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haleykc

9 Types of Collaborators - 0 views

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    Collaborators come in all different shapes and sizes. This info-graphic identifies the top nine types of collaborators that typically exist within organizations. Ranging from early adopters to social butterflies to the begrudging skeptic.
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    Collaborators come in all different shapes and sizes. This info-graphic identifies the top nine types of collaborators that typically exist within organizations. Ranging from early adopters to social butterflies to the begrudging skeptic.
breedyer

Chapter 6: A Golden Retriever of Your Own: Searchasaurus - Powered By EBSCOhost - 0 views

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    This site talks about what it is like to own your own Golden Retriever. It talks about where you should buy them, how you should choose, and many other things.
Monette McKinnell

NASA's Climate Kids :: Next Generation Science Standards - 0 views

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    A consortium of 26 states and other science groups created the Next Generation Science Standards. Many states plan on adopting them in the coming years. The standards are organized into three dimensions: disciplinary core ideas, science and engineering practices, and cross cutting concepts.
rhiannontuttle

Stories - Trail Of Tears National Historic Trail (U.S. National Park Service) - 0 views

  • Historically, Cherokees occupied lands in several southeastern states. As European settlers arrived, Cherokees traded and intermarried with them. They began to adopt European customs and gradually turned to an agricultural economy, while being pressured to give up traditional home-lands. Between 1721 and 1819, over 90 percent of their lands were ceded to others. By the 1820s, Sequoyah's syllabary brought l
  • etween 1816 and 1840, tribes located between the original states and the Mississippi River, including Cherokees, Chickasaws, Choctaws, Creeks, and Seminoles, signed more than 40 treaties ceding their lands to the U.S. In his 1829 inaugural address, President Andrew Jackson set a policy to relocate eastern Indians. In 1830 it was endorsed, when Congress passed the Indian Removal Act to force those remaining to move west of the Mississip
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    Trail of Tears Info
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