Reading Rainbow: Zin! Zin! Zin! A Violin
Music and orchestras are profiled in this tuneful show. The episode soon gets rhythmic when LeVar introduces the viewers to the theatrical percussion group, Stomp. Gregory Hines reads Zin! Zin! Zin! a Violin, a counting story that mentions all the different types of instruments that are played in bands and orchestras and the kinds of groups they make based on many play at once. (28:21)
Zo gezegd, zo gerekend 2 : Jaarplan Deze jaarplanning sluit aan bij de methode Zo gezegd, zo gerekend 2.

Buena Park Vis Com
Author(s):
Karrah Miller
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TED402 Session 2 Fall 2011
TED402 Educational Psychology Session Two 09/07/11 Jeffrey Miller
Walk the Plank Beach Bash Edition
This is the second episode of Walk the Plank on location at Beach Bash 2011
World marks 9/11 anniversary
Sept. 11 - France honors 9/11 victims with a replica of the twin towers as Europe, Asia and the Middle East mark the 10th anniversary. Deborah Gembara reports.
Was Earth Home to a Race of Giants?
This 3:45 long video explains why people become giants and the tales of giants across the planet. Lots of interesting facts are presented and this video would be of interest for most students to start a discussion.
Number Sequencing In The Real World
A video created for educational purposes that focus on numeracy in the real world. The actor needs to know how to tell time, read a map, count how many floors to climb, and read decimals. (01:54)
Dwyane Wade speaks at Milwaukee BGCA Club
Former Marquette University star and NBA All-star Dwyane Wade spoke at the Hillside Boys & Girls Club in Milwaukee, Wis., on Aug. 29, 2011, encouraging club members to dream big and strive for success. Wade was in town as part of an annual visit to Marquette University where he met with the school's BGCA Youth of the Year scholarship winners. A video from his visit to Marquette can be found here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZUh9Wd-bOfk
Writers Series 2011: Honor Moore
Honor Moore, Distinguished Writer in Residence, read from her work on Tuesday, September 6, 2011 at the University of Richmond.
Honor Moore has published a memoir, The Bishop's Daughter, and a biography, The White Blackbird, A Life of the Painter Margarett Sargent by Her Granddaughter. The Bishop's Daughter was named an Editor's Choice by the New York Times and was a finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Award. In 2009 the Library of America published Poems from the Women's Movement, an
Growing Up in the New South Africa: Childhood and Adolescence in Post-Apartheid Cape Town
How has the end of apartheid affected the experiences of South African children and adolescents This pioneering study provides a compelling account of the realities of everyday life for the first generation of children and adolescents growing up in a democratic South Africa. The authors examine the lives of young people across historically divided communities at home in the neighbourhoods where they live and at school. The picture that emerges is one of both diversity and similarity as young peo
Tips for Teaching International Students
Tips for Teaching International Students
Honors Colloquium - "The Web Within Us: When Minds and Machines Become One"
Inventor and futurist Ray Kurzweil on exponential growth and its consequences.
URI Fall 2011 Honors Colloquium: Are You Ready for the Future?
IDS336 Session 2 Fall 2011
IDS336 Jazz in the Modern Era Session Two 09/13/11 Chet Hanley
Durable robots tackle triathlon
Sept. 15 - Panasonic's battery-powered robots gear up for the Ironman triathlon challenge in Hawaii. Tara Cleary reports.
U.S. Day Ahead: Geithner to talk leveraging EU bailout fund
Sept. 15 - U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner heads to Poland to meet with European finance ministers and propose a possible solution for making the EU's bailout fund more effective, says Reuters Economics Editor Bill Schomberg.
Open Classroom - 09/14/2011 #1 Bluestone's Introduction
The Role of Government in the 21st Century
This week: Government through the Eyes of Hollywood with Eric Stange and Larry Lowenthal as Guest Speakers
Les premiers systèmes sonores. Une conférence Jean-Pierre Verscheure
L’histoire du cinéma sonore débute véritablement avec les premiers films dialogués qui marquent une transformation fondamentale du langage filmique. Une nouvelle forme de narration naît avec Le Chanteur de Jazz, et d’une manière plus significative encore avec L’Ange bleu ou Lights of New-York. A partir des équipements Vitaphone de la Western Electric de 1927 (le projecteur à disque, le premier haut-parleur de l’histoire du cinéma), jusqu’au système RCA Photophone mis au p
L'histoire du cinéma sonore est-elle seulement technique ? Une conférence de Claude Bailblé
Depuis le phonautographe de Léon Scott (1857), nombre d’inventions techniques en cascade (microphone, lampe triode, haut-parleur, modulateur optique…) finissent par se rencontrer en un seul dispositif : le cinéma sonore des années 1930. Commence alors l’exploration des possibilités expressives de la monophonie, que d’autres progrès technologiques (l’enregistrement magnétique, la caméra silencieuse, le montage et mixage multipistes) viennent faciliter.
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