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What do you know about dinosaurs? In Dinosaur Facts for Kids, you will learn cool facts about many of these ancient animals. They lived during the Mesozoic era millions of years ago, which is divided into three smaller periods: Triassic, Jurassic, and Cretaceous. To this day, scientists still debate about the cause of their extinction. Was it because lots of volcanoes erupted at the same time? Or was it because a meteor crashed into Earth and caused a ton of damage?
Regardless, we can learn a lot about dinosaurs by studying their fossils. The first dinosaur bones ever found were found in China. The people originally thought they were the bones of giant dragons! The word dinosaur means “terrible lizard,” which works because most dinosaurs are classified as reptiles. Because of the work of paleontologists, we know that some dinosaurs walked on two legs while other walked on four. We also know that these terrible lizards varied greatly in size. Some were as small as chickens while others were bigger than a school bus!
The types of food that dinosaurs ate varied as well. Dinosaurs were either herbivores, carnivores, or omnivores, just like the animals of today. There are also some dinosaurs that are considered the ancient ancestors of birds!
We hope you and your student(s) enjoyed learning about these four different dinosaurs! If you want to learn even more, head over to our website and download one of our many free lesson plans about dinosaurs, full of activities, worksheets, and more!
https://learnbright.org/lessons/science/dinosaurs/
https://learnbright.org/lessons/science/fossils/
https://learnbright.org/lesson....s/science/extinct-en
https://learnbright.org/lesson....s/science/extinction
What you will learn in Dinosaur Facts for Kids:
0:00 Introduction to dinosaurs and the Mesozoic Era
0:58 What caused the extinction of dinosaurs
2:01 Chinese found first dinosaur bones
2:46 Paleontology and what we can learn
3:29 Facts about specific dinosaurs
4:26 Dinosaurs related to birds
5:05 Review of the facts
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*Teachers and Parents! Did you know? In addition to these great videos, we have also created a library of high-quality and engaging lessons for your elementary aged student(s). Visit us, sign up for a free account, and instantly you'll have access to thousands of lesson plans, learning materials, teaching instructions, activities, and assignments that your kids will really enjoy! We hope to see you soon!
Browse our entire collection of Science lesson plans: https://learnbright.org/lessons/?filter_subject=science
#DinosaurFactsForKids
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By using Gemini it’s not too difficult to generate alt text that will make your published images accessible to those who use screen readers.
Alt Text Generator Gem
https://gemini.google.com/gem/....12BCpB29HnzSLljUWBjM
In order to make this appear as a saved Gem for you, you have to open it and use it once. Then you can find it in your Gems Manager page.
All of my help videos: https://docs.google.com/docume....nt/d/1lVxUw0wpiv-18M
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Our What Is the Electoral College video will explain and answer many questions regarding the electoral college and how it is used to determine our new president. This video is geared for kids and provides a basic overview of this important part of our government and election process. Come and learn all about the history of the electoral college and how it will impact the upcoming elections. We hope you enjoy.
Looking for more Electoral College resources? Download our free comprehensive lesson plan here: https://learnbright.org/lesson....s/social-studies/ele
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*Teachers and Parents! Did you know? In addition to these great videos, we have also created a library of high quality and engaging lessons for your elementary aged student(s). Visit us, sign up for a free account, and instantly you'll have access to thousands of lesson plans, learning materials, teaching instructions, activities, and assignments that your kids will really enjoy! We hope to see you soon!
Browse our entire collection of Social Studies lesson plans: https://learnbright.org/lessons/?filter_subject=social-studies
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What do you know about the inside of our planet? In our Layers of the Earth for Kids video, you and your students will discover some facts about the four main layers that make up our beautiful earth! The first thing you'll learn is that the earth is not simply a giant ball of dirt, rocks, and minerals. On the contrary, our planet is much more than meets the eye.
The crust is the outer layer of the earth and is actually between 5 and 25 miles thick depending on where you are. Under the oceans, it is only about 3 to 5 miles thick, and we refer to these areas as oceanic crust. The crust beneath the land reaches up to 25 miles thick. We refer to these parts as continental crust. The temperatures of the earth's crust can range anywhere between air temperature and 1600°F, which is hot enough to melt rocks!
This thin layer consists of broken pieces called plates, which float on top of the soft mantle layer below. (The movement of these plates is what often causes earthquakes.) The mantle layer is the largest at about 1800 miles thick. It comprises extremely hot, dense rock that flows like asphalt. The temperature at the top is about 1600°F, but it's about 4000°F at the bottom! This layer is basically made up of melted rock that allow the plates of the earth's crust to float on top. The melted rock that escapes to the earth's surface lead to the creation of volcanoes.
Then comes the outer core of the earth. The outer core consists mostly of melted nickel and iron. This layer lies around 1800 miles below the earth's surface and is around 1400 miles thick. The temperature ranges from 4000°F to 9000°F! The inner core is about 800 miles thick with 9000°F temperatures. There is so much pressure in the core that the metals squeeze very tightly, forcing them to vibrate as solids do. This pressure comes from the weight of the other layers that press down on it.
We hope you and your student(s) enjoyed learning about the crust, mantle, and inner and outer cores of our planet! If you want to learn even more, head over to our website and download one of our many free lesson plans about Earth, full of activities, worksheets, and more!
https://learnbright.org/lesson....s/science/layers-of-
What you will learn in Layers of the Earth for Kids:
0:00 Introduction to the earth
0:25 What the earth is made of
1:17 The crust—outermost layer of Earth
2:09 Plate tectonics
2:40 Lithosphere and asthenosphere
3:33 The mantle layer
4:35 The outer and inner core layers
5:34 Review of the facts
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*Teachers and Parents! Did you know? In addition to these great videos, we have also created a library of high-quality and engaging lessons for your elementary aged student(s). Visit us, sign up for a free account, and instantly you'll have access to thousands of lesson plans, learning materials, teaching instructions, activities, and assignments that your kids will really enjoy! We hope to see you soon!
Browse our entire collection of Science lesson plans: https://learnbright.org/lessons/?filter_subject=science
#Earth
#LayersOfTheEarth
In this video we learn all about constellations for kids. At night we can see thousands of stars and scientists long ago figured out that the stars line up in recognizable patterns. The patterns form shapes of people, animals, and mythological beings. Early astronomers called these special patterns constellations. Each star in the pattern has a name and is connected to form a different constellation. It is almost like a “connect-the-dots” picture, but instead of using numbers and dots, the twinkling stars are connected to form the special patterns. You have have heard of the Big Dipper, Orions Belt, or Aries, but these are only a few of the constellations there are many more!
Many constellations have their roots in myths. A myth is an ancient story about many different things. Constellation myths are usually stories about gods, heroes and creatures such
as serpents, dragons, flying horses and more. The images related to these myths are formed using connected stars. The Greeks and Romans created the stories for constellations.
In addition to the constellation myths, there are ancient and modern uses of constellations:
1. They helped ancient farmers know when to plant and harvest crops. Constellations can be used as a calendar in the sky.
2. Travelers use them to navigate from one place to another, relying on different stars to guide them on journeys throughout the world.
3. Modern astronomers and star gazers use them to help keep track of specific stars in the sky.
4. Astronomers use them to locate other objects in the sky such as galaxies or nebulae, which are areas where gas and dust are cluttered
We hope you and your kids enjoyed our constellation video and are able to identify some of the major constellations when you look up at the stars at night. If you'd like even more resources and constellation activities...download our free lesson plan here: https://learnbright.org/lesson....s/science/constellat
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*Teachers and Parents! Did you know? In addition to these great videos, we have also created a library of high quality and engaging lessons for your elementary aged student(s). Visit us, sign up for a free account, and instantly you'll have access to thousands of lesson plans, learning materials, teaching instructions, activities, and assignments that your kids will really enjoy! We hope to see you soon!
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#ASL
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#StarPatterns
Discover everything a NUMBEROCK subscription has to offer!
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Newly Available for Website Subscribers:
1. Number Notes | Highly-visual math worksheets that integrate drawing and creative processes that make problem-solving and note-taking way more fun.
Research has shown that resources like these worksheets help students to integrate their artistic side with the mathematical side of their brain and as a result aides with long-term memory retention.
Our own research has shown us that teachers who try these activities love them! It seems to be a natural extension beyond song and video and into additional visual learning tools that when used in concert with our videos, cater to the many different types of learners that in your classroom - especially those non-mathy types.
Hope to see you at https://learnmore.numberock.com/free-fnl.
Intro: 0:00
Example 1: 0:58
Example 2 ( Practice ): 3:10
This are two examples on how to solve simple system of equation problems using the substitution method. When solving systems, you are finding a value for all your unknown variables (usually solving for x and y ). If you need more examples, go to my other systems of equations lesson using substitution.
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Hello and welcome!
My name is Anton and in this video, we will talk about the discovery of water vapor around an interesting exoplanetknown as K2-18b that's orbiting in the habitable zone of its planet.
Paper: https://arxiv.org/pdf/1909.04642.pdf
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You probably studied the "regular" periodic table in school—but did you know there are more versions of the periodic table than just the one you know? The periodic table of elements has gone through many iterations since it was first used to organize elements over 150 years ago! Join Michael Aranda in this new episode of SciShow and learn all about them!
SciShow has a spinoff podcast! It's called SciShow Tangents. Check it out at http://www.scishowtangents.org
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Support SciShow by becoming a patron on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/scishow
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Huge thanks go to the following Patreon supporters for helping us keep SciShow free for everyone forever:
Adam Brainard, Greg, Alex Hackman, Sam Lutfi, D.A. Noe, الخليفي سلطان, Piya Shedden, KatieMarie Magnone, Scott Satovsky Jr, Charles Southerland, Patrick D. Ashmore, charles george, Kevin Bealer, Chris Peters
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https://iupac.org/what-we-do/
https://www.nde-ed.org/Educati....onResources/HighScho
http://www.chem.tamu.edu/class..../fyp/stone/tutorialn
https://periodic.lanl.gov/about.shtml
https://www.angelo.edu/faculty..../kboudrea/periodic/t
http://www.unesco.org/new/en/b....rasilia/about-this-o
https://www.bipm.org/utils/com....mon/pdf/si_brochure_
http://scienceline.ucsb.edu/getkey.php?key=408
http://www.rsc.org/periodic-table/history/about
https://phys.org/news/2019-01-periodic-table.html
https://forvo.com/word/alexand....re-%C3%A9mile_b%C3%A
https://www.meta-synthesis.com..../webbook/35_pt/pt_da
http://scienceworld.wolfram.co....m/biography/Beguyerd
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https://www.meta-synthesis.com..../webbook/35_pt/JCE_P
https://www.meta-synthesis.com..../webbook/35_pt/pt_da
https://patents.google.com/patent/US3581409A/en
https://www.meta-synthesis.com..../webbook/35_pt/pt_da
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http://www.ipgp.fr/~tarantola/....Files/Professional/M
https://www.sciencedaily.com/t....erms/electron_config
https://web.archive.org/web/20....160323155930/http://
http://philsci-archive.pitt.edu/3095/
https://link.springer.com/arti....cle/10.1007/s10698-0
http://www.chem.tamu.edu/class..../fyp/stone/tutorialn
https://www.researchgate.net/p....ublication/36444683_
https://www.khanacademy.org/pa....rtner-content/big-hi
https://www.britannica.com/science/atomic-weight
https://www.quora.com/Why-was-....the-spiral-arrangeme
Image Sources:
https://commons.wikimedia.org/....wiki/File:Periodic_T
https://commons.wikimedia.org/....wiki/File:Comparativ
https://commons.wikimedia.org/....wiki/File:Gallium_cr
https://commons.wikimedia.org/....wiki/File:Elementspi
https://commons.wikimedia.org/....wiki/File:Periodic_s
https://commons.wikimedia.org/....wiki/File:Portrait_d
https://commons.wikimedia.org/....wiki/File:Eric_Scerr
https://digital.sciencehistory.org/works/s4655h20t
https://commons.wikimedia.org/....wiki/File:DIMendelee
https://commons.wikimedia.org/....wiki/File:Mendelejev
https://commons.wikimedia.org/....wiki/File:Mendeleev%
https://commons.wikimedia.org/....wiki/File:Alexandre-
https://commons.wikimedia.org/....wiki/File:Telluric_s
https://commons.wikimedia.org/....wiki/File:Benfey,_Th
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https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:P2M0.png
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https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:D3xy.png
https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:D3xz.png
https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:D3M0.png
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Many people attribute summer vacation to the need for kids to be home and working on their family farms. But the truth is very different and way more sweltering. Cool off and learn about the history of summer vacation in this K12 Teaching Moment! #K12TeachingMoment #Challenge #TikTok #Animation
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Explicit instruction is a critical feature in teaching students who struggle with math. By walking through exactly what you want a student to know and allowing them time to practice, using explicit instruction in your classroom can help you reach students who may otherwise struggle.
In this video, Sarah Powell from UT demonstrates how to use explicit instruction in the classroom. This video is part of the Project STAIR, a resource for teachers and parents with students who are struggling with math. The project was originally made to help middle school math teachers, but explicit instruction is a tool that teachers at any grade (and in any subject) can use in their classroom.
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Please let us know in the comments below if this video was helpful, and be sure to subscribe to see new videos.
Welcome to "What are Square Roots?" with Mr. J! Need help with square roots? You're in the right place!
Whether you're just starting out, or need a quick refresher, this is the video for you if you're looking for help with how to find the the square root of a number. Mr. J will go through square root examples and explain the steps of how to find the square root of a number.
✅ What are Square Roots?
https://youtu.be/yICR9PiW340
✅ Square Roots of Perfect Squares
https://youtu.be/PTa9AQ9L3G8
✅ Simplifying Square Roots
https://youtu.be/GjiA0nGYlLM
About Math with Mr. J: This channel offers instructional videos that are directly aligned with math standards. Teachers, parents/guardians, and students from around the world have used this channel to help with math content in many different ways. All material is absolutely free.
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Hopefully this video is what you're looking for when it comes to square roots.
Instructional Goal: Students are able to utilize mathematical models to demonstrate conceptual understanding.
The quality of instruction is a function of the teacher’s knowledge and use of mathematical content, the teacher’s attention to and handling of students, and the student’s engagement in and use of mathematical tasks is the key for problem-centered classrooms.
Contact: www.TeachnKidsLearn.com
Email: PD@TeachnKidsLearn.com
Herzlich Willkommen zurück! In diesem Video zeige ich dir, wie du in Sheets das Geometrische Mittel berechnen kannst. Mit der Geomittel Funktion.
Leo Office Tutorials - Docs - Sheets - Slides - Word - Excel - PowerPoint - Apps Script
Kapitelmarken
0:00 Begrüßung & Intro
0:29 Geometrisches Mittel berechnen
3:17 Geomittel Funktion
3:53 Benannte Funktion erstellen
5:35 Fazit & Schluss
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