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msphillipsonline

Understanding the negative effect of processed foods. - 3 views

  • These non-foods have one thing in common; it costs your body a great deal more to digest, absorb, and eliminate them than they offer your body in nutritional value – an extremely poor return on your investment that leaves your body sluggish and depleted
    • msphillipsonline
       
      Perfect explanation of the effects of processed food on the body for fourth grade health and nutrition unit.
  • Beef jerky, canned tea, jam, hot dogs, and low-fat yogur
  • Processed food is made from real food that has been put through devitalizin
  • ...1 more annotation...
  • Examples include bacon bits, bottled salad dressing, dehydrated soups, and instant coffee.
msphillipsonline

Wild Things Article - 0 views

  • reading Where the Wild Things Are aloud every day for a week and discussing it as a whole group
  • Time was provided for students to discuss each new book and its connections
  • students began to notice similarities and differences
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    Research on engaging students in the process of interpreting texts using where the wild things are.
msphillipsonline

4C Rokz: - 0 views

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    I think I'm going to use this platform for an online discussion manager for lit circles.  Let's work together on it if you want!
emily hough

HookedOnJuice.com :: Sugar and Fruit Juice Nutrition Information Facts - 2 views

shared by emily hough on 03 Sep 12 - No Cached
  • JUST WHAT IS THE SUGAR CONTENT OF FRUIT JUICE? We’ll use orange, apple, cherry and grape juice as examples. Even with no sugar added, fruit juice contains about the same amount of sugar as the same amount of soft drink. Because apples, oranges and grapes are naturally full of sugar. (No surprise there: Processed sugar comes from plants, usually corn or sugar cane or sugar beets.) The table below compares the sugar in 12 ounces of juice (no sugar added) with 12 ounces (one can) of Coca-Cola. If you look at the nutrition label on a can of Coke or fruit juice, the “carbohydrate” is mostly sugar. Four grams of sugar carbs equal approximately 1 teaspoon of sugar. 12 ounces of >>>>>>>  Coca-Cola Orange Juice Apple Juice Cherry Juice Grape Juice Total carbohydrates 40 g 39 g 42 g 49.5 g 60 g Carbs from sugar 40 g 33 g 39 g 37.5 g 58.5 g Sugar (teaspoons) 10 tsp 8 tsp 10 tsp 9 tsp 15 tsp Calories 145 165 165 210 240 WHAT DOES THE CHART TELL US? It tells us that no matter which juice you choose, they all have more calories than the same amount of Coke. It tells us that juice — 100 percent juice, no sugar added — contains about the same amount of sugar (or even more — 50 percent more for grape juice) as the same volume of Coke. For this comparison we used: Classic Coke, Tropicana HomeStyle Orange Juice, Walnut Acres Organic 100 Percent Apple Juice, Eden Organic Montmorency Cherry Juice (no sweetener added) and R.W. Knudsen Unsweetened Concord Grape Juice. The numbers in the chart were calculated from the nutrition labels on the containers.
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    Table for comparing Coke to various juices 
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