View the collection here: https://www.artic.edu/collection
Read all about it here: https://mymodernmet.com/art-institute-of-chicago-free-resources/?fbclid=IwAR1HFDwSe2U3WrTEbSTO2vCDQ2ZUXgby1lD2kIvw27s87bZKbWzMdjmXPZE
This is great news for arts and humanities teachers, as well as graphic designers and other artists: The Chicago Institute of Art has digitized thousands of works of art and they are available free, in high-resolution, AND they are downloadable and reusable, in the public domain! View the collection here: https://www.artic.edu/collection Read all about it here: https://mymodernmet.com/art-institute-of-chicago-free-resources/?fbclid=IwAR1HFDwSe2U3WrTEbSTO2vCDQ2ZUXgby1lD2kIvw27s87bZKbWzMdjmXPZE
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With the upcoming 50th anniversary of the Moon Landing on July 20, coupled with NASA’s 60th anniversary last year, here are some really neat STEM activities to look at with your students:
Kim McClean, teacher librarian at Clague Middle School in Ann Arbor, is a featured educator in the following article. By Jo Mathis/AAPS District News Editor Clague Middle School librarian Kim McLean grew up in Philadelphia and graduated from Temple University, where she studied communications and theater. She started her career in book publishing, where she worked in marketing and public relations for a variety of publishers, including Congressional Quarterly Publishing in Washington, D.C. and Rand McNally in Chicago. After staying home to raise her two children while working part-time for the Lamaze Association and the Wild Swan Theater, McLean returned to school to earn her master of science in information degree from the University of Michigan in 2010. She met her husband, Austin, during a study abroad program in London, England during her junior year in college. The Ann Arbor residents have been married for 25 years and have two children, Neil and Grant. Neil graduated this past spring from the College of William and Mary with a bachelor’s degree in business administration and art history, and is now working as a cloud solution engineer for Oracle in Washington, D.C. Grant is a sophomore at Villanova University studying business and history. He is on the ultimate frisbee team and will be studying abroad in London next year. What inspired you to study library science? When my boys were attending Lawton Elementary school, I volunteered in their library helping with book circulation and book fairs. After seven years of volunteering, I took a job as a media clerk at Tappan Middle School and realized how much I absolutely loved working in the school library. The only thing holding me back was a degree, so with the encouragement of the librarians I had volunteered and worked for, I decided to apply to the University of Michigan. Not only did I get into the program, but I also received a non-traditional scholarship awarded to students who have been out of college for more than five years. This cemented my decision to return to school. After two years in a full-time program in the School of Education, I earned my teaching certification and at the School of Information, I received my master’s degree. Read more... |
Mr. Kipp, Tappan LibrarianI am the librarian faculty at Tappan Middle School in Ann Arbor, Michigan. Archives
April 2024
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