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Tracy Watanabe

General Chemistry - Download Free Content from Ohio State University on iTunes - 0 views

  • Course Description This General Chemistry course covers the first nine chapters of the 12th Edition of Chemistry: The Central Science by Brown, LeMay, Bursten, Murphy, and Woodward text and is designed for science and engineering majors. Topics covered include: dimensional analysis, atomic structure, the mole, stoichiometry, chemical reactions, thermochemistry, electron configuration, periodicity, bonding, and molecular structure.
anonymous

DOK Levels in Science - 0 views

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    A chart that provides detailed descriptors for "depth of knowledge" in science
anonymous

Review Game Zone - Bird Beak Design & Protective Coloration - 0 views

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    Review game for bird beak design and protective coloration concepts
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    For 8th grade science.
anonymous

Review Game Zone - Pollination and Seed Dispersal - 0 views

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    A review game to practice concepts about pollination and seed dispersal.
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    For 8th Grade Science.
anonymous

Disney's Planet Challenge - 0 views

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    PBL opportunity
anonymous

DNAi Scavenger Hunt - 0 views

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    Using the timeline on the website - students track down answers to complete the worksheet.
Tracy Watanabe

3-D Teleconference | Educational Science Videos for Kids | Math, Engineering & Science ... - 0 views

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    Great find by Linda Gering, "The National Defense Education Program has some great "webisodes" dealing with science..."
Tracy Watanabe

Lessons - Science NetLinks - 0 views

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    Find Lessons for K-12 in earth science, physics, astronomy, chemistry, biology, health/medicine, engineering, social sciences, technology, math/statistics, nature of science, careers.
Tracy Watanabe

What is Future City? | National Engineers Week Future City Competition™ - 0 views

  • The Future City Competition is a national, project-based learning experience where students in 6th, 7th, and 8th grade imagine, design, and build cities of the future.
  • With this at its center, Future City is an engaging way to build students’ 21st century skills
Tracy Watanabe

Mr. C's Class Blog: Our Community Blog Links - 0 views

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    Here's a list of individual student bloggers, grades 6-8. Their posts are about digital citizenship & science. I'm sure they would love students to comment on their blogs.
Tracy Watanabe

Mr. C's Class Blog - 0 views

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    Fabulous blog for science students to connect with. A must to add to your blogroll.
Tracy Watanabe

What Else - Antarctica 3 - 0 views

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    Great opportunity for inferences about adaptations and some real interaction with another class. You can discuss as a class and model your response as a comment to Mrs. Edwards class. Or, allow a few individual bloggers to respond (first names only).
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    Great opportunity for inferences about adaptations and some real interaction with another class. You can discuss as a class and model your response as a comment to Mrs. Edwards class. Or, allow a few individual bloggers to respond (first names only).
Tracy Watanabe

Terie Engelbrecht (mrsebiology)'s Public Profile in the Diigo Community - 0 views

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    I recommend following her on Twitter and in Diigo
Tracy Watanabe

Bugscope: Home - 0 views

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    You sign up, ask your students to find some bugs, and mail them to us. We accept your application, schedule your session, and prepare the bugs for insertion into the electron microscope. When your session time arrives, we put the bug(s) into the microscope and set it up for your classroom. Then you and your students login over the web and control the microscope. We'll be there via chat to guide you and answer the kids' questions.
Tracy Watanabe

AAAS - AAAS News Release - "SCIENCE Honors Electron Bugscope Project with SPORE Award" - 0 views

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    If your students investigate bugs, use a microscope, need an authentic purpose for research, I'd like to suggest partnering with Bugscope. You get to collaborate with expert scientists to explore bugs (i.e. looking at a bug's tongue). You would do this all via the internet. It looks amazing! Below is a response from them, with an attachment.  A news-release summarizes a history of Bugscope (http://www.aaas.org/news/releases/2011/0729sp_spore.shtml). Bugscope allows teachers everywhere to provide students with the opportunity to become microscopists themselves-the kids propose experiments, explore insect specimens at high-magnification, and discuss what they see with our scientists-all from a regular web browser over a standard broadband internet connection. You sign up, ask your students to find some bugs, and mail them to us. We accept your application, schedule your session, and prepare the bugs for insertion into the electron microscope. When your session time arrives, we put the bug(s) into the microscope and set it up for your classroom. Then you and your students login over the web and control the microscope. We'll be there via chat to guide you and answer the kids' questions. If you would like to see the response from one class who have done this, read Mrs. Krebs' blog post: http://krebs.edublogs.org/2011/09/04/bugscope-session/  If you need any help with this, just let me know. If you end up taking them up on this FREE collaboration, please let me know when/where so I can drop by. This looks fascinating! Kind regards,Tracy
anonymous

National Geographic - 0 views

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    The classic magazine - online style
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    Fabulous share Bethany! Thank you.
Tracy Watanabe

DeforestACTION - 0 views

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    PBL that you can join!
anonymous

Inquiry In Action - 0 views

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    A promising collection of activities for solubility - still need to check it out...
Tracy Watanabe

Japan Tsunami with Dr. Michio Kaku | Discovery Education - 0 views

  • Join Us Thursday, May 19th, at 1:00 PM ET
  • Discovery Education invites you to an exclusive webinar with distinguished physicist, Dr. Michio Kaku, as he discusses the nuclear crisis in Japan following March's devastating earthquake and tsunami.
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    STUDENT and class webinar with nuclear physicist on Japan recovery Thursday, May 19th at 10:00 AM
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    What a great opportunity! I don't know your benchmark schedule, but wanted to share this opportunity! STUDENT and class webinar with nuclear physicist on Japan recovery Thursday, May 19th at 10:00 AM
anonymous

Giant Cell Model - 0 views

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    Video of NYC teacher who turns classroom into a giant cell model & then explains how he has the students teach each other.
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