Architectural Design: BKA-BahadırKul ArchitectsClient: Greater Municipality of Kayseri Location: Kayseri/ TURKEYProject Year : 2009Construction Period: 2012/2013Site Area: 10.000 m2Total Floor Area: 2.600 m2Photography: Ket Kolektif / BKA-Bahadır Kul...
Image 5 of 17 from gallery of Kollaskolan School / Kjellgren Kaminsky Architecture. Photograph by Mikael Olsson
This is a great writing exercise to practice writing a narrative. Keywords and drawings are given.
Teach your kids how to make their very own marshmallow catapult using common household supplies. How to construct a marshmallow launcher.
We had fun with this experiment. It was very cool to watch the colours change! I used food coloring and cabbage leaves to show the kids how plants …
Ретро фотографии о лихих кавалеристах и их впечатляющих навыках
Easy at home science experiments using simple materials: salt and water experiment, egg in salt water, salt and ice. No-prep quick STEM activities kids love.
Here’s how we enjoyed our last day together! It really hasn’t sunk in yet. We laughed, we cried, we played! Minute to Win It! Oh so fun! I made some...
Everyone has that awkward phase they'd like to forget about. These pictures will remind you that you have to start somewhere, even if it IS a bit awkward. Get inspired with Gap and become your own icon.
Write and decode secret spy messages with these cool secret codes for kids. Keep the kids busy making their own secret code with the free printable!
We may earn money or products from the companies mentioned in this post. Please see policies for more information. We’ve gotten LOTS of comments on some updates we’ve done to our home throughout the years so I thought I’d share the latest that I am SO happy to have done. The door knobs! Goodbye cheap knobs that
I'm not sure there exists a more fun and easy science experiment for young kids than a homemade volcano. All you really need for a volcano science activity is baking soda, vinegar, an empty container and maybe some food coloring and your kids will be begging for more. My kids LOVE homemade volcanoes and we've made our fair share over the last few years. This time I decided it would be interesting if we could make the project a little more educational by creating a cutaway view of an erupting volcano. Does your child know the difference between lava and
Have you got dysania? Perhaps it is because you are philogrobilized! So stop twattling about it and learn a few of these sweet olde-school words!
This Science Experiment is perfect for demonstrating how Jesus Washes Our Sins Away. Despite how sin taints us, Jesus' sacrifice purifies and cleanses us!
Feeling like you're stuck in a rut with your writing activities? This fun combo makes for great practices with lots of laughter! Students come up with silly sentences using spinners, then illustrate & share with a telephone pictionary game! Check out this post for instructions and FREE resources!
Anaphora and epistrophe both use repetition to make a point. Let’s define them and look at anaphora and epistrophe examples together.
So this week for camp all the experiments we are doing have to do with candy! I got a ton of information from Pinterest and this website: http://www.candyexperiments.com/ (go figure...LOL) But the kids are so excited.....today we started off with a gummy bear lab!!! I was inspired by this pin: Source: asurvivalguidetomiddleschool.blogspot.com via Amber on Pinterest But we took it to a WHOLE NEW LEVEL! I was once again amazed by the brainstorming and creativeness of the class. We started out with our regular water, salt water, then we added vinegar, baking soda and vinegar, and sugar water (each with separate cups) Then after the first class, I had the oldest group and each table brainstormed what they wanted to try with the gummy bears. Look at our impressive list: I'm sure you can't read it all but it was long! We wrote down what we wanted to test, then our guesses of what would happen, and we left space to fill in the results tomorrow! Boy am I excited and I know that the kids are too! They had so much fun coming up with things- they didn't want to stop :) Some of our oldest campers suggested bleach. At first I was hesitant but because these were the oldest kids (3rd grade and up) I knew that if we could (under controlled conditions) we should give them the chance to explore....so we used a little bleach- and kept it away from our hands and faces!!!! This was one of those happy accidents (which I love and are an awesome learning experience for science)....it was pretty cool. Most of the gummy bears you have to wait to see what happens....NOT THIS ONE! Take a look: They dissolved right away and there was even foam on the top!!! The cup was WARM also!!! I'm not really sure all the exact science behind this (I'll look it up for class tomorrow ;) I suggest if you try this doing it outside because of the smell and then bring it inside later! I'll update what happens to the rest of our gummy bears tomorrow and check back in this week for more awesome CANDY experiments :)
Snazzy title, right? Guess I'm not feeling too creative today. But that's okay, because I spent some quality time with my computer. Summarizing, like theme, isn't just something you can teach a unit on. You have to keep coming back and coming back and coming back. It all started with this pin on Pinterest: Source: rundesroom.blogspot.com via Megan on Pinterest I thought, WOW! How easy would it be to do this run down every time we read a book? Then I can easily hit summarizing over and over and over and over and over. You get the idea. So, I decided to make my own version because I have an obsessive need to coordinate. Duh. Then, while writing this post, I decide to check out where the original came from. And it's a blog I already follow! Guess I started following after this post. The blog is Runde's Room, and it's awesome. She even has a whole fictional narrative unit to go with it in her TPT store. (FYI-I checked with her before I shared my copycat version.) Anywho, here's my version. Click on the post to download it. I would actually like to stack 10 or 15 post-its on each square in the poster. Maybe we could do something with them after we write on them? Like a mini summarizing board? I don't know. I'll let you know how that goes. Click on image to download. I had it printed at Office Max in an 11x17 poster for about $1.50. I know, I know. Good thing Office Max isn't a real man, or my husband might start getting jealous. Then I started thinking maybe a poster wasn't enough. Maybe I would want something bigger sometimes. So I made it for the Mimio. It will at least be great for the beginning of the year when I'm introducing it. You can download the Mimio lesson here. Take some time and go visit Jen at Runde's Room for some more great ideas! So what about you? Do you have any good summarizing strategies?
Fill the Balloon Science Experiment 🎈ages 3+ 🎈This simple experiment demonstrates the space air molecules take up as they are heated and cooled. Start with a pan of hot water and a pan of ice cold water. Then take an empty two liter bottle and put a balloon over the top. Place the bottle in the […]
Vokabeltest zum Thema "At home"Passt zu:Where is... [Prepositions of Place]In the living roomIn the kitchenIn the bathroom
"The real horrors of October are midterms."
The Unfair Game is a totally unfair twist on Jeopardy that your students will LOVE to hate! Learn how to play and find sample game boards in this post.
10 ideas for planning engaging novel units: creative, engaging lesson ideas for your next whole-class novel unit
We had fun with this experiment. It was very cool to watch the colours change! I used food coloring and cabbage leaves to show the kids how plants …
Find fun, easy, and educational science experiments for kids to do at home to help teach them science in an engaging way.
Explore sweetvintagegal's 1011 photos on Flickr!
What does sound look like? This fun 5-item science experiment helps kids “see” sound waves and have fun while doing it. In this article, we include a demonstration video, a supplies list, detailed printable instructions, experiment variations, and an easy to understand scientific explanation of how it works. Bonus: Kids love this experiment because not […]
Teachers like vocabulary strategies that make learning more meaningful and lasting. Check out these 15 Strategies to Ramp Up Vocabulary Instruction.
Kolmanskop - this room is very blue and accentuated by the daylight © www.markdanielphoto.com Sometimes the image demands a more detailed look, a hint of the light source perhaps, maybe the shadows that play in the sand, the view into the other room? The mystery is sometimes what can not be seen but only guessed at and why we find such mystery in this beauty that was made by nature, not by man. - Mark Daniel
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Here's how to make romantic wine bottle drip candles, using a wine bottle special to you and either drip candles or cheap candles that drip colored wax.
amor mundi
Skyrocket your Morse code skills by using our Morse code flowchart and training exercises! Learn Morse with this powerful technique!
You can substitute cabbage with white flowers, but no word yet on the experiment's compatibility with kale. Instructions here.