This will take you to the Science and Technical Education portion of the Illinois Writing Matters website. If you back up, however, there are many, many resources for the content areas.
This is a grammar and spell checking site. There is an app that can be downloaded, and it will check everything you write, from e-mails to documents, for many common errors. If you are very concerned about your writing, or if you are currently in a master's or doctoral program, I recommend the premium service. It's about $12 a month, but it will save you a ton of time if you have difficulty with proofreading. The basic service, however, is free and checks for over 250 common errors!
Adding primary sources can be an excellent way to engage students and spark their curiosity. This website has many excellent resources and is fairly easy to navigate.
Shift kits are tools designed to help teachers shift from the old standards to the new. The ELA content literacy shift kit is designed for teachers who are not teaching in the English language arts classroom but who are trying to incorporate literacy standards in their content areas. If you scroll down to the Power Points and the Handouts, there are some useful items for science and technical education teachers.
This link will take you to an Australian site that is dedicated to professional development for teachers. Specifically, this page gives useful information for creating rubrics.
This site shows a new infographic each day, but it also has access to a gallery of previous infographics on a wide variety of topics. This is a good place to send students to glean new information or to use as a visual aide for your own lessons.
Glogs are definitely a way for students to show you what they know, but this link shows you another side of the Glogster website: the glogpedia. This is over 30,000 glogs that have already been created on a wide array of topics. Some of these are quite excellent while others have clearly been produced by students.
This is a terrific resource that includes lesson ideas and videos of teachers actually implementing them in the classroom. There are professional development videos as well, including many that show PLC's working with student growth and assessments.
This site has many free rubrics that you can see and the tools to create your own rubrics. Some of them are very vague, while others seem fairly detailed.
I know people who use this site. It has many rubrics that have already been created and software to help you create a rubric. It does come with a cost. If you have more money than time, it might be worth it, but there is nothing here that you could not create yourself with time.