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Operations and Algebraic Thinking
Resources cannot be aligned to this standard, browse sub-standards to find lessons.
Relate counting to addition and subtraction (e.g., by counting on 2 to add 2).
Add and subtract within 20, demonstrating fluency for addition and subtraction within 10 and use strategies such as
Add and... |
Counting Coins to Get Ready for School
Crayons? Check! Scissors? Check! Glue? Check! This worksheet features the school supplies kids stock up on, but with the added bonus of maths practise. Kids see five key supplies for school, and each item has a set of coins representing its price. Your child's task is to count the... |
Most of the lunar surface consists of irregular dust grains called regolith. Particles striking the moon should get trapped in the spaces between these grains and absorbed into the regolith. When protons are absorbed in this manner they should interact with the oxygen present to produce hydroxyl and water.
SARA has con... |
The depletion of natural ecosystems continues worldwide, with serious negative consequences for human and other species. The current rate of global extinction of plants and animals is more than a thousand times higher compared to natural extinction rates observed throughout life’s history on Earth. Biodiversity crises ... |
Nuclear fusion occurs when two or more elements are fused together. Nuclear fusion cannot be used with elements that are heavier than iron, only lighter elements are used. Lighter elements produce more energy. Energy is produced because the mass of the combined elements is lower than the mass of the two separate elemen... |
The roots of modern racism can be traced back to the planter class of slave owners. Although fear and suspicion of the stranger and the outsider had existed before, it had not been fear on the basis of skin colour.
In the ancient world there were many societies based on slavery. But there was no idea comparable to “rac... |
A watershed is a basin, or a land area that collects and delivers water to a central point. Water moves through a watershed through soils, streams and rivers from upper elevations to lower elevations, and exists at an outflow such as a stream, river, lake, or the ocean. Watersheds are complex and unique containing diff... |
Build a Growth Mindset in Students
January 2, 2018
Developing a growth mindset in students is a common topic among today’s educators. Our research has found work by several scholars, including Dr. Mau Kapur and Dr. Carol Dweck, on which much discussion about growth mindsets is based.
Some of the key concepts related to... |
PNAS paper shows that C. neoformans grows by attaching saccharides to its outer edge.
Researchers at Albert Einstein College of Medicine of Yeshiva University have discovered how a fatal fungus evades the human immune system and causes disease.
Cryptococcus neoformans typically gains access through the lungs and can th... |
In biology, the term systematics refers to the scientific study of life on Earth, how it has evolved, and the relationships, physical and genetic similarities and differences between organisms existing now and those that existed in the past. The traditional way of illustrating such relationships is a tree, where the br... |
Researchers Have Recently Discovered How Some Bee Eggs Hatch
Have you ever wondered how tiny insect larvae are able to hatch from their eggs? This would seem like a difficult task for a powerless newborn insect. Afterall, insect shells are designed to withstand a certain degree of pressure that favors its preservation.... |
Monday, 15 April 2019
How to express different emotions
Part of growing up is developing empathy, the ability to understand the feelings of others. While the children get older, they learn to include others in the games to avoid hurt feelings and begin to relate better to those who are different than they are. The chil... |
You may have noticed that while this module provided guidance about the development of READING skills, an awful lot of it relied upon WRITING.
The two skills are very much entwined. Perhaps you’ve heard advice suggesting that the best way to improve writing ability is to read more. It turns out the reverse is also true... |
History of Spain/Visigoths
The Middle Ages borned in Spain with the creation of the Visigoth Kingdom in the 5th Century. It would last until 711, with the conquest of Spain by the Umayyad Caliphate. In 409, the Roman Empire was very weak and was invaded by German People from the north. Some of these people, like Vandal... |
The celebration of the new year on January 1st is relatively new. The earliest recording of a new year celebration happened in Mesopotamia, c. 2000 B.C. and was celebrated around the time of the vernal equinox, in mid-March. A variety of other dates tied to the seasons were also used by various ancient cultures. The Eg... |
Vocational skills are job-related skills and concepts. One of the primary goals of special education is to prepare students with disabilities for life after secondary education. Vocational skills include any skills that facilitate the successful transition to meaningful employment. Vocational competencies include skill... |
Cane was published in 1923 in the midst of literary modernism. Modernist writers such as Joyce, Stein, Anderson, Frank and artists such as Stieglitz and O'Keefe espoused the "make it new" agenda, choosing contemporary settings and themes as well as seeking inspiration across the boundaries of different art expressions.... |
Worksheet 14: Word Search Game
For this vocabulary skills word search worksheet, students use 6 clues to locate and identify 6 words within the word search puzzle.
3 Views 8 Downloads
Compound Word Trivia
Engage young learners in expanding their vocabulary with these fun games and activities. Children learn how compoun... |
- Education and Science
A focus on the 1920 Jazz Music
The period of 1920s marked a significant development not only in jazz music, but also in the entire music fraternity. The technocrats in the industry discovered novel ways of generating revenue by combining piano role sales and sheet music. This made it easier for ... |
On December 7, 1941 Japanese Aircraft
Carriers located in the Pacific Ocean, 200 miles from Oahu, Hawaii launched their planes
into the predawn light. Under the orders of Japanese Admiral Isoroku Yamamoto their
mission is to cripple the United States Pacific Fleet based in Pearl Harbor.
Shortly before eight local time,... |
Lunar surface still active: study
Active Moon A new study indicates the Moon may not be as geologically dead as previously thought, showing signs that it is simultaneously stretching and shrinking.
New high-resolution images from NASA's Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter, show parts of the Moon's surface are being pulled apa... |
Images of the Mexican Revolution (1910–1920) presents rare, powerful, and compelling period photographs of one of the twentieth century’s longest and deadliest conflicts.
The Mexican Revolution resulted in the deaths of more than a million people. The exhibition explores this conflict through a range of dramatic and of... |
Model 1 – Logistic Growth
This model illustrates resource-limited population growth. Populations have a per-capita growth rate and carrying capacity. Two populations are compared on three graphs: N vs time, dN/dt vs N, and dN/Ndt vs N. Individuals in the populations are viewed in windows, illustrating that even at carr... |
The rise of the Andes not only reversed the course of rivers that cut through the Amazon today, but created the environment for the diversification of species that make the region become one of the most biodiverse in the world. Of course this was not the only factor driving the variety of flora and fauna of the region.... |
Fletcher (2011) suggests the following steps:
Books, especially children’s books, can be an effective tool for alerting students to the different techniques that make writing effective and memorable. Choose books that you enjoy reading and that contain the specific technique(s) you would like your students to develop.
... |
Moral Lesson of Helen of Troy
Helen was the renowned daughter of Zeus and Leda the queen of Sparta because of her beauty. As Prince Paris of Troy was undertaking a quest to the king of Sparta, he comes across Helen and likes her. Unfortunately, the royal Greeks receive him in a very impolite way. As a result, he realiz... |
Learning Intention: To distinguish between prisms and other three-dimensional shapes and to work out the relationship between vertices, edges and faces (Euler’s Formula).
These two Year 7 students are making three-dimensional models with jubes and toothpicks (or satay sticks) to record vertices, edges and faces. Start ... |
THE LIVING WORLD
Unit two. The Living Cell
4.2. The Plasma Membrane
Encasing all living cells is a delicate sheet of molecules called the plasma membrane. It would take more than 10,000 of these molecular sheets, which are about 5 nanometers thick, piled on top of one another to equal the thickness of this sheet of pap... |
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Imagine What It's Like
How would you like to have to read an entire book backwards and then be asked questions to check your comprehension? That is what it is like for many people who suffer from a learning disability called dyslexia. The Dyslexia Research Institute states that 10 to 15 percent of the po... |
for National Geographic News
To find north, humans look to a compass. But birds may just need to open their eyes, a new study says.
Scientists already suspected birds' eyes contain molecules that are thought to sense Earth's magnetic field. In a new study, German researchers found that these molecules are linked to an ... |
Urban heat islands
The world is warming and more people live in cities than ever before. While these two facts may seem completely unrelated, they have an important connection due to a phenomenon called the urban heat island. The Met Office is working to better understand the cumulative impacts of increasing temperatur... |
This paper discusses recommendations for the provision of teachers who are sufficiently trained and motivated to include children with disabilities (and children from other marginalised groups) in regular schools.
- In order to develop the skills, experience and confidence to be inclusive of all children, teachers need... |
Pieter Bruegel the Elder was a 16th-century painter from the Netherlands known for his landscape paintings populated by peasants (though you may also be familiar with his version of the Tower of Babel). He also produced dozens of drawings and prints. In the early 1990s, though, several Alpine drawings attributed to Bru... |
Acids are named according to the guidelines provided by the standardized scientific body known as the International Union of Pure and Applied Chemists, or IUPAC. The general basis for naming various acidic compounds is the corresponding anion comprising these chemical substances.Continue Reading
Acids are generally cat... |
On 23 July 2012, two eruptions on the sun known as coronal mass ejections (CMEs) burst from an active patch of sunspots on the far side of the sun, which is monitored by a probe that circles the sun ahead of Earth in the same orbit. Emerging about 15 minutes apart, the CMEs quickly merged into one shock wave of charged... |
Fever is not an illness in itself, but is the sign of an illness. Children get fevers for all kinds of reasons. Most fevers, and the illnesses that cause them, last only a few days. But sometimes a fever will last much longer, and might be the sign of an underlying chronic or long-term illness or disease.
A fever is a ... |
A Recipe for Gold
Around 20 million years ago volcanoes burst through the landscape around what we now know as Waihi. Tall, steep sided andesite volcanoes formed as the hot lava was thrown out to coat the sides of the volcanoes and the surrounding land. These volcanoes were similar in size and shape to Ruapehu and Ngau... |
A child’s vision develops in many forms. When they are born, they are only able to see in black and white. However, within the first couple weeks, their color vision begins to develop. During this time you’ll also see your infant begin to have a preference their mother’s face over a strangers.
The First Month
In the fi... |
13.1 Introduction: Two quantities having a same ratio are said to be in proportion. Proportion refers to the equality of two ratios. It can be written in two ways.
< a - c
< < b -d
for example if we write
1 pencil : 3 erasers
This means that for every pencil there are three erasers.
In simple words we can say “ a propo... |
High school geometry projects can help students apply theoretical concepts to real life applications of geometry. This not only helps students understand and remember principles of geometry but also stimulates their interest and their desire to continue studying mathematics and science subjects. Teachers can also use a... |
In this unit, students will learn how to use powers and roots in Mathematics. They will begin by looking at square and cube numbers and their corresponding roots (including negative square roots). They will then move on to looking at index notation, calculating with indices, the index laws, and working with the order o... |
In the mid 1940's Harrison Brown, of the University of Chicago, assigned a tedious dissertation project to a young Clair Patterson. Geologists then were interested in calculating the age of the earth and Harrison had developed a new method for counting lead isotopes in igneous rocks. Uranium in rocks, over a period of ... |
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The Roman numerals system has almost entirely been replaced by the Arabic numeral system. Even the NFL decided to not use Roman numerals to name Super Bowl 50, which has traditionally been named using Roman numerals. However, students will still encounter Roman numerals in many pl... |
ISRAELI-OCCUPIED LANDS. LEGACY OF THE 1967 WAR
The Arab-Israeli war that began 20 years ago today was a watershed in Mideast history. Fearing attack from hostile neighbors, Israel launched a preemptive strike. Within six days, Israel occupied territories that more than doubled the amount of land under its control, brin... |
Disease Impacts of Wild Pigs
In the United States, wild pigs are nonnative, invasive pests that are known carriers of at least 45 different parasites (external and internal) and diseases (bacterial and viral). Diseases of wild pigs affect humans and other animals in several ways. First, there are diseases that are tran... |
We’ve long attempted to recreate living creatures in robot form. From the very early age of robotics, there have been attempts to reproduce systems similar to human arms and hands. This has been extended to flexible and mobile platforms reproducing different animals from dogs to snakes to climbing spider octopods, and ... |
Microcephaly is a condition in which a person's head is significantly smaller than normal for their age and sex, based on standardized charts. Head size is measured as the distance around the top of the head.
Microcephaly most often occurs because the brain fails to grow at a normal rate. Skull growth is determined by ... |
The Gilded Age: 1865-1900"Gilded" means something that looks good on the surface, but the appearance is deceptive (usually gritty underneath). Mark Twain coined the phrase, "The Gilded Age." The Gilded Age in America looked good on the outside: extravagant displays of wealth and excess among upper class, 2nd industrial... |
The story of women’s struggle for equality belongs to no single feminist nor to any one organization but to the collective efforts of all who care about human rights.-Gloria Steinem
Celebrated on March 8, International Women’s Day (IWD) is a holiday which commemorates the achievements of women all over the world. The d... |
To unscrew a nut you normally use a spanner. You do this by putting the spanner on the nut and pushing against it. The turning effect of this is called the moment.
To Increase the moment you can:
- Increase the perpendicular distance from the pivot i.e. The length of the spanner
- Increase the applied force i.e. How ha... |
Theories of Extinction & Seeking Patterns
Part 5 of 5
In 1982 David Raup and John Sepkoski, American paleontologists, plotted the number of extinctions per million years for families of invertebrate and vertebrate marine organisms during the last 560 million years. Their graph reveals very high levels of extinction for... |
Triangles and Parallel Lines
In this triangles and parallel lines worksheet, 10th graders solve and complete 21 different problems. First, they determine whether the given line segments are parallel in each figure shown. Then, students complete each proportion using the figure at the top. In addition, they find the val... |
What are solar flares?
A solar flare is a tremendous explosion on the Sun that happens when energy stored in 'twisted' magnetic fields (usually above sunspots) is suddenly released.
In a matter of just a few minutes they heat material to many millions of degrees and produce a burst of radiation across the electromagnet... |
Lecture notes #1, Physical Measurements 201 Lab: Dr. Erkal
In any experiment, the measured quantities are only known to within the limits of the experimental uncertainty. The value of the uncertainty can depend on such factor as
the quality of the apparatus, the skill of the experimenter, and the number of measurements... |
We know how important it is for students to understand the values that the digits in numbers represent. Practice with composing and decomposing numbers based on place value helps students use strategies based on place value for addition and subtraction.
This math set can be used in several ways to provide practice with... |
Where do good questions come from?
If you Google “guiding questions elementary math”, you will get lots of hits. As with anything on the Internet, some will be more useful than others. But it’s not so hard to actually develop your own. A great place to start is your standards.
I am working with my 3rd graders on fracti... |
Knowing how to promote equality in the classroom is necessary for teachers as communities grow and diversify. Not only should teachers work toward making all students comfortable, they should also model appropriate behavior for students to follow. Equality can deal with gender or race issues and, while it can be uncomf... |
Phonics involves the relationships between printed letter and their corresponding sound in language.
“The study of phonics can give teachers and students a sense of the great intellectual feat of the development of alphabetic writing. According to historians, the development of the alphabet is one of the great intellec... |
There are undoubtedly several different teaching techniques that one can employ when teaching a science, but few are truly effective. But how do we identify which teaching technique is most effective, and what are the reasons for its success in modern pedagogy? Essentially, the most ideal technique is the creation of a... |
The acceleration due to gravity, at the surface of the Earth, is about 9.81 m/s2. (If you are some of my students, you think it's 10, which is confusing for a moment. Fortunately none of my students thought it was 32.)
π2 = 9.87.
The approximate numerical equality of these numbers is not a coincidence.
I was reminded o... |
One of the lines at right matches the equation
, and the other matches . Which line matches which equation?
In the equation
is the -intercept.
-value in each equation to the -intercept on the graph.
Yoshi wants to add the line
to her graph. Predict where it would lie and sketch a graph to show its position. Justify you... |
When scientists want to sample the organisms that live on or just below the surface of the ocean floor (the benthos) they commonly use a Benthic Grab to collect a portion of the ocean floor. Benthic Grabs can take a bite out of the benthos. Various sizes and approaches work with different organisms and sediment types. ... |
The Anniversary of the Liberation of Italy
Here in Italy, April 25th is a national holiday. Today we celebrate the anniversary of the Liberation of Italy from Nazifascism in 1945. Schools are closed, parades are organized, and people are in the streets.
However, the history of this day is much more complex than a forei... |
For 20 years, scientists have been chucking fish into the forest. Here's why
Originally published on November 10, 2018.
A long term study in Alaska has demonstrated the importance of salmon as a fertilizer for the forests of the Pacific Northwest — and it involved throwing salmon into trees.
Every year, tens of thousan... |
This point of view worksheet was made from some of the best examples that my students created in response to a journal writing assignment. Consequently, many of these are not as difficult to identify as the other point of view worksheets, but it’s still function well as a review activity, or it could be used to give pr... |
For most of our history, the biggest obstacle to human deep rock mining could be summed up as “too much water, not enough air.” (Lecain, 44) All that changed with the advent of coal as a fuel source and the steam engine. We can see how technological advances have allowed humans to push even deeper into the earth, aided... |
Martin Luther King, Jr. was an incredible orator, harnessing the power of words rather than weapons as he lead this country on its road to civil liberty. In fact, many of his speeches have the power of poetry, using some of the same conventions writers use when composing poems: alliteration, personification, simile, re... |
In 1745, William Pepperrell led an expedition to Acadia that stunned the French government when his men and a contingent of British naval vessels captured the French fortress at Louisbourg. Louisbourg, a key fort for the French, protected the mouth of the St. Lawrence River so essential to the Canadian trade.
Furious, ... |
Fuel cells promise to be the environmentally-friendly
power source of the future, but some types run too hot to be practical.
New research may have a solution.
by Patrick L. Barry
Astronauts have been using them for
power aboard spacecraft since the 1960s. Soon, perhaps, they'll
be just as common on Earth - powering ca... |
In English we have many ways to express aspects of time. These are demonstrated by the use of tenses.
The word tense = time reference relative to the time of speaking. It is extremely important when speaking or writing in English to express time relationships.
We have 2 main ways to express time.
1. Verb structure.
2. ... |
The techniques in this series generally serve three purposes. Activities like lecture summaries and the muddiest point are generally classified as assessment techniques–methods that help an instructor check and see whether students are understanding the lesson. This is useful, but secondary to the purpose that I see th... |
Diffraction of Light
We classically think of light as always traveling in straight lines, but when light waves pass near a barrier they tend to bend around that barrier and become spread out. Diffraction of light occurs when a light wave passes by a corner or through an opening or slit that is physically the approximat... |
Firstly, what is a cognitive bias? A cognitive bias is a limitation in rational thinking caused by the tendency for the human brain to take short cuts to save energy. Cognitive biases are coping mechanisms that allow the brain to process vast amounts of input. While the mechanism is very effective, its limitations caus... |
This exhibition can offer only a limited view of the situation of South Tyrol in the 1960s. The “South Tyrol Conflict” culminated during those years, which were so “many-facetted” that this exhibition seeks in particular to generate interest in the events of that era – which had a major impact on South Tyrol’s path to ... |
EL Support Lesson
The Rhyme and Reason for Rounding
Students will be able to round whole numbers to the nearest thousand.
Students will be able to discuss the purpose and method of rounding numbers using strategic questioning and sentence starters.
- Lead students in a word association exploration on the term "rounding... |
Greeks paid a land tax and a heavy tax on trade, the latter taking advantage of the wealthy Greeks to fill the state coffers. Greeks, like other Christians, were also made to pay the jizya, or Islamic poll-tax which all non-Muslims in the empire were forced to pay instead of the Zakat that Muslims must pay as part of t... |
Gamma-ray bursts are among the most energetic and explosive events in the universe. They are also short-lived, lasting from a few milliseconds to about a minute, making it tough for astronomers to observe a gamma-ray burst in detail. Using a wide array of ground- and space-based telescope observations, an international... |
When students learn to see structure in math, it gives them a new way to think about problem solving.
In Making Sense of Algebra, Paul Goldenberg, June Mark, and their colleagues look carefully at how students think about mathematics. They explore five “Habits of Mind” that focus not just on the results of mathematical... |
Amblyopia is a neuro-developmental condition in which vision does not develop adequately in one eye.
In the early years of life, there is a constant process occurring in our brains where neurons, or nerve cells, are forming connections with other neurons. This describes the basic units of information processing.
Every ... |
Women’s Suffrage and the American Presidency
On the 28th of August 1917, ten Suffragists were arrested for picketing in front of the White House in Washington, D.C. This marked one of the most dramatic points in the American suffragist campaigns. Earlier that year, in January, an ever growing number of women started pa... |
Major-General Sir Isaac Brock (1769-1812)
A portrait of Major-General Sir Isaac Brock, one of the greatest military heroes from Ontario’s past, is displayed prominently in the lobby of the Legislative Building.
Brock took over command of the British troops in Upper Canada (now Ontario) in 1810 following a series of suc... |
Lymphocytes are the white blood cells involved in the specific immune response. They recognise specific antigens on invading pathogens. Antigens are molecules, often proteins, located on the surface of cells that trigger a specific immune response.
Lymphocytes detect that the proteins and pathogens are foreign - not na... |
The OSI Model - Features, Principles and Layers
n numbers of users who use computer network and are located over the world. So to ensure, national and worldwide data communication, systems must be developed which are compatible to communicate with each other ISO has developed a standard. ISO stands for International or... |
Skip to 0 minutes and 17 secondsIt is extremely important that we monitor CO2, because it is an important greenhouse gas. And satellite data inform us on how to model and represent the CO2. This image is actually based on a model simulation, on a model forecast of the CO2 cycle for September, 2014. And you can see the ... |
Elephant Poop Matters
Most individuals understand that elephants are a delicate piece of the African ecosystem. However, elephant poop is especially valuable.
This has long been common knowledge in Africa, where numerous studies have identified elephants as important dispersers of seeds for a vast variety of plants. Bo... |
On May 15, 1800, President John Adams ordered the federal government to move from Philadelphia to Washington, D.C. Answer these trivia questions about the establishment of the federal government’s permanent location and what it took to get there...
What Were The Former Capitals of the United States?
The country has had... |
Chromosome: The chromatin fibre which is formed in coiled form in coiled form in the nucleoplasm and breaks down into some definite number of piece, arc called chromosomes.
The self-reproducing thread like structure which is made of nucleic acid and protein from nuclear reticulum and carries the hereditary characterist... |
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Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter
Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter (MRO), U.S. satellite that orbited Mars and studied its geo... |
NA2-8: Find rules for the next member in a sequential pattern.
This means students will explore sequential patterns, either spatial, for example, , ... or numeric, for example, 1, 3, 5, 7 ... A pattern has consistency so further terms of it can be anticipated from those already known. In spatial patterns students shoul... |
AP2 Iced Tea, Please Cha, D ōzo!
In Japan, children and adults drink hot tea with their meals. Is that true for your family?
Help your class conduct a survey of what their families drink. Choose one day. List all the beverages that every person in your home drinks that day. Your list might include hot tea, iced tea, co... |
Finding the volume and surface area of an object can be challenging at first, but with some practice becomes easier. By following formulas for different three-dimensional objects, you will be able to determine both volume and surface area of cylinders, cones, cubes and prisms. Armed with those figures, you will be well... |
“The existence of this wave means that the electrons on the surfaces of copper, iron, beryllium and other metals behave like water on a lake’s surface,” says Bogdan Diaconescu, a postdoctoral research associate in the Condensed Matter Group of the physics department at University of New Hampshire. “When a stone is thro... |
Energy is defined in science as the ability to do work. It is a scalar physical quantity. Although energy is conserved, there are many different types of energy, such as kinetic energy, potential energy, light, sound, and nuclear energy. One form of energy may be converted into another without violating a law of thermo... |
These emergency lesson plans for Year 3 Geography are only to be used by supply teachers who are faced with no planning or easily accessible resources. Also to be used following the guidance notes here.
|Investigating our local area||Where is it in relation to other places?|
|Weather around the world||Plan a holiday in... |
The discovery of several fish from the Chaunacidae family that hold their breath underwater for up to four minutes has been very interesting. A group of researchers from Dickinson College and Howard University, in the United States, observed the strange behavior while reviewing videos recorded by the National Oceanic a... |
At the turn of the nineteenth century, an unusual proposal was put forward to the British authorities in India, which neither they nor anyone else on the subcontinent were capable of fully comprehending. In spite of this, the plan was approved, and in time its far-reaching consequences would be felt not only in India b... |
How the Axis and the Allies in WWII Got Their Names
Marking the two main groups of belligerents in the Second World War (1939-1945), the Axis and the Allies slugged out their differences from the beaches of Normandy to the islands of the South Pacific. The history of their epic battles, atrocities, heroes and villains ... |
It’s not just paper. From the first notes issued by the Continental Congress to the latest star-spangled bills released by the Federal Reserve, the history of money in America is laced with rebellion, propaganda, and—of course—lots and lots of wealth. It’s awkwardly beautiful.
The history of paper currency, specificall... |
Especially for practitioners working with preschoolers! Fun With Letters Alphabet Knowledge Preschoolers are eager to recognize some letters, especially those in their names. Often they can even point out the letters in an array of contexts. Reinforce these skills by giving children chances to interact with letters tha... |
7.21 Daniel -- Deportation
Daniel was among the first group of Jews deported from Judah to Babylon. He was taken to Babylon in 605 BC, following the Battle of Carchemish (although some argue for a deportation in 602), during the reign of Jehoiakim (Dan 1:1-2). Thereafter, he made no further reference to events occurrin... |
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