Why it's OK if you don't graduate college in four years.
We’ve all heard it: “Today, your phone has a zillion times more processing power than giant computers that filled an entire room in days past!” Rather than review bits and bytes, let’s look at CHM’s 1401 computer from the point of view of what it can do, and its long-lasting impact on the development of business computing.
One of the questions I am frequently asked is how to handle a negative blog comment. Unfortunately, if you blog long enough, you will eventually receive negative comments. It's so sad but true :(. And
Persuasive or Rhetorical Appeals are the building blocks for persuasive or argumentative essay writing. This complete lesson is designed introduce middle-high school students to the terms ethos, pathos, and logos. Student Experience: Students will step into the world of ethos, pathos, and logos with the mindset that these are the key pieces in argumentation. As you deliver the lecture with the eye-catching, no prep PPT, students will fill in their sketch notes. You will guide them through several models, examples, and then they will complete the guided practice. Next, students will identify the terms you just covered in modern examples and complete in an interactive vocabulary exercise. To further their application and understanding, students will participate in a gallery walk. Finally, the worksheet and quiz provided will provide you with the assessment you need to measure understanding. Included: Lecture in 100% editable PPT and Google format (with ORIGINAL print examples and video links) Sketch Notes for Guided Note taking (not editable due to font and style choices) Guided Practice Interactive, editable sorting activity in print and Google digital format Interactive, no-prep gallery walk for identify and analyzing ethos, pathos, logos with original ads and textual examples along with commercials Practice Worksheet Two editable quizzes Lesson plan and suggestion pacing Graphic organizer students can use with any text for success after the lesson Modern-style Classroom Posters Plus, be sure to check out my Ethos, Pathos, Logos Breakout game, not included in the bundle mentioned above! Ethos, Pathos, Logos Breakout Game Classroom success stories from teachers who have tried this resource: ♥ "Excellent for my 7th graders to grasp the concepts, thank you! Thank you for a concise lesson for these concepts." ♥ "This is the first time I've taught this topic and it was so nice to have this unit - it was a HUGE help!" ♥ "This was an excellent ppt with fun video links my HS students enjoyed. Thank you!" ♥ "I used this with my students before we evaluated texts and various other media for Ethos, Pathos, and Logos. This purchase is very student friendly. Takes away all of the extra explaining for me." ♥ "This seller seeks to create innovative lessons that truly engage learners. I have personally reached out, and she responds with great empathy. This resource is great, and the seller highly recommended!" ♥ "This was a lot better than what I had! Students loved the easy notes sheet, and it has been helpful!" ♥ "For introducing rhetorical devices this was a great pack. I have 9th grade students and need to expose them this year for next year. I found the examples great!" Each of my ELA skills-readiness "How to Teach It" Lesson Packs includes a teacher's guide lesson plan, an easy-to-use PPT lecture explaining the concept, guided practice, opportunity for collaborative and individual practice, and a form of assessment. See my other English standards skills readiness teaching packs, and teach the fundamental skills first for success! Summarizing Close Reading & Annotating Citing Textual Evidence Evaluate Credibility of Websites Propaganda and Logical Fallacies Allusions Setting Affects Plot Theme Development Symbolism Characterization Conflict Affects Plot Author’s Perspective Homophones, Frequently Confused Words Be the first to know about my new discounts, freebies and product launches. Look for the green star next to my store logo and click it to FOLLOW ME. Voila! You will now receive email updates about my store. For more ideas and inspiration: Faulkner's Fast Five Blog Julie's Classroom Stories on Instagram Julie's Classroom Stories on Facebook Teaching Middle and High School English Facebook Group Yearbook and Journalism Facebook Group Pinterest Created 2014-Updated 2019 Terms of Use: Please one classroom use only. Not to be shared online without proper security. Additional licenses sold at a discount at checkout. **Images and art are documented on credits page in download.
CollegeHumor imagines what Valentine's Day cards might have been like for Puritans.
Use Post-it Super Sticky Notes to play this awesome and easy math game.
Reading Focus Cards and how they help with struggling readers and special needs homeschooling.
List of most commonly used sports idioms in business and daily life. Pull out all the stops and start using them today!
Control Gene Expression In Prokaryote Pogil from prokaryotes vs eukaryotes worksheet , image source: winonarasheed.com
Many, many more Americans would qualify for income-driven repayment plans, if only they knew about them.
Level: This is most suited to A1 level students Time: 35 minutes + (depending on level) This activity provides practice of basic conversation for getting to know someone. It includes 18 cards, featuring people from all over the world. There is also an information sheet for students to complete. It's great for revising spelling, occupations, free time activities, food, and animals. For best results when printing our PDFs, open and print them through Adobe Acrobat. https://get.adobe.com/reader/
Nine speaking cards to describe houses. Eight of them are completed, the ninth one is for students own house. - ESL worksheets
Wearing asked people on the street to write whatever they were thinking on a card and hold it up, and she photographed the result.
CARDIAC (CARDboard Illustrative Aid to Computation) Replica: Back in the 1960's and early 70's Bell Labs made some very sophisticated educational kits available to high schools and colleges. Designed for classroom use, they included wonderful manuals written by some of Bell Labs best minds. One of these kits…
For my Precalc kids, I started toying with this idea of presenting function operations using diagrams to help kids visually organize domain changes and to see how equations relate to one another. Here's stab #1 (we started doing this earlier this week. I plan on finishing this tomorrow and easing our way into composition of functions...). My reasoning for organizing it like this is to show kids that addition, subtraction, and multiplication are all very forgiving operations. As long as f(x) is a valid value and g(x) is also a valid value, you can add/subtract/multiply them with no problem. Only division might cause additional exceptions in the domain. I'm sort of envisioning the kids to then go into something like this, where they can picture composition as one function machine feeding into another one and using that idea to write equations. I also hope that they'll figure out on their own by the end of this second worksheet that g(f(x)) will only be undefined if either f(x) is undefined or if f(x) is some value that will in turn "break" or cause an error in g. Finally, I'll squeeze in a game/activity, where they get in groups of 3 and split a deck of "cards." Every round I'll call out some order of composition -- for example, g(f(h(x))) -- and the kids would need to write the resulting equation and find the domain restrictions on that formula. And then, with those same 3 cards I'd reverse the composition order, and they'd do it again. It's not terribly fun of a "game", I guess, but as far as activities go, I hope it will be a little better than doing straight problems on paper, because they'd hopefully notice that the domain restrictions only come into play for certain types of operations (ie. square root), regardless whether that operation happens first or last in the composition. Thoughts or suggestions? ...By the way, I recently read on someone else's teaching blog that they have all these really wonderful things planned for their Precalc kids. It made me feel a little math-envy, but alas, my kids need all of the basic reinforcements that they can get. (They're coming along, and are actually understanding words that are written on paper with numbers inserted in between!!!! It seems like half a miracle considering the zombie-esque state that they were in when I got them back in August.) But, our sloooowness in progress is making me very worried about their future, and I'm going to try my best not to become a total stressball over this during the next few months. It's going to take me another couple of weeks to just get through all of the Algebra 2-ish review-ish stuff with them, and then whatever trig I can squeeze in to the rest of the year, I'll have to be happy with!! The end of the year is coming SO FAST.
Check out these helpful study methods that will help get you through those tough exams in college and in life in general whenever you need study time!
I've been creating anchor charts to go with each unit. The charts hang around the room, hopefully reminding students of specific skills, steps, or formats. Two of the most recent charts are pictured here. Other charts are in this prezi.
Französische Literatur in Reclams Roter Reihe: das ist der französische Originaltext – ungekürzt und unbearbeitet mit Worterklärungen am Fuss jeder Seite, Nachwort und Literaturhinweisen. Saïd ist 11 und Kind algerischer Einwanderer, ist begabt und motiviert und möchte gern ein guter Schüler sein. Aber die Verhältnisse am Collège in der Pariser Banlieue, auf das er geht, lassen ihm kaum eine Chance – die Disziplinlosigkeit der Klasse, der Lärm und Tumult, der während des Unterrichts herrscht, die Lehrer, von denen viele schon resigniert haben. Und dann wird er auch noch in die kriminellen Machenschaften seines Bruders Abdelkrim hineingezogen. »Il faut sauver Saïd«: Saïd muss gerettet werden. Ob das gelingt? Französische Lektüre: Niveau B2 (GER)
Original in OCAD University Archives