 Welcome to OTAN, your Outreach and Technical Assistance Network. Newseum ED is a free website belonging to Newseum, a museum in Washington, D.C. They are dedicated to the topics of news and history. The focus is on First Amendment rights and helping students develop critical thinking skills through thousands of lesson plans, videos, classes, digital artifacts, historical events, and critical debates. Newseum ED is a great way to build the critical thinking skills needed for our high school equivalency students. There are several different ways to explore Newseum ED. First, let's take a look at some resources by topics. There are six different topic areas. Understanding the First Amendment, finding reliable facts, making historical connections, examining the powers of the press, navigating a religiously diverse society, and exercising my rights. One of my favorites is finding reliable facts. Let's take a look. Inside, there are numerous tools and techniques to evaluate information. This first one is a collection of resources that can be broken up into smaller units. Let's take a look at one lesson. At the top is a description of the activity. This lesson takes approximately 30 minutes to an hour to complete and is appropriate for seventh grade through college-level students. There are step-by-step instructions and all the needed resources. At the bottom, you will also find the related standards. Going back to the homepage, I want to show you one more way to find resources. This time, I'm going to select ED tools. Here we can search by keywords, type of tool, topic, grade, and more. The content can be filtered by grade level and adapted for English language learners and basic skills students. Museum ED topics are important to all our students. You will want to get your own free account. Please be sure to check out Museum ED. It is a great resource for you and your students. Thank you. And as a reminder, OTAN supports California Adult Education Agencies who are integrating, improving, and maintaining technology use in the classroom. Always stay informed by visiting the OTAN website at www.otan.us and be sure to subscribe to our YouTube channel, like us on Facebook, and follow us on Twitter.