collect Rock specimens from your surroundings and also dering your travel. classify them with the help of your teacher. make a small museum of Rock for your school and plece your specimes there. keep and a note of the place from where you have collected them
Answers
Answer:
At this National Geographic Resource Library website teachers will find a collection of vetted resources to deepen students’ understanding about condensation, precipitation,and weather patterns that are affected by, and a part of, the water cycle. Most appropriate for grades 5–12, the standards-supported resources include encyclopedic entries on various topics (e.g., Earth, types of precipitation, air, hydrosphere, and clouds), infographics (e.g., Urban Water Cycle), and classroom activities using interactive computational models exploring water’s movement above and below ground (e.g., Availability of Fresh Water; Using Groundwater Wisely).
Engineering for Good
Added: Jan 10, 2020
Developed by PBS Learning Media and KQED Teach, this three-week, project-based learning unit for middle level science classrooms focuses on developing solutions for negative impacts of plastics on the environment. The unit supports the NGSS and promotes the engineering design process as students define a problem, brainstorm solutions, develop prototypes, and iterate on their designs. The project culminates with students producing videos about their solutions to share with the community. In addition to lesson plans and videos, the unit instructs teachers on how to create digital media artifacts such as digital stories and data visualizations.
American Physical Society Outreach Guide
Added: Jan 9, 2020
This online guide was developed to help K–college physics educators and other physics enthusiasts design and implement successful physics outreach programs in their schools or communities. The guide has information on topics such as the types of outreach programs, ways to work with schools and other audiences, safety issues, and public relations tactics to help advance the outreach effort. Links to information about popular physics demonstrations for outreach events, as well as contact information for physics experts willing to assist colleagues in developing a new outreach program, are included.