Weston Woods Animated Children's Books
Explore the properties of polygons through puzzles and games, then proceed into a more formal classification of polygons. Look at mathematical definitions more formally, and explore how terms can have different but equivalent definitions.
Professor Scharff weaves the story of the Civil Rights movement with stories of the Vietnam War and Watergate to create a portrait of a decade. Lyndon Johnson emerges as a pivotal character, along with Stokely Carmichael, Fanny Lou Hamer, and other luminaries of the era.
Chicana writer Gloria Anzald a tells us that the border is "una herida abierta [an open wound] where the lifeblood of two worlds is merging to form a third country a border culture." This program explores the literature of the Chicano borderlands and its beginnings in the literature of Spanish colonization.
Weston Woods Animated Children's Books
Dave tours historic locations in Philadelphia recalling battles of the American Revolution and the lives of the Founding Fathers who attended the Constitutional Conventions held there. He spends some time at Franklin House where he reviews the biography of the great statesmen and inventor. Locations, such as the American Philosophical Society, Declaration House, and Carpenter's Hall bring to mind the writing of the Declaration of Independence and the American Constitution, documents whose common sense approach to freedom and liberty is extolled throughout the episode. Dave also recalls the history of the Liberty Bell, the design of the Great Seal, and the establishment of the American bald eagle as the symbol of the United States and its freedoms.
Weston Woods Animated Children's Books
Organisms as different as flies, fish, and humans share a set of genes, known as a genetic toolkit, which guides development. This session presents new perspectives on the remarkable similarity in these molecules and processes and the ethical questions involved in this research.
Shedding light on the mathematical form of the gravitational, electric, and magnetic forces.n
In 1898, Frederick Jackson Turner declared the frontier as the defining feature of American culture, but American authors had uncovered its significance much earlier. This program turns to three key writers of the early national period James Fenimore Cooper, John Rollin Ridge, and Walt Whitman and examines the influential visions of American manhood offered by each author.
I Choose My Future, a captivating presentation and video series, provides viewers with comprehensive, straightforward insight into how substance abuse impacts the individual, their families, and society.
In Good Shape is the weekly health show on DW, covering all aspects of health care: what's new in medical treatment, alternative medicine, wellness and fitness - as well as nutrition and beauty. In our studio interview we discuss topics in-depth with specialists, and offer you opportunities to pose your own questions. Dr. Carsten Lekutat and Stefanie Suren are alternate hosts of the program and will provide a combination of video-rich features and insightful interviews that grapple with some of the larger issues in medical treatment and healthcare. As an interactive feature of the program we also ask viewers to request a program topic Dr. Carsten Lekutat is a qualified General Practitioner and works as a doctor in Berlin. He is also responsible for training medical students at the Berlin Charite hospital. Stefanie Suren is executive producer and presenter of In Good Shape. 'Keep it simple and straightforward' - that is her goal as a reporter, producer and presenter.
Dave visits Mount Vernon, Monticello and Montpelier recalling the achievements of the Presidents who lived there and their aims for the estates they called home. He highlights features of Georgian and Palladian architecture and provides insightful anecdotes associated with each home. These anecdotes concern the lives of African slaves and indentured servants, epithets on the graves of the tree Presidents, and stories of Dolley Madison's successes in Washington. Viewers gain an understanding of the private lives of Presidents Washington, Jefferson, and Madison.
How did people begin to understand themselves in relation to the natural world and to the unseen realms beyond, and how was religion a community experience? In this unit, animism and shamanism in Shinto are contrasted with philosophical and ethical systems in early Greece and China, and the beginnings of Zoroastrianism, Hinduism, and Judaism.
While enemies slashed at Rome's borders, civil war and economic collapse destroyed the empirenfrom within.n
This program on problem solving is the 3rd of 13 episodes designed to help students prepare for the mathematics section of the GED exam. Problem solving is an acquired skill that can be improved through practice. People need to know how to get the answer more than having the answer itself. A host and several guests present 5 principles for math problem solving in the context of a person wanting to buy a car. The first step is to identify and understand the problem. One should focus on the problem to ensure one knows how to proceed. Second, one should locate all needed information. This includes doing any homework beforehand and reading the fine print. The easiest decision isn't necessarily the smartest one. Third, one sets up the problem, looking for similarities to a previous problem that could guide one's approach, as well as cues that reveal the functions to be performed. Fourth, one works the calculations, seeking a ballpark estimate before reaching the final answer. When calculating, it's essential to know the PEMDAS order of operations: a) first solve within parentheses; b) simplify exponents; c) multiply and divide from left to right of equation; d) add and subtract from left to right. Lastly, it's important to check that one's answers make sense.
The properties and patterns of prime numbers