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Author(s): Jo Dierdorff
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Author(s): Robert Prescott
Every year, thousands of people enroll as English majors at colleges and universities all across America. They come to the discipline for many reasons, but typically they choose English because they love to read or because they had a life-changing experience in a high-school or junior-college English class. Students never tell faculty they are coming to English because they want to get a good paying job after they graduate.
Author(s): Kathy H Barclay
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Author(s): Tony Hecimovic, Russell Lord, Natalie Bohlmann
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Teachers should constantly be engaged in the art of teaching – applying confirmed knowledge and theory to ever-changing situations, solving unique challenges in real-time contexts.
Author(s): Michelle Cummings, Mike Anderson
A compass can be used in many ways, from telling which way is North to finding hidden treasure or following an unmarked path over wilderness terrain. In any conflict, you have to get your bearings on what happened in order to best determine how to resolve the issue. Conflict is inevitable, and despite how many of us feel about it, conflict is not always a bad thing.
Author(s): Eleanor Miele, Jennifer Adams
New York City is home to numerous museums, science centers, zoos, botanical gardens, and beautiful urban parks – with woodlands, marshes, lakes, and ponds – and nearly 27,000 acres of natural coastal habitat. This wealth of resources provides for and supports science learning for children.
Science Safaris in New York City is both a guide to teachers, parents and guardians, and a field journal that children can use to record, organize, and reflect on their learning in these places.