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kgarland

World Simulation Ideas - 95 views

I think it would be great to add more natural disasters, along with trying to bring out the slave trade, I think we could make the slave trade more part of the game. Also I think it would be great ...

worldsim

Amanda Stueve

US Doctors For Africa - 0 views

  • V. P. of Ghana joins US Doctors for Africa
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    Has recent news relating to U.S. Doctors for Africa. Particularly interesting is the section about the VP of Ghana joining. Ghana is one country highly affected by the "brain drain" in Africa, and they are very active in trying to find a solution, but they still have a huge healthcare problem.
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    Has recent news relating to U.S. Doctors for Africa. Particularly interesting is the section about the VP of Ghana joining. Ghana is one country highly affected by the "brain drain" in Africa, and they are very active in trying to find a solution, but they still have a huge healthcare problem.
senoumou

CNN.com: Web search - 0 views

  • www.chbn.com Global Warming Products  Find and Compare
jcoop11

Indigenous Australians - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - 0 views

  • not been shown to be related to any languages outside Australia. In the late 18th century, there were anywhere between 350 and 750 distinct groupings and a similar number of languages and dialects
  • At the time of first European contact, it is estimated that a minimum of 315,000 and as many as 1 million people lived in Australia. Recent archaeological evidence suggests that the land could have sustained a population of 750,000[11].
  • the regions of heaviest Indigenous population were the same temperate coastal regions that are currently the most heavily populated
  • ...12 more annotations...
  • While Torres Strait Island populations were agriculturalists who supplemented their diet through the acquisition of wild foods the remainder of Indigenous Australians were hunter-gatherers. Indigenous Australians along the coast and rivers were also expert fishermen. Some Aborigines and Torres Strait Islanders relied on the dingo as a companion animal, using it to assist with hunting and for warmth on cold nights.
  • Torres Strait Islanders
  • Indigenous Australians did practise agriculture.
  • sugar cane, taro and sweet potato as well as husbanding pigs
  • In contrast Australian Aborigines did not cultivate any crops and lacked any domestic food animals
  • mainland Australia no animal other than the dingo
  • Indigenous diet included a wide variety of foods, such kangaroo, emu, wombats, goanna, snakes, birds, many insects such as honey ants and witchetty grubs. Many varieties of plant foods such as taro, nuts, fruits and berries were also eaten.
  • A primary tool used in hunting was the spear, launched by a woomera or spear-thrower in some locales. Boomerangs were also used by some mainland Indigenous peoples. The non-returnable boomerang (known more correctly as a Throwing Stick), more powerful than the returning kind, could be used to injure or even kill a kangaroo.
  • Permanent villages were the norm for most Torres Strait Island communities. In some areas mainland Indigenous Australians also lived in semi-permanent villages, most usually in less arid areas where fishing could provide for a more settled existence. Most Indigenous communities were semi-nomadic, moving in a regular cycle over a defined territory,
  • Many Indigenous communities also have a very complex kinship structure and in some places strict rules about marriage. In traditional societies, men are required to marry women of a specific moiety
  • To enable men and women to find suitable partners, many groups would come together for annual gatherings (commonly known as corroborees) at which goods were traded, news exchanged, and marriages arranged amid appropriate ceremonies. This practice both reinforced clan relationships and prevented inbreeding in a society based on small semi-nomadic groups.
  • The Indigenous Australians lived through great climatic changes and adapted successfully to their changing physical environment
sleavitt

BBC NEWS | UK | Magazine | Charging up the stairs - 0 views

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    This is something I have never heard of! In some ways it seems very futuristic and sci-fi. However, if this could be implemented without major reconstruction of infrastructure and consumption goods, it could be a very exciting source of energy. I'm curious to find out more about this topic.
sleavitt

HiPER Project - 0 views

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    I wonder if fusion as an energy source does not make the news as often as other alternative fuel because it is harder to grasp by the general public. Scientists seem to think that it is a safe, sustainable, powerful fuel source. However, I would like to research more into this process. I would also like to find out how similar this process is to that used in the nuclear power plants that are in use today.
Amie Mosier

Educating Language-Minority Children. - 0 views

  • CULTURE, LANGUAGE, AND DEVELOPMENT Differences in the ways groups think and act are more than a matter of using different words or performing different actions for the same purposes. Differences in cultures are more substantial than whether members of a community eat white bread, corn pone, or tortillas. The behavior of people varies, and the beliefs, values, and assumptions that underlie behavior differ as well. Culture influences both behavior and the psychological processes on which it rests. Culture forms a prism through which members of a group see the world and create shared meanings. And a group's culture is reflected by the group's language. Child development follows a pattern similar to that of culture. Major structural changes in children, such as language learning, arise from the interaction of biology and experience. Such changes are remarkably similar in kind and sequence among cultural groups. But the knowledge and skills--the cultural learning--the child acquires at various ages depend on the child's family and community. Learning a primary language is a developmental milestone. However, which language a child learns and the uses to which that language is put are determined by the culture. As the ideas from a child's social world are brought to bear through the guidance of the older members of the community, children come to share meanings with their elders. Classroom discourse presents children with the challenge of learning new rules for communication. The use of formal language, teacher control of verbal exchanges, question-and-answer formats, and references to increasingly abstract ideas characterize the classroom environment. To the extent that these new rules overlap with those that children have already learned, classroom communication is made easier. But children whose past experience with language is not congruent with the new rules will have to learn ways to make meaning before they can use language to learn in the classroom. When teachers and students come from different cultures or use different languages or dialects, teachers may be unaware of variations between their understanding of a context and their students'; between their expectations for behavior and the children's inclinations. When children and adults do not share common experiences and beliefs, adults are less able to help children encode their thoughts in language. TEACHING CHILDREN FROM DIFFERENT CULTURES Teachers facing the challenge of teaching children from different cultural communities are hard-pressed to decide what constitutes an appropriate curriculum. If children from some groups are hesitant to speak up in school, how can teachers organize expressive language experiences? If children from some groups are dependent on nonverbal cues for meaning, how can teachers stress word meaning? How can teachers test for mastery of the curriculum if children do not speak a standard language or use the same styles of communication? Cultural diversity makes it hard for teachers to assess each child's developmental status, find common educational experiences to promote growth, and measure the achievement of educational objectives. Given the complex interaction between culture and development, is it possible to design a developmentally appropriate curriculum? If that question implies that the same curriculum can be used for all children, the answer must be "no." However, the following developmental principles can provide a conceptual framework for teachers trying to bridge the gap between children's cultural backgrounds and school objectives.
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     And idea of why culture language and development are important.
Amie Mosier

QUIZ-acceptance of others - 0 views

shared by Amie Mosier on 28 May 07 - Cached
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    pretty interesting-find out how accepting you are
Kendall

Expanded Academic ASAP Document - 0 views

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    This article is basically just one of the ways The United States of America is trying to end the labor of child prostitution.
Kendall

Expanded Academic ASAP Document - 0 views

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    Children are more susceptible to injury or death on the job than adults. (which is the same in physical abuse.)
Kendall

Expanded Academic ASAP Document - 0 views

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    This article highlights the concerns people have for the environment and type of work that young citizens do.
tomorronow

Act now - Amnesty International - 0 views

shared by tomorronow on 29 May 07 - Cached
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    Amnesty is a trusted and proven leader in human rights advocacy, and a great watchdog in international affairs.  On this particular page, one can donate, learn more, find people who want to make change, and put ideas into action. 
Kendall

North American Secretariat on Child Labor and Education - ICCLE - 0 views

shared by Kendall on 28 May 07 - Cached
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    This website is awesome, check it out, and look around to find all sorts of nifty research on children worldwide!
elligant35

Global Development: Solutions to Poverty - 0 views

    • elligant35
       
      Solution to poverty this article suggest using housing vouchers on government developed property. Among other solutions it proposes is to educate and provide better health care. The education they propose is to enable people to find some kind of trade to support themselves.
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    Again, good analysis of the problems but no actionable plans.
katiescan

CFACT - Revised data heats up Global Warming controversy - 0 views

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    This is a great article in talking about the new data that has come out on global warming.  Scientists have corrected a variety of measuring tools used to measure the amount of damage "global warming" is having on mother earth and this article gives a great overview of all of those new findings.
elligant35

Kansas State Department of Education - 0 views

shared by elligant35 on 27 May 07 - Cached
    • elligant35
       
      Break down of how poverty affects education in Kansas. this website will detail building reports that enble a person to see how many kids live below the poverty level in each school district. This also shows how many kids are receiving free or reduced lunches. In addition, it show the testing average broken down by racial demographics and the graduation rate broken down by racial demographics. Education is tied to global poverty because students and educators need to find a way to help break the cycle so that many students do not follow the poverty footsteps of thier parents or guardians.
Hans De Keulenaer

Internet Archive - 0 views

  • "This webpage is no longer available", is the sentence familiar to you? This is no longer a problem since a complete archive for webpages is now available. Through the Internet Archive, you can find expired webpages and you can also see how your favorite websites looked like 10 years ago and trace their development. What is the Internet Archive? The Internet Archive is a complete snapshot of all webpages on every website since 1996 till today.
drumnman

The choice doomsday or arbor day - 0 views

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    Why should we care? Find out here!
elligant35

Poverty Facts and Stats - Global Issues - 0 views

    • elligant35
       
      This article will be a good source for finding out how mamy people are living in poverty. This article also lists some things that are wrong structurally within poverty. One of the most interesting statistics that this article claims that 27,000 children died today and this is a number that coincides with the 3 billion people that live on less than two dollars a day.
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    This article basically describes poverty as a result of third world debt, free trade, corporations, consumption and consumerism, and a complex list of other facts that places almost three billion people living on less than two dollars a day.  The article goes on to state how much money is being spent to try to help solve the poverty issue.
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