User Image

Brian Ausland

Director of Education & Research
One Learning Community
Language Arts And English, Social Studies, Career and Tech Ed

Brian works at One Learning Community as the Director of Education. As a former member of the core design and development team for the Smithsonian Learning Lab, he loves using and sharing this incredible platform, with large communities of educators through work with various State Education Agencies, districts, and national projects. Brian and his team hopes everyone has as much fun using this site as they did coordinating with Smithsonian Center for Learning and Digital Access staff on its research, development, and support.

Brian Ausland's collections

 

What Can Boys and Girls Club Find and Do in the Learning Lab?

Let's take a journey to see what the Smithsonian has for you and your students. We will use this as a FRIENDLY challenge, and as a way to explore the types of diverse resources and features found in the Learning Lab.
Brian Ausland
16
 

Travers - The Rise of Industrialism

<p>This collection is an adaptation of a presentation on Industrialization that introduces students to the forces and concepts related to England (and other European countries) transition from pre-industrial to industrial societies. </p>
Brian Ausland
11
 

The California State Parks - Guided Journey Through the Learning Lab

<p>Let's take a journey to see what the Smithsonian has for you and your students. We will use this as a FRIENDLY challenge, and as a way to explore the types of diverse resources and features found in the Learning Lab.</p>
Brian Ausland
11
 

President Lincoln: Casualty of War?

<p>In lessons in this issue of <em>Smithsonian in Your Classroom, </em>portraits of Lincoln introduce a study of the Civil War. An analysis of the portraits—including the famous “cracked-plate" photograph, two plaster “life masks," and an eyewitness drawing of Lincoln's arrival in the enemy capital of Richmond, Virginia—leads to an analysis of the times.</p> <p>Click on the PDF icons to download the issue and larger images of the portraits.</p>
Brian Ausland
16
 

new Collection for brian

asdfasdfasdfs
Brian Ausland
4
 

My Race to Space Collection

<p>Take this collection, and make it your own by finding at least 5-10 more "space" objects and artifacts. </p>
Brian Ausland
6
 

“Exploring Connections: How Transcendentalism Influences American Culture Today”

<p>Note to Students: You are about to write an essay that asks you to think about connections between your own experiences and those described by the Transcendentalist authors we've studied in this unit. Before you start your essay, you'll embark on an "Exploring Connections" activity designed to help you think about how Transcendentalist ideas and principles still influence American culture today. You'll explore a series of contemporary "artifacts"--comic strips, songs, videos, and poems--and discuss the ways they seem to be influenced by (or connected to) Transcendentalist ideas, values, and beliefs.</p>
Brian Ausland
9
 

Examining the Transcontinental Railroad - Nn

<p>Railroads started well before 1869, but it was not until that year that the nation was bound together by a commitment to build the first transcontinental system. On May 10, 1869, the driving of a golden spike, signaled the ceremonial end to a process that had been going on for 6 years of construction, engineering, and human toil. Two companies, one starting in Omaha, Nebraska and the other in Sacramento, California competed to lay track towards each other to join the Central Pacific and Union Pacific Railroads. Their reward for each mile was government money and lots of it. By the time that they met at Promontory Summit, Utah, vast sums of money and untold human labor and sacrifice had been expended on this incredible technical endeavor. A single track united the continent's Wester and Eastern regions. Travel from East to West used to take months by wagon train, could now be measured in mere days. This collection utilizes Primary Source student review strategies from the Library of Congress' <a href="http://www.loc.gov/teachers/usingprimarysources/guides.html" target="_blank">Primary Source Analysis Tools</a>. </p>
Brian Ausland
14
 

Egyptian Hieroglyphs

What are hieroglyphs? What was the purpose? Who could write them? How did we discover how to read them?
Brian Ausland
11
 

California Parks Learning Activity

<p>This collection is for an activity with California State Parks leadership teams. Teams will use a somewhat random series of resources found within this Smithsonian collection to see if they can create an educational theme/context using at least 3-5 of the resources. #CalParks</p>
Brian Ausland
27
 

Behind Lock and Key

A collection of locks and keys from various times and cultures.
Brian Ausland
23
 

Been Caught Stealing - A Digital High School English Unit

<p>This learning collection examines what is means to steal. The concept of stealing ranges from music sampling to cultural appropriations from people trying to stop basic theft of packages on their porches. What does it mean to steal an election? What does it mean to steal someone's heart? What does it mean when Bob Dylan sings, "Steal a little and they'll put you in jail, steal a lot and they'll make you king."<strong> </strong><br><br><br></p>
Brian Ausland
10