explorealaskawinsor.blogspot.com
Winsor's Explore Alaska Blog: November 2010
http://explorealaskawinsor.blogspot.com/2010_11_01_archive.html
Winsor's Explore Alaska Blog. Sunday, November 28, 2010. Module VII: Culture and Climate. Module VII started out with videos and information about the composition of the atmosphere and the early formation of our solar system, and I found myself again disappointed, wishing I had discovered this information about six weeks earlier. But the blog entry "Module VII: Carbon Connections". Showed me some exciting ways to tie that information into my third quarter units on Chemistry! Video clip from Dave's Blog.
ham28.blogspot.com
Let's Explore Alaska and get Connected!: December 2010
http://ham28.blogspot.com/2010_12_01_archive.html
Let's Explore Alaska and get Connected! ASDN class on making connections with observed science. Monday, December 27, 2010. I have been debating which project to post here. I will do them all eventually. Try to create an algorithm to predict the ice going out on the Nenana. Set up time laps photography and a feature study of the Mendenhall glacier. ( like EIS. A service learning project to reduce carbon emissions. Weather and Climate change in Juneau over last 75 years based on local photos and info.
ehhayesexplorealaska.blogspot.com
Explore Alaska: October 2010
http://ehhayesexplorealaska.blogspot.com/2010_10_01_archive.html
Sunday, October 31, 2010. For the most part, volcanoes are classified as active, dormant, and extinct, and that they occur mainly at the edge of geologic characteristics known as plates, which was the subject of earlier study. Here’s a regional map of Alaska volcanoes. The TD tools are invaluable, and I plan to build a sizeable file. Applying new knowledge to the classroom is an ever-challenging task, but for the generation of students who are movie-goers, here’s a fun website. Sunday, October 24, 2010.
pathstoknowledge.blogspot.com
Many Paths to Knowledge: Blogs Visited
http://pathstoknowledge.blogspot.com/2010/12/blogs-visited.html
Many Paths to Knowledge. This blog is a means to communicate with other participants of a class that helps teachers use a variety of resources to "integrate Native ways of knowing with Western scientific methods to create greater student interest in, and understanding of, the geosciences". Monday, December 6, 2010. Was a site I hadn’t visited. I liked the photo on his first post but I think he must have dropped the class, because there were no other posts? Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom).
wwwkrisexploresalaskacom.blogspot.com
Living and Learning in Alaska: Module VII: Changing Climate
http://wwwkrisexploresalaskacom.blogspot.com/2010/11/module-vii-changing-climate.html
Living and Learning in Alaska. Monday, November 29, 2010. Module VII: Changing Climate. Explain: What new learning or reflections have you taken from this module? The active role northern cultures are taking in monitoring climate change is highlighted in this module. The Sila-Inuk project, in which the Greenland Hunters and Fishermen Organization is making first hand observations of climate change is one example. The TD movie Alaska Native Teens Help Researchers. So how did we get here? The background on...
wwwkrisexploresalaskacom.blogspot.com
Living and Learning in Alaska: November 2010
http://wwwkrisexploresalaskacom.blogspot.com/2010_11_01_archive.html
Living and Learning in Alaska. Monday, November 29, 2010. Module VII: Changing Climate. Explain: What new learning or reflections have you taken from this module? The active role northern cultures are taking in monitoring climate change is highlighted in this module. The Sila-Inuk project, in which the Greenland Hunters and Fishermen Organization is making first hand observations of climate change is one example. The TD movie Alaska Native Teens Help Researchers. So how did we get here? The background on...
kahtnu.blogspot.com
Explore Alaska: Module IX
http://kahtnu.blogspot.com/2010/12/module-ix.html
Friday, December 10, 2010. Explain: I learned a lot about the Larsen Ice sectors through this weeks TD. Larsen B sector was around for 12, 000 years and after being discovered was gone after only 100 years; a mere blip in real world time. what is of great interest is the abundance of sea life like clams,. 65279;. Antarctic soft-shelled clam Laternula elliptica. Http:/ peterbrueggeman.com/nsf/fguide/mollusca6.html. 65279;. After viewing the climate change of Greenland ice sheet. The Nenena River bre...
explorealaskawinsor.blogspot.com
Winsor's Explore Alaska Blog: Module V Blog Review
http://explorealaskawinsor.blogspot.com/2010/11/module-v-blog-review.html
Winsor's Explore Alaska Blog. Monday, November 8, 2010. Module V Blog Review. I was feeling incredibly overwhelmed by coursework during this last module. Much of it was my own fault, in getting excited, taking long tangents of exploration into topics on Teacher Domain, and then procrastinating when it came to the actual writing of my response. So it was comforting tonight to see a surprising number of blogs that have not been updated since the first few modules. And Kevin Hamrick's blog.
ham28.blogspot.com
Let's Explore Alaska and get Connected!: Module 8
http://ham28.blogspot.com/2010/12/module-8.html
Let's Explore Alaska and get Connected! ASDN class on making connections with observed science. Sunday, December 5, 2010. All of Earth's surface where water is in solid form. When I first read that word I wondered if I had studied it before.or if it was a sub-category of the Troposhere or something I had forgotten. I'm not sure if I have studied it or not but, I've got it stored now! From the national snow and ice data center. Low concentration to high concentration). And arctic climate perspectives.