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Thursday Literally Language Arts
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| The Sign of the Beaver |
If you like adventure stories about survival in the wilderness, chances are you'll enjoy reading The Sign of the Beaver, by Elizabeth George Speare.
The story takes place in 1768. A 12-year-old boy named Matt and his family are planning to move from their home in Massachusetts to the wilderness in Maine. It is decided that Matt and his father will go before the rest of the family members, to build a cabin and plant the crops.
Once in Maine, Matt and his father build a two-story log cabin out of spruce trees. After readying the fields and planting the crops, Matt's father leaves for Massachusetts, to gather the remaining family members and the family possessions and lead them to their new home. He leaves Matt in charge of minding the new homestead.
While on his own, Matt must fend for himself in the woods of Maine. At one point, while trying to harvest some honey, he is attacked by a swarm of bees. An Indian and his grandson rescue Matt and treat his many stings. He befriends the Indians, who teach him about wilderness survival in exchange for his teaching the grandson to read. Through his many experiences with his newfound friends, Matt learns much about their very-different culture and about himself in the process.
Suppose the front and back walls of the cabin that Matt and his father built consisted of logs that were 30 feet in length, and the side walls consisted of logs that were 20 feet in length. Suppose also that the walls of the cabin were 18 feet tall. If the logs were cut from spruce trees that were 50 feet long and 1 foot in diameter, how many trees were needed to build the cabin walls?
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Bonus Question
| When Matt was attacked by the bees, he thought he heard one bee comment about the weather to another bee. What comment did Matt think he heard?
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Math Facts Game: Keep your Score! Basic and Advanced Math Facts: Addition, Subtraction, Multiplication
& Division.
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Free Tips and Activities from leading education experts that build parenting confidence: The Wonders of Praise and The Encouragement list are two of the hot topics.
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Math Games and activities for
the whole family.
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Math Word Problems. Learn
strategies for math problem
solving in History, Geography,
Science, Language Arts
and Health.
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Free tips and advice for helping
students learn the secrets of good study habits. What's the Plan, Making To-Do Lists and many more.
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Free worksheets for basic math skill review and strategy sheets that review step-by-step problem solving.
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Fact or Opinion
Posted: 2010-04-15
Hello All-
My name is Paul McKinney and I am very pleased to be a regular contributor to this new and informative blog site.
First let me tell you a little bit about who I am and the experiences I bring to this site. I always find it important to identify with those I share ideas, opinions and most importantly research. This is my 42nd year in the field of education. Notice that I did not identify education as a profession.Along the way I will explain my reasoning for this statement.
I started teaching in 1968 in a very small community in upstate NY.And for the next 22+ years taught in the public schools around Central New York. I must say that my favorite teaching experience was when I taught Kindergarten for 5 years. I learned more about teaching from teaching these little munchkins, than I did from taking any methodology class in undergraduate or graduate school. I taught all grade levels through 5th grade, special education through high school, and was an Assistant Director of Special Education for 5 years in charge of Curriculum and Instruction representing nine different school districts. For the past 20 years, I have been consultant trainer for SRA, a Project Director of Project Follow Through, and owner and principal in two major staff development companies. I am presently Vice President and partner in Educational Resources, Inc. (ERI) (www.erigroup.us) And I am proud to say that for 40 of those years I have been associated with all of the powerful instructional programs that come under the "umbrella" called Direct Instruction. OK, there you have it. I also need you to know as I write on this blog, I promise to always delineate between fact and my opinion or experience.
Earlier, I made the statement that Education is still a field and not a profession. I say that after the accumulation of 42 years of working hard, reading lots, studying diligently, and observing always. We are in fact a fickle profession (OPINION). My exp....
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Welcome to the New MathMastery
Posted: 2010-04-15
The MathMastery team is excited about the launch of its new web site. On the site you will find a wealth of math and science content. Our blogs will be hosted Paul McKinney and his team from Education Resources Incorporated, Sky Lamont, a home schooling mom, and myself. In this first posting I want to introduce Paul and Sky and set the stage for future interactions one can expect.
Paul McKinney, Vice-President of Educational Resources, Inc. (ERI) was recently notified that he was unanimously selected by the Board of Directors of ADI to receive this year's Life Time Achievement Award. The award comes as a result of a 40-year commitment to Direct Instruction. Paul started his teaching career in 1968 in Phoenix, New York. He has spent his entire career, teaching, training, supervising and promoting effective teaching and D.I. In 1989, Paul left public education to form and become President of J/P Associates, Inc. Then again in 1999, along with his partners Dr. Molly Blakely and Ed Schaefer, formed Educational Resources, Inc. a professional staff development company. ERI presently partners with school districts across the United States and abroad. Paul holds a B.A. and an M. S in Early Childhood Education from the State University College at Oswego and a C.A.S from Syracuse University in Educational Administration. Paul will receive his award at the annual ADI conference in Eugene Oregon in late July.
MathMastery online subscribers already know Paul. He is the narrator on many of the math and science videos. Check out Changing the Sides of an Equation video in the Absolute Value and Problem Solving tutorial in the Equations, Roots and Exponents! See how many more times you can find Paul as a narrator on MathMastery. Send us your answer. The winner(s) will get three months free subscription to MyMasteryNetwork, MathMastery’s online math subscription.
I look forward to Paul’s contributions to the MathMastery blog on effective teach....
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The Power of Positive Association
Posted: 2010-04-15
One
of the basic challenges a homes schooling parent faces is resistance from their
child/children towards their daily lessons. I'm sure there are a couple of
parents out there right now who know exactly what I mean -the moaning, the sad
faces, the snails crawl paces at which the kids do their activities - you know,
the pain we parents go through.
I'm
a life coach, one thing I can tell you is that sometimes my adult clients act
the same way. Take for instance a client who wants to lose weight. Making
healthy eating choices and exercise are not always easy - or are they? It
really depends on the perception they associate with having to do those
activities. If they have positive associations, then their exercise routine
flows even when they're pushing through tremendous resistance like lifting
weights. If while lifting, they co....
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