In this article, we’re going to walk through Step 3 by getting familiar with the overall user experience surrounding this problem. Head’s up! We just launched our brand new Problem Framing Toolkit —…
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Ok...not you! But your students! Here's a fun rhythm game designed to pin student against student! What do you need? Simply the game board (found on the my website here. ), a 12-sided die, and sets of two different colored chips (12-20 each). Here's how the game is played: The game board is made up of 12 circles with rhythm values totaling from 1 to 12. Students roll the die and find the circle of rhythm that matches the number on the die and place one of their chips on the circle. Game continues with each student taking turns and placing chips. If a student rolls a number that an opponent has a chip on, they can "knock" the opponent off the number and place their own chip on it. If a student rolls a number they already have a chip on, they can add another of their own chips which secures their spot and doesn't allow opponent to knock them off. If a student rolls a number that is secure, their turn is over and play moves to their opponent. The game ends when one player covers the entire game board or a designated time is up! To add a bit more challenge, have your students clap the rhythm in order to place a chip on the circle. Enjoy this game with students who have lessons back to back, such as sibling group, use it in your classroom or as a station during a group lesson. Have fun!
Today I wanted to see how well my students were internalizing our perimeter and area explorations, so I gave them a cooperative task to complete. The timing was perfect as I was missing 5 students for early spring break starters–so it seemed like a great plan for a Friday before break! Area and Perimeter Problem […]
Jeremyville is an artist, designer and author of Vinyl Will Kill and Jeremyville Sessions.
Lord Snowdon’s photograph of Lucie’s hands and Sam Haskin’s portrait of Lucie taken around 1990. Lucie Rie and Hans Coper pottery upstairs at 18 Albion Mews in 1950. Then Lucie sunbathing in the 1960s. Photo by Stella Snead. Then her pink porcelain conical bowl, c. 1978. Lucie, around 1935, in her Vienna studio. Then a shot of her London studio with her glazing materials. Lucie in her London studio. Photo by Hansi Böhm. Then a page from her Vienna-days glazing notebook, 1920s. A busy schedule filling orders in 1946 and Lucie getting it done in her London studio. The group of vases were on display at London’s Berkeley Gallery, 1962. Photo by Jane Gate. Then Lucie potting in the 1980s. Volcanic bowl with manganese border, c. 1986, then stoneware bowl with volcanic glaze, 1990 (from last firing), then yellow porcelain bowl, 1967, then turquoise bowl with bronze rim, 1983. These images from Galerie Besson. Lucie Rie at her front door, photo by Jim Hair. Then Lucie’s pots arranged on the Plischke shelves at Albion Mews, 1950. Lucie Rie was born on March 6, 1902 to a prominent family in Vienna. In 1922 she entered the Kunstgewerbeschule, a school of arts and crafts associated with the Wiener Werkstätte, where she was, she said, instantly ‘”lost” to the potter’s wheel. She developed quickly, combining a taste for a clean, modernist aesthetic with daring technical skill. In 1926, she married and commissioned an apartment from a young Viennese architect, Ernst Plischke, on Andreasgasse. Lucie had purchased a chair from Plischke and like it so much that she asked him to furnish her entire apartment. It was his first commission. Plischke designed every detail of the flat to suit the young potter, including studio space with a gas-fired kiln and, in the living room, walnut cupboards with versatile shelves that could be rearranged to display her work. When Lucie fled to London in 1938, she had the entire interior shipped over and re-erected in a mews house in Bayswater, where she lived and worked, to great renown, for the next 50 years. After she passed, the studio was moved and reconstructed again, this time in the Victoria and Albert Museum‘s ceramics gallery. Lucie is often described as steely and too rigorous to be a good teacher, though she had a lasting mentorship turned creative partnership with Hans Coper and always made time to meet with anyone with a serious interest in pottery. Those who qualified for her time were invited over to her studio for tea, cake, and serious conversation, so long as it wasn’t technical talk about pottery. Read more about this great dame on the VADS essay site set up for her in a nice timeline format and with lots more great images. The best spot to check out images of her work is through Galerie Besson, which represented her. Pouring bowl, c.1952 and another portrait of Dame Lucie by Snowdon.
18:41 // The only way I can prep for Econ is by writing meticulous notes.
Basically, I will post pictures and comics about Klance (aka my favorite shipping in the series) from Netflix Voltron. I do not own Voltron, its characters and the pictures, as they belong to their owners. I hope you will enjoy it!❤️❤️❤️
I know that we all know how important problem solving is–and that we want students to be able to apply the math they learn to real world situations. That being said, most math series are rather limited when it comes to the types and numbers of quality problems available to use with students. If you […]
✏ DESCRIPTION ✏ ✏ These a6 prints are perfect for brightening up your walls! ✏ Each print is a6 in size on 300gsm card ✏ Designed, drawn, printed and cut, by myself in my little studio! ✏ Comes packaged in a paper bag ✏ POSTAGE ✏ ✏ UK - Free shipping items will be posted by 2nd class Royal Mail and usually takes around 3-5 working days to arrive ✏ EU - All items will be sent by International Standard by Royal Mail and usually takes around 3-5 working days ✏ Australia - All items will be sent by International Standard by Royal Mail and usually takes around 7-14 working days ✏ USA - Items will be posted by International Standard by Royal Mail and usually takes around 7 - 14 working days to arrive ✉ If you have any problems with your order, please feel free to message me ✉ **Please be aware, that if your item has not arrived or may be lost on the post, you will need to contact us within 30 days from the day of dispatch. If you do not contact us within the 30 days, we will not be able to replace or refund the item(s) for you, Thank you**
Use STEM engineering activities in elementary school as a fun, engaging, and meaningful way to tackle the Next Generation Science Standards.
Try DOODLING!!!!! Get inspiration from Mr. Doodle; Sometimes, the solution to your problem just won’t come into your head, yet your thoughts are spinning at a 100 kilometres an …
Format - Dog Problems - Milky Clear - Vinyl LP - Tracklist: 1. LP1: Matches 2. I'm Actual 3. Time Bomb 4. She Doesn't Get It 5. The Lottery Song 6. Pick Me Up 7. Dog Problems 8. Oceans 9. Dead End LP2: Snails 10. The Compromise 11. Inches and Falling 12. If Work PermitsInternational orders please allow 7-10 business days for shipping, and an additional 21 business days for delivery
Try DOODLING!!!!! Get inspiration from Mr. Doodle; Sometimes, the solution to your problem just won’t come into your head, yet your thoughts are spinning at a 100 kilometres an …