Weston Woods Animated Children's Books
Explore how the concepts developed in this course can be applied through a case study of a K-2 teacher, Ellen Sabanosh, a former course participant who has adapted her new knowledge to her classroom.
Connections can be physical, as with bridges, or immaterial, as with friendships. Both types of connections can be understood using the same mathematical framework called network theory, or graph theory, which is a way to abstract and quantify the notion of connectivity. This unit looks at how this branch of mathematics provides insights into extremely complicated networks such as ecosystems.
Understand the nature of the real number system, the elements and operations that make up the system, and some of the rules that govern the operations. Examine a finite number system that follows some (but not all) of the same rules, and then compare this system to the real number system. Use a number line to classify the numbers we use, and examine how the numbers and operations relate to one another.
Weston Woods Animated Children's Books
Watch this program in the 10th session for grade 6
Watch this program in the 10th session for grade 6-8 teachers. Explore how the concepts developed in this course can be applied through case studies of grade 6-8 teachers (former course participants) who have adapted their new knowledge to their classrooms.
Explore several methods for finding the volume of objects, using both standard cubic units and non-standard measures. Explore how volume formulas for solid objects such as spheres, cylinders, and cones are derived and related.
Topology, known as "rubber sheet math," is a field of mathematics that concerns those properties of an object that remain the same even when the object is stretched and squashed. In this unit we investigate topology's seminal relationship to network theory, the study of connectedness, and its critical function in understanding the shape of the universe in which we live.
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.
Media Arts Center Showcase highlights media created by the Media Arts Center San Diego
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Liberty, equality, and fraternity skidded into a reign of Terror.n
This episode of GED Connection is called "Themes in U.S. History." In it, some of the themes that are at the core of american history are discussed: the coming together of many cultures, the idea of personal rights and freedom, and the changing nature of everyday life. On the GED test there will be questions relating to a variety of periods in american history. It is helpful to get as familiar as possible with them by reading, visiting museums and historic sites, watching movies about historical events, watching the nes, and talking to friends and family about the issues they lived through. Topics discussed in this program include: early America and settlement, the Louisiana Purchase, slavery, the civil war, the labor movement, immigrants, World War II, the Civil Rights movement, and women in the workplace.
Media Arts Center Showcase highlights media created by the Media Arts Center San Diego