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Additional Search Results 1 - 10 of 3959 for Circle
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1. Circles
Lesson 148 Circles Quote of the Day: "The greater our knowledge increases, the greater our ignorance unfolds." John F. Kennedy Objectives: The student will review the definition of a circle. The student will apply the general formula for a circle to specific problems. Given the center and radius of a circle, the stud...
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2. Pattern Puzzlers Pattern Puzzlers
Pattern Puzzlers Mathematics Children will identify triangles, circles, and squares, then show their understanding of patterns by continuing a pattern that contains three different elements. What You Need Pattern Puzzlers: Spring Scene (PDF file print and copy) Pattern Puzzlers: Cutouts (PDF file print and copy) Scissors Glue Crayons What to Do 1. Draw this pattern on...
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3. Tower of Hanoi
...312-646-4860 Objectives: (For grades 6 through 12) 1. To discover a pattern. 2. To evaluate an exponential expression. Materials: Tower of Hanoi puzzle and circular discs of various sizes. Procedure: Pass out five circular discs of different sizes to each student. Have each student draw three large circles on a sheet of paper. Then have them place the largest disc in one of the circles as you place the largest disc of the puzzle on one of the three pegs (towers). Explain the rules of the puzzle as follows. The object is to move all the discs from one tower (one circle) to another tower (another circl...
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4. The Middle West
studyskills Home Up Teacher: Elizabeth Hardekopf Subject Area: Social Studies Grade Level: 4 Unit Title: The Middle West (Unit 4) Lesson Title: Study Skills Date: Friday, September 19, 2003 Social Studies Content Standards: 02 Objectives: Explain the purposes of a circle graph and line graph. Identify each graph and its title and labels. Compare data using line and circle graphs. Material/Resources Needed: None Anticipatory Set: Remind the students that we have worked with some graphs in math and that today we are going to learn about a new graph. The new graph that...
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5. The Area of a Circle
THE AREA OF A CIRCLE Edwina R. Justice Gunsaulus Academy 4420 S. Sacramento St. Chicago, IL 60632 1-312-523-1061 OBJECTIVE: To see the relationship between circumference and diameter and how that relationship, called pi, is used in the formula for the area of a circle. MATERIALS: A.Round container lids with varying circ...
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6. Corcurv
Corel lettering added on a curve Grade 5 Vocabulary..Text, font, style, size, path Objectives..After being shown how to add text to a picture that has already been drawn and saved, the student shall add text in a circle around the image. They may use an image they have brought in ( a picture of themselves or a pet?) or a picture that they have drawn and saved before. Samples will be on the board. Method..Open a new page in Corel Draw. Import the image. Use the circle tool and make a circle where the text is to go....
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7. Outnumbered by the English
...forces of cooperation and conflict among people influence the division and control of Earth's surfaces State Standard: 13 Teaching Level: E Objective/Purpose: - to recognize how the English eventually outnumbered the Indians and gained control Materials: paper, pencil or crayon Procedure: 1. Draw 5 circles on the board and have each student draw 5 circles on their own paper. 2. The first circle represents the population at the beginning of the book when it was all Indians. The whole circle is white. 3. The second circle represents the population when the English began coming. Shade in about 1 quarter...
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8. Spelling Game
...challenges their spelling skills. OBJECTIVES: The student will a. practice their spelling vocabulary. b. develop a positive attitude towards learning. c. practice their listening skills. RESOURCES/MATERIALS: One copy of students spelling list, an area large enough for the whole class to stand in a circle. ACTIVITIES AND PROCEDURES: 1. Have the class form a large circle in an open area. Ask them to stay standing. 3. Tell the students that you are going to give them a spelling word and that it is very important for them to pay attention. 4. Say a spelling word, e.g. "sphere". 5. The first person will...
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9. What Does Theme Mean?
...at the main characters learned in the story, and to what you learned as you shared their experiences. Now, turn the person sitting next to you and tell him or her what theme means. Do you think there can be more than one theme in a story? What do you think were some of the themes of your Literature Circle book? How did you figure out the themes of your Literature Circle book? Describe the theme you talked about with your partner. What elements of your Literature Circle book support that theme (think about characters, setting, language, time, values)? Is there another book you have read that may have...
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10. Winter Web Activity 3 - the Arctic Circle
...his Daily Classroom Special WinterWeb is an interactive site using the cold of winter as the focus of interdisciplinary activities. WinterWeb was written by Lottie Simms, teacher at Lawton Chiles Middle School, in Miami, Florida and former Teachers Network web mentor. Activity 3 Visiting the Arctic Circle or Why does a compass point north? The Arctic Circle is the invisible circle of latitude on the earth's surface at 66°33' north, marking the southern limit of the area where the sun does not rise on the winter solstice or set on the summer solstice - a geographic ring crowning the globe. It is appro...
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