President for a Day (Interactive)
This activity provides a job description for the presidency, so students understand what kinds of skills and competencies are necessary in that office. Students have the opportunity to role play the president for a day, making decisions about different events that a president might actually experience (meetings with Cabinet members, speeches to the public, bowling in the White House).
Missouri Government and Politics: Lecture 13 - Initiatives
This course is designed to familiarize students with the constitutional framework and institutions of the state of Missouri, including the legislative, executive, and judiciary branches, and its political parties.
Missouri's inherent conservatism and individualism is explored in the frame of the state's role as a ''laboratory of democracy." Special attention is given to innovations in welfare and education policies, as well as Missouri's role in the national debates over the right to privacy a
A random movie
Author(s):
Diptongo
Author(s):
Slide 2: The Introduction
Development of Oro-facial Structures and it's Clinical Correlations. Slide 2: The Introduction
KNUST OER 2012. CC:BY-NC
This video is included in a set of presentation videos on the Development of Oro-facial Structures and its Clinical Correlations. The videos describe and illustrate the pre-embryonic period of human development, which are weeks 1-3, the development of brachial arches, the face and palate, the types of facial clefts with illustrations and the development of the tongue. The deve
Science Bulletins: Black Holes in a Rare Ring
NASA's Chandra X-ray Observatory recently spied a spectacular cosmic sight: a ring of eight black holes. Telescopes that view the Universe in optical, ultraviolet, and infrared light can see the galaxy where the ring resides, but only an X-ray telescope can detect the black holes lurking within. Scientists believe the ring was formed in a galactic collision millions of years ago.
Science Bulletins: Seeking Signs of Another Universe
If other universes exist, how could we notice them? A new study by British and Canadian astrophysicists points to a radiation map of the cosmic microwave background, which was emitted shortly after the Big Bang. Its cryptic temperature fluctuations may show imprints from other universes that collided with our own.
Science Bulletins: How Did Saturn Get Its Rings?
Astronomers propose a new theory to explain Saturn's unusual rings.
President Floyd & Global Campus thoughts
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Classify 2-D Shapes (Interactive)
Identify the properties of two dimensional figures using appropriate terminology.
XSL Formatting Objects
Hannes Hirzel
XSL Formatting Objects is an XML language designed to be used to markup text which then later will be converted to PDF.
Some Ri
TWC9: Microsoft Surface, Windows Phone 8, Azure, Imagine Cup and Pi! | This Week On Channel 9 This week on Channel 9, Dan and Brian discuss the week's top developer news, including:
Developer Platform Drill Down - Kevin Gallo, Windows Phone 8 | Windows Phone Summit Kevin Gallo, drills further into the new Windows Phone 8 developer platform, and increased opportunity. He also unveils new capabilities and features for business users and enterprises.

The Rule of Law [Audio]
Speaker(s): Daw Aung San Suu Kyi, Professor Christine Chinkin, Professor Nicola Lacey, Sir Geoffrey Nice QC, Dr Maung Zarni | Daw Aung San Suu Kyi is Chairman of the National League for Democracy (NLD) and Member of Parliament of Kawhmu constituency in Burma. She was awarded the Nobel peace prize in 1991. Christine Chinkin, FBA, is currently Professor in International Law at the London School of Economics. She has widely published on issues of international human rights law, law, including as c
Excursion à Paris Laat je leerlingen een driedaagse uitstap naar Parijs voorbereiden. Voorstel tot programma:

More Protractors: Angle Action (Part 2) (Interactive)
Measure angles using a protractor. Identify the angles created by two lines and a transversal.
Uniting Online Education with Service-Learning
The Office of Citizenship and Service-Learning is pleased to provide videos from three of the sessions of the spring, 2012 Faculty/Staff Development Conference, Beyond the Borders: The Future of Service-Learning.
This sessions features Jean Strait presenting "Uniting Online Education with Service-Learning."
The Beat Goes On (Activity)
In this activity, students learn about their heart rate and different ways it can be measured. Students construct a simple measurement device using clay and a toothpick, and then use this device to measure their heart rate under different circumstances (i.e., sitting, standing and jumping). Students make predictions and record data on a worksheet.













