Camp Internet
News from the Director Timothy Tyndall - Director - Camp Internet
Weekly News & Briefing
April 9 - April 15, 2007
Summer Session is comming near with the yearly Camp Internet Summer Reading Program and new this summer, for High School
students, a 6 week course in Linux.
Differentiated Learning is a technique Camp Internet encourages.
Letting students set their level and goals is important and you will find Camp study units are easy for students to work with from many different levels.
One of the most valuable things about the design of Camp Internet is the way a Teacher or Student is able to weave in and out of more
than one curriculum area at a time. Geology, Literature, History, Environmental Studies, these and all the other areas of study within
Camp Internet are inter-connected. Combined they weave a strong fabric of knowledge that will benefit students and teachers.
Be sure to email me if you have questions or information about your experiences. Send email to rain@rain.org
Exciting Learning Adventures continue this week -
Islands explores the history of each Channel Island since transfer to American ownership - Who settled these remote and rocky lands ?
How did they survive?
Backcountry steps to the end of the 19th century to meet the daring explorers and artists / writers who were the first to venture into the California
Backcountry Sierra Nevada on foot and then widely exhibit or publish their work.
From John Muir to Thomas Moran, from the formation of the Sierra Club
to Albert Bierstadt - these explorers were the first to take photographs, pint, and write in depth about the Sierra wilderness.
http://www.rain.org/campinternet/backcountry/railroads/turn-century.html
Do an art project to tie a hands on to the online history unit.
Southwest now moves to meet the Hopi and Acoma online and learns about their lives today and their art and culture.
See how the Anasazi live on in the pueblos.
The Channel Islands are sometimes referred to as the North American Galapagos due to the unique species and sub species that can be found on these isolated and
less disturbed Island habitats. Both plants and animals on the California Channel Islands have developed unique characteristics.
The plants on the islands represent native species, which have lived on the island since before European colonization began, and they include introduced plants
that the settlers brought with them. The islands also have plants with utilitarian and medicinal properties understood by the Native Americans who lived
on the islands since up to 13,000 years ago.
Ocean Studies
Part of the larger Environmental Studies within Camp Internet, the Ocean Studies unit links you to resources, projects and interesting online video.