Skip to main content

Home/ HCPS ITRT/ Group items tagged trip

Rss Feed Group items tagged

william berry

The taxi-meter effect: Why do consumers hate paying by the mile or the minute so much? - 0 views

  •  
    "When I get a taxi for the 15-minute ride from my office to the airport, I have two choices. I can hail a cab on the street, and pay a metered fare for the 4.6-mile trip. Or I can walk to the local Marriott and pay a fixed fee of $31.50. Truthfully, I'm always a lot happier paying the fixed fee. I'm happier even though it probably costs more in the end. (A congestion-free trip on the meter comes out to about $26.) Sitting in a cab watching the meter tick up wrenches my gut: Every eighth of a mile, there goes another 45 cents-tick ... tick ... tick." ...this provides interesting context for a math problem using linear equations. When is it worth it to pay the fixed fare vs. paying the per 1/8th of a mile rate? You could "3-Act" this scenario pretty easily: -Take a short video of a taxi fare display clicking upwards. Ask students to give you the first questions that come to mind. When the students ask for it, provide them with a photo of the rate schedule on the side of the taxi and your destination address.
william berry

Travel times in the U.S.: Moving by road, canal, boat, and airplane in the 19th and 20t... - 0 views

  •  
    "These maps, published in 1932 in the Atlas of the Historical Geography of the United States and available through the David Rumsey Historical Map Collection, illustrate how arduous travel was in the country's early history. In 1800, a journey from New York to Chicago would have taken an intrepid traveler roughly six weeks; travel times beyond the Mississippi River aren't even charted. Three decades later, the trip dropped to three weeks in length and by the mid-19th century, the New York-Chicago journey via railroad took two days. And the introduction of regional airlines in the 1920s made it possible to travel 1,000 or more miles in a single day." Possible applications for Westward Expansion
Mike Dunavant

21 Digital Tools to Build Vocabulary | Learning Unlimited | Research-based Literacy Str... - 5 views

  •  
    "The following digital tools show promise to support word learning, review, and play with language. I've grouped them into four categories: Reference Tools, Word Clouds, Games and Review, Word Walls and Virtual Field Trips. "
Kourtney Bostain

Tech Tips for Teachers and Teacher Educators - 2 views

  • What if you started the day (or class period) with a webcam or other virtual field trip site projected onto your screen / whiteboard / wall?
  •  
    I think this is a neat idea. Would be easy to do and could really add a layer of authenticity to what students are doing and working on. Lots of different ways this idea could be used.
1 - 4 of 4
Showing 20 items per page