Every month I make a short list highlighting my choices of the best resources I shared through (and learned from) Twitter, but didn’t necessarily include them in posts here on my blog. Now and then, in order to make it a bit easier for me, I may try to break it up into mid-month and end-of-month lists (and sometimes I’m a bit late).

I’ve already shared in earlier posts several new resources I found on Twitter — and where I gave credit to those from whom I learned about them. Those are not included again in this post.

If you don’t use Twitter, you can also check-out all of my “tweets” on Twitter profile page or subscribe to their RSS feed.

Here are my picks for June’s Best Tweets — Part Two (not listed in any order):

Understanding by Design Meets Neuroscience for compelling and memorable learning and executive function by Judy Willis

“Why U.S. Teachers Work the Most But U.S. Students Stay Average” The Atlantic

“Awesome People Reading”

Daily 10 min podcasts from BBC “Witness – history as told by the people who were there.”

How to know if hackers have stolen your password

Straight Up Conversation: Teacher Eval Guru Charlotte Danielson

“World’s scariest job? Meet the workers building a 1m-wide wooden road on a vertical cliff face”

NPR listeners pick the best book “thrillers”

“The Man Who Robbed a Bank for $1 to Get Health Care Coverage” The Atlantic

The Eye On Education blog also regularly lists their favorite tweets.