February 7th is World Read Aloud Day this year. You might be interested in The Best Resources For World Read Aloud Day.
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  1. Feb. 4th Is World Read Aloud Day – Here Are Teaching & Learning Resources
  2. Chinese (Lunar) New Year Begins On Feb. 17th – Here Are Teaching & Learning Resources
  3. This Week’s Free & Useful Artificial Intelligence Tools For The Classroom
  4. I Love These “Game Poems” & Think They Would Be Great Models For Students Creating Their Own
  5. It’s Fred Korematsu Day – Here Are Teaching & Learning Resources On Japanese-American Internment
  6. More Recent Articles

Feb. 4th Is World Read Aloud Day – Here Are Teaching & Learning Resources

 

February 7th is World Read Aloud Day this year.

You might be interested in The Best Resources For World Read Aloud Day.

     

Chinese (Lunar) New Year Begins On Feb. 17th – Here Are Teaching & Learning Resources

hulkiokantabak / Pixabay

 

Chinese (Lunar) New Year begins on January 29th.

You might be interested in The Best Resources For Chinese New Year.

     

This Week’s Free & Useful Artificial Intelligence Tools For The Classroom

 

geralt / Pixabay

 

At least, for now, I’m going to make this a weekly feature which will highlight additions to THE BEST NEW – & FREE – ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE TOOLS THAT COULD BE USED IN THE CLASSROOM.

Here are the latest:

Slide Sync is free and creates presentations on any topic.

Zappy Pages uses AI to let you create webpages.

Dream Math, likes a zillion other AI tools, creates stories for kids.  Its twist is that its stories incorporate math into them.

Hablo is another AI language learning tool.

Budget Pixel is another text-to-image tool.

Here are some AI coloring pages tools: Cogoz ; Coloring Page Generator; Sprunki ; Coloring-Pages app

Can AI Make History Class More Fun for Students? is from Ed Week. I’m adding it to THE “BEST” IDEAS FOR USING CHATGPT, BARD, & OTHER FORMS OF AI WITH STUDENTS.

What a surprise —–Why AI May Not Be Ready to Write Your Lesson Plans www.edweek.org/technology/w…

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— Larry Ferlazzo (@larryferlazzo.bsky.social) June 30, 2025 at 12:42 PM

What Happens After A.I. Destroys College Writing? www.newyorker.com/magazine/202…

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— Larry Ferlazzo (@larryferlazzo.bsky.social) June 30, 2025 at 10:30 AM

 

A Classroom Experiment www.nytimes.com/2025/07/09/b…

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— Larry Ferlazzo (@larryferlazzo.bsky.social) July 9, 2025 at 7:43 AM

The problems posed by LLMs for education are immediate and obvious, and the promised benefits remain untested and uncertain. But I see one way that LLMs may inadvertently improve student thinking.
substack.com/inbox/post/1…

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— Dan Willingham (@dtwuva.bsky.social) July 8, 2025 at 8:59 AM

 

 

     

I Love These “Game Poems” & Think They Would Be Great Models For Students Creating Their Own

I love this!

Game Poems curates an innovative collection of small, poetic videogames, or “game poems.” That is, short interactive artworks that borrow language and framing from traditional videogames (e.g., they may utilize a player-controlled avatar or make use of classic videogame iconography), while also presenting themselves as poems in some way (perhaps by engaging with creative material constraints, playing with poetic text, or simply following in the lyric tradition of short-form personal expression).

The ones I tried out were very cool, though I didn’t click on all of them and can’t vouch they are 100% classroom appropriate.

I could see a teacher showing several, students identifying common characteristics, and then creating their own (assuming they or the teacher were technologically proficient to do so).

I’m adding this info to The Best World Poetry Day Resources – Help Me Find More.

For what it’s worth, I asked ChatGPT for suggestions of tools students could use to create these kinds of “game poems.”  Here’s what it said:

⭐ BEST MATCHES FOR “GAME POEMS”
1. Twine

Best overall tool for interactive poetry

💡 What it is: A free tool for creating choice-based interactive stories and poems

🎮 Why it fits game poems:

Readers click choices

Text changes based on decisions

Can feel like a game, dream, or maze

🧠 Skill level: Beginner-friendly (no coding required)

🌐 Runs in browser or desktop

📤 Output: Shareable web page

Perfect for:

Second-person poems

Emotional decision poems

Identity, memory, or “what if” poetry

➡ Students can create poems where reading = playing

2. Scratch

Best for younger students / visual interaction

💡 What it is: Block-based coding platform (MIT)

🎮 Why it fits:

Poems can be revealed by clicking, moving, or colliding

Text, sound, and animation combine

Feels very “game-like”

🧠 Skill level: Elementary–middle school friendly

🌐 Browser-based

📤 Shareable links

Perfect for:

Concrete poetry

Spoken-word poems with motion

Mood poems with sound and visuals

➡ Think: poem as a playful interactive scene

3. Bitsy

Best for minimalist, artsy game poems

💡 What it is: Ultra-simple pixel game creator

🎮 Why it fits:

Poems appear as players move through rooms

Objects trigger lines of poetry

Very “indie game” aesthetic (like gamepoems)

🧠 Skill level: Beginner

🌐 Browser-based

📤 Shareable HTML file

Perfect for:

Journey poems

Memory poems

Place-based or vignette poems

➡ This is probably the closest vibe to gamepoems.com

🟡 SECOND-TIER (Still Strong)
4. Google Slides (Interactive Poetry)

Lowest barrier, surprisingly effective

Use hyperlinks between slides as “choices”

Click objects to reveal lines

Add sound and images

➡ Not a real game engine, but great for classrooms with tight tech limits

5. Canva (Interactive Presentation Mode)

Students create poem “levels” as pages

Buttons link to different paths

Strong visual design

➡ Less game logic, more visual storytelling

6. Genially

Interactive content creator

Clickable objects, layers, reveals

Free tier works well for poetry projects

➡ Excellent for exhibition-style game poems

🧠 HOW TO FRAME THIS FOR STUDENTS

You might give them a prompt like:

“Create a poem that must be played, not just read.”

Constraints help:

Reader must make at least 3 choices

Poem must change based on interaction

Language matters more than winning

     

It’s Fred Korematsu Day – Here Are Teaching & Learning Resources On Japanese-American Internment

 

Every January 30th is officially Fred Korematsu Day in California. Here’s some background on it from YES Magazine:

In 1942, 23 year-old shipyard welder Fred Korematsu refused to join over 120,000 West Coast Japanese Americans who were rounded up and taken to incarceration camps under President Franklin D. Roosevelt’s Executive Order No. 9066. While Korematsu’s family was at the Topaz incarceration camp in the Utah desert, Korematsu was appealing his conviction. In 1944, the Supreme Court voted in a 6-3 decision against Korematsu, claiming the incarceration was justified for military reasons. It wasn’t until Nov. 10, 1983 that his conviction was overturned.

Fred Korematsu continued to speak up for civil rights throughout his life. He believed that “If you have the feeling that something is wrong, don’t be afraid to speak up.” That message remains alive in the mission and teachings of the Fred T. Korematsu Institute for Civil Rights and Education. In 2010, the state of California established January 30 as Fred Korematsu Day.

 

     

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