text stringlengths 255 17.6k |
|---|
Effects of Bullying
Being a victim of bullying is hardly an enjoyable experience. Bullying at school greatly affects the mental health of students. It can destroy students’ self-esteem and causes lifelong health problems. Victims of bullying may experience constant feelings of insecurity, depression, and anxiety. This ... |
Elementary School Units
- A Trip To The Zoo
Zoological Gardens and Parks have long been popular destinations for school field trips. These visits, and the weeks prior to such an outing, can be fully utilized for their educational potential, with teacher pre-planning. The purpose of this unit is to provide educational a... |
Bigot: a person who is intolerant toward those holding different opinions — ORIGIN: late 16th century (denoting a superstitious religious hypocrite): from French, of unknown origin.~New Oxford American Dictionary
Is it possible to go in search of the origin of a word? Etymology, the study of the origin of words and how... |
Birds have been visiting and pollinating flowers for at least 47 million years, fossil evidence now suggests. The new find pushes back the onset of ornithophily, or bird pollination, by about 17 million years, researchers say.
To pollinate, most species of angiosperms (flowering plants) require assistance from animals,... |
- Identify the common characteristics of superphylum Deuterostomia
- Describe the distinguishing characteristics of chordates
The phyla Echinodermata and Chordata (the phylum in which humans are placed) both belong to the superphylum Deuterostomia. Recall that protostome and deuterostomes differ in certain aspects of t... |
Body Mass Index (BMI) is used to determine one's mass in relation to height. To calculate BMI, a person's weight in kilograms is divided by the square of height in meters.
BMI is specific by age and sex for children and teens, and it can be seen on charts in pediatric practices. This is called BMI-for-age. A high amoun... |
Women in History - Downloadable Poster
Ruth Bader Ginsburg (1933-2020)
Ruth Bader Ginsburg was a champion of gender equality. She started out her career as an attorney, judge, and then a Justice of the Supreme Court. She graduated top of her class from Columbia and became the first person on both Harvard and Columbia L... |
The rate at which climate change is causing the Alpine glaciers to melt can be determined from the 120-year-old mountain maps created by Sebastian Finsterwalder. For decades, this multi-talented scientist tirelessly trekked through the mountains, analyzed photos and took to the skies in a hot-air balloon to survey the ... |
It may not have been entirely co-incidental that the United States Congress chose July 14, 1798 to pass the Sedition Act, one of a bundle of laws known collectively as the Alien and Sedition Acts. It was, after all, also the 10th anniversary of the Storming of the Bastille by the Paris Mob, a symbolic beginning to the ... |
Various adjectives, arranged as pairs of opposites, describe the relationship of parts of the body or compare the position of two structures relative to each other.Some of these terms are specific for comparisons made in the anatomical position, or with reference to the anatomical planes:
Superior refers to a structure... |
The purpose of a diode is to allow the flow of electrical current in only one direction. The ability to control current flow is very useful in electronics applications. Diodes have been around in one form or another for a long time. In the days of vacuum tubes, a “diode” was a tube with a heated cathode and an adjacent... |
Using Primary Sources
Using primary and secondary sources to unravel the past is at the heart of NHD’s approach. You’re familiar with secondary sources because you rely on them all the time—for example, your textbook, the news you hear on the television, an article you read online. However, secondary sources deliver ... |
Common Core Standards: Math
3. Solve problems involving velocity and other quantities that can be represented by vectors.
Students should understand that verbal problems aren't going to kill them, make them vomit, or cause them any permanent brain damage. Of course, they can always consult their physicians about that, ... |
Over the last 150 years, human beings have released hundreds of billions of tons of carbon dioxide into the Earth’s atmosphere. About one quarter of this carbon has been absorbed by the world’s oceans, causing them to become more acidic. Ocean acidification is especially dangerous to corals and other organisms that bui... |
ReadWriteThink couldn't publish all of this great content without literacy experts to write and review for us. If you've got lessons plans, activities, or other ideas you'd like to contribute, we'd love to hear from you.
Find the latest in professional publications, learn new techniques and strategies, and find out how... |
Researchers from Ohio State University have come up with a novel way to detect dark matter, one of the greatest mysteries to the cosmological community. Using ground-based radar to search for ionization trails, similar to those produced by meteors streaking through the atmosphere, researchers are hoping to use the Eart... |
Fifteen percent of all children ages 6-19 are classified as overweight or at risk of becoming overweight, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and the percentage of overweight children in the United States has risen 200 percent over the last 30 years.Sedentary living is a known contributor to th... |
The term "Purchasing Power Parity" compares buying power across countries.
The term "Purchasing-Power Parity" (PPP) expresses income in terms of buying power and attempts to neutralize the influence of exchange rate differences on cross-country comparisons of income.
The Gross Domestic Product (GDP) is measured in Amer... |
The sight of migrating V's of swans or geese high in the blue sky quickens the pulse of those lucky enough to see them in spring or autumn. Imagine though, in numbers as yet incalculable, the larger migration hidden by darkness: billions of small birds coursing in broad fronts and narrow rivers across the night sky. Th... |
Individual differences |
Methods | Statistics | Clinical | Educational | Industrial | Professional items | World psychology |
Example choice is a teaching method that has been developed and explored at the University of Bergen. The main objective is to make mathematics and science teaching more interesting and relevant... |
Make a book describing the inside and outside of a pumpkin using the five senses and observation skills.
use words to describe inside and outside of the pumpkin
record descriptions on paper (in a pumpkin book)
- Pumpkin with a lid pre-cut
- Cover of book – orange construction paper cut in shape of pumpkin, (or with pum... |
|All viruses are characterized by these structural characteristics. Each virion is composed of an outer capsid consisting of proteins and an inner core of nucleic acid. Keep it simple. Viruses consist of genetic material contained within a protective protein capsid The protein capsid and nucleic acid core can together ... |
The American Civil War Memorial pays tribute to the sacrifice made by citizens of Waterloo during the Civil War, and recognizes the soldiers
from the North and the South who gave their lives in the conflict. The Memorial, designed by sculptor Pietro del Fabro of Princeton Junction,
New Jersey, is located on Lock Island... |
Growing Independence and
Fluent, experienced readers read with expression and enthusiasm. Reading aloud to students helps them to realize how much more exciting and inviting stories can be when read with expression. The following activities help students to see, hear, and practice enthusiastic reading through hearing e... |
HI 455/555 The American Civil Rights Movement
The Civil Rights Movement was one of the most remarkable periods in American history. This mass movement dramatically shifted power relations in the American South, provided charismatic leadership for black Americans throughout the nation, built coalitions of linking black ... |
Tensions Over Immigration
During the 1920s, the United States sharply restricted foreign immigration for the first time in its history. Large inflows of foreigners long had created a certain amount of social tension, but most had been of Northern European stock and, if not quickly assimilated, at least possessed a cert... |
Antarctica's Brunt Ice Shelf.
Credit: British Antarctic Survey
When it comes to melting ice shelves in Antarctica, the danger comes from below, new research suggests.
By discovering the anatomy of ice loss across this chilly expanse, research may be able to forecast how the continent will melt in the future — and also ... |
FAQs - Frequently Asked Questions
? Solar noon drifts around in a funny fashion. Also, in the northern hemisphere, some cities have the earliest sunset in early December and the latest sunrise in early January instead of some day near the winter solstice. Why?
A: Generally speaking, when referring to the sun, the defin... |
© The Daily Galaxy
In a unique experiment on a galactic scale, millions of bacterial spores have been purposely exposed to space, to see how solar radiation affects them and the results supported the idea that not only could life have arrived on Earth on meteorites, but that considerable material has flowed between pla... |
The city of Berlin, New Hampshire, located alongside a two-mile stretch of waterfalls in the Androscoggin River, became the center of the pulp and papermaking industry in northern New England in the late 1800s. There was little economic activity in Berlin from the time it was chartered in 1829 to the 1850s. This all ch... |
Using Flash Cards as a Study Skill
For many people, the words "flash cards" remind them of the way they learned multiplication tables in elementary school.
|On one side of the card was the problem:|
|On the other side, was the answer:|
You can quiz yourself by looking at the question side and answering it; then checkin... |
Required math: arithmetic
Required physics: Newton’s law, kinetic energy
As we stated in the page on kinetic energy, energy in physics is the ability to do work, and work, in turn, is defined as the product of a force and the distance over which it acts. If a single force acts on a constant mass over a given distance, ... |
TABLE OF CONTENTS
A Guide to the Military Operations in Texas Collection, 1862-1864
During the Civil War, the U.S. Army created the Department of the Gulf and the Army of the Gulf following the capture of New Orleans, Louisiana, by Admiral David G. Farragut in 1862. Major General Benjamin F. Butler took command of the ... |
How does https work?
Https is based on public/private-key cryptography. This basically means that there is a key pair: The public key is used for encryption and the secret private key is required for decryption.
A certificate is basically a public key with a label identifying the owner.
So when your browser connects to... |
A space flight by millions of microscopic worms could help us overcome the numerous threats posed to human health by space travel. The Caenorhabditis elegans (C. elegans) have also given experts an insight into how to block muscle degradation in the sick and elderly.The worms — from The University of Nottingham — were ... |
Triceratops Addition & Coloring
Time for some prehistoric math lessons! This worksheet gives your kid the opportunity to practice a few basic addition skills while counting one of their favorite dinosaurs. Be sure to have her color the dinosaurs after she solves the problem, or, to help her.
For extra fun, have her dra... |
Flatworms’ stem cells (in color, left image) and excretory organs (pink clusters, right image) could provide insight into our own—and pave the way toward regenerative therapies.
Credit: Peter Reddien, Whitehead Institute for Medical Research (left); Jochen Rink, Max Planck Institute, and Hanh Thi-Kim Vu, Stowers Instit... |
Electron ‘Spin’ Key To Solar Cell Breakthrough
Organic solar cells, a new class of solar cell that mimics the natural process of plant photosynthesis, could revolutionize renewable energy – but currently lack the efficiency to compete with the more costly commercial silicon cells.
Currently, organic solar cells can ach... |
THE asteroid that killed the dinosaurs was a mere pebble compared with a 30-kilometre rock that clobbered the Earth about 2.5 billion years ago.
Andrew Glikson of the Australian National University in Canberra has found a layer of impact debris spread across the Hamersley Basin of Western Australia. It is less than 20 ... |
A ruler of a people called the Sabeans, who occupied a territory in southwest Arabia, approximately where Yemen is today (see Map 6:G6). The Semitic inhabitants of Sheba built up a far‐reaching trade, especially in spices and precious metals and stones; they colonized nearby parts of Africa, including the Ethiopian coa... |
By Anjum Altaf
In the last installment we went back to the origins of instrumental music tracing it to the sound that resulted from the draw and release of a hunting bow. This was presumed to have led to experimentation with more strings being stretched across a bow-like frame – a precursor of the harp. Since the shape... |
Sickle cell disease (SCD) is a disease of the hemoglobin. The hemoglobin is a molecule that carries oxygen within red blood cells. In SCD, defective hemoglobin causes the red blood cells to become stiff instead of flexible and form a sickle or a crescent.
SCD is an inherited disease, meaning that the disease is passed ... |
Language Arts: Kindergarten
Key Ideas and details
1. Read closely to determine what the text says explicitly and to make logical inferences from it; cite specific textual evidence when writing or speaking to support conclusions drawn from the text.
2. Determine central ideas or themes of a text and analyze their develo... |
The “Teach & Tell”
If you were a fly on my classroom wall you would see my students presenting a “Teach & Tell” three times a year (once per term). This activity is simply a variation of a favourite for many students in the primary grades: “Show and Tell”. This practice provides students with an opportunity to share in... |
Excess nutrients reach surface-water resources in direct discharges from point sources (for example, municipal wastewater-treatment plants) and from diffuse non—point sources (for example, nutrient runoff from farmland, urban, and suburban areas and air pollution). Because the nutrient-use efficiency of crops is less t... |
Place of Worship
Life in ancient Hawaii focused on propitiating the gods, and the various islands housed many types of temples invoking peace, war, health, or profitable fishing and farming. Chiefs and specific occupational groups, such as fishermen, practiced formalized worship in the heiau (place of worship). The hei... |
O Positive vs O Negative
Human blood can be classified into four different types of groups according to the antigen in the cell surface of the red blood cells. In 1900, Landsteiner found the two types of antigens called type A and B. So, the surface of red blood cells of a person can have either antigen A or B or neith... |
As with any structure, the human body is built upon a framework that is constructed to carry out a wide range of functions. The bones, ligaments, and tendons are each essential parts of the human framework, integrated into a mechanism, the skeleton, that is crucial to the movement, stability, protection, and growth of ... |
Ocean currents and iceberg movements
- 576 kbps mp4
- 1000 kbps mov
In this video clip NIWA scientist John Mitchel explains how icebergs are moved by the water currents. He uses a map to further explain the movement of icebergs.
Points of interest for teachers:
- What does John Mitchel mean when he talks about the iceb... |
The Elevation of the Magdalen
Peter Strüb the Younger (Master of Messkirch)
Tempera on panel
The Bergmann Richards Memorial Fund and the Fiduciary Fund
Mary Magdalene, her sister, Martha, and her brother, Lazarus, were set adrift in a rudderless open boat by some people who did not
share their belief in the Christian m... |
The Great Valley of California has a Mediterranean climate, one of only five such areas on earth. It is characterized by hot dry summers and wet, cool winters. There is six to eight inches of rain in the southern valley and 20 inches in the north. Vernal pool plants and creatures have established strategies to grow in ... |
What is now known as Ohm's law appears in a famous book written in 1827 in which he gave his complete theory of electricity.
Georg Simon Ohm was born in 1787 in Erlangen, Germany. Georg came from a Protestant family. His father, Johann Wolfgang Ohm, was a locksmith and his mother, Maria Elizabeth Beck, was the daughter... |
Blue carbon is the carbon stored and sequestered in coastal ecosystems such as mangrove forests, seagrass meadows or intertidal saltmarshes. These valuable ecosystems hold vast carbon reservoirs; they sequester atmospheric CO2 through primary production, and then deposit it in their sediments. In fact, most blue carbon... |
Have you ever wondered how a camera can take a picture of a tree in the distance and have the subject fill the whole of the frame despite how far away it is?
Or how a picture can be taken close to a subject yet include a whole host of things either side of it? Stay with us and we'll tell you all you need to know.
In th... |
View your list of saved words. (You can log in using Facebook.)
Class of substances with chemical structures made up of a central metal atom surrounded by nonmetal atoms or groups of atoms, known as ligands. Examples of coordination compounds include hemoglobin, vitamin B, and chlorophyll, as well as dyes, pigments, an... |
The globular cluster NGC 6397 contains around 400,000 stars and is located about 7,200 light years away in the southern constellation Ara. With an estimated age of 13.5 billion years, it is likely among the first objects of the Galaxy to form after the Big Bang.
Credit: European Southern Observatory
A process similar t... |
The building block of life and information about them.
Humans are complex multicellular organisms. As such a person requires many nutrients, minerals and amino acids to function at peak efficiency. These can be provided by food and it is through food that other components such as vitamins are created. By examining the ... |
Image of Magellan orbiting Venus.
Click on image for full size
On May 4, 1989, Magellan was carried into space by the Atlantis space shuttle, which launched it toward Venus. It arrived on Aug. 10, 1990 and inserted itself into a highly elliptical orbit around the north and south poles.
Over the next 3 years, Magellan u... |
The New Testament is the second, shorter part of the Christian Bible. Unlike the Old Testament, which covers hundreds of years of history, the New Testament only covers several decades, and is a collection of the religious teachings and beliefs of Christianity. The New Testament is not a single book written by one pers... |
|Yale-New Haven Teachers Institute||Home|
This unit is designed for first grade; however, it could be adjusted to meet the needs of students in kindergarten or second grade. The unit focuses on Plains Indians and the aspects of their lives that many of us find interesting and are fascinated with. The Unit allows childr... |
born on April 15, 1452 Leonardo da Vinci was an Italian Renaissance painter, sculptor, architect, musician, mathematician, anatomist, geologist, cartographer, botanist and writer. He epitomized the Italian Renaissance, a period of great cultural change and achievement that began in Italy during the 14th century and las... |
What the Sixth-Century Plague was:
The Sixth-Century Plague was also known as:
The disease of Justinian's Plague:
The progress of the disease was similar to that of the later epidemic, but there were a few notable differences. Many plague victims underwent hallucinations, both before the onset of other symptoms and aft... |
What motivates behavior? According to humanist psychologist Abraham Maslow, our actions are motivated in order achieve certain needs. Maslow first introduced his concept of a hierarchy of needs in his 1943 paper "A Theory of Human Motivation" and his subsequent book Motivation and Personality. This hierarchy suggests t... |
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Soil erosion is the washing or blowing away (by wind or water) of the top layer of soil (dirt).
Erosion also leaves large holes in the earth, which can weaken buildings and even cause them to collapse.
Prevention[change | edit source]
Soil erosion can be prevented several ways.
- P... |
Archaeology Month Lesson Plan (3MB pdf)
All of the pottery on this year’s poster comes from the City Square area in the heart of Charlestown, a neighborhood of Boston. The artifacts generally came from privies (outhouses) surrounding a structure that served many purposes during its lifetime. It was originally construct... |
A heavy layer of air pollution, a mix of aerosol particles and vapors, obscures the view over Mexico City. Two studies by the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory show the importance of including the small-scale effects of aerosols in climate modeling. | Image courtesy of PNNL
Who knew a little dust made such a differ... |
Suggestions for Recognizing Sites and Artifacts: HammerstonesIntroduction | Raw Materials | Projectile Points—Dart, Spear, Arrow | Hammerstones | Milling and Grinding Tools | Lithic Debitage
"Hammerstone" is the archaeologist's term for a hand-held stone that shows battering on one or more surfaces, from coming into co... |
for National Geographic News
Rare diamonds found buried on an island near southern California strengthen the controversial idea that comet impacts wiped out huge beasts and an early human culture in North America about 12,900 years ago.
Similar "nanodiamonds" found in sediments across North America were presented earli... |
The effective educator must be ever mindful of the simple fact that children go to school for a living. School is their job, their livelihood, their identity. Therefore, the critical role that school plays in the child's social development and self-concept must be recognized. Even if a child is enjoying academic succes... |
SPENCER MICHELS: Off the California coast, researchers are doing ocean-floor experiments that may affect the nature of the debate over global warming. Up to now, that debate -- at numerous international conferences -- has focused on proposals to reduce emissions into the atmosphere of carbon dioxide, which is considere... |
Math Probability - What a Fun Unit!
In math, probability is the likelihood that an event will happen. It is the ratio of the number of ways an event can occur to the number of possible outcomes.
Probability is expressed as a fraction or decimal from 0 to 1. Think of the following scale when determining the probability ... |
What can you do to encourage your child to read more? One important tip is to remember that your child is watching. What are you reading? Children are likely to follow your example if you are enthusiastic about reading. Whether you read information online together, follow a recipe in a magazine, or read a favorite book... |
Sexual reproduction in flowering plants is often mediated by the birds & the bees (& other animal agents), but up until now the life cycle has appeared much simpler in plants like the mosses. Until fairly recently it was generally accepted that moss sex was a case of ‘just add water’: this released sperm from the male ... |
Forests naturally slow the rates of human-caused global warming by storing carbon. Carbon storage is a natural process whereby living plants and trees absorb carbon from the atmosphere through photosynthesis as they grow. Research suggests that over the last century, nearly 100 billion tonnes of carbon have been absorb... |
Free African Society
The Free African Society was founded in Philadelphia in April 1787, the first black mutual aid society in the city. The leaders were Richard Allen and Absalom Jones, free blacks whose goal was to create a non-denominational religious organization to serve the spiritual, economic and social needs of... |
Let us begin in the beginning and trace the activities of the people who put the space age into motion.
In the very beginning there was Isaac Newton, who taught us the Laws of Motion. Force equals mass times acceleration; to every action there is always opposed an equal reaction. Newton’s objective was to understand Ke... |
Earlier this week, the Planetary Society, a space advocacy group in Pasadena, California, received an anonymous donation to build and launch a small solar-sail driven spacecraft.
The Society hopes to launch the sail in about a year as part of a three-stage plan to demonstrate the viability of solar sail propulsion, whi... |
Learning to tell time in English can be challenging for learners so consider using one of the 86 telling time worksheets
in this section to give your students some extra practice. Here you can find a really comprehensive activity on time
. It was created for pre-intermediate students and talks not just about times of d... |
First Nations of AlbertaEdit This Page
From FamilySearch Wiki
|This Indians of North America-related article is a stub. You can help by expanding it.|
The eastern slopes of the Rocky Mountains form the western border of Alberta; they sweep down and become flat plains. A single culture is thought to have first inhabited... |
- Do a Z10 easy game.
- Numbers appear in small groups.
- Each adds up a multiple of 10.
- Guess the groups.
- Work out what numbers are in the ? squares.
Extended tutorial for the ℤ10 Puzzles (auch auf Deutsch verfügbar.)
The puzzles are based on a grid with numbers in small groups. We need to get rid of the numbers. ... |
OriginIn the early 20th century, experiments by Ernest Rutherford established that atoms consisted of a diffuse cloud of negatively charged electrons surrounding a small, dense, positively charged nucleus. Given this experimental data, Rutherford naturally considered a planetary-model atom, the Rutherford model of 1911... |
Latin America is and always has been a geographically diverse region of the world rich in resources, cultures and ecological diversity and the first Spanish colonizers certainly recognized this. The early Spaniards were quite explicit about their intentions to usurp this new territory, plundering the lands and relentle... |
Mapping the World and Beyond
Imagine that you are planning a trip in a foreign country. Two items you would probably wish to carry along are a map and compass. With the map, you can locate yourself and with the compass and simple pacing, you can navigate from location to location as depicted on the map. This process is... |
It consists of a hole, usually round or oval, and a tapered plug, usually a disk shape on the end of a shaft also called a valve stem. The portion of the hole where the plug meets with it is referred to as the 'seat' or 'valve seat'. The shaft guides the plug portion by sliding through a valve guide. In exhaust applica... |
- slide 1 of 4
Explain to the students that each hemisphere has all four lobes — frontal lobe, parietal lobe, temporal lobe and occipital lobe. Point out that the two lobes are connected by the corpus callosum. If you have a 3-D model, show students the corpus callosum.
Point out that if the corpus callosum is cut, suc... |
John Locke (1632-1704) was a political thinker in England who was critical of the idea of absolute power held by a king. He had the idea of a “state of nature”, which was a society that lacked a government power, or rather preceded any established authority. In the state of nature everyone enjoys natural rights, derive... |
In New Zealand, the government passed legislation that recognised the Whanganui River catchment as a legal person. This significant legal reform emerged from the longstanding Treaty of Waitangi negotiations and is a way of formally acknowledging the special relationship local Māori have with the river.
In India, the Ut... |
A typical planar tube is depicted in figure 2-13. Notice that the tube elements are mounted close to
each other and are parallel to one another. The oxide coating of the cathode is applied to the top surface
only. Therefore, the emitting surface of the cathode is parallel to the plate and the grid.
Figure 2-13.Internal... |
Black powder from the factories was usually packed in barrels or cases.
Powder cases were usually made of copper and the powder was put in a linen bag and placed in the case. Alternatively, the case was made of wood, with a second inner box also made of wood.
Barrel making was an art that was well developed over severa... |
When it comes to making babies, women do the heavy lifting. The parts of the female reproductive system work together in a symphony of function that starts with fertilization and culminates in the birth of a baby.
Ovaries: Egg and Hormone Production
Ovaries, the female reproductive organs, have two main functions: to p... |
Home > Preview
The flashcards below were created by user
on FreezingBlue Flashcards.
How does heat differ from temperature?
- Temp is a number of how fast the molecules are moving
- Heat is energy traveling from one object to another
- Heat is energy
What is the unit for temperature and what is the unit for heat?
- Hea... |
The age of Earth (and by inference, the age of most other objects in the solar system) is also not directly known. But related evidence can be studied, in this case, by the technique of radioactive dating. Various elements (the parent element) are unstable and decay to produce another (the daughter) element. The time i... |
Washington: When a “planetary embryo” called Theia collided with the early Earth approximately 100 million years after the Earth was formed, the moon span off into the orbit around the nascent planet, according to a new study.
Scientists had already known about this high-speed crash, which occurred almost 4.5 billion y... |
School Tool Box: Introducing the Interactive Student Notebook (left side- right side)
Lesson 2 of 2
Objective: SWBAT explain the difference between the left and right side activities in an Interactive Student Notebook.
A Look at the Tools
This is the second of a two day lesson.
Before you begin this portion of the less... |
The ongoing debate about global warming and climate change includes arguments about whether our world actually faces such a problem, and whether it was caused by human activity. But there’s another earthling-influenced phenomenon we don’t hear too much about: how we affect what happens in space.
According to NASA:
Spac... |
In this activity developed by EDC's Center for Children and Technology, students explore how sound is used to create meaning in a shot by listening for three types of sound: voice-over, music, and ambient sound.
To explore how sound is used to create meaning in a shot, listen for three types of sound while watching the... |
A Pythagorean triple is a set of three positive integers, (a, b, c), such that a right triangle can be formed with the legs a and b and the hypotenuse c. The most common Pythagorean triples are (3, 4, 5), (5, 12, 13), (8, 15, 17) and (7, 24, 25).
A:The definition of a limit in calculus is the value that a function gets... |
To understand the state’s role, we should look at the influence on policymaking of what economists call “path dependence.” This is the impact history has on the decisions governments take. It was during the time of the long British rule of India that the state got heavily involved in all aspects of agriculture in the a... |
Limestone is one of this countries most important resources, Portland limestone has been used to build many British landmarks including Bucking Palace, the Cenotaph, many large houses and many town houses throughout the UK.
Limestone undergoes several useful reactions which produce many more products than the simple bu... |
The digestive system is designed to convert the foods eaten on a daily basis into materials the body can use. To do this, a series of chemical and mechanical processes work to gradually alter food materials into a molecular form. The processes that take place in the mouth mark the first transition stage within the dige... |
Subsets and Splits
No community queries yet
The top public SQL queries from the community will appear here once available.