lives 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. ing and hopeful possibilities of genetic engineering From Ear to Ear — the properties of sound, the structure of the ear, and the consequences of noise pollution Have a Heart — the heart and its structure; causes of heart disease The Kidneys — the kidneys' importance as the body’s filtration system Muscles — differences among involuntary, voluntary, and reflex muscles The Skeleton — how this powerful structure supports weight, allows movement, acts as a storeroom, and repairs itself Skin — the epidermis, the dermis, and the hypodermis — the frontier which separates organisms from their outside worlds Smell and Taste — the different types of papillae on a tongue, the four types of taste, and the importance of the olfactory membrane BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Friday, August 11 at 2:00/1:00 pm CT (Programs 1-8; 2 hours) Block Feed II: Friday, January 12 at 2:00/1:00 pm CT (Programs 1-8; 2 hours) Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Website: 9-12 30 minutes School year http://destination.larc.nasa.gov/ KY Academic Expectations: 2.1, 2.2, 2.3, 2.4 Designed for life-long learners, this Emmy (R) award-winning series uses a five-segment magazine format to provide inside looks at NASA and how research and technology relate to our everyday lives. An associated website provides summaries of stories and links to related program material. (Note: NASA is repeating shows from previous seasons this coming year. The following are the programs listed in their schedule. NASA may air new programs towards the end of the broadcast season. Watch the KET3 Monthly Calendar Update for details.) continued on next page 2006/2007 M�Instructional Videos� • 89 SCIENCE 14. The Light Microscope: Window on the Microcosm — This program demonstrates techniques for using a student microscope including correct lighting procedures and techniques for viewing living cells. (15:26) 15. The Biology of Protists — New genetic analysis research shows that the various lines of protists might easily represent different kingdoms, revising the old five kingdoms classification scheme still found in many textbooks. (29:45) 16. The Biology of Sponges — This program looks at this phylum in developmental, ecological, and evolutionary terms and clarifies its structure, function, classification, and ecological roles. (14:45) 17. The Biology of Algae — These photosynthetic organisms play vital roles in aquatic and marine ecosystems, providing oxygen, food, and shelter for vast communities of living things. (18:30) 18. The Biology of Fungi — These organisms help provide oxygen, food and shelter in aquatic and marine ecosystems (18:00) PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS SCIENCE (Note: The Program numbers over the years have been wrong. Below in parenthesis is NASA's program number for your convenience.) 1. (Program 18 (403)) — takes a look at NASA's new plan for space exploration; robotic missions that lead the way for astronauts; and talk about some of the challenges of getting to and staying on other worlds. 2. (Program 16 (401)) — Part 1 of this two-part episode explores the food astronauts eat during space flights. 3. (Program 17 (402)) — Part 2 looks at the future of food technology in space. 4. (Program 23 (503)) — looks back at the successful CasinniHuygens mission to Saturn and Titan. This show revisits robotic exploration that will enable future human missions to the Moon and Mars, GPS technology, and the development of the space shuttle program. 5. (Program 24 (504)) — focuses on the Mars Phoenix mission; The Crew Exploration and Crew Launch Vehicles; Viking Mission to Mars 30 years later, and how space suits work. 6. (Program 25 (505)) — highlights radiation protection efforts done by NASA and focuses on how NASA plans to tackle radiation questions for travel to the Moon and Mars. 7. (Program 20 (405)) — consists of four exciting segments. "Behind the Scenes" segment, which viewers learn about the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter; the "Tech Watch" segment, where viewers learn about a new type medical device that will give doctors a form of x-ray vision; the "Retrospective" segment, which viewers find out how the space shuttle program was started; and viewers find out about sonic booms in the "How it Works" segment. BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Friday, August 18 at 2:30/1:30 pm CT (Programs 1-5; 1 hour, 15 minutes) Block Feed II: Friday, January 19 at 2:30/1:30 pm CT (Programs 1-5; 1 hour, 15 minutes) Viruses on the Rise Science, Biology, Viruses, Infectious Disease Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: 10-12 30 minutes School Year Call 919-821-3644 or email sales@boxlunchmedia.com KY Academic Expectations: 2.1, 2.2, 2.3, 2.6, 2.31 BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Friday, September 29 at 2:00/1:00 am CT (Programs 1-7; 3 hours, 30 minutes) Block Feed II: Friday, March 2 at 2:00/1:00 am CT (Programs 1-7; 3 hours, 30 minutes) Visualizing Cell Processes C Short teaching modules of cell biology Grade level: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: 4. DNA Replication, Mitosis and Cell Reproduction — Mitosis: Chromosome Condensation, Mitosis Stages, Cytokinesis, Meisis, Nucliotide Structure and Bonding, Replicaiton Enzymes, Replicating the Strands, Topoisomerase and the Twisting Problem, Proof Reading and Repair, Replication Review 5. The Genetic Code and Its Translation — The Protein Nature of Life, Protein Structure, Transcription, Translation and Protein Synthesis, Gene Regulation in Prokaryotes, Exons and Introns, Mutations, Renegade DNA—the Viruses 9-12 15 minutes School Year Downloadable at www.ebiomedia.com Companion CD-ROM and DVDs also available at Web site for extra fee KY Academic Expectations: 2.2, 2.3, 2.4, 2.6 Each program presents a series of short, narrated, full-motion, liveaction or animated modules 1-2 minutes long to convey an essential process of cellular biology. PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS 1. Cells and Molecules — A Variety of Cells, Cell Organization, Overview of Organic Molecules, Prokaryotic Cells, The Evolution of Eukaryotic Cells 2. Cell Movement and Transport — Structure and Behavior of the Plasma Membrane,Osmosis, Transport Proteins, Phagocytosis, Pinocytosis, Receptor Mediated Endocytosis, Golgi Function, Lysosomes and Hydrolytic Digestion, Microtubules, Cilia, Actin and Myosin Motor Proteins 3. Photosynthesis and Cellular Respiration Photosynthesis — Chlorplast Structure, the Light Dependent Reactions of Photosynthesis, Cellular Respiration Modules: Glycolysis and Fermentation, Mitochondrion Structure, Aerobic Respiration, Krebs Cycle, Electron Transport Chain and ATP Synthesis 90 • 2006/2007 M�Instructional Videos Consider the difference in size between some of the very tiniest and the very largest creatures on earth. A small bacterium weighs as little as 0.00000000001 gram, while a blue whale weighs about 100,000,000 grams. Yet a bacterium can kill a whale. “Microbes, not macrobes rule the world.”—Bernard Dixon PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS 1. Viruses: The Deadly Enemy — This program investigates medical science's discovery of viruses; the efforts to combat them; and how studying viruses has helped us understand more about disease, the immune system, and the relationships between humans and the global ecosystem. 2. The Rising Threat of Infectious Diseases — This program focuses on the interaction of disease-causing microbes with human beings. It explores the discovery of bacteria and viruses, advances in sanitation and medical science, ways in which microbes have adapted, and newly emerging diseases. BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Friday, November 10 at 3:00/2:00 pm CT (Programs 1-2; 1 hour) Block Feed II: Friday, April 13 at 3:00/2:00 pm CT (Programs 1-2; 1 hour) See Also... Electronic Field Trip to the Falls of the Ohio (4-12) — page 32 Electronic Field Trip to the Forest (4-8) –- page 32 Electronic Field Trip to Louisville Zoo (4-12) — page 33 Electronic Field Trip to Mammoth Cave (4-12) — page 31 Electronic Field Trip to the National Weather Service (5-12) — page 34 Electronic Field Trip to a Veterinary Clinic (4-12) — page 29 KET Distance Learning AP Physics course (9-adult) — page 114 KET Distance Learning Physics course (9-adult) — page 114 program titles F culture and society I Love Music! The culture of a country experienced through its musical Grade Level: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: Primary-6 8 minutes School Year Downloadable at www.ket.org/education/guides KY Academic Expectations: 1.14, 2.16, 2.17, 2.23, 2.26 Each program, narrated by a child musician, shares the festivals, ceremonies, costumes, rhythms, and dances of his or her heritage. Viewers will be encouraged to discover similarities and differences among cultures. PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS 1. England: Katie and Her Orchestra — Katie has ambitions to become a musician, a conductor, or a composer 2. Japan: Yutaro and His Drum — Yutaro practices the wadaiko, a traditional Japanese drum, in preparation for a big community concert. 3. USA: Duquan Sings Gospel — A Harlem church celebrates through gospel music BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Thursday, November 2 at 9:00/8:00 am CT (Programs 1-3; 30 minutes) Block Feed II: Thursday, March 8 at 9:00/8:00 am CT (Programs 1-3; 30 minutes) My Beautiful House C Ways diverse cultures meet their basic needs Grade Level: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: Primary-6 8 minutes School Year Downloadable at www.ket.org/education/guides KY Academic Expectations: 2.16, 2.17, 2.19 My Beautiful House shows the structure, organization, food preparation, sleeping arrangements, clothing, and family relationships within the homes of three cultures. PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS 1. Canada: My Indian House — Catherine Wapachee, a Cree, shows her modern home and her teepee. 2. Ivory Coast: My House in the Ivory Coast — Soro takes us through her daily chores at her home in the Ivory Coast in Africa. 3. USA: My loft in New York — Lino shares his top floor apartment in NYC. BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Thursday, November 2 at 9:30/8:30 am CT (Programs 1-3; 30 minutes) Block Feed II: Thursday, March 8 at 9:30/8:30 am CT (Programs 1-3; 30 minutes) New or Revised for 2006/2007 C Closed Captioned K KET Production On KET EncycloMedia continued on next page 2006/2007 M�Instructional Videos • 91 SOCIALSTUDIES culture and society I Love Music (Primary-6) My Beautiful House (Primary-6) C Hand in Hand (2-3) C Native Americans Series (2-5) C Great Native American Leaders (3-8) Great Native American Nations (3-8) Native American Exhibit (4-8) K Passport to Japan–Konnichiwa (4-8) A Native Presence (4-12) K C Living the Story: The Civil Rights Movement in Kentucky (6-12) C Living the Story: The Rest of the Story (6-12) C Kentucky Archaeology (7-12) economics Entrepreneurs in Kentucky (1-12) K C Economics: The Production, Distribution… (4-6) Electric Money (8-12) C geography Kentucky GeoQuest (4) K C Rivers of North America "The Ohio River" (4-8) U.S. Geography: From Sea To Shining Sea (4-8) Maps and Globes (4-12) C Rivers of the World (4-12) government and civics America’s Special Days (Primary) C My America (1-6) America’s Veterans (2-9) C News Quiz (4-8) The Kentucky Legislature: Behind the Scenes (4-12) C The Almost Painless Guide to American Civics (5-12) Under 18: Under the Law (6-9) U. S. Constitution (6-12) Human Rights: Youth Perspectives (9-12) C A Bill of Rights…(10-12) history Sacagawea (3-8) Kentucky’s Story (4-5) K Tracks: Impressions of America (4-6) F Colonial Williamsburg Electronic Field Trips (4-12) Kentucky in Africa (4-12) K C Kentucky’s Underground Railroad… (4-12) K C Liberty Hall (4-12) C The Prehistoric Mounds of Uruguay… (4-12) K C Women of Kentucky: Our Legacy, Our Future (4-12) K Pyramid (5-9) Our Presidents in American History (5-12) The Remarkable Clarks (5-12) K C Roman City Modules (5-12) Ancient Civilizations (6-12) Great Campaigns of the Civil War (6-12) American Voices (7-12) Events of the 20th Century (7-12) Kentucky Chautauqua (7-12) K The Middle Ages (7-12) America Past (8-12) C Twentieth Century History (11-12) SOCIAL STUDIES SOCIALSTUDIES Hand in Hand C BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: How communities function locally, regionally, and globally Thursday, August 17 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-12; 4 hours) Block Feed II: Thursday, January 18 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-12; 4 hours) Grade Level: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: Native Americans Series C 2-3 20 minutes School Year $6.50 plus shipping, Call Pam McElroy at 1-888-225-4029, ext. 210 KY Academic Expectations: 2.14, 2.16, 2.18, 2.19 Introduction to North American Indian cultures Hand in Hand provides students with the knowledge and skills needed to understand and analyze the functioning of communities locally, regionally, and globally. Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS 1. Back Then — What was daily life like in communities long ago? 2. Comparing Communities 3. Choices, Choices, Choices — Following directions. How do people KY Academic Expectations: 2.16, 2.19, 2.20, 2.25, 4.5 in communities meet their wants? 4. This for That — Interpreting and Creating Flow Charts. How and why do people in communities exchange goods, services, and products? 5. Moving On — Using timelines. How do communities change? 6. It’s the Law! — Social participation skills. How do communities make, carry out, enforce, and manage conflicts over rules and laws. 7. Count On Me — Group interaction skills (negotiation). Communities have rules and laws to guide behavior and establish order. 8. Where We Live — Using map symbols. How do people living in communities adapt to and change the environment? 9. This Is the Place — Asking and answering geographical questions. Why are communities located where they are? 10. Just Like Me and Different Too — Using bar and line graphs. Who lives in communities? 11. Fix It — Decision-making. How do communities face and resolve problems? 12. What's New? — Brainstorming. Will communities continue to change? 2–5 approx. 20 minutes School year See order form, pg. 124 Five hundred years ago, a wide variety of Native American peoples occupied all of the lands of North America. This series introduces students to some of those cultures by region. Through stunning liveaction cinematography, each program shows the continuity of customs, culture, and history among the Native Americans of each region, helping students develop appreciation and understanding of this shared heritage. PROGRAM TITLES 1. Indians of California 2. Indians of the Northwest 3. Indians of the Plains 4. Indians of the Southeast 5. Indians of the Southwest BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Thursday, October 19 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-5; 1 hour, 40 minutes) Block Feed II: Thursday, November 9 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-5; 1 hour, 40 minutes) Block Feed III: Thursday, March 22 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-5; 1 hour, 40 minutes) Photo: Rick McComb Great Native American Leaders Native American leaders and cultures Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: 3-8 15 minutes School year Downloadable at www.ket.org/education/guides KY Academic Expectations: 2.16, 2.20 Four of America's great Indian leaders, from some of the most famous Native American tribes, are portrayed here by historic photographs & graphics, dramatic reenactments, haunting music, and their own words. This revision of America's Great Indian Leaders focuses the series at the lower primary - middle school level. 92 • 2006/2007 M�Instructional Videos PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS 1. Chief Joseph & The Nez Perce Indians — The eloquent "Guardian of the Nez Perce" led his people on a 1,700-mile flight from the U.S. Army. 2. Crazy Horse & The Lakota Sioux Indians — Known as the "Sacred Warrior of the Lakota," he refused to bring his people into submission. 3. Geronimo & The Apache Indians — The "Brilliant Medicine Man of the Apaches" seemed to be able to use his powers to vanish and reappear, confounding pursuers. 4. Quannah Parker & The Commanche Indians — "Last Chief of the Comanche" and the son of a white woman, he guided his people between two worlds, white and Indian. BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Thursday, October 19 at 7:40/6:40 am CT (Programs 1-4; 54 minutes) Block Feed II: Thursday, November 9 at 7:40/6:40 am CT (Programs 1-4; 54 minutes) Block Feed III: Thursday, March 22 at 7:40/6:40 am CT (Programs 1-4; 54 minutes) BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Thursday, October 19 at 8:35/7:35 am CT (Programs 1-6; 1 hour, 1 minute) Block Feed II: Thursday, November 9 at 8:35/7:35 am CT (Programs 1-6; 1 hour, 1 minute) Block Feed III: Thursday, March 22 at 8:35/7:35 am CT (Programs 1-6; 1 hour, 1 minute) Native American Exhibit K Native American crafts and storytelling Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Videocassette: 4–8 21 minutes Unlimited See order form, pg. 125 KY Academic Expectations: 1.13, 2.16, 2.20 The history and cultures of Native Americans Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: 3-8 9-11 minutes School year Downloadable at www.ket.org/education/guides KY Academic Expectations: 2.16, 2.18, 2.19, 2.20 Six of America's representative Indian nations from five major geographic areas of common Native American cultures are portrayed here by historic photographs & graphics, dramatic reenactments, music, and the people's own words. This revision of America's Great Indian Nations focuses the series at the primary-middle school levels. PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS/LENGTHS 1. Cheyenne — A look at the North American Plains Indian people who 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. live near the Platte River and the Black Hills of South Dakota. (8:39) Iroquois — Indians of the Northeast (A) Five warring Native American tribes, Mohawk, Oneida, Onondaga, Cayuga, and Seneca, negotiated the Great law of Peace or Iroquois league, which influenced American political thinkers. Nonetheless, the American Revolution split the confederation, pitting old friends against each other and signaling the decline of their culture. (10:13) Lakota Sioux — The North American Plains Indian people living in North and South Dakota. (11:24) The Navajo — Overview of the country's most populous Indian groups who live in northwestern New Mexico, Arizona, and southeastern Utah. (9:47) Seminoles — The history and culture of the Flordia Seminoles, comprised of migrant tribes from Georgia and runaway African slaves, who now live in Oklahoma and Florida. (9:24) Shawnee — The history and culture of the Algonkian-speaking Shawnee who inhabited the Ohio Valley. Tecumseh became a great leader during their resistance unifying many native peoples until he was tragically killed until the war of 1812. (10:56) This program, produced by KET from footage shot at the 1994 Kentucky State Fair exhibit, features Native American crafts and storytelling with demonstrations, photographs, and interviews with participants. Note: This program is offered on videotape only. See tape order information on pages 125-126. Passport to Japan–Konnichiwa C A modern day trip to Japan Grade Level: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: 4-8 20-22 minutes School year See order form, pg. 124 KY Academic Expectations: 2.16, 2.17, 2.19, 2.20 This series is an integrated, cross-curricular approach to teaching western children in grades 4-8 about the children of contemporary Japan. PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS 1. School — Go to school for a day and see Japanese children waking up, walking to school, and participating in the classroom. 2. Family — Spend a day with two Japanese families. 3. Community — Tour various Japanese communities for an introduction to the geography, history, and industry of Japan. 4. Traditions — Visit Kyoto, the cultural capital of Japan, to learn about its rich and long cultural heritage. BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Thursday, September 14 at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 1-4; 1 hour, 24 minutes) Block Feed II: Thursday, February 15 at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 1-4; 1 hour, 24 minutes) 2006/2007 M�Instructional Videos� • 93 SOCIALSTUDIES Great Native American Nations A Native Presence K C Kentucky’s Native American heritage and contemporary issues Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Videocassette: 4–12 60 minutes Unlimited See order form, pg. 125 KY Academic Expectations: 2.17, 2.19, 2.20 This KET production documents the efforts of Native Americans in Kentucky to reconstruct their ancestors’ history in the state through archaeological evidence as well as oral history and tradition. In particular, the program addresses myths held about Kentucky’s early history. SOCIALSTUDIES NOTE: This program is offered on videotape only. See tape order information on pages 125-126. Living the Story: The Civil Rights Movement in Kentucky C Personal stories of the fight for racial equality Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: Videocassette: 6-adult 60 minutes Unlimited Available at Web site $12.00, contact Carrie Dowdy at 1-877-444-7867 Web Site: www.ket.org/civilrights During the 1950s and '60s, profound legal and social changes took place in Kentucky and across America as a result of the civil rights movement. This documentary is designed to give a feel for the times, to explain some of the issues that were particularly important in Kentucky, and to inspire young people by showing how people their age have made a difference in society. Photo: Rick McComb 94 • 2006/2007 M�Instructional Videos To facilitate classroom use, the hour-long video is divided into segments that may be viewed separately. Related biographies, a historical timeline, and lesson plans written by Kentucky teachers for various grade levels, including connections to Kentucky Core Content in social studies, can be found at the Web site developed by KET. Living the Story is a 2001 production of Video Editing Services, Lexington, and the Kentucky Oral History Commission of the Kentucky Historical Society. BROADCAST SCHEDULE Thursday, August 3 at 6:00/5:00 am CT Tuesday, November 14 at 3:00/2:00 pm CT Thursday, February 15 at 8:15/7:15 am CT Living the Story: The Rest of the Story C Interviews with civil rights pioneers Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: Videocassette: 6-12 60 minutes Unlimited Downloadable at Web site. $12.00 each, contact Carrie Dowdy at 1-877-444-7867 Web Site: www.ket.org/civilrights/restofstory.htm Streaming video available at Web site Ky Academic Expectations: 2:20, 2:22 These 14 one-hour programs contain extended interviews with Kentuckians featured in the documentary Living the Story: The Civil Rights Movement in Kentucky. In unedited one-on-one conversations taped for a Kentucky Oral History Commission project, these eyewitnesses to history tell their own moving stories of life under segregation and of the struggle for racial equality in Kentucky and in America. PROGRAM TITLES 1. Julian Bond 2. Gov. Edward Breathitt 3. Sen. Georgia Davis Powers 4. John Jay Johnson 5. Mervin Aubespin 6. P. G. Peeples 7. Abby Marlatt 8. Blaine Hudson 9. James Howard (35:00) 10. Jennie & Alice Wilson 11. Raoul Cunningham 12. Audrey Grevious 13. Ann Braden 14. Grace Lewis (30:00) BLOCK FEED Thursday, August 3 at 7:00/6:00 am CT (Programs 1-3; 3 hours) and at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 4-7; 4 hours); and Thursday, August 10 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 8-11; 3 hours, 30 minutes) and at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 12-14; 2 hours, 30 minutes) Science and American Indian culture Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: 7-12 25 minutes Unlimited Downloadable at www.state.ky.us/ agencies/khc/video.htm KY Academic Expectations: 2.1, 2.2, 2.6, 2.16, 2.19, 2.20, 2.24 These short documentaries, produced by the Kentucky Heritage Council, explore new research about the state’s rich cultural heritage. Each episode examines a unique aspect of archaeology through interviews, artifacts, rare archival images, and video of ancient American Indian sites. PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS/LENGTHS 1. Ancient Fires at Cliff Palace Pond — examines landmark research on Kentucky’s first forest managers. (10:30) 2. The Adena People: Mound-Builders of Kentucky — (6:00) 3. Saving a Kentucky Time Capsule — Archaeologists Valerie Haskins and Dan Davis lead viewers on an unforgettable journey to see rare legacies discovered inside a Kentucky cavern from Kentucky’s early occupants. (9:00) BROADCAST SCHEDULE Entrepreneurs in Kentucky K C Kentucky businessmen and women Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Videocassette: Print Materials: Web Site: 1-12 5-10 minutes Unlimited See order form, page 125 See below www.econ.org KY Academic Expectations: 2.18, 2.36, 3.4 Segments taken from KET's Kentucky Life series provide opportunities for students to learn about the lives of unique businessmen and women living in Kentucky. PROGRAM SEGMENTS/LENGTHS Music Tom T. Hall (9:21) Arts & Crafts James Archambeault (9:02) Rebekka Seigel (4:37) Ed Hamilton (5:40) Stan Schu (4:56) Rose Mary King (5:37) Farming Sunflower Farm (4:55) Paddlefish (7:15) Double Stink Hog Farm (4:00) Tourism Fort Boonesborough (4:28) Kentucky Derby Museum (4:50) Equine Horse Logging (4:50) Jockey Silks (6:05) Fast Food Sanders Museum and Cafe (4:50) Environmental Quiet Trails Nature Preserve (7:40) Bernheim Forest (3:25) Retail and Service Valco's Barge Delivery Service (7:00) Abbey of Gethsemani (5:15) Olde Tyme Toys (4:02) Unity Wear (4:40) Moonlight Barbecue (6:06) BROADCAST SCHEDULE Wednesday, September 27 at 1:00 pm/12 noon CT (2 hours, 4 minutes) Thursday, November 16 at 2:00/1:00 pm CT (2 hours, 4 minutes) Thursday, February 1 at 2:00/1:00 pm CT (2 hours, 4 minutes) Wednesday, April 25 at 7:45/6:45 am CT (2 hours, 4 minutes) TEACHING MATERIALS A curriculum package including lesson plans, activity sheets and community and curriculum connections for each school level is available for $35 plus shipping from: Kentucky Council on Economic Education, 4010 Dupont Circle, Suite 360, Louisville, KY 40207, Attention: Jan Mester. Phone: (800) 436-3266, Fax: 502-893-4229, Email: jan@econky.win.net Thursday, October 19 at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (25 minutes) Thursday, March 22 at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (25 minutes) 2006/2007 M�Instructional Videos� • 95 SOCIALSTUDIES Kentucky Archaeology economics Economics: The Production, Distribution and Consumption of Goods and Services Economic Concepts Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: 4-6 20 minutes School year See order form, pg. 124 KY Academic Expectations: 2.18, 2.30, 5.1, 5.4 This five-program series introduces the basic concepts of economics and lays a strong foundation for making wise choices in our increasingly economics-driven future. SOCIALSTUDIES PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS 1. Resources — This program defines and illustrates the three basic kinds of resources: natural resources, labor, and capital. 2. Producing — In this program, students learn the differences between consumer and industrial goods and services. 3. Needs and Wants — This program defines the three basic needs — food and water, shelter, and clothing — and shows that satisfying those needs is a difficult problem and is not the same for all people at all times. 4. Consuming — This program defines the three categories of consumption: durable goods, non-durable goods, and services. The student learns the role of “opportunity cost”as people choose which goods to consume. The program also traces the growth of consumerism throughout the U.S. in the last part of this century. 5. Money — This program defines the five properties of money and traces the evolution of money through history and presents the concepts of savings, checking accounts, and credit cards. BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Thursday, August 24 at 8:30/7:30 am CT (Programs 1-5; 1 hour, 25 minutes) Block Feed II: Thursday, January 25 at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 1-5; 1 hour, 25 minutes) Electric Money C Money's transformation by electric technology Grade Levels: Length: Taping rights: Print Materials: Web Site: 8-12 15 - 25 minutes School year Downloadable at Web site www.pbs.org/opb/electricmoney KY Academic Expectations: 2.18, 2.30 Host Bob Cringely tells the story of the invention of the credit card and how it has evolved into the trillion-dollar-a-year business it is today. Electric Money examines how information technology has expanded futures, options, and stock trading. 96 • 2006/2007 M�Instructional Videos PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS/LENGTHS 1. Evolution of Money - The progression of money from gold and silver to paper currency and checks to electronic transfer of bank deposits. (26:00) 2. How Credit Cards Work - How companies make money from credit cards. Should we be worried about a few companies having a monopoly? (20:00) 3. Banks in the 20th and 21st Centuries - How modern technology has changed the banking system. (15:00) 4. Trading Risk: Markets for Futures and Options - Which commodities are traded on the futures market and why. (18:00) 5. The Electronic Revolution in Financial Markets - How does the stock market work? Who gains and looses from technological innovation? (26:00) BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Thursday, October 26 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-5; 2 hours, 5 minutes) Block Feed II: Thursday, March 29 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-5; 2 hours, 5 minutes) geography Kentucky GeoQuest KC Kentucky geography Grade Level: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: Videocassette: 4 30 minutes Unlimited Downloadable at www.ket.org/education/guides See order form, pg. 125 KY Academic Expectations: 2.19, 2.20, 2.24 This series shows students the incredible diversity of the state’s geographic features and gives them an understanding of how those features have influenced human life — and the ways in which humans, in turn, have affected the land around them. PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS 1. A Statewide Ride — Molly the mapmaker meets Ricky Redbird and together they tour Kentucky, documenting the geographic diversity of the state and its main regions: the Jackson Purchase, the Western Coal Field, the Pennyroyal, the Knobs, the Bluegrass, and the Eastern Mountains and Coal Field. 2. Natural Gifts — Molly and Ricky investigate the origins of the Kentucky landscape, visiting remnants of a virgin forest (Lilley Cornett Woods), the Red River Gorge, Mammoth Cave, and the Ballard Wildlife Management Area. 3. The Human Factor — Early inhabitants of Kentucky are examined through visits to Cumberland Gap, the Wilderness Road, and Fort Boonesboro. The program reviews Kentucky history up through the Civil War. 4. My New Kentucky Home — Molly and Ricky explore the effects of humans and their machines on the state’s environment, as well as the shift from a rural to an urban society. The program also looks at some Kentucky artists, writers, and musicians. BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Thursday, September 14 at 2:00/1:00 pm CT (Programs 1-4; 2 hours) Block Feed II: Thursday, November 30 at 2:00/1:00 pm CT (Programs 1-4; 2 hours) Block Feed III: Thursday, January 11 at 2:00/1:00 pm CT (Programs 1-4; 2 hours) Block Feed II: Thursday, May 3 at 2:00/1:00 pm CT (Programs 1-4; 2 hours) Rivers of North America "The Ohio River" C Natural and human geography of the Ohio River 4-8 22 minutes School year Available at www.filmideas.com/titlepages/ pthrus/riversna.html KY Academic Expectations: 2.19, 2.20 "The Ohio River," from the series, Rivers of North America, looks to both the past and the future as it explores how the Ohio River has shaped and continues to shape the vast North American landscape. Some of the key topics include: dams, watersheds, steamboats, fossil fuels, tributaries, river confluences, Kansas-Nebraska Act, the Underground Railroad, the Ice Age, the French and Indian War, and the Ohio and Erie canals. Photo: Rick McComb Grade Level: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: BROADCAST SCHEDULE Thursday, November 2 at 1:00 pm/12 noon CT Thursday, March 8 at 12 noon/11:00 am CT Relationships among geography, history, government, and business Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: 4–8 20 minutes School year See order form, pg. 124 KY Academic Expectations: 2.18, 2.19, 2.20 This beautifully photographed series shows how geography helped shape the history, government, and business of the United States. Documentary segments and historic reenactments introduce prominent industries, agriculture, mining activities, and historical events by region, and map skills are reinforced to help students place these regions within the United States as a whole. 6. Mountain West Region — The extensive rivers, canyons, basins and mountain ranges make this region a popular tourist destination, which is also rich in agricultural and natural resources. 7. Pacific West Region — The Pacific region’s landscape of rain forests, deserts, and volcanoes provide a backdrop for a prospering regional economy based on technology and natural resource industries. BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Thursday, September 28 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-7; 2 hours, 30 minutes) Block Feed II: Thursday, March 1 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-7; 2 hours, 30 minutes) Maps and Globes C PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS 1. South Central Region — The program explores the states of Texas, Identification and use of different types of maps and globes 2. Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: 3. 4. 5. Oklahoma, and New Mexico, which comprise the fastest growing economic region in the country and the influence of Native American and Mexican cultures. New England Region — The states of Maine, Massachusetts, Connecticut, Vermont, Rhode Island and New Hampshire are featured, showing how the Atlantic Ocean and its bays contributed to the development of the early U.S. economy. Mid Atlantic Region — New York, New Jersey, Delaware, Maryland, Pennsylvania and the District of Columbia comprise this region, whose waterways, protected bays and moderate climate combined to make a prosperous transportation center. Southeast Region — The region’s rich history, economy and geography are explored. Midwest and Great Plains Region — The rich topsoil and adequate rainfall makes this region a flourishing agricultural zone, as well as a region rich in natural resources. 4-12 15 minutes School year Downloadable Teacher's guide and blackline masters at www.unitedlearning.com (Search by Individual program titles.) KY Academic Expectations: 2.19, 2.9 This program describes and illustrates the many and varied uses and forms of maps, including software programs and Internet sites. Information is included about the Global Positioning System. Maps include weather maps, marine maps, tourist maps, and maps for pilots with flight plans. continued on next page 2006/2007 M�Instructional Videos� • 97 SOCIALSTUDIES U.S. Geography: From Sea to Shining Sea PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS/AIR DATES 1. Globes and Their Use - Students will learn about key terms associ- ated with globes such as Equator, Prime Meridian, axis, hemispheres, latitude, longitude, compass rose, time zones, and scale model. Demonstrations are provided for calculating the distances between locations on the globe. (14:00) (A) Oct 17, (B) May 14 2. Maps and Their Use - This program describes and illustrates the many and varied uses of maps. It also presents information about GPS (Global Positioning System) (13:00) (A) Oct 18, (B) May 15 3. Using Graphs - The four main types of graphs - the line graph, the bar graph, the circle or pie graph, and the pictograph - are discussed and illustrated in this video. (16:00) (A) Oct 20, (B) May 16 4. Using Tables, Charts, and Diagrams - This program is about using visual tools to organize data, represent information, organize thinking, and illustrate the workings of processes or internal workings of machinery. (14:00) (A) Oct 23, (B) May 18 WEEKLY BROADCAST SCHEDULES Weekly broadcast (A): SOCIALSTUDIES Mondays, Tuesdays, Wednesdays, and Fridays, October 17-23 at 10:45/9:45 am CT Weekly broadcast (B): Mondays, Tuesdays, Wednesdays, and Fridays, May 14-18 at 10:45/9:45 am CT BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: 5. The Mississippi: Taming the River — The longest river in the United States, the Mississippi flows south from Minnesota to the Gulf of Mexico. This river tends to overflow its banks and silt up vital shippinig routes, so taming the river has been a long fought battle. BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Thursday, September 28 at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 1-5; 1 hour, 40 minutes) Block Feed II: Thursday, March 1 at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 1-5; 1 hour, 40 minutes) government and civics America’s Special Days C A study of the holidays in the United States Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: Primary 15 minutes School year See order form, pg. 124 KY Academic Expectations: 2.14, 2.16, 2.20 Thursday, September 7 at 9:00/8:00 am CT (Programs 1-4; 1 hour) Block Feed II: Thursday, January 18 at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 1-4; 1 hour) Rivers of the World America’s Special Days is a 10-program series that helps students understand and appreciate why we celebrate certain days commonly referred to as “holidays.” The series uses an interdisciplinary approach that combines language arts, reading, science, math, and the fine arts around a social studies framework. The interdisciplinary content is included at appropriate, naturally occurring points in the programs; not all disciplines are included in every program. Natural and human geography of the world’s greatest rivers PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS/ SOME AIRDATES 1. New Year’s Day(s) — The celebration of the new year is investigated Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: 2. 4-12 20 minutes School year KY Academic Expectations: 2.19, 2.20 This series explores the relationship between humans and the river environments where they live. The programs present the universal geographic features of river systems and the types of human settlements established along them. PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS 1. The Orinoco: The Natural River — This South American River begins in the mountains of Venezuela and passes through tropical forests inhabited by the indigenous Piaroa people before reaching the Atlantic Ocean. 2. The Angara: Power from the River — The Angara River begins in Lake Baikal in Central Asia and flows north to the Arctic Ocean. Huge hydroelectric dams harness the river’s power to supply electricity for the region’s heavy industry. 3. The Danube: Transport on the River — The second longest river in Europe, the Danube runs from Germany to the Black Sea. The Danube is a “managed” river, with many locks and dams, but also is home to indigenous people and unique wildlife. 4. The Nile: River of Life — The Nile is the longest river in the world, beginning in the mountains of Central Africa and flowing north to the Mediterranean Sea. The Nile has provided precious water for civilizations that have inhabited this desert region. 98 • 2006/2007 M�Instructional Videos 3. 4. 5. 6. as we follow Earth around the sun, explain the calendar, and experience several New Year activities, including the making of New Year’s resolutions. (Monday, Jan 1 at 10:45/9:45 am CT) Martin Luther King Jr. Day/Black History Month — Fairness and equal rights and the goals of Dr. King are depicted as we visit important historical sites in Memphis, Atlanta, and Washington, DC. (Friday, Jan 12 and Monday, Jan 15 at 10:45/9:45 am CT) Presidents’ Day — We honor George Washington and Abraham Lincoln as we tour historical monuments in Washington, DC; Mount Vernon; and Springfield New Salem, IL. (Thursday, Feb 15 at 9:45/8:45 am CT and Monday, Feb 19 at 10:45/9:45 am CT) Women’s History Month — We celebrate the contributions of women in our society through reenactments of events in the lives of famous women. Florence Nightingale and Amelia Earhart visit classrooms and talk with children. (Monday, Mar 5 at 10:45/9:45 am CT) Arbor Day/Earth Day — Environmental conservation and the roles of trees in the survival of ecosystems are discovered as we visit the birth of Arbor Day and the rainforest of Australia. (Friday, Apr 6 at 10:45/9:45 am CT) Memorial Day/Veterans Day — Honoring America’s veterans takes us to several memorials, including Arlington National Cemetery, the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier, and others. Students will experience the ceremonies and discover how we show respect for the men and women who serve or have served our nation. (Thursday, Oct 26 at 8:30/7:30 am CT and Friday, Nov 10 at 9:30/8:30 am CT and 10:45/9:45 am CT) 7. Flag Day/ Citizenship Day — Respect for the flag and flag etiquette are demonstrated as we visit the birthplace of Flag Day (Wisconsin), a flag factory, and America’s largest Flag Day celebration. 8. Independence Day(s) — This holiday commemorates the signing of the Declaration of Independence in 1776. 9. Native American Day — We celebrate the contributions of Native Americans to our country’s development, including their influence on the food we eat and the workings of our government. Successful Native Americans share their feelings about living in two cultures. (Thursday, Oct 26 at 8:45/7:45 am CT) 10. Thanksgiving Day — The true meaning of Thanksgiving is emphasized as we observe past and present celebrations in a wide variety of cultural and ethnic settings. (Thursday, Oct 26 at 9:00/8:00 am CT and Wednesday, Nov 22 at 10:45/9:45 am CT) WEEKLY BROADCAST SCHEDULE 10. Rights and Responsibilities — The principles of the Declaration of Independence, the Constitution and the Bill of Rights are illustrated 11. Parents, Teachers, and Community: Working Together — This program address the involvement of parents, teachers, and community members in a site-base managed school 12. Teaching in a Multicultural Society — This program conveys the principles of multiculturalism – the ability to hold multiple perspectives, to see and understand different points of view, and to understand and accept that each of these is valid BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Thursday, August 17 at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 1-12; 4 hours) Block Feed II: Thursday, January 4 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-12; 4 hours) (See above for specific holiday program dates and times.) BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Thursday, August 24 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-10; 2 hours, 30 minutes) Block Feed II: Thursday, February 1 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-10; 2 hours, 30 minutes) SOCIALSTUDIES My America A multicultural view of America Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: 1-6 20 minutes School year Downloadable at www.ket.org/education/guides KY Academic Expectations: 2.14, 2.15, 2.16, 2.17, 2.20, 4.5 PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS 1. What Is a Flag? — The story of the American flag, including the McComb meaning behind the stars, stripes and colors 2. A Pledge Is a Promise — The meaning of the Pledge of Allegiance and the commitment a promise 3. Neighborhood and Community — How people living together in neighborhoods and communities work together towards common goals 4. Liberty and Justice — Students learn the American ideals of freedom and fairness 5. What Is an American? — The multiethnic cultural history of America 6. The Story of the National Anthem — The story of how and why the national anthem was written 7. What Is a Democracy? — Students learn that democracy is based on participation 8. Becoming an Active Citizen — Students learn that an active citizen is one who participates in the world around them 9. How Our Laws Are Made — Senator Barbara Boxer and Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg answer children’s questions about how laws are made Photo: Rick The My America series explores the basics of American government in a way that encourages students to participate actively in their schools and communities and to become a part of the democratic process. Two programs in the series provide parents and teachers with instruction on how to use the programs in a multicultural classroom. 2006/2007 M�Instructional Videos� • 99 America’s Veterans C Veteran’s Day to Honor the Men and Women who Protected our Country Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: 2-9 24 minutes School year Downloadable at www.ket.org/education/guides KY Academic Expectations: 2.14, 2.15, 2.16, 2.20 Twelve-year-old Lizzie discovers who veterans are, what they have done, and why they should be honored. Four veterans tell their stories and the program concludes with a Veteran’s Day parade. BROADCAST SCHEDULE SOCIALSTUDIES Thursday, October 26 at 8:05/7:05 am CT Thursday, November 9 at 1:20/12:20 pm CT Friday, November 10 at 9:00/8:00 am CT Thursday, March 29 at 8:05/7:05 am CT News Quiz K REGIONAL EMMY NOMINEE Current events Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: Web Site: 4–8 15 minutes Unlimited Downloadable at www.ket.org/education/guides www.ket.org/newsquiz KY Academic Expectations: 2.17 Note: Academic Expectations addressed will vary with new topics covered each week. This weekly KET production features highlights from the past week’s top news stories and includes a multiple-choice quiz concerning aspects of each story. The Kentucky Legislature: Behind the Scenes C Dramatically captures how a bill becomes a law Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: 4-12 18 minutes each School year Downloadable at www.ket.org/education/guides KY Academic Expectations: 2.14, 2.15 Students experience the exciting twists and turns when a “fly on the wall” camera visits the legislature, observes the governor, lobbyists, and legislators as they maneuver for and against the passage of three bills. With graphics to clarify the process, the programs lead viewers to ask: Does this work? Should I be more involved? PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS 1. Overview – How A Bill Becomes Law and Bill # 1 — Mental Health Insurance Parity. One citizen lobbyist manages to get this bill passed despite the odds. The Issue: Mental Health is not covered as broadly by insurance companies as physical health. The Bill: Would increase mental health coverage. 2. Early Childhood Development — The balance of powers between executive and legislative branches is seen in debate of this bill proposed by the Governor. The Issue: Research shows children learn from day one. Should the state help educate parents and children before the age of 5? The Bill: Would regulate day care centers, provide money for more day care, create educational programs for parents and health professionals, and provide free health exams. 3. Factory Farming — Professional lobbyists maneuver on opposing sides. The Issue: Mass production poultry and meat is profitable for farmers but animal waste produces environmental hazards for the community where they are situated. The Bill: Debates regulation of factory farms. BROADCAST SCHEDULE Thursday, October 12 at 2:30/1:30 pm CT Thursday, March 15 at 2:30/1:30 pm CT WEEKLY BROADCAST SCHEDULES Live Weekly broadcast (A): Thursdays, September 7-May 17 at 1:45/12:45 pm CT (Note: No broadcast on November 23; December 14, 21, 28; Jan 4, and April 5) Weekly broadcast (B): Repeats Mondays, Tuesdays, Wednesdays, and Fridays, September 8May 18 at 10:45/9:45 am CT (Note: No broadcast on November 24-29; December 15-January 10; and April 6-11) Newsquiz also airs Fridays at 2:00/1:00 pm CT on KET 1 100 • 2006/2007 M�Instructional Videos When state legislature is in session, you can access live coverage of chamber sessions and selected committee meetings of the Kentucky House of Representatives and Kentucky Senate on Digital KET5 and KET6. The Almost Painless Guide to American Civics Under 18: Under the Law Civics made fun! Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Material: Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: 5-12 20-22 minutes School year Downloadable at www.ket.org/education/guides KY Academic Expectations: 2.14, 2.15, 2.20 Delivered in an entertaining style, this series uses contemporary and archival footage, and computer graphics to provide a fresh approach to the study of civics. PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS 1. The Executive Branch — Focuses on the origins of the executive 2. 4. 5. 6–9 45-60 minutes Unlimited Call 1-502-573-2350 KY Academic Expectations: 2.15, 5.1 Students will learn about the juvenile justice system, the role of the court-designated worker, the diversion process, and the formal court system in this two-part special. Registration packets will be mailed to middle school teachers in early October. For free resource materials or classroom resource speakers, contact: Deborah Williamson Law-Related Education Program Administrative Office of the Courts 100 Millcreek Park Frankfort, KY 40601 (502) 573-2350 BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Thursday, October 26 at 2:00/1:00 pm CT (Programs 1-2; 1 hour, 20 minutes) Block Feed II: Thursday, December 7 at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 1-2; 1 hour, 20 minutes) Block Feed III: Thursday, March 29 at 2:00/1:00 pm CT (Programs 1-2; 1 hour, 20 minutes) BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Thursday, August 31 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-5; 1 hour, 45 minutes) Block Feed II: Thursday, November 30 at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 1-5; 1 hour, 45 minutes) Block Feed III: Thursday, January 11 at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 1-5; 1 hour, 45 minutes) Block Feed IV: Thursday, April 19 at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 1-5; 1 hour, 45 minutes) Photo: Rick McComb 2006/2007 M�Instructional Videos� • 101 SOCIALSTUDIES 3. branch, the executive offices, the Cabinet, the power of Presidential veto, and executive checks and balances. Also, it examines the requirements and functions of the Presidency, along with the distribution of federal power between the branches The Judicial Branch — Looks at judicial checks and balances, the functions of the Supreme Court, and the appointment of Justices. It also delves into judicial overview of lower courts and the power of the Supreme Court to influence history The Legislative Branch — Explores the functions of the legislative branch of the U.S. government; legislative checks and balances, the power to impeach, and the lawmaking process. It also explains the origins of the two-house system and the structure of the Senate and House of Representatives The Constitution — The ideas of American Constitutional government, the theory of “We the People,” and the concepts laid out by the Preamble The Election Process — The process of electing a political candidate The juvenile justice system U.S. Constitution The Constitution as a living document Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: Videocassette: 6–12 30 minutes Unlimited Call 1-800-457-4509, ext. 4 or visit www.ait.net/ catalog See order form, pg. 125 KY Academic Expectations: 2.14, 2.15, 2.20, 4.4 This series, hosted by Bill Moyers, increases students’ understanding and awareness of the U.S. Constitution as a vital part of the American heritage and of their own lives. Each program features a dramatic episode in which constitutional law directly affects teenagers. The programs show the dynamism that enables the Constitution to adapt as our country changes, the structure that balances constitutional powers and rights, and the critical thinking skills demanded of young people as citizens and learners. SOCIALSTUDIES PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS 1. Limited Government and the Rule of Law — A young woman is 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. unjustly accused of vandalism. Federalism — A young man confined to a wheelchair finds that his school board does not want to install facilities for the handicapped. Separation of Powers with Checks and Balances — A teenager learns about the interactions of the three branches of government when she discovers that an important nesting place for sea birds may become a government-assigned nuclear waste dump. Freedom of Expression — A young man who wants to broadcast a prevention tape on teen suicide may be stopped by parents who fear the program will glamorize suicide. Equal Protection of the Laws — An older woman who is an expert pilot may be rejected for a flying job because of her age. The Constitution and the Economy — An artistic teenager hired to custom-paint cars may lose his job when anti-pollution regulations make it difficult for the shop to do business. BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Thursday, November 2 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-6; 3 hours) Block Feed II: Thursday, March 8 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-6; 3 hours) Human Rights: Youth Perspectives C See young people learning about and acting on human rights issues Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: 9-12 15 minutes School year Call 1-800-457-4509, ext. 4 or visit www.ait.net/catalog KY Academic Expectations: 2.14, 2.16, 2.17, 2.20, 4.5 Linking the human rights violations of the past with current events, this series features Presidential Classroom Scholars studying human rights issues in Washington D.C. for two weeks. Students hold debates on the roles of citizens in a democracy and the value of personal action in promoting human dignity in their communities. 102 • 2006/2007 M�Instructional Videos PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS 1. Japanese-American Internment Camps: Human Rights Violations Presidential Scholars from around the world tour the National Museum of American History exhibit, “A More Perfect Union?” to learn about the internment of Japanese Americans during World War II. Later, the students interview survivors of these internment camps. 2. Learning from the Holocaust — The Presidential Scholars visit the National Holocaust Museum and meet Holocaust survivors, officials from the German and American governments and members of Human Rights Watch, a not-for-profit group promoting civil rights for all global citizens. 3. The Price of Silence: Students Speak Out at the Front Lines — Students at a Coeur D’Alene high school, recent site of a militarystyle parade by members of the Aryan Nation, form a Human Rights Club. The program features members of the high school club and the Coeur D’Alene community work to counter the aggressive activities of hate groups. 4. Creating a Human Rights Agenda — The Presidential Scholars debate global human rights issues. In the program, views are encouraged to explore the role of citizens in upholding human rights in the United States and abroad. BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Thursday, September 28 at 8:30/7:30 am CT (Programs 1-4; 1 hour) Block Feed II: Thursday, March 1 at 8:30/7:30 am CT (Progrms 1-4; 1 hour) A Bill of Rights: What No Just Government Should Refuse Civics and government Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: 10–12 30 minutes Unlimited See order form, pg. 124 KY Academic Expectations: 2.14, 2.15, 2.20 This film recounts the demand for a bill of rights, voiced by Jefferson and Madison, and Madison’s struggle against an unwilling Congress to attach such amendments to the new Constitution. Through the eyes of these founders, engaged in the fight to secure our rights, the film looks at the Bill of Rights issues that confront the nation today — religion in the classroom, the death penalty, civil rights. BROADCAST SCHEDULE Thursday, October 12 at 3:30/2:30 pm CT Thursday, March 15 at 3:30/2:30 pm CT history Sacagawea C A reenactment of the Lewis & Clark expedition through a young person's eyes Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Teaching Materials: 3-8 15-17 minutes School year Email rcarr@questar1.com (free for classroom teachers) KY Academic Expectations: 2.16, 2.19, 2.20 Sacajawea's storytelling of the epic journey of Lewis and Clark becomes an historic adventure. This reenactment of America's most important exploration through the eyes of a teenager is shown with the Native American point of view giving their contribution to the success of this exploration. Episodes are rich with wildlife, tribal lore, and clear, concise maps of the undiscovered wilderness. PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS/LENGTHS 1. St. Louis to Ft. Mandan — Sacajawea shares what the two captains had Thursday, August 31 at 7:45/6:45 am CT (Programs 1-9; 2 hours, 15 minutes) Block Feed II: Tuesday, November 21 at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 1-9; 2 hours, 15 minutes) Block Feed III: Thursday, February 15 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-9; 2 hours, 15 minutes) Block Feed II: Tuesday, April 24 at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 1-9; 2 hours, 15 minutes) Tracks: Impressions of America C Tracing this country’s greatest historical events Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Material: Videocassette: Web Site: BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Thursday, October 12 at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 1-3; 1 hour) Block Feed II: Thursday, March 15 at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 1-3; 1 hour) Kentucky’s Story K Historical perspective on early Kentucky Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: Videocassette: BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: 4–5 15 minutes Unlimited Download at www.ket.org/education/guides See order form, pg. 125 KY Academic Expectations: 2.16, 2.19, 2.20 Kentucky’s Story presents a re-creation of what life in Kentucky was like at different times in history, beginning with the American Indians who were here when the first white settlers arrived. The focus in each program is on what a typical 10-year-old might have experienced during the various periods. Viewers see how early Kentuckians dressed, cooked, played, spoke, and worked. The series is not meant to convey a great many facts or detailed information, but rather to give a feel for the issues and emotions of the times. 4–6 15 minutes Unlimited Lesson plans and worksheets downloadable at Web site See order form, pg. 125 www.ecb.org/tracks KY Academic Expectations: 2.16, 2.20 This series reflects the experiences of two young adults who investigate U.S. history as they travel by rail across the country. While learning about historical events, they also discover the relevance of those events to the present day. PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS/AIR DATES 1. Trekking Across Our Land — Describes the early migration of people from Asia to North America (Jan 16) 2. Spain Comes to America — Introduces some of the first European explorers in the Americas and describes their influence on colonization (Jan 17) 3. Early European Settlements — Describes the motivation and goals of early English settlers at Jamestown and their interaction with Native Americans (Jan 19) 4. Seeds of Revolution — In Boston, Issy and Duncan learn about the diverse beliefs and independent thinking that laid the groundwork for the American Revolution (Jan 22) 5. Independence — Issy discusses the state of the colonies with the character Ben Franklin in Philadelphia (Jan 23) 6. The New Nation — Focuses on the creation of the Constitution and sketches the three branches of the federal government. (Jan 24) 7. Westward Ho! — The territorial expansion of European settlers and their effect on Native Americans; a visit to the Cumberland Gap is included (Jan 26) continued on next page 2006/2007 M�Instructional Videos� • 103 SOCIALSTUDIES learned of the wilderness and of the Indian nations in their journey. (15:53) 2. Over the Rockies to the Pacific — A moving reenactment of Sacajawea's invaluable contributions to the journey and her survival. (15:22) 3. Ft. Clatsop & the Journey Home — As the expedition makes the trip back across the west, an important decision about where to build the fort is brought to a vote, possibly the first instance in North America's history that a woman (Sacajawea) and an African American (York) are given the right to vote on an important issue. (16:54) PROGRAM TITLES 1. Early Kentucky 2. The Lure of the Middle Grounds 3. Survival of a People 4. The Need for Statehood 5. Slavery in Kentucky 6. Civil War 7. Schoolmarm 8. Riverboats and Railroads 9. The Birthday Party 8. Divided and United — The causes of the Civil War and its effects on the American people; program connects the events of the Civil War with the Civil Rights movement during a visit to Montgomery, Alabama (Jan 29) 9. The Urbanization of America — Milwaukee, Wisconsin is the site to describe the waves of immigration that changed social patterns and labor relations in the late 19th century (Jan 30) 10. The Road to Mount Rushmore — Explores the development of mining, ranching, agriculture and the railroads, and the strained relations between settlers and Native Americans (Jan 31) 11. America at War — Discusses America’s reluctance to enter World War I and World War II (Feb 2) 12. Changing Times and Modern Industries — Examines the Cold War and the dangers and promise of the Atomic Age (Feb 5) Mondays, Tuesdays, Wednesdays, and Fridays, January 16-February 5 at 10:45/9:45 am CT 5. The Slave Trade — Beginning with the American Revolution, this program explores the U.S. law of 1807 that abolished the transAtlantic slave trade. Meet the people who were involved in or influenced by this pivotal legislation: the slaves, plantation owners, slaveship captains, common seamen, government officials, Navy officers, and anti-slavery activists. (Live at 10:00/9:00 am CT on Feb 15) 6. Made in America — Throughout America's history, advances in technology have revolutionized the nature of work several times over. This trip through three centuries examines technology's effects on labor, the family, and how people perceive their jobs. (Live at 10:00/9:00 am CT on Mar 22) 7. Jamestown Unearthed — Take a look at how history is written and reevaluated as new methods of study are introduced. Using the example of Jamestown in 1607, explore the myths and misconceptions of that era: revisit the documents, artifacts, and other evidence through archaeology. Learn how every generation sees the evidence in new ways, and how this affects our understanding of the past. (Live at 10:00/9:00 am CT on Apr 26) BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: *Purchasing teacher materials through the Web Site secures extended taping rights. WEEKLY BROADCAST SCHEDULE SOCIALSTUDIES Thursday, September 7 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-12; 3 hours) Block Feed II: Thursday, February 8 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-12; 3 hours) Colonial Williamsburg Field Trips Season 2006-2007 Exploring colonial life in America Grade level: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: Web Site: 4-12 60 minutes 10 days* Order at Web site or call 1-800-761-8331 www.history.org/trips KY Academic Expectations: 2.14, 2.15, 2.20 PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS/AIR DATES 1. Yorktown — The story of the people of the small town of York during the Revolutionary War siege in October, 1781, the ripples it caused internationally, and how it defined future events. How the military men planned, how the soldiers fought, and how civilizns fared. (Live at 10:00/9:00 am CT on Oct 19) 2. Degrees of Latitude — Charting the New World was the task of American surveyors and European mapmakers. This is a 21st-century look at the craftsmanship and importance of 18th-century mapmaking —revealing to student historians the geography of a rapidly changing world.(Live at 10:00/9:00 am CT on Nov 16) 3. Buying Respectability — By 1700, the demand for goods and services led to a "consumer revolution." Explore the 18th century's changing economy, including the status symbols of this class society, social mobility, taxation, the monetary system, and the impact of British mercantilism on America. (Live at 10:00/9:00 am CT on Dec 14) 4. Influenced by None — "Freedom of the press" is a principle that Americans take for granted. Eighteenth-century printers, though, were not free to express independent points of view. Explore the world of Clementina Rind, printer of the Virginia Gazette in preRevolutionary War America. (Live at 10:00/9:00 am CT on Jan 18) 104 • 2006/2007 M�Instructional Videos WEEKLY BROADCAST SCHEDULES Live Broadcast (A): Thursdays at 10:00/9:00 am CT (See above for dates.) Weekly Broadcast (B): Repeats the following Thursdays at 10:00/9:00 am CT before the next live program. Kentucky in Africa K C Exploring Social Studies in Africa and Kentucky Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Teaching Materials: Videocassette: 4–12 24 minutes Unlimited Downloadable at www.ket/org/education/guides See order form, pg. 125 KY Academic Expectations: 2.16, 2.19, 2.20 A Kentucky Life special which focuses on the emigration of Kentuckians to the nation of Liberia, West Africa. In the 1800's, before and after the Civil War, around 15,000 freed American slaves went to live in Africa. This video traces the ex-slaves journey from Kentucky in America to Kentucky in Africa. As they arrived in Africa they formed their own independent country, "Little America" as some called it. They named their towns after American names such as "Kentucky in Africa" and "Clay-Ashland". These towns are still there today and in many ways they live like Americans. This program allows students to experience first-hand this historical relationship by hearing the stories of the actual people involved speak in their own words. People like Abraham Lincoln, Henry Clay, Alfred Russell (a president of Liberia from Kentucky) and many more. BROADCAST SCHEDULE Thursday, October 19 at 12:30 pm/11:30 am CT Thursday, March 22 at 12:30 pm/11:30 am CT Kentucky’s Underground Railroad: Passage to Freedom K C PBS Eddie Award Winner Trace Kentucky’s tracks on the Underground Railroad Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: Videocassette: Web Site: 4–12 60 minutes Unlimited Downloadable at www.ket.org/education/guides See order form, pg. 125 www.ket.org/underground KY Academic Expectations: 2.14, 2.19, 2.20, 2.26, 4.5 Kentucky’s location on the border of slave and nonslave states and its unique geography as the only state surrounded on three sides by rivers, created opportunities for people who were willing to risk their lives to live in freedom, and those willing to risk everything to help them. KET’s documentary, Kentucky’s Underground Railroad – Passage to Freedom, tells the stories of fugitive slaves and anti-slavery advocates in Kentucky. Thursday, September 14 at 9:00/8:00 am CT Tuesday, November 21 at 2:15/1:15 pm CT Thursday, January 11 at 9:00/8:00 am CT Tuesday, April 24 at 2:15/1:15 pm CT KENTUCKY’S UNDERGROUND RAILROAD WEB SITE Includes a brief history of slavery in Kentucky; teacher resources; audio and video segments from the documentary, including additional footage not seen in the broadcast; and a discussion forum. The Web site promotes historical preservation and community research to document more stories of the fugitive slave movement in Kentucky. In addition, it includes arts and humanities resources and discussion questions. Kentucky’s Underground Railroad Professional Development Series–see page 121 Liberty Hall Thursday, October 19 at 1:00 pm/12 noon CT Thursday, March 22 at 1:00 pm/12 noon CT The Prehistoric Mounds of Uruguay: Linking the Past and the Future K C Exploring archaeology in South America Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: 4-6 24 minutes Unlimited Videocassette: Web Site: See order form, pg. 125 www.dinacyt.gub.uy/proykent/index_i.htm Print Materials: Teacher and Student materials available at Web site KY Academic Expectations: 2.19, 2.20, 2.21, 2.28 Product of a cultural and educational exchange project between the governments of Uruguay and Kentucky, this video introduces the principles of archaeological field research and raises awareness of the importance of preserving our cultural heritage. South American students help archaeologists collect data at a prehistoric site in Uruguay that was occupied by a mound-building society, then return to the classroom to use what they have learned to explore topics in social studies and language learning. The program will air in both English and Spanish versions. The Web site, which includes background information on the project and links to related resources, is also bilingual. Note: The schedule for the Spanish version Los Constructores de Cerritos del Uruguay: Uniendo el Pasado y el Futuro is located on page 36. BROADCAST SCHEDULE Thursday, August 31 at 3:30/2:30 pm CT Thursday, January 4 at 12 noon/11:00 am CT C Explore the home of a founding Kentucky family Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: Videocassette: 4-12 20 Minutes School year For 4th-6th grade materials visit www.libertyhall.org $18.00 To order, email libhall@dcr.net KY Academic Expectations: 2.14, 2.15, Z2.16, 2.20 Take a trip to Frankfort and back through time to see the lives of the Browns at Liberty Hall. This video will show students the beautiful historic home built in 1796 while describing what life was like for one family as they moved to and settled in the muddy backwater of Frankfort. During this video, students will learn what life was like in Kentucky's early statehood; learn about governmental changes that took place in the U.S. around 1800; hear the story of Liberty Hall's ghost, the Gray Lady; and see maps, engravings, and paintings from the 18th and 19th centuries. www.ket.org/education/newsletters 2006/2007 M�Instructional Videos� • 105 SOCIALSTUDIES BROADCAST SCHEDULE BROADCAST SCHEDULE Women of Kentucky: Our Legacy, Our Future K Kentucky Women Leaders – Past and Present Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: Videocassette: Web Site: 4–12 60 minutes Unlimited Downloadable at Web site See order form, pg. 125 www.womeninkentucky.com KY Academic Expectations: 2.14, 2.15, 2.16, 2.20 SOCIALSTUDIES Through interviews with women leaders, primary documents, and brief biographical sketches, this film encourages young people to become more committed to Kentucky’s political process by becoming grassroots advocates and future office holders. The program inspires interest in Kentucky history, focusing on the fine heritage of its women, and promotes the values of citizenship and public service by documenting the progress of women in positions of community leadership and elected office. NOTE: This program is offered on videotape only. See tape order information on pages 125-126. Pyramid C PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS 1. What Was Ancient Egypt Like? — geography of Egypt; importance of the Nile; unification of Upper and Lower Egypt; dynasties; social structure; religious beliefs; creation myth; mummification techniques 2. Why Were the Pyramids Built? — myth of Osiris; development of pyramid complexes; importance of pyramid shape; social, cultural, religious, and political significance of pyramids 3. How Were the Pyramids Built? — ancient tools and construction techniques; theories of construction; statistics about the size of the pyramid; pyramid builders; Tutankhamen’s tomb; hieroglyphics; the Rosetta Stone; archaeology; dynasty review BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Thursday, August 24 at 3:00/2:00 pm CT (Programs 1-3; 1 hour) Block Feed II: Thursday, February 15 at 2:00/1:00 pm CT (Programs 1-3; 1 hour) Our Presidents In America’s History Personal and historical profiles Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: 5-12 9-13 Minutes School year Downloadable at www.ket.org/education/guides KY Academic Expectations: 2.14, 2.16, 2.20 Ancient Egypt and the pyramids Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: 5–9 20 minutes School year See order form, pg. 124 KY Academic Expectations: 2.16, 2.19, 2.20 Based on the book by David Macaulay, Pyramid takes us on a voyage of discovery to see and feel the mystery, romance, and overwhelming splendor of ancient Egypt and the pyramids during the Fourth Dynasty of the Old Kingdom (c. 2500 BC). Photo: Rick McComb 106 • 2006/2007 M�Instructional Videos This revision of Portraits of American Presidents focuses on individual Presidents' influence on the historical events of their eras, shortens each program to correlate better with classroom units of study, provides better graphic details in maps, omits on-camera commentators, and adds two programs: #1. "The Making of America's Presidency," and #17, "G.H.W. Bush, Clinton & G.W. Bush. PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS/LENGTHS 1. Making of America's Presidency — Shows how our early history 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. Thursday, August 31 at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 1-17, 3 hours, 15 minutes) Block Feed II: Thursday, January 25 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-17, 3 hours, 15 minutes) The Remarkable Clarks KC A docudrama on one of Kentucky's most famous families Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Videocassette: Web Site: Upper elementary-12 30 minutes Unlimited See order form, pg. 125 www.locustgrove.org/ KY Academic Expectations: 2.20, 2.22 Captain William Clark of Lewis and Clark was the younger brother of Louisville founder and Revolutionary War hero General George Rogers Clark. As part of the bicentennial celebration of the Lewis and Clark expedition, KET's production of The Remarkable Clarks looks back over the lives of the two brothers and their sister, Lucy Clark Croghan. This docu-drama was staged at the Croghan home-Locust Grove in Louisville — which in the early 19th century was a gathering place for the prominent political and social figures of the day. BROADCAST SCHEDULE Thursday, October 12 at 1:00 pm/12 noon CT Thursday, March 15 at 1:00 pm/12 noon CT Roman City Modules C Ancient Roman engineering and technology Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: 5–12 20 minutes School year See order form, pg. 125 KY Academic Expectations: 2.15, 2.19, 2.20 Author/illustrator David Macauley visits sites throughout the ancient Roman Empire to point out examples of the remarkable achievements of Roman engineers and show how their architectural principles and technical innovations are still reflected in our civic construction projects. PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS 1. People and Society — comparisons between Roman cities and modern cities. 2. The Built Environment — Roman innovations in materials and construction techniques. 3. Daily Life BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Thursday, August 10 at 2:30/1:30 pm CT (Programs 1-3; 1 hour) Block Feed II: Thursday, February 15 at 3:00/2:00 pm CT (Programs 1-3; 1 hour) 2006/2007 M�Instructional Videos� • 107 SOCIALSTUDIES 7. fortuitously led to George Washington, and prepares us for the later growth of Presidential power. (12:10) George Washington — Features Washington's establishment of Presidential dignity with democratic forbearance during the Revolutionary War and the creation of the Constitution. (9:11) John Adams & Thomas Jefferson — The rise of political parties, the XYZ Affair, Marbury v. Madison, and the Louisiana Purchase were among the great events during these presidents tenure (12:43) Madison & Monroe — Both deal with foreign threats in the War of 1812 and the Monroe Doctrine. (12:53) J.Q. Adams, Jackson & Van Buren — Features injustices to African and Native Americans while white Americans are moving west. (12:45) Harrison, Tyler, Polk, & Taylor — As the Westward Movement and Manifest Destiny gained momentum, controversies about slavery, border disputes, and territorial rights were reflected in President conflicts and short, unmemorable terms of office. (12:29) Fillmore, Pierce, & Buchanan — Features the Kansas-Nebraska Act, the Dred Scott decision, founding of the Republican Party, and John Brown's raid. (9:19) Abraham Lincoln — Remembered for his great writing and tragic character, Lincoln was dedicated to keeping the Union intact, delaying emancipation of the slaves and suspending some legal rights during the Civil War. (10:20) Johnson, Grant, & Hayes — The Reconstruction period seriously damaged the Presidency with Johnson's impeachment, Grant's corruption scandal, and Hayes election fraud. Also the Gilded Age of economic expansion, western outlaws, Edison's inventions, and massive immigration. (11:02) Garfield, Arthur, Cleveland, & Harrison — Features Garfield's assassination, industrialization, Urbanization, and immigrations. As America's frontier closes world affairs expand. (12:52) Cleveland, McKinley, & Theodore Roosevelt — Features Cleveland's economic problems, McKinley's economic upturn, and growing American wealth and power during Roosevelt's Term of office. (9:54) Taft, Wilson, Harding, Coolidge, & Hoover — Features World War I, League of Nations, business boom of the 20's, and growing military shadows. (12:39) Franklin D. Roosevelt — Contrasts his own handicap and his famous speeches against fear with the crises of the Great Depression and World War II. Moving documentary footage creates an experience of history both sweeping and personal. (10:10) Truman, Eisenhower, & Kennedy — Features WWII ending with the Atomic Bomb, the Marshall Plan, and the Truman Doctrine. The popular Eisenhower continues the Cold War. The stylish Kennedy succeeds with the Cuban Missile Crisis, but assassination cuts his promise short. (12:05) Johnson, Nixon, & Ford — Features the Great Society, the Voting Rights Acts, Civil Rights victories, and the Vietnam War. Martin Luther King's and Robert Kennedy's assassination shock the world. The Watergate affair forces Nixon to resign. (12:18) Carter, Reagan, & G.H.W. Bush — Features Middle East problems, the Iran Contra scandal, recession, and the end of the communist threat. Reagan restores some Presidential prestige. (11:07) Clinton & G.W. Bush — Clinton's presidency was undermined by an increasingly apathetic public, a Republican legislature, and personal scandals. G.W. Bush took office with an Electoral College victory despite losing the popular vote, soon finding his attention focused mainly on Terrorism. (8:56) BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Ancient Civilizations C World history Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: 6–12 30 minutes School year Downloadable at www.ket.org/education/guides KY Academic Expectations: 2.16, 2.19, 2.20, 2.25 This six-part series studies the ancient civilizations of China, India, Mesopotamia, Egypt, Greece, Rome, and Meso-America from the invention of writing 5,000 years ago to the fall of Rome in 450 A.D. SOCIALSTUDIES The programs are skills-based, stimulating comparison, analysis, synthesis, and conclusion, and are organized thematically. By examining the basic human search for food, security, and creativity, the series traces the development of ancient economies, governments, and cultures. The daily life of the inhabitants of the various civilizations is explored using models, reconstructions, and actual artifacts. Particular attention is paid to the role of women in each society. Maps and animation are used to present lateral time comparisons. PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS 1. The Beginning Is in the End 2. Balancing the Budget — The invention of agriculture and the subse- 3. 4. 5. 6. quent domestication of animals gradually led to economies based on trade. This evolution is studied in detail in Egypt. The program also looks at the Minoans and Phoenicians. Safekeeping — This study of ancient systems of security reveals how these systems evolved into sophisticated governments and codes of law. Athens and Sparta are contrasted, and the Etruscans and republican Rome are examined. On the Town — The cultural high points of ancient civilizations are examined, with a focus on the Golden Age of Greece. Legacies — The debt we owe to past civilizations — in particular, Rome — is explored. The End Is in the Beginning — The reasons for the decline and fall of the civilizations explored in this series are examined. BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Thursday, August 24 at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 1-6; 3 hours) Block Feed II: Thursday, January 11 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-6; 3 hours) Great Campaigns of the Civil War 2. The Killing Grounds — Covers the major battles of 1862 beginning with Shiloh and ending with Antietam 3. The Confederate Resurgence — Traces the period from late 1862 to 1863 including the battle of Gettysburg 4. The Turning Tide and the Final Peace — Chronicles the confrontation between Ulysses S. Grant and Robert E. Lee at the Battles of Wilderness, Spotsylvania, Cold Harbor and Petersburg, including Sherman’s capture of Atlanta and subsequent “March to the Sea” BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Thursday, November 2 at 2:00/1:00 pm CT (Programs 1-4; 2 hours) Block Feed II: Thursday, March 8 at 2:00/1:00 pm CT (Programs 1-4; 2 hours) American Voices C Using interviews from the Federal Writers' Project -- A look at America between the wars Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Program Notes: KY Academic Expectations: 2.14, 2.16, 2.17, 2.20 In the late 1930's, the U.S. Government commissioned an oral history project in which thousands of ordinary Americans took part. They described their lives and experiences: immigrants who came in search of the American dream; Americans who flourished in the boom times, then lost it all in the crash; poor farmers in the South; meatpackers in the North; and New Deal relief workers. The powerful human narratives, archival film, and historic photographs combine to provide a unique and interesting look at American's lives. PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS 1. Immigrant America — Between 1900-1917, eight million Immigrants 2. 3. 4. Realistic reenactments of pivotal battles Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: 6–12 30 minutes School year See order form, pg. 124 KY Academic Expectations: 1.13, 2.20, 2.24 This award-winning series brings the Civil War to life through portraits and readings from letters, speeches, and diaries. PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS 1. First Blood — Chronicles the battles at Fort Sumter, Manassas, and Fort Donelson, and the prevailing issues of the Civil War’s first years 108 • 2006/2007 M�Instructional Videos 7-12 24 minutes School year http://pmi.itmonline.com/netnotes/ (click on American Voices) 5. crossed the Atlantic to start a new life. Could America fulfill all of their expectations for success and prosperity? Boom and Bust — The Roaring Twenties and the Jazz Age after the horrors of World War I was a boom time of prosperity and pleasure. How real was the prosperity for most Americans, and why did the good times crash in 1929? Hard Times — In the early 1930's, the U.S. experienced the worst depression in her history. Fifteen million Americans lost their jobs. Whas was it like to live through the Great Depression? New Deal — In 1932, Franklin D. Roosevelt toured the country and promised a New Deal for the American people. How successful would his New Deal prove in tackling the challenges ahead? Black America — In the early decades of the 20th century, Black Americans experienceed a harsh side to America's promise as land of the free. How real for them was the American Dream? BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Thursday, September 28 at 2:00/1:00 pm CT (Programs 1-5; 2 hours, 1 minute) Block Feed II: Tuesday, November 7 at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 1-5; 2 hours, 1 minute) Block Feed III: Thursday, January 4 at 12:30 pm/11:30 am CT (Programs 1-5; 2 hours, 1 minute) Block Feed IV: Tuesday, April 10 at 1:30/12:30 pm CT (Programs 1-5; 2 hours, 1 minute) Events of the 20th Century From the horror of the Holocaust to the triumph of the moon landing Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Material: 7–12 15 minutes School year Downloadable at www.ket.org/education/guides The Kentucky Humanities Council celebrates the state’s bicentennial, sponsoring a series of traveling stage shows in which actors portrayed characters from Kentucky history. This KET production offers five of the performances: • • • Nancy Sherburne as Belle Brezing, the notorious Lexington madam. Laura Lee Duncan O’Connell as Cora Wilson Stewart, the adult education pioneer who opened the “Moonlight Schools.” George T. Vaughn as the Rev. Elisha Green, a former slave who became a Baptist minister and fought for civil rights. Jimmy Lowe as author Jesse Stuart. Vic Hellard Jr. as Edwin Porch Morrow, Kentucky's Republican governor from 1919 to 1923, who championed women's rights, fair tax assessments, governmental accountability, and, above all, education reform. KY Academic Expectations: 2.14, 2.15, 2.16, 2.20 • • PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS 1. Apollo XI — Through a captivating musical montage of graphics and NOTE: This program is offered on videotape only. See tape order information on pages 125-126. 2. The Middle Ages This series provides insight into the major historical events of the 20th century. Each program blends archival footage and interviews to give students a unique look at the momentous occurrences of the period. 3. 5. 6. 7. 8. BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Thursday, September 7 at 2:00/1:00 pm CT (Programs 1-8; 2 hours) Block Feed II: Thursday, February 8 at 2:00/1:00 pm CT (Programs 1-8; 2 hours) Kentucky Chautauqua K Characters from Kentucky history Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Videocassette: 7–12 60 minutes Unlimited See order form, pg. 125 English history in the 14th and 15th centuries Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: 7–12 20 minutes School year KY Academic Expectations: 2.16, 2.20 Each program focuses on a different aspect of life, showing the everyday lives of peasants, traders, church officials, and townspeople and how their lives influenced changes in political and social movements, architecture, religion, government, and commerce. All programs incorporate source materials or evidence from the period, even when dramatized. PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS 1. The Peasants’ Revolt — the Peasants’ Revolt of 1381 from the per- spectives of both the peasants and King Richard II 2. The Castle — evolution of castle design and the changing role of the castle 3. The Church — a variety of perspectives on the role of religion 4. The Town — why towns developed and what life was like in them 5. The Traders — the importance and complexity of the medieval wool industry; modes of travel during the Middle Ages BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Thursday, September 7 at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 1-5; 1 hour, 45 minutes) Block Feed II: Tuesday, November 14 at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 1-5; 1 hour, 45 minutes) Block Feed III: Thursday, February 8 at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 1-5; 1 hour, 45 minutes) Block Feed II: Tuesday, April 17 at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 1-5; 1 hour, 45 minutes) KY Academic Expectations: 2.20, 2.26 2006/2007 M�Instructional Videos� • 109 SOCIALSTUDIES 4. archival film footage, viewers gain an overview of the mission from blast off to splash down. Extensive insight is provided by Apollo XI astronaut Buzz Aldrin Chernobyl: Lessons Learned — A brief history of the nuclear disaster at Chernobyl; the program also explains how people continue to be affected to this day JFK Assassination: Transfer of Power — The role the death of John F. Kennedy played in modifying the United States Constitution, the transition of presidential power, and the safety of future presidents Lessons of the Holocaust — This program examines the persecution of Jews in Nazi Germany and demonstrates that the ideas and opinions of that time are still prevalent in our society today Martin Luther King: Civil Rights Movement — The Civil Rights Movement through the words of Dr. Martin Luther King; excerpts from some of his most stirring speeches are put into context through the recollections of people who knew him best Return to Vietnam — A history of the conflict in Vietnam: what led up to it, how the United States became involved, and what happened prior to the North Vietnamese invasion of Saigon Conversation with Rosa Parks — Students will learn the importance of knowing their own heritage and standing up for what they believe in Return to Auschwitz — This program will take the viewer on a tour of Auschwitz, the most notorious Nazi “death camp” of World War II. Several survivors who have returned to Auschwitz after a half-century tell their forced inarceration and the hardships they had to endure America Past C Development of America from the Colonial period to the eve of the Civil War Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: Videocassette: 8–12 15 minutes Unlimited Call 1-800-457-4509, ext. 206 or visit www.ait.net See order form, pg. 125 KY Academic Expectations: 2.16, 2.19, 2.20, 2.25 America Past provides teachers with opportunities to enhance their American history courses by emphasizing social history while providing direct and clear connections to the curriculum, extending and enriching typical textbook content, and highlighting personal experiences and dramatic events. SOCIALSTUDIES PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS 1. New Spain — how the Spanish affected ways of life and culture in the New World 2. New France — how the French influenced ways of life and culture in North America 3. Southern Colonies — the influence of the plantation system on other aspects of Southern life 4. New England Colonies — the role of religion; the hardships faced by early settlers at Plymouth; how geography affected ways of life 5. Canals and Steamboats — how the Mississippi and Ohio rivers affected east-west trade; life on the early canals and steamboats 6. Roads and Railroads — how changes in land transportation affected regional and national developments 7. The Abolitionists — goals of the abolitionists; Garrison and Douglas; Northern and Southern reaction to the abolitionists 8. The Role of Women — the beginnings and the development of the women's rights movement 9. Social Life — 19th-century family life; population changes; reform movements; medicine 10. Moving West — factors that motivated Americans to move westward; Manifest Destiny 11. The Industrial North — Industrial Revolution; industry in the North; effects of industrialization 12. The Antebellum South — social classes in the pre-Civil War era BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Thursday, September 14 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-12; 3 hours) Block Feed II: Thursday, April 5 at 12:30 pm/11:30 am CT (Programs 1-12; 3 hours) PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS 1. Make Germany Pay — Chronicles the aftermath of World War I in Germany 2. Boom and Bust — The story of the development of the modern consumer society in America and its sudden crash in 1929 3. Hitler’s Germany — The rise of Adolph Hitler and the Nazi party 4. Roosevelt and the New Deal — The Federal programs designed to provide Americans relief from the Great Depression 5. Stalin and the Modernization of Russia — Chronicles the industrial and agricultural reforms initiated by the Communist Party and the persecution of their opponents 6. Why Appeasement? — British Prime Minister, Neville Chamberlain’s historic visit to Munich in 1938 in which Czechoslovakia was effectively ceded to Germany to avoid involving Britain and France in a world war. 7. Britain Alone — Covers the Battle of Britain and the Battle of the Atlantic during World War II, ending with the involvement of Russia and the United States 8. Pearl Harbor to Hiroshima — The war between Japan and the United States 9. The Road to Berlin — World War II from 1942 to 1945, including the Soviet victory over Germany, the bombing of London, German surrender and opening of the concentration camps BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Thursday, October 12 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-9; 3 hours) Block Feed II: Thursday, March 15 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-9; 3 hours) See Also... Twentieth Century History Appleseed John (3-7) — page 23 Major events in modern world history Electronic Field Trip to Perryville (4-12) — page 31 Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: Electronic Field Trip to the Mountain Home Place (4-12) - page 33 11–12 20 minutes School year Call 1-217-359-6130 KY Academic Expectations: 2.16, 2.18, 2.20, 4.5 Designed and produced for classroom use, this series illuminates the events and issues that have been critical in shaping modern world history. Drawing on archival footage, animated maps, and contemporary illustrations, the programs document actions that have reverberated around the world. 110 • 2006/2007 M�Instructional Videos Econ and Me (primary-5) — page 50 Electronic Field Trip to White Hall Historic Site, Home of Cassius M. Clay (4-12) — page 35 Humanities Connections (7-12) — page 17 Teach Me Japanese (Primary-5) — page 37 A World of Our Own: Kentucky Folkways (8-12) — page 26 TECHNOLOGY & MEDIA program titles F F KET School Video Project 2006: My Kentucky Home (K-12) K C KET School Video Project 2007: My Kentucky Home (K-12) K C Media Mania (Primary-4) Making News Quiz (4-12) K C Hollywood Homeroom: Producing Classroom Videos with Hollywood Magic (K-12) Making Grimm Movies (6-12) Mountain Media (9-12) F New or Revised for 2006/2007 C Closed Captioned K KET Production KET School Video Project 2006: My Kentucky Home K-12 student-produced documentaries Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Videocassette: K-12 2 hours Unlimited See order form, pg. 125 This KET production shows examples of K-12 student videos from around Kentucky. See the work of these talented young producers. This year’s theme of My Kentucky Home emphasizes Kentucky history as a social studies project. K-12 student-produced documentaries Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Videocassette: K-12 TBA Unlimited See order form, pg. 125 Streaming video will be available at Web site after May 15 Web Site: www.ket.org/education/video_project.htm KY Academic Expectations: 1.16, 2.20, 2.22, 2.36, 2.37, 2.38, 5.2 This KET production will show examples of K-12 student videos from around Kentucky. See the work of these talented young producers. This year’s theme of My Kentucky Home emphasizes Kentucky history as a social studies project. BROADCAST SCHEDULE Tuesday, May 15 at 7:00/6:00 am CT Tuesday, May 15 at 12 noon/11:00 am CT Thursday, May 17 at 8:00/7:00 am CT Thursday, May 17 at 2:00/1:00 pm CT Media Mania Information literacy for elementary students Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: Videocassette: Primary–4 20 minutes School year See order form, pg. 124 See order form, pg. 125 KY Academic Expectations: 1.1, 1.10, 5.3 Works submitted from Anderson Co High, Appalachian Media Institute; Appalshop, Bardstown High, Bourbon Co Middle, Cartmell Elementary, Central Hardin High, Corbin High, Fairvew High, Gray Middle, Henderson Co High, Jackson Co High, Kentucky School for the Deaf, Lakeside Elementary, LaRue Co Intermediate, Lebanon Middle, Lewis Co High, McDowell Elementary, Meadow View Elementary, Munfordville Elementary, Newburg Middle, Newport Middle, Oldham Co High, Providence Elementary, Shearer Elementary, Simon Kenton High, Sorgho Elementary, South Elementary, Warren Central High, and Whitley Co High BROADCAST SCHEDULE Photo: Rick McComb Tuesday, September 5 at 1:00 pm/12 noon CT Tuesday, December 12 at 7:00/6:00 am CT Tuesday, February 6 at 1:00 pm/12 noon CT 2006/2007 M�Instructional Videos� • 111 TECHNOLOGY&MEDIA Streaming video available at Web site Web Site: www.ket.org/education/video_project.htm KY Academic Expectations: 1.16, 2.20, 2.22, 2.36, 2.37, 2.38, 5.2 KET School Video Project 2007: My Kentucky Home Media Mania helps 2nd, 3rd, and 4th graders learn to use the library media center. Mortimer, a lovable media monster, helps kids have fun learning about card catalogs, the Dewey decimal system, fiction and nonfiction books, and doing research. PROGRAM TITLES 1. Fiction/Nonfiction 2. Card Catalog 3. Research 4. Reference How to use the video camera effectively Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Tuesday, August 8 at 2:30/1:30 pm CT (Programs 1-4; 1 hour, 20 minutes) Block Feed II: Tuesday, January 9 at 2:30/1:30 pm CT (Programs 1-4; 1 hour, 20 minutes) Making News Quiz K C See how a professional news program is produced Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Videocassette: Web Site: 4-12 20 minutes Unlimited See order form, pg. 125 Streaming video available at Web site www.ket.org/newsquiz KY Academic Expectations: 2.20, 2.22, 2.36, 2.37, 2.38 Making News Quiz looks behind the scenes at KET’s weekly live current events program for 4-8th graders. The students will see video of the News Quiz team planning, writing, producing, and broadcasting the program. TECHNOLOGY&MEDIA Hollywood Homeroom: Producing Classroom Videos With Hollywood Magic Interviews with the News Quiz crew demonstrate how the program is based on the writing process. The program also models good production values for school video producers. See how it’s done by watching Making News Quiz on KET3 or online in the streamed Web version at the News Quiz website. A KET production. BROADCAST SCHEDULE Thursday, September 14 at 1:25/12:25 pm CT Thursday, October 19 at 1:25/12:25 pm CT Tuesday, November 7 at 8:00/7:00 am CT Tuesday, April 10 at 8:30/7:30 am CT Photo: Rick McComb 112 • 2006/2007 M�Instructional Videos K-12 15 minutes School year Contact Ann Tsao at 213-241-4007 or email ann.tsao@lausd.net KY Academic Expectations: 2.22, 3.4, 5.2 Hollywood Homeroom: Producing Classroom Videos With Hollywood Magic is a series of four programs that address how to use the video camera more effectively. From pre-production planning, to framing shots properly, to editing the finished product, Hollywood Homeroom offers practical tips to make classroom videos outstanding. Students can use the video medium to demonstrate their knowledge in all of the curricular areas. The series features classroom teachers who are in various stages of video production. Teachers and students share their experiences and discuss issues that beginners should consider. PROGRAM TITLES 1. Getting Started: Choosing a Subject 2. Pre-Production 3. Getting into Production 4. Post-Production BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Tuesday, September 5 at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 1-4; 1 hour) Block Feed II: Tuesday, December 12 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-4; 1 hour) Block Feed III: Tuesday, February 6 at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 1-4; 1 hour) Block Feed IV: Tuesday, May 15 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-4; 1 hour) Mountain Media Storytelling through film-making Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Videocassette: 9–12 30 minutes Unlimited See order form, pg. 125 KY Academic Expectations: 1.11, 1.13, 2.16, 2.22, 2.25, 4.2, 5.2 Making Grimm Movies How to make creative and inexpensive movies/media literacy Grade Levels: Length: Taping Rights: Print Materials: Videocassette: Web Site: 6–12 20 minutes School year Order at Web site See order form, pg. 125 www.davenportfilms.com KY Academic Expectations: 1.13, 2.22, 3.4, 5.2 PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS 1. Making Grimm Movies, part 1—scripting and editing 2. Making Grimm Movies, part 2—design: location, sets, makeup, and props 3. Making Grimm Movies, part 3—production: producing, editing, and directing BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Tuesday, August 8 at 1:30/12:30 pm CT (Programs 1-3; 1 hour) Block Feed II: Wednesday, December 6 at 1:00 pm/12 noon CT (Programs 1-3; 1 hour) Block Feed III: Tuesday, January 9 at 1:30/12:30 pm CT (Programs 1-3; 1 hour) Block Feed IV: Wednesday, May 16 at 8:30/7:30 am CT (Programs 1-3; 1 hour) and traditions associated with death 2. As Long as It Takes/Simon — a documentary about striking coal miners and a folk tale brought to life through claymation 3. Sacred Vows/Fat Man — a documentary about marriage in Appalachia and an animated folk tale 4. McRoberts: An Eastern Kentucky Coal Camp — a documentary about a coal town 5. To Hell and Back — a documentary about Vietnam veterans in Eastern Kentucky NOTE: This series is offered on videotape only. See tape order information on pages 125-126. Try KET’s MediaWorks listerv to recieve and discuss information on video & multi-media production equipment, methods, and news. To join, email Jeff Gray at jgray@ket.org 2006/2007 M�Instructional Videos� • 113 TECHNOLOGY&MEDIA Making Grimm Movies shows young people how to use resources and locations in their own communities to produce inexpensive films. Examples from the Brothers Grimm folktale films and interviews with key production staff members guide students through the rigors of translating tales into scripts and storyboards, working with teams of actors and crew members, selecting locations, establishing continuity during filming, and editing fragments into a coherent narrative. The series does not simply tell students how to “read” media; it shows them how to “write” it. PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS 1. A Dying Tradition — a documentary exploring the mountain rituals MediaWorks Photo: Rick McComb High school interns participating in Appalshop’s Appalachian Media Institute show and talk about their own videos in Mountain Media. Each program showcases one or more of the students’ films and the young filmmakers answering one another’s questions on how they chose and researched their topics, interview and production techniques, problems they encountered and how they solved them, and collaboration and teamwork in making and editing a film. DISTANCELEARNING DISTANCE LEARNING KET Distance Learning combines multimedia and personal interation with teachers to bring courses in humanities, physics, German, and Latin directly to students in classrooms across Kentucky. These courses challenge students with rigorous academic work that strengthens their educational credentials and prepares them for advanced placement and college entrance exams. Students watch lessons on videotapes, CD-ROMs, or DVDs produced by KET Distance Learning. These lessons include demonstrations, performances, lectures, animation, and film clips which present the material in a lively format that complements most learning styles. Students participate in interactive learning activities through the companion Web site or by using a CD-ROM, putting these instructional practices to their best uses. Master teachers, who have a combined 82 years of instructional experience, including 40 years of expertise in distance learning, lead the instruction. Unlike many online courses, KET Distance Learning offers personal interaction with experienced educators who work closely with students throughout the course. With proper supervision, the course materials may also be used with small groups or full classes. All three courses use the same college textbook. There is no lab component. physics Physics I Physics principles at work in everyday phenomena Physics I provides students with an appreciation and understanding of the physical world while preparing them for college courses and careers that require an understanding of physics. The guided workshop utilizes a CDROM with movies and animations, labs, and videotaped lessons to give students direct experience with the phenomena and provides a self-paced learning environment. Students discover physics principles themselves by analyzing data taken from the movies on the CD-ROM or from labs they conduct. The Internet is also used extensively in the course. This course may be taken on a full-year schedule, or in a block schedule, one-semester format. AP Physics B, and Honors Physics Preparation for college physics AP Physics B, and Honors Physics all utilize a set of 27 CD-ROMs (or 4 DVDs) produced for the AP course. Multimedia-based instruction includes lectures, demonstrations, and problem solving. Students work independently with minimal need for supervision at their school. The teacher is available via e-mail and phone when help is needed. The teacher grades tests—homework is graded by computer. 114 • 2006/2007 M�Instructional Videos AP Physics B is a rigorous preparation for the AP Physics B test, and the Medical College Aptitude Test. It uses college-level syllabi, homework, and tests. (Full year.) Honors Physics is for students who want to learn physics at a high level, but who are not interested in the full AP Physics B program. (Full year.) Visit the Web site at www.dl.ket.org or contact the instructor Chuck Duncan at 1-800-333-9764 or cduncan@ket.org. German Program Language and cultures of the German-speaking people German I is an interactive multimedia course designed to engage students in mastering the basic skills of speaking, listening, writing, and reading. The German video series Fokus Deutsch and its accompanying materials are used to give students an authentic picture of the Germanspeaking culture. Conversation practice is provided via telephone interaction with tutors. The course is structured for high school 9th12th graders, but is available to highly-motivated middle school 8th graders. This course may be taken on a full-year schedule, or in a block schedule, one-semester format. German III continues the multimedia approach to help students extend the language skills learned in German I and II. In this accelerated course, students will explore the topics relevant to today's Germanspeaking countries while expanding their vocabulary, and reviewing and extending their language skills. The video series Fokus Deutsch provides the core of the content. Conversation practice is provided via telephones. Assignments and exercises integrate an interactive, multimedia approach to language learning. This course may be taken on a full-year schedule, or in block schedule, one-semester format. Visit the Web site at www.dl.ket.org, or contact the instructor Harold Hayes at 1-800-333-9764 or hhayes@ket.org Humanities Program History and appreciation of visual and performing arts Humanities through the Arts is a survey of the development of humankind as reflected in dance, theater, visual arts, and music. This high school class promotes an understanding of the connections between creative works and their historical and cultural contexts, and fosters an appreciation of all the arts. This is a one-credit, one-semester course designed to be compatible with block scheduling and to be used in partnership with a certified classroom teacher. It makes available a wide range of arts and humanities resources that teachers can use, not only as part of this class, but in a variety of ways in the future. Teachers registering for Humanities through the Arts will be able to use their password to access Themes, a web-based resource that includes projects suitable for students with a wide range of ability levels. This resource organizes visual arts, theater, dance, music, and literary topics in three thematic strands: The Natural World Relationships Search for Self Humanities Connections is an innovative set of resources for students in grades 7-12. These four productions consists of programs for both teacher and student audiences and cover the basic elements of theater, dance, music and visual arts. They are written in direct compliance with the Kentucky Core Content for Arts and Humanities and National Standards in the Arts. The accompanying Connections Web site provides an episode summary, vocabulary, ideas for projects, works consulted, and a teacher response form for each of the productions. Visit the Web site at www.dl.ket.org or contact the instructor C. Geraci at 1-800-333-9764 or cgeraci@ket.org. Latin Program Language and Roman culture Latin I students read Latin stories through which they also study the vocabulary and structures of Latin. Learning Latin also improves students’ ability to decode English words, their understanding of the English language, and prepares them to study other world languages. Mythology and an overview of Roman contributions to Western civilization are stressed. The study of Latin often improves one’s performance on achievement tests. The instruction follows the Ecce Romani I text. The course is structured for high school 9th-12th graders, but is available to highly-motivated middle school 7th or 8th graders. This course may be taken on a full-year schedule, or in a block schedule, one-semester format. Middle school students may also split this course over the 7th and 8th grades. Latin II is designed to increase student proficiency in reading and speaking Latin. Additional vocabulary and grammatical structures, cultural and historic materials, and excerpts from original Roman authors all serve to enhance students’ understanding of the language and culture of the ancient Romans. Students apply what they learn of the ancients to better understand our world as they see the many influences of Latin in our lives—from our language to our government. The course follows the program set forth in the Ecce Romani II text series. This course may be taken on a full-year schedule, or in a block schedule, one-semester format. Latin III is a student directed class taught via Internet. This class is designed to increase vocabulary and assist students in completion of the corpus of grammar required to read many authentic Latin writings. Students read selections from Caesar, Cicero, Augustus, Pliny, Trajan and Eutropius. Through the words of these Roman authors, students increase their knowledge of the intricacies of the late Roman Republic and early Roman Empire. Grammatical concepts and Latin vocabulary are reinforced in the context of these selections. Agenda, assignments, graded and non-graded activities, quizzes and tests are all posted on the Internet. The text is Ecce Romani III with several ancillary readings from Internet sites. Internet access is required for the course. Literature of the late Republic and early Empire—AP Syllabus Latin Literature is a student-directed class taught via Internet. Students read authentic works from Latin authors, concentrating in particular on the poems of Horace and Catullus, in preparation for the Advanced Placement Latin Literature exam. Students interact with the teacher via e-mail and telephone. Agenda, assignments, graded and non-graded activities, quizzes and tests are all posted on the Internet. Internet access is required for the course. Visit the Web site at www.dl.ket.org or contact the instructor Ann Denny at 1-800-333-9764 or adenny@ket.org All Latin courses have 160 lessons. Students can expect to spend a minimum of 200 hours spread evenly over the academic cycle. 2006/2007 M�Instructional Videos� • 115 DISTANCELEARNING German II continues the interactive multimedia approach to further develop the basic skills of speaking, listening, writing, and reading acquired in German I. The German video series Fokus Deutsch and accompanying materials expose students to a variety of situations in authentic cultural contexts. Conversation practice is provided via telephone interaction with tutors. This course may be taken on a full-year schedule, or in a block schedule, one-semester format. SECONDARY GED Secondary GED Programming Pre-GED Grades 9-12 and Recently, legislation was passed and a waiver was granted by the American Council on Education that allows Secondary GED programs to be established in Kentucky’s schools. The purpose of the program is to provide a potential dropout student—who has the academic capability to complete high school graduation requirements but who is behind the cohort group in the credits needed to graduate—the opportunity to stay in school, prepare for, and obtain the GED certificate. GED Connection As schools begin to prepare to implement these programs, they are searching for curriculum resources. KET has two such resources: GED Connection and Pre-GED Connection. Below is a block feed of the series GED Connection (which also includes Pre-GED Connection programs). 1. GED Connection Orientation Language Arts: Reading 11. Passing the GED Reading Test 12. Nonfiction 13. Fiction 14. Poetry 15. Drama Social Studies 16. Passing the GED Social Studies Test! 17. Themes in U.S. History to help ensure student achievement. Mathematics 27. Passing the GED Math Test 28. Number Sense 29. Problem Solving 30. Decimals 31. Fractions 32. Ratio, Proportion, and Percent 33. Measurement 34. Formulas 35. Geometry 36. Data Analysis 37. Statistics and Probability 38. Introduction to Algebra 39. Special Topics in Algebra and Geometry BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Wednesday, August 2 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-8; 4 hours) and at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 9-16; 4 hours); Wednesday, August 9 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 17-24; 4 hours) and at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 25-32; 4 hours); and Wednesday, August 16 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 33-39; 3 hours, 30 minutes) Block Feed II: Wednesday, January 3 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 1-8; 4 hours) and at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 9-16; 4 hours); Wednesday, January 10 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 17-24; 4 hours) and at 12 noon/11:00 am CT (Programs 25-32; 4 hours); and Wednesday, January 17 at 6:00/5:00 am CT (Programs 33-39; 3 hours, 30 minutes) TEACHING MATERIALS The full series is now available on ten DVDs with menus so it’s easier to use ($200). 39 VHS tapes ($200), student workbooks ($20), and a teacher’s guide ($24) are all avilable from KET. Kentucky schools may call KET (800) 228-3382, for information. 116 • 2006/2007 M�Instructional Videos Contact Tonya Crum at tcrum@ket.org or call 1-800-432-0951 ext. 7009. Photo: Rick McComb SECONDARY GED Language Arts: Writing 2. Passing the GED Writing Test 3. Getting Ideas on Paper 4. The Writing Process 5. Organized Writing 6. Writing Style and Word Choice 7. Effective Sentences 8. Grammar and Usage 9. Spelling, Punctuation, and Capitalization 10. The GED Essay Alternative solutions 18. Themes in World History 19. Economics 20. Civics and Government 21. Geography Science 22. Passing the GED Science Test 23. Life Science 24. Earth and Space Science 25. Chemistry 26. Physics PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT Annenberg Media Series arts and humanities The Art of Teaching the Arts: A Workshop for High School Teachers (9-12) C The Arts in Every Classroom: A Workshop for Elementary School Teachers (K-5) C Connecting with the Arts: A Teaching Practices Library (6-8) C Connecting with the Arts: A Workshop for High School Teachers (6-8) C foreign languages Teaching Foreign Languages K-12: A Library of Classroom Practices (K-12) C language arts/reading F F Developing Writers: A Workshop for High School Teachers (9-12) C Inside Writing Communities, Grades 3-5 (3-5) K C Teaching Multicultural Literature: A Workshop for the Middle Grades (6-8) C Teaching Reading K-2: A Library of Classroom Practices (K-2) C Teaching Reading 3-5 Workshop (3-5) C Write in the Middle: A Workshop for Middle School Teachers (5-8) K C education theory and issues Principles for Principals (K-12) C The Learning Classroom: Theory Into Practice (K-12) C mathematics Insights Into Algebra 1: Teaching for Learners (6-12) C Learning Math: Number and Operations (K-8) C science Essential Science for Teachers: Physical Science (K-6) C Rediscovering Biology: Molecular to Global Perspectives (9-12) C social studies Bridging World History (9-12) C Social Studies in Action: A Methodology Workshop (K-5) C New or Revised for 2006-2007 F K KET Production C Closed Captioned arts & humanities The Art of Teaching the Arts: A Workshop for High School Teachers C For high school teachers; eight 60-minute programs. This workshop introduces and explores seven principles of effective teaching in dance, music, theatre, and visual art classes. BROADCAST SCHEDULE Monday, July 31 at 4:00/3:00 pm CT (Programs 1-4; 4 hours) Monday, August 7 at 4:00/3:00 pm CT (Programs 5-8; 4 hours) The Arts in Every Classroom: A Workshop for Elementary School Teachers C For K-5 classroom teachers and arts specialists; eight one-hour video programs. Southeast Center for Education in the Arts workshop leaders help teachers, principals, and arts specialists from three elementary schools develop and implement arts-based units. BROADCAST SCHEDULE Monday, August 14 at 4:00/3:00 pm CT (Programs 1-8; 4 hours) Monday, August 21 at 4:00/3:00 pm CT (Programs 9-14; 3 hours) Connecting with the Arts: A Teaching Practices Library, 6-8 C BROADCAST SCHEDULE introduction The professional development series listed below are funded by Annenberg Media, a part of The Annenberg Foundation. For program titles and descriptions, as well as related online resources, visit www.learner.org, the Annenberg Media Web site. Please note: In addition to the blockfeeds of Annenberg Media professional development on KET3 listed below, KET is broadcasting the full schedule of Annenberg Media programming on KET4 from 8:00/7:00 am CT to 8:00/7:00 pm CT Sunday through Saturday. This schedule includes professional development, instructional programming for students, and college telecourses. For program schedule on KET4, visit KET’s Website, www.ket.org/watch. Monday, August 28 at 4:00/3:00 pm CT (Programs 1-8; 4 hours) Monday, September 4 at 4:00/3:00 pm CT (Programs 9-12; 4 hours) Connecting with the Arts: A Workshop for Middle Grades Teachers C For 6-8 teachers; eight 60-minute programs. Connecting with the Arts uses extensive classroom examples and round table discussions among art educators to demonstrate why and how middle school teachers integrate dance, music, theatre, and visual arts into other content areas. BROADCAST SCHEDULE Monday, October 9 at 4:00/3:00 pm CT (Programs 1-4; 4 hours) Monday, October 16 at 4:00/3:00 pm CT (Programs 5-8; 4 hours) 2006/2007 M�Instructional Videos� • 117 PROFESSIONALDEVELOPMENT For 6-8 teachers; twelve 30-minute programs. This video library visits classrooms around the country where teachers have incorporated arts integration strategies. Each program includes ideas and projects arts specialists and subject-area teachers can use in their own classrooms, as well as insights into planning and implementing an integrated curriculum. Photo: Rick McComb Annenberg Media Seminars Teaching Multicultural Literature: A Workshop for the Middle Grades C BROADCAST SCHEDULE Tuesday, August 1 at 4:00/3:00 pm CT (Programs 1-4; 4 hours) Tuesday, August 8 at 4:00/3:00 pm CT (Programs 5-8; 4 hours) Teaching Reading K-2: A Library of Classroom Practices C For K-2 teachers, twelve 30-minute programs. This series features the teaching practices of a diverse cross-section of teachers from across the country. foreign language Teaching Foreign Languages K-12: A Library of Classroom Practices C For K-12 foreign language teachers; 30-minute introduction, two 60minute overviews, twenty-seven 30-minute classroom videos. This subtitled video library illustrates effective instruction and assessment strategies for teaching foreign language in grades K-12. Classrooms shown includes Chinese, French, German, Italian, Japanese, Latin, Russian, and Spanish. BROADCAST SCHEDULE Monday, September 11 at 4:00/3:00 pm CT (Programs 1-6; 4 hours) Monday, September 18 at 4:00/3:00 pm CT (Programs 7-14; 4 hours) Monday, September 25 at 4:00/3:00 pm CT (Programs 15-22; 4 hours Monday, October 2 at 4:00/3:00 pm CT (Programs 23-30; 4 hours) PROFESSIONALDEVELOPMENT For 6-8 teachers; eight 60-minute programs. This workshop examines instructional strategies and resources that make ethnically diverse writing meaningful to students. language arts/reading Developing Writers: A Workshop for High School Teachers C For high school teachers, eight 60-minute programs. This workshop presents practical and philosophical advice for teaching writing and examines issues such as high-stakes assessment and teaching students with differing abilities. BROADCAST SCHEDULE Tuesday, September 19 at 4:00/3:00 pm CT (Programs 1-4; 4 hours) Tuesday, September 26 at 4:00/3:00 pm CT (Programs 5-8; 4 hours) Inside Writing Communities, Grades 3-5 C For 3-5 teachers, sixteen 30-minute programs. This series guides teachers in enhancing their writing instruction through researchbased strategies, interactive online exercises, and classroom video examples. NOTE: For more information and block feed schedule, see page 122. 118 • 2006/2007 M�Instructional Videos BROADCAST SCHEDULE Tuesday, August 15 at 4:00/3:00 pm CT (Programs 1-8; 4 hours) Tuesday, August 22 at 4:00/3:00 pm CT (Programs 9-12; 2 hours) Teaching Reading 3-5 Workshop C For 3-5 teachers, sixteen 30-minute programs. This workshop shows intermediate elementary teachers how to help their students' transition from "learning to read" to "reading to learn." BROADCAST SCHEDULE Block Feed I: Tuesday, September 5 at 4:00/3:00 pm CT (Programs 1-8; 4 hours) Tuesday, September 12 at 4:00/3:00 pm CT (Programs 9-16; 4 hours) Block Feed II: Tuesday, November 14 at 4:00/3:00 pm CT (Programs 1-8; 4 hours) Tuesday, November 21 at 4:00/3:00 pm CT (Programs 9-16; 4 hours) Write In the Middle: A Workshop for Middle School Teachers C K For 5-8 teachers, eight 60-minute programs. This workshop explores effective practices and strategies that help middle-level students become more confident and proficient writers. NOTE: For more information, see page 122. BROADCAST SCHEDULE Block Feed I: Tuesday, October 3 at 4:00/3:00 pm CT (Programs 1-4; 4 hours) Tuesday, October 10 at 4:00/3:00 pm CT (Programs 5-8; 4 hours) Block Feed II: Tuesday, December 5 at 4:00/3:00 pm CT (Programs 1-4; 4 hours) Tuesday, December 12 at 4:00/3:00 pm CT (Programs 5-8; 4 hours) education theory & issues Principles for Principals C For K-12 principals, eight 60-minute programs. Designed by and for principals working to improve student achievement in mathematics and science, this workshop addresses the specific issues faced by administrators. Tuesday, August 9 at 4:00/3:00 pm CT (Programs 1-4; 4 hours) Tuesday, August 16 at 4:00/3:00 pm CT (Programs 5-8; 4 hours) Block Feed II: Tuesday, October 11 at 4:00/3:00 pm CT (Programs 1-4; 4 hours) Tuesday, October 18 at 4:00/3:00 pm CT (Programs 5-8; 4 hours) Rediscovering Biology: Molecular to Global Perspectives C For high school teachers, thirteen 30-minute programs. This course updates teachers’ knowledge and understanding of major new developments in the field of biology. BROADCAST SCHEDULE The Learning Classroom: Theory Into Practice C For K-12 teachers, thirteen 30-minute programs. Hosted by Stanford University professor Linda Darling-Hammond, each program explores a specific learning theory and its use in the classroom. BROADCAST SCHEDULE Tuesday, October 17 at 4:00/3:00 pm CT (Programs 1-8; 4 hours) Tuesday, October 24 at 4:00/3:00 pm CT (Programs 9-13; 2 hours, 30 minutes) mathematics Insights Into Algebra 1: Teaching for Learning C For middle and high school teachers, eight 60-minute programs. This workshop explores strategies that improve the teaching of 16 key topics in Algebra 1. BROADCAST SCHEDULE Friday, August 11 at 4:00/3:00 pm CT (Programs 1-4; 4 hours) Friday, August 18 at 4:00/3:00 pm CT (Programs 5-8; 4 hours) Learning Math: Number and Operations C BROADCAST SCHEDULE Friday, September 15 at 4:00/3:00 pm pm CT (Programs 1-8; 4 hours) Friday, September 22 at 4:00/3:00 pm CT (Programs 9-12; 2 hours) science Essential Science for Teachers: Physical Science C For K-6 teachers; eight 60-minute programs. By exploring topics that range from the essential properties of aluminum foil to the plasma that makes up the sun, this series provides participants with enhanced understanding of content and how it connects to the elementary school classroom. BROADCAST SCHEDULE Friday, September 1 at 4:00/3:00 pm CT (Programs 1-4; 4 hours) Friday, September 8 at 4:00/3:00 pm CT (Programs 5-8; 4 hours) social studies Bridging World History C For 9-12 teachers, twenty-six 30-minute programs. This multimedia course looks at global patterns through time –seeing history as an integrated whole. BROADCAST SCHEDULE Thursday, August 10 at 4:00/3:00 pm CT (Programs 1-8; 4 hours) Thursday, August 17 at 4:00/3:00 pm CT (Programs 9-16; 4 hours) Thursday, August 24 at 4:00/3:00 pm CT (Programs 17-24; 4 hours) Thursday, August 31 at 4:00/3:00 pm CT (Programs 25-26; 1 hour) Social Studies in Action: A Methodology Workshop, K-5 C For K-5 teachers, eight 60-minute programs. This workshop provides a methodology for teaching social studies, with a focus on engaging students. BROADCAST SCHEDULE Thursday, October 12 at 4:00/3:00 pm CT (Programs 1-4; 4 hours) Thursday, October 19 at 4:00/3:00 pm CT (Programs 5-8; 4 hours) Professional Development for Principals from Cerebellum Corporation Principals: Leaders & Learners For K-8 administrators and teachers, seven 30-minute programs. Each program illustrates one standard from Leading Learning Communities: Standards for What Principals Should Know and Be Able To Do, a publication of The National Association of Elementary School Principals. The series features K-8 principals, teachers, and students in 12 different schools demonstrating what the standards look like in practice. To purchase a companion guide, call Cerebellum at 1-800-238-9669. For program titles and descriptions go to http://www.cerebellum.com/principals/. BLOCK FEEDS Block Feed I: Wednesday, September 13 at 4:00/3:00 pm CT (Programs 1-7; 3 hours, 30 minutes) Block Feed II: Wednesday, November 15 at 4:00/3:00 pm CT (Programs 1-7; 3 hours, 30 minutes) 2006/2007 M�Instructional Videos� • 119 PROFESSIONALDEVELOPMENT For K-8 teachers, twelve 30-minute programs. This video- and Web-based course examines the Number and Operations strand of Principles and Standards of School Mathematics (NCTM) and its classroom applications. Friday, October 6 at 4:00/3:00 pm CT (Programs 1-8; 4 hours) Friday, October 13 at 4:00/3:00 pm CT (Programs 9-13; 2 hours, 30 minutes) Annenberg Media Seminars BROADCAST SCHEDULE Block Feed I: arts & humanities KET seminars Art to Heart C K arts and humanities Art to Heart K C The Arts: A Content Course for Teachers K C The Arts II: West African Dance K C The Arts III: Afro-Cuban Dance K F Length: 8 programs; 30 minutes each Audience: teachers of infants through primary Cost: $50 for the series This series explores how developmentally appropriate activities in visual arts, dance, drama, and music contribute to learning and physical, cognitive, emotional, and social development in children from birth to age 8. reading and writing Authentic Publishing K C How To Improve the Quality of Writing Conferences K C Inside Writing Communities, Grades 3-5 K C Write in the Middle: A Workshop for Middle School Teachers K C F NOTE: For more information and the block feed schedule, see page 20. social studies Kentucky’s Underground Railroad K C The Arts: A Content Course for Teachers C K special education About Autism K C Your Child With Special Needs K C Length: 3 programs; 90 minutes each Audience: teachers, all levels Cost: $25 per program; $75 for the series special programming Childhood Obesity Prevention K C Just Ask: A Call-In on Teen Depression K C Promise Not to Tell? A Teacher’s Guide to Recognizing and Responding to Child Sexual Abuse K C A series for adult learners on the elements and principles of art forms assessed in Kentucky schools: dance, drama, and music (produced in collaboration with the Institute for Arts in Education sponsored by the Kentucky Center for the Arts). 1. Drama 2. Dance 3. Music New or Revised for 2006/2007 F C Closed Captioned BROADCAST SCHEDULE K KET Production Monday, November 6 at 4:00/3:00 pm CT (Programs 1-3; 3 hours, 37 minutes) The Arts II: West African Dance C K The following professional development programs are available on videotape. Accompanying participant’s guides are posted at our Web site (www.ket.org/ profdev). When you purchase videotapes, a copy of the print materials will be mailed with your order. All KET seminars are approved by the Kentucky Department of Education for professional development credit if schools or districts include them in their PD plans. Teachers who wish to use KET seminars for PD credit should check with their school or district PD coordinator. Unless otherwise indicated, the stage of professional development is practice/application. KET seminars also can be used to satisfy requirements for the fifth year program. Contact your local university or the Division of Teacher Education and Certification at (502) 564-4606 for more information. Length: 60 minutes Audience: teachers, all levels Cost: $20 Step-by-step dance instruction from professional artists designed to deepen teachers’ general knowledge of Kentucky’s dance Core Content and of West African dance. BROADCAST SCHEDULE Monday, November 13 at 4:00/3:00 pm CT (1 hour) The Arts III: Afro-Cuban Dance K Length: 40 minutes Audience: teachers, all levels Cost: $20 An exploration of the interrelated music and dance traditions of Cuba, including the claves, simple percussion sticks. BROADCAST SCHEDULE Monday, November 13 at 5:00/4:00 pm CT (40 minutes) reading & writing Photo: Rick McComb PROFESSIONALDEVELOPMENT introduction 120 • 2006/2007 M�Instructional Videos Authentic Publishing C K Length: 9 programs; 30 minutes each Audience: primary-6 classroom and language arts teachers Cost: $10 per program; $90 for the series Maintaining authentic audience and purpose while tying student writing to the Core Content and allowing student choice. 1. Personal Narrative 2. Memoirs Written For and About People 3. Inquiry in the Library 4. Short Stories 5. Script Writing/Plays 6. Poetry 7. Brochures 8. Feature Articles 9. Persuasive Letters BROADCAST SCHEDULE Tuesday, October 31 at 3:30/2:30 pm CT (Programs 1-9; 4 hours, 30 minutes) How To Improve the Quality of Writing Conferences C K Length: 4 programs; 30 minutes each Audience: classroom and English/language arts teachers, all levels Cost: $40 Quality writing conferences in a variety of settings—and at a variety of stages in the writing process. 1. Prewriting Conferences 2. Quick Conferences 3. Revision Conferences 4. Response Groups BROADCAST SCHEDULE Tuesday, November 7 at 4:00/3:00 pm CT (Programs 1-4; 2 hours, 45 minutes) Write in the Middle: A Workshop for Middle School Teachers C K Length: 8 programs, 60 minutes each Audience: Middle level teachers, grades 5-8 Write in the Middle: A Workshop for Middle School Teachers is a KET production, funded by a grant from Annenberg and part of the Annenberg/CPB schedule (p. 118). Write in the Middle explores strategies and practices that help middlelevel students become confident and proficient writers. Both the videos and the guide can be purchased from Annenberg at 1-800LEARNER. PROGRAM TITLES Workshop 1. Creating a Community of Writers Workshop 2. Making Writing Meaningful Workshop 3. Teaching Poetry Workshop 4. Teaching Persuasive Writing Workshop 5. Teaching Multigenre Writing Workshop 6. Responding to Writing: Teacher to Student Workshop 7. Responding to Writing: Peer to Peer Workshop 8. Teaching the Power of Revision Kentucky’s Underground Railroad C K Length: 4 programs; 30 minutes each Audience: social studies and history teachers, intermediate and secondary levels Cost: $25. An exploration of Pre-Civil War Kentucky history and enslaved African Americans’ quest for freedom. 1- 2. The History of Slavery and the Fugitive Slave Movement in Kentucky 3. Freedom: A Basic Need 4. Artistic Expression and the Fugitive Slave Movement BROADCAST SCHEDULE Thursday, September 21 at 4:00/3:00 pm CT (Programs 1-4; 2 hours) special education About Autism C K Length: 2 programs; 60 minutes each Audience: teachers, all levels Cost: $12.50 per program; $25 for the series or tape off air (see schedule below). These programs examine the issues surrounding autism-signs to look for in early development, effective early intervention programs, and strategies to help children with autism achieve in school. Renee Shaw hosts. Program 1: About Autism: Diagnosis and Early Intervention Program 2: About Autism: Success in School BROADCAST SCHEDULE Wednesday, August 23 at 4:00/3:00 pm CT (Programs 1-2; 2 hours) Wednesday, October 25 at 4:00/3:00 pm CT (Programs 1-2; 2 hours) Wednesday, January 17 at 4:00/3:00 pm CT (Programs 1-2; 2 hours) Your Child With Special Needs C K Length: 2 programs; 60 minutes each Audience: see below Cost: $12.50 per program; $25 for the series or tape off air (see schedule below). Local experts, service providers, educators, and parents discuss such topics as entering the special education system, the legal rights of students with special needs, and planning for the transition from high school to the real world. Renee Shaw hosts. Program 1: Public School Resources (Audience: teachers & parents, K-12) Program 2: From High School to the Community (Audience: students with disabilities, 11-12; teachers & parents, 11-12) BROADCAST SCHEDULE Wednesday, August 23 at 6:00/5:00 pm CT (Programs 1-2; 2 hours) Wednesday, October 25 at 6:00/5:00 pm CT (Programs 1-2; 2 hours) Wednesday, January 17 at 6:00/5:00 pm CT (Programs 1-2; 2 hours) BROADCAST SCHEDULE Block Feed I: Tuesday, October 3 at 4:00/3:00 pm CT (Programs 1-4; 4 hours) Tuesday, October 10 at 4:00/3:00 pm CT (Programs 5-8; 4 hours) Block Feed II: Tuesday, December 5 at 4:00/3:00 pm CT (Programs 1-4; 4 hours) Tuesday, December 12 at 4:00/3:00 pm CT (Programs 5-8; 4 hours) 2006/2007 M�Instructional Videos� • 121 PROFESSIONALDEVELOPMENT The workshop features an extensive Web site (www.learner.org/workshops/middlewriting/), with lesson plans, classroom materials, student writing samples, and audio interviews with teachers and writing experts. An interactive feature allows you to respond to student drafts and compare your responses with those of another teacher. You also can download the Write in the Middle workshop guide, which provides specific information about the eight programs plus discussion questions and activities. social studies special programming Childhood Obesity Prevention C K Length: 1 program; 60 minutes Audience: teachers, all levels Cost: $12.50 or tape off air (see schedule below). Kentucky experts discuss the causes of childhood obesity as well as ways to prevent obesity. BROADCAST SCHEDULE Wednesday, September 6 at 4:00/3:00 pm CT (1 hour) Wednesday, November 1 at 4:00/3:00 pm CT (1 hour) Wednesday, January 24 at 4:00/3:00 pm CT (1 hour) Just Ask: A Call-In on Teen Depression C K Length: 1 program; 60 minutes Audience: teachers, 6-12, parents Cost: $12.50 or tape off air (see schedule below). This program was recorded live on August 13, 2003 – so the 800 number will not be active. Mental health professionals representing organiations who work extensively with teen depression answer viewers’ questions about teen depression. www.ket.org/teendepression BROADCAST SCHEDULE Inside Writing Communities, Grades 3-5 Length: 16 programs, 30 minutes each Audience: Teachers in grades 3-5 A professional development series produced by KET debuts on the roster of Annenberg video workshops in January 2007. Inside Writing Communities: Grades 3-5, the second professional development workshop KET has produced for Annenberg, is available free to teachers nationwide. (Write in the Middle: A Workshop for Middle School Teachers was the first KET/Annenberg collaboration.) Wednesday, September 6 at 5:00/4:00 pm CT (1 hour) Wednesday, November 1 at 5:00/4:00 pm CT(1 hour) Wednesday, January 24 at 5:00/4:00 pm CT(1 hour) KET traveled throughout the country to videotape teachers in grades 3 through 5 modeling teaching strategies and reflecting on their practice. National experts on teaching writing contributed to the series as advisors and on-air commentators. Promise Not to Tell? A Teacher’s Guide to Recognizing and Responding to Child Sexual Abuse C K Inside Writing Communities, Grades 3-5 helps teachers improve their writing instruction through research-based strategies, interactive online exercises, and classroom examples. Sixteen 30-minute videos — eight session videos and their corresponding classroom videos — demonstrate how the writing workshop motivates students and helps develope proficient writers. NETA AWARD WINNER PROFESSIONALDEVELOPMENT Sheryl Block, literacy resource teacher for Simpsonville Elementary in Shelby Co., is one of eight teachers and the only Kentucky teacher appearing in Inside Writing Communities, Grades 3-5 Length: 3 programs; 20 minutes each Audience: teachers, counselors, and administrators, all levels Cost: $7 per program or tape off air (see schedule below). (Note: April is Child Abuse Awareness Month.) Mental health and law enforcement professionals, teachers, and adult survivors providing insight and advice on dealing with child sexual abuse. 1. Recognizing and Responding 2. Reporting and Investigating 3. Dealing with Long Term Consequences An extensive Web site reinforces the videos and offers a model for on-site professional development. The site includes an online viewing guide, resources, eight interactive activities, and a downloadable facilitator guide. Both the videos and the guide can be purchased from Annenberg at 1-800-LEARNER or wwww.learner.org. BROADCAST SCHEDULE Wednesday, September 27 at 4:00/3:00 pm CT (Programs 1-3; 1 hour) Wednesday, November 8 at 4:00/3:00 pm CT (Programs 1-3; 1 hour) Wednesday, March 28 at 4:00/3:00 pm CT (Programs 1-3; 1 hour) Wednesday, April 11 at 4:00/3:00 pm CT (Programs 1-3; 1 hour) Wednesday, April 18 at 4:00/3:00 pm CT (Programs 1-3; 1 hour) TEACHING MATERIALS To download the booklet for this series, go to: www.ket.org/education/guides SESSION VIDEO 1. Building a Community of Writers 3. Reasons for Writing 5. Reading Like a Writer 7. Teaching the Writing Craft 9. Conversations With Student Writers 11. Conversations Among Writing Peers 13. Learning To Revise 15. Writing Across the Curriculum CLASSROOM VIDEO 2. Teacher as Writer 4. Choice and Independence in the Writing Workshop 6. Reading-Writing Connections 8. Teaching a Specific Writing Strategy 10. Teacher Conferences 12. Peer Conferences 14. Modeling Revision 16. Content Writing BLOCK FEED ON KET3 Tuesday, November 15 at 4:00/3:00 pm CT (Programs 1-4; 4 hours) Thursday, November 17 at 4:00/3:00 pm CT (Programs 5-8; 4 hours) 122 • 2006/2007 M�Instructional Videos KET4—The Annenberg/CPB Channel Just for teachers! Audience: Middle and high school teachers, all content areas More Reading Strategies in Action, an innovative CD-ROM-based professional development tool produced in collaboration with the Kentucky Department of Education, is designed to help secondary teachers whose students struggle to read and understand textbooks, exam questions, and other informational reading. More Reading Strategies in Action demonstrates how teachers can introduce their students to the strategies used by successful readers without sacrificing content instruction. Flexible, convenient PD workshops Challenge yourself at: www.ket.org/education/ket4.htm Cross-indexed by subject—mathematics, science, social studies, and English/language arts—and by reading strategy, More Reading Strategies in Action features video clips of Kentucky teachers describing and illustrating how they incorporate reading instruction into their everyday teaching. In interviews, the teachers explain why they teach certain strategies, how they integrate the strategies into their lessons, and the successes they’ve had helping students understand and retain written information. Literary Strategies in Action KET and the Kentucky Department of Education jointly present a new professional development resouce to support Kentucky's implementation of the national Reading First project. The CD-ROM-based resource is modeled after the popular and widely used More Reading Strategies in Action. KET and the KDE are at work this year on the next phase of the project which will be ready in the summer of 2007. Reading Next (working title) will focus on the challenges of teaching struggling readers in grades 4-12 and provide video illustrations of a variety of strategies to meet a variety of student needs. How can my school get a copy of More Reading Strategies in Action? Photo: Rick McComb In the fall of 2003, the Kentucky Department of Education destibuted one set of More Reading Strategies in Action to every middle and high school in the state. You can use this set to copy more discs, or you can order additional copies by calling Darlene Carl at 1-800-432-0951, ext. 7271. 2006/2007 M�Instructional Videos� • 123 PROFESSIONALDEVELOPMENT Literacy Strategies in Action CD-ROM set includes two disks. The KDE distributed copies at its summer institutes and to every elementary school in Kentucky. You are free to copy those disks or you can order additional copies by calling Darlene Carl at 1-800-432-0951, ext. 7271. More Reading Strategies in Action includes four color-coded discs, one for each content area, plus a disc for reading specialists and a “Getting Started” disc with technical information and software. Each content disc has a subject-specific entry page. From there, you can access classroom clips and interviews featuring teachers in all four content areas; downloadable teacher materials; a glossary of reading strategies; and an annotated bibliography. TEACHER’S GUIDE ORDER FORM This form may be photocopied. Please use this form to order teacher’s guides from KET. Allow three weeks for delivery. Add shipping and handling charge to each order. Please do not send cash. ____ ____ ____ ____ 1004 1185 1186 1012 ____ ____ ____ ____ ____ ____ 1017 1631 1019 1204 1020 1160 ____ 1189 ____ 1190 ____ 1043 ____ 1055 America’s Special Days ...........................................$4.50 Backyard Safari.......................................................$10.00 The Big A ...................................................................$5.00 A Bill of Rights: What No Just Government Should Refuse .............80¢ Cursive Handwriting Series A ...............................$5.00 Deutsch macht! (German Can Be Fun!) ..............$10.00 Different and the Same............................................$5.00 Doodle......................................................................$10.00 Drug Avengers..........................................................$2.50 Economics: The Production, Distribution And Consumption of Goods and Services ...................$2.00 Flirting or Hurting: Sexual Harassment in Schools ..................................................................$1.00 Great Campaigns of the Civil War ........................$8.00 It Figures....................................................................$1.45 Lab Safety: The Accident at Jefferson High ............30¢ Write the order quantity for each guide in the blank at the left of the series title. Write totals in this box and send the entire form along with a purchase order or a check payable to KET. Please do not send cash. Note: If paying with a personal check, you must add 6% Kentucky sales tax. Mail to: KET, The Kentucky Network • Teacher’s Guides 600 Cooper Drive • Lexington, KY 40502-2296 Fax to: 859-258-7399 Subtotal: $ ________________ 6% tax $ ________________ Shipping/handling: $ ________________ 1–5 6–10 11–15 16+ items items items items $1.00 $2.25 $3.25 $4.25 Amount Enclosed: $ ________________ School Name: ___________________________________________ School Address: ________________________________________ (No P.O. Boxes Please) City: __________________________ , KY Zip:_____________ Phone ( ______ )__________________________________________ Name of Person Ordering: ________________________________ Billing Address if Different from Shipping Address: _________________________________________________________ Lyric Language ____ 1058 Series I (covers all languages in series) ........... $6.00 ____ 1059 Series II (advanced covers all languages ................. in series) ............................................................ $6.00 ____ 1062 Math Basics ....................................................... $8.95 ____ 1063 Math Basics Workbook .................................... $10.00 ____ ____ ____ ____ ____ Math Vantage: 1167 Data Analysis Unit ............................................. $5.00 1168 Language of Math ............................................. $5.00 1069 Patterns Unit ...................................................... $5.00 1169 Proportional Reasoning Unit ............................. $5.00 1070 Spatial Sense Unit ............................................. $5.00 ____ ____ ____ ____ ____ ____ ____ 1162 Media Mania ...................................................... $3.50 1074 Mrs. Cabobble’s Caboose ................................. $1.30 1158 Native Americans Series ................................... $1.50 1217 Passport to Japan: Konnichiwa ......................... $7.50 1633 Passport to Weather and Climate ................... $25.00 1253 Posie Paints ...................................................... $3.00 1083 Pyramid ............................................................. $3.50 124 • 2006/2007 M Appendices _________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________ ____ ____ ____ ____ ____ ____ ____ ____ ____ ____ 1085 Read On: Cover to Cover.................................. $4.95 1141 Real Science! II ................................................. $4.00 1164 Real Science! III ................................................ $4.00 1092 Roman City Modules ......................................... $3.60 1099 The Short Story ................................................. $1.15 1170 Statistics: Decisions Through Data ................... $4.00 1159 U.S. Geography: From Sea To Shining Sea ..... $1.00 1146 Violence: Reversing the Trend .......................... $1.00 1118 Voices & Visions .................................................. .25¢ 1134 Zoo Zoo Zoo ...................................................... $1.00 VIDEO TAPE PRICE LIST KET Tape Duplication Service Ordering Information Please read the following information carefully before you order. Then, use the Tape Duplication Service Order Form on the next page to order videotaped programs from KET. This duplication service is intended for use by Kentucky elementary and secondary schools. The fees charged cover duplication and tape stock costs only. They do not cover copyright for use in perpetuity. Any tapes acquired by schools through this service may be kept only for the taping rights period as defined in this 2006/07 KET School Resources book. These rights are listed on the pages containing the program descriptions. In the spring of 2007, KET will publish a list of those programs that will have to be erased at the end of the school year. The prices listed are effective July 1, 2006. All orders must be accompanied either by payment or by an authorized purchase order. Please do not send cash. Allow 3 weeks from the date KET receives your order for delivery of your tapes. Following is a list of ITV series available through KET’s videotape duplication service for the 2006/07 school year. Series (programs/length) Price 2003 Great Kentucky Gospel Shout Out (1/60) ............... $12.50 America Past (12/15s) ......................................................... $37.50 Art History I: A Century of Modern Art (10/15s) .......... $35.00 Art History II: A Survey of the Western World (12/15s) $37.50 Art On-Air (12/30s) ............................................................. $75.00 Art to Heart (8/30s) ............................................................. $50.00 ¡Arte y más! (Program 0, PD & Programs 1-60) DVD only ........ $127.00 4100 Arts Alive (13/15s) ............................................................... $47.50 4101 Arts Express (20/15s) .......................................................... $62.50 Arts Tool Kit (Dance) 4809-videos; 4810-DVDs ........ $89.00/$8.00 s/h Arts Tool Kit (Drama) 4797-videos; 4798-DVDs ....... $99.00/$8.00 s/h Arts Tool Kit (Visual Arts) 4818-videos; 4819-VHS .. $99.00/$8.00 s/h 4582 bookclub@ket: James Still's Legacy: River of Earth (1/60) ....... $12.50 4799 Careers in Printing (1/10) ................................................... $10.00 4801 College and You—Why Not? Tackling College with a Disability (1/25) ................................................................... $10.00 4016 Crafting Tradition (1/60) .................................................... $12.50 4744 Creating Stories & Music (1/90) ........................................ $15.00 4741 Cursive Handwriting (22/15s) ........................................... $60.00 4771 DanceSense (10/15s) ............................................................ $37.50 4106 Dancing Threads: Community Dances (4/30s) ............... $25.00 4742 Destinos (26/30s).................................................................. $87.50 4708 Deutsch macht Spass! (German Can Be Fun!) (10/30s) . $62.50 4654 An Electronic Conversation with George Ella Lyon (1/60) . $12.50 KET Electronic Field Trips (see pages 28-33 for titles) ....... $12.50 each 4792 Entrepreneurs in Kentucky (1/120) ................................. $17.50 4761 Events of the 20th Century (8/15s) ................................... $25.00 4779 Everyday Voices (5/30s)...................................................... $37.50 4740 Fat Albert & the Cosby Kids (30/15s) ............................... $75.00 4814 From the Brothers Grimm (16/20s) and (4/25s) ............. $67.50 4500 From the Shadows of the River (1/30) ............................. $10.00 4039 Hymnody of Earth (1/60) ................................................... $12.50 4126 It Figures (28/15s) ................................................................ $87.50 4582 James Still’s River of Earth (1/60) ..................................... $12.50 4811 4782 4812 4813 4099 4833 4822 4128 4601 Just for Me (6/15s) ............................................................... $22.50 Kentucky Afield for Kids (per program – specify program number and/or original airdate): ...................................... $12.50 4131 Kentucky Chautauqua (1/60) ............................................ $12.50 4114 Kentucky GeoQuest (4/30s) ............................................... $25.00 4831 Kentucky in Africa (1/24) ................................................... $10.00 4132 Kentucky’s Natural Heritage (8/15s)................................ $25.00 4133 Kentucky’s Story (9/15s)..................................................... $35.00 4709 Kentucky's Underground Railroad: (1/60) ...................... $12.50 4749 Latin Roots for English Word Power (6/30s) .................. $37.50 4794 Living by Words (1/90) ....................................................... $29.95 4805 Liz’s Circus Story (1/60) ..................................................... $12.50 4461 Looking at Painting (3/60s) ................................................ $37.50 4832 Looking From the Inside Out (15/155) ............................. $50.00 4802 Los Constructores de Cerritos del Uruguay (1/27) ........ $10.00 4711 Lyric Language (14/20s) ..................................................... $57.50 4122 Making Grimm Movies (3/20s) ......................................... $12.50 4803 Making of News Quiz (1/20) ............................................. $10.00 4138 Math Basics (11/30s) ............................................................ $87.50 4140 Math Works (28/15s) ........................................................... $87.50 4674 Media Mania (4/20s) ........................................................... $15.00 4060 Mountain Media (5/30s) ..................................................... $37.50 4493 Native American Exhibit (1/20) ........................................ $12.50 4061 A Native Presence (1/60) .................................................... $12.50 4143 Old Music for New Ears (22/15s)...................................... $72.50 4804 The Prehistoric Mounds of Uruguay (1/24) .................... $10.00 4482 Real Science! II (6/20s) ........................................................ $25.00 4750 Real Science! III (13/30s) ..................................................... $70.00 4793 The Remarkable Clarks (1/30) ........................................... $10.00 4663 Richard Davis on Jazz (6/60s) ............................................ $75.00 4808 Saludos (36/15s) ................................................................... $87.50 4146 The Short Story (16/15s) ..................................................... $50.00 4517 Signature (6/60s) .................................................................. $75.00 SignatureLIVE: 4080 Bobbie Ann Mason (1/60).......................................... $12.50 4081 Ed McClanahan (1/60) ............................................... $12.50 4083 Sing Out for Freedom (1/60) .............................................. $12.50 4147 Solve It (18/15s).................................................................... $60.00 4710 Spanish Media Collection (30/15-30s) .............................. $60.00 4593 Street Skills (4/30s) .............................................................. $25.00 4631 Student Lessons with Barry Lane (6/40s) ........................ $37.50 4751 Teletales (15/15s) .................................................................. $50.00 4150 Telling Tales (16/15s) ........................................................... $50.00 4743 Tracks: Impressions of America (12/15s) ......................... $37.50 4665 Truth & Consequences: Federal Crimes & Teenagers (1/60).....$12.50 4152 U.S. Constitution (6/30s) .................................................... $37.50 4748 Up Close & Natural (15/15s) ............................................. $50.00 4712 Voices and Visions (6/60s) .................................................. $75.00 4745 Well, Well, Well with Slim Goodbody (15/15s) ............... $50.00 4746 Women of Kentucky: Our Legacy, Our Future (1/60) .... $12.50 4594 Words Like Freedom/Sturdy Black Bridges (1/60) ........ $12.50 4666 World of Our Own: Kentucky Folkways (8/30s) ............ $50.00 4161 Write Ideas (10/3s) ............................................................... $10.00 4747 Zoo, Zoo, Zoo (16/15s)........................................................ $50.00 order form on back 2006/2007 M� Appendices• 125 VIDEO TAPE SERVICE ORDER FORM Use this form to order videotaped programs, including professional development seminars, from KET. Payment (make checks payable to KET) or purchase order must accompany order. Please do not send cash. This form may be photocopied. To order by phone, call KET Tape Duplication at (800) 945-9167, or fax this form to (859) 258-7399. Shipping/Handling Charges: Please add the cost of shipping and handling to your order according to the following chart. Any tapes acquired through this service may be kept only for the taping rights period as defined in this 2006/2007 KET School Resources book. For more information, please read page 125 before filling out this form. MERCHANDISE TOTAL ADD up to $30.00 $30.01 to $60.00 $60.01 to $100.00 $100.01 to $130.00 $130.01 to $160.00 $160.01 to $200.00 over $200.00 $3.95 $4.95 $5.95 $7.95 $8.95 $9.95 $10.95 Bill to: Ship to: (if different) Name Name School School School Address School Address City , KY (Zip Code) City No P.O. Boxes Please , KY (Zip Code) School telephone number ❑ Payment enclosed ❑ Please bill the school—our purchase order number is Note: If paying with a personal check, you must add 6% Kentucky sales tax. Qty Item # Title of Program/Series Return to: KET Tape Duplication, 600 Cooper Drive, Lexington, KY 40502-2296 FAX: (859) 258-7399 Please allow three weeks for delivery from the date KET receives your order. 126 • 2006/2007 M Appendices Item Cost Subtotal 6% tax (only if paid w/ personal check) Shipping & handling TOTAL Amount ALPHABETICAL INDEX 2003 Great Kentucky Gospel Shout Out (7-12) ............................. 22 2007 World's Largest Concert (Primary-6) .................................... 21 The Almost Painless Guide to American Civics (5-12) .............. 101 America Past (8-12) ...........................................................................110 American Voices (7-12) .................................................................... 108 America's Special Days (Primary) ................................................... 98 America's Veterans (2-9).................................................................. 100 Ancient Civilizations (6-12) ............................................................ 108 AP Physics and Honors Physics .....................................................114 Appleseed John (3-7) ......................................................................... 23 Art History I: A Century of Modern Art (6-12) ............................. 25 Art History II: A Survey of the Western World (6-12) .................. 26 Art On Air (4-6) .................................................................................. 24 Art to Heart (PD for Pre-Primary) .......................................... 18/121 Arte y más! (K-Primary) .................................................................... 38 Arts Alive (6-9) ................................................................................... 17 Arts Express (Primary-6) .................................................................. 16 Arts Tool Kit........................................................................................ 14 Backyard Safari (Primary-6) ............................................................. 76 Between the Lions (Primary)............................................................ 65 Beyond the Page (3-5)........................................................................ 70 The Big A (Primary) ........................................................................... 23 A Bill of Rights… (10-12) ................................................................ 102 The Biology Of... (7-12) ..................................................................... 88 bookclub@ket: James Still’s Legacy “River of Earth” (9-12) ....... 73 Bullying/Character Education (3-5) ............................................... 53 Career Encounters (10-12)................................................................. 59 Careers in Printing (7-12) .................................................................. 57 The Character Education Series (Primary-4) ................................. 49 Classic Animal Tracks (5-12) ............................................................ 84 College and You—Why Not? Tackling College with a Disability (9-12) ................................... 58 Colonial Williamsburg Electronic Field Trips (4-12)................... 104 The Complete Cosmos (5-12) ........................................................... 85 Concepts in Nature (Primary-6) ...................................................... 78 Cover to Cover (Primary-4) .............................................................. 69 Crafting Tradition (5-12) ................................................................... 25 Creating Stories and Music (4-5) ..................................................... 62 Cursive Handwriting Series A (Primary) ....................................... 61 Cyberchase (3-7) ................................................................................. 44 DanceSense (5-10) .............................................................................. 16 Dancing Threads: Community Dances from Africa to Zuni (Primary-8) ...................................................................................... 15 Destinos (9-12) .................................................................................... 41 Deutsch macht Spass! (German Can Be Fun!) (4-6) ...................... 36 Different and the Same (Primary) ................................................... 48 Doodle (Primary-12) .......................................................................... 24 Drug Avengers (Primary-6) .............................................................. 51 Econ and Me (Primary-5).................................................................. 50 Economics: The Production, Distribution, and Consumption of Goods and Services (4-6) ................................ 96 The Eddie Files (3-6) .......................................................................... 43 Electric Money (8-12) ......................................................................... 96 An Electronic Conversation with George Ella Lyon (5-12) ......... 73 Electronic Field Trip Through Geologic Time (4-12) .................... 28 Electronic Field Trip to a Beef Cattle Farm (4-12) ......................... 28 Electronic Field Trip to a Coal Mine (4-8) ...................................... 29 Electronic Field Trip to a Horse Farm (4-12).................................. 29 Electronic Field Trip to a Newspaper (4-12) .................................. 29 Electronic Field Trip to a Pig Farm (4-8) ........................................ 29 Electronic Field Trip to a Veterinary Clinic (4-12) ......................... 29 Electronic Field Trip to a Watershed (K-8) ..................................... 30 Electronic Field Trip to an Orchard (4-12)..................................... 30 Electronic Field Trip to Fort Harrod and Fort Boonesborough (4-8) ..................................................................... 30 Electronic Field Trip to Horse Cave Theatre (5-12) ...................... 31 Electronic Field Trip to KET (4-12) .................................................. 31 Electronic Field Trip to Mammoth Cave (4-12) ............................. 31 Electronic Field Trip to Perryville (4-12) ....................................... 31 Electronic Field Trip to the Aviation Museum of Kentucky (4-12).......................................................................... 32 Electronic Field Trip to the Falls of the Ohio (4-12) ...................... 32 Electronic Field Trip to the Forest (4-8) .......................................... 32 Electronic Field Trip to the KY Center for the Arts (6-12) ........... 32 Electronic Field Trip to the Kentucky Opera (6-9) ........................ 33 Electronic Field Trip to the Louisville Zoo (4-12) ......................... 33 Electronic Field Trip to the Mountain Homeplace (4-12) ............ 33 Electronic Field Trip to the National Weather Service (5-12) ...... 34 Electronic Field Trip to the Post Office (Primary) ......................... 34 Electronic Field Trip to the Speed Museum (6-12)........................ 35 Electronic Field Trip to Toyota (4-12) .............................................. 35 Electronic Field Trip to White Hall Historic Site, Home of Cassius M. Clay (4-12) .................................................. 35 Ellis Wilson—So Much to Paint (9-12) ............................................ 27 English Composition: Writing for an Audience (9-12) ................. 63 Entrepreneurs in Kentucky (1-12) ................................................... 95 Events of the 20th Century (7-12) .................................................. 109 Everyday Voices (10-adult) ............................................................... 64 Explore More (6-8) ............................................................................. 85 Exploring the World of Music (9-12)............................................... 22 Fat Albert & the Cosy Kids (Primary-7) ......................................... 52 Flirting or Hurting Sexual Harassment in Schools (11-12) .......... 56 Forest Family Forever (Primary-5) .................................................. 78 From the Brothers Grimm (4-8) ....................................................... 71 From the Shadows of the River (4-12) ............................................ 25 GED .....................................................................................................116 Gee Whiz in Agriculture (4-5) .......................................................... 81 German Program...............................................................................114 Great Campaigns of the Civil War (6-12) ..................................... 108 Great Native American Leaders (3-8) ............................................. 92 Great Native American Nations (3-8) ............................................. 93 Hand in Hand (2-3)............................................................................ 92 Head To Toe (Primary) ...................................................................... 48 Healthy Body Healthy Mind (4-8)................................................... 54 Hollywood Homeroom: Producing Classroom Videos with Hollywood Magic (K-12 ..............................................................112 Human Rights: Youth Perspectives (9-12).................................... 102 Humanities Connections (7-12) ....................................................... 17 Humanities Themes ..........................................................................115 Humanities Through the Arts .........................................................115 Hymnody of Earth (5-12) .................................................................. 21 I Love Music (Primary-6) .................................................................. 91 I'm Safe on Wheels (K-2)................................................................... 48 Inside Our Human Body (7-12) ....................................................... 89 Inside The Living Cell (6-9) .............................................................. 86 Inside Story With Slim Goodbody (2-6) ......................................... 53 Inventing Flight (7-9) ......................................................................... 87 It Figures (4) ........................................................................................ 44 James Still's River of Earth (7-12) .................................................... 73 Just For Me (Primary)........................................................................ 49 Kentucky Afield for Kids (4-7) ......................................................... 82 Kentucky Archaeology (7-12) ........................................................... 95 Kentucky Chautauqua (7-12) ......................................................... 109 2006/2007 M� Appendices• 127 ALPHABETICAL INDEX Kentucky GeoQuest (4) ..................................................................... 96 Kentucky in Africa (4-12) ................................................................ 104 The Kentucky Legislature: Behind the Scenes (4-12) ................. 100 Kentucky's Learning Goals and Academic Expectations .............. 8 Kentucky's Natural Heritage (6-12) ............................................... 83 Kentucky's Story (4-5) ..................................................................... 103 Kentucky's Underground Railroad… (4-12) ................................ 105 KET School Video Project 2006: My Kentucky Home (K-12) .....111 KET School Video Project 2007: My Kentucky Home (K-12) .....111 Know It All (3-6)................................................................................. 61 Lab Safety: The Accident at Jefferson High (7-9) .......................... 88 Latin Program ....................................................................................115 Latin Roots for English Word Power (9-12) ................................... 64 Liberty Hall (4-12) ............................................................................ 105 Life in Marine and Freshwater Environments (6-12) ................... 87 Life Skills/Character Education Series (5-9).................................. 54 Living By Words (9-12) ..................................................................... 74 Living the Story: The Civil Rights Movement in KY (6-12) ....... 94 Living the Story: The Rest of the Story (6-12) ............................... 94 Liz’s Circus Story (6-12) .................................................................... 23 Looking at Painting (9-12) ................................................................ 27 Looking At Picasso (8-12) ................................................................. 26 Looking from the Inside/Out (Primary-5)..................................... 51 Los Constructores de Cerritos del Uruguay .................................. 41 Lyric Language (Primary-6) ............................................................. 36 Making Grimm Movies (6-12).........................................................113 Making News Quiz (4-12) ...............................................................112 Maps and Globes (4-12) .................................................................... 97 Math Basics (9-12) .............................................................................. 46 Math Can Take You Places (3-6) ...................................................... 43 Math Vantage (7-9)............................................................................. 45 Math Works (5) ................................................................................... 44 Mathica's Mathshop I (Primary) ...................................................... 42 Mathica's Mathshop II (Primary) .................................................... 43 Media Mania (Primary-4) ................................................................111 The Middle Ages (7-12) ................................................................... 109 Middle School Kids Speak Out (6-9) ............................................... 56 More Books from Cover to Cover (5-6) .......................................... 72 Mountain Media (9-12) ....................................................................113 Mrs. Cabobble's Caboose (Primary) ................................................ 19 My America (1-6) .............................................................................. 99 My Beautiful House (Primary-6) ..................................................... 91 NASA Connect (4-8) .......................................................................... 86 NASA SCIence Files (3-5) ................................................................. 79 NASA's Destination Tomorrow (9-12) ............................................ 89 Native American Exhibit (4-8) ........................................................ 93 Native Americans Series (2-5) .......................................................... 92 A Native Presence (4-12) ................................................................... 94 Natureworks (3-6) .............................................................................. 80 News Quiz (5-8) ............................................................................... 100 North American Biomes (4-8) .......................................................... 82 Old Music for New Ears (Primary-8).............................................. 20 Our Earth (7-12).................................................................................. 89 Our Presidents in American History (5-12) ................................. 106 Passport to Japan - Konnichiwa (4-8) ............................................. 93 Passport to Weather & Climate (6-9)............................................... 86 Physics ................................................................................................114 Planet Neighborhood (6-12) ............................................................. 87 Posie Paints (Primary-3).................................................................... 24 The Prehistoric Mounds of Uruguay (4-12) ................................. 105 128 • 205/2006 M Appendices Professional Development ...............................................................117 Pyramid (5-9) .................................................................................... 106 Read On: Cover to Cover (4-5) ........................................................ 70 Reading Rainbow (Primary) ............................................................ 65 Real Science! II (5-10) ......................................................................... 83 Real Science! III (5-10) ....................................................................... 84 Real World Science (4-6) ................................................................... 81 Red Light, Green Light, Have You Heard? (Primary-6) .............. 51 The Remarkable Clarks (5-12) ........................................................ 107 Richard Davis on Jazz Teleconference (PD) ................................... 21 Rivers of North America "The Ohio River" (4-8) ......................... 97 Rivers of the World (4-12) ................................................................ 98 Roman City Modules (5-12) ........................................................... 107 Sacagawea (3-6) ................................................................................ 103 Saludos (Primary-5) ........................................................................... 39 Shakespeare Shorts (9-12) ................................................................. 74 The Short Story (7-12)........................................................................ 73 Signature (9-12) .................................................................................. 74 SignatureLIVE (10-12) ....................................................................... 75 Signing Time! (Preschool-3) ........................................................ 38/47 Sing Out for Freedom (7-12)............................................................. 21 Solve It (6) ........................................................................................... 45 The Spanish Media Collection (Primary-12).................................. 40 Statistics: Decisions Through Data (10-12) ..................................... 46 Street Skills (9-12) ............................................................................... 58 Student Lessons with Barry Lane (4-8)........................................... 63 Take a Look I (Primary-4) ................................................................. 77 Teach Me Japanese (Primary-5) ....................................................... 37 Teacher's Guide Order Form .......................................................... 124 Teen Issues (7-12) ............................................................................... 57 Teletales (Primary) ............................................................................. 67 Telling Tales (Primary-8) ................................................................... 69 Tracks: Impressions of America (4-8) ............................................ 103 Truth and Consequences: Federal Crimes & Teenagers (11-12).. 60 Tumbletown Tales (K-3) .................................................................... 42 TV411 (7-12) ........................................................................................ 55 Twentieth Century History (11-12) .................................................110 U.S. Constitution (6-12) ................................................................... 102 U.S. Geography: From Sea To Shining Sea (4-8) ........................... 97 Under 18: Under the Law (6-8) ...................................................... 101 Up Close and Natural (Primary) ..................................................... 76 Videotape Price List ......................................................................... 125 Videotape Service Order Form ...................................................... 126 Violence: Reversing the Trend (5-10) .............................................. 55 Viruses on the Rise (10-12) ............................................................... 90 Visualizing Cell Processes (9-12) ..................................................... 90 Voices & Visions (10-12) .................................................................... 75 Well, Well, Well with Slim Goodbody (Primary) .......................... 49 When I Grow Up (1-4)....................................................................... 53 Wind in the Willows (Primary-8) .................................................... 22 Winter: Season of Darkness/Season of Light (4-12) ..................... 17 Women of Kentucky: Our Legacy, Our Future(4-12).................. 106 Women's Work (6-12)......................................................................... 56 Words Like Freedom/Sturdy Black Bridges (9-12)....................... 23 Work, Energy, and the Simple Machine (5-8) ................................ 83 Workplace Essential Skills (9-12) ..................................................... 59 The World of Nature II (Primary-6) ................................................ 79 World of Our Own: Kentucky Folkways (8-12) ............................ 26 Write Ideas (4-6) ................................................................................ 62 Zoo Zoo Zoo (Primary) ..................................................................... 77