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More than 3,000 years ago, a rare form of iron fell from the sky and was turned into jewelry and tools by Iron Age craftspeople in what is now Poland. Recent analysis of artifacts from two Lusatian Culture cemeteries suggests that early metallurgists were not only working with iron from terrestrial sources but also incorporating metal from ataxite meteorites—an extremely rare form of nickel-rich iron that originates in space.
Via the latest issue of 'Geography' journal. The University of Liverpool has shared a variety of Google Earth Engine tools for researchers (and educators). This includes options for coding using Google Earth Engine. Some school based resources are apparently on the way, and if you'd like to make some suggestions there's a form on the website.
Human societies are built on layers of culture, law, and technology, yet beneath it all, some of the oldest instincts in the animal kingdom continue to shape our world. From political power struggles to economic inequality and environmental exploitation, an evolutionary past rooted in dominance, survival, and competition still drives much of human behavior today.
I started writing original music in 1971, my Junior Year of College at Santa Clara University (in the San Francisco Bay Area). I have written several hundred songs since then, more than 100 of which I regularly play out in public. While working as a lawyer in Kentucky, I decided to sing out under the name of my grandfather, Reginald Bareham. He was British and died on the first day of the Battle of the Somme (July 1, 1916, in France) while my father was still in the womb.
Project Title:Green Corn Renaissance: Mvskoke Food Sovereignty and the Political Ecology of Osafke Noah Schlager, University of Arizona Noah Schlager cvhocefketos. Este Mvskokvlket owis. Through their mother, Donna Wiggins, they are Mvskoke-Creek, Southern Creole, and Anglo from the longleaf pinelands of the southern Mvskoke homeland. Through their father, Dan Schlager, they are Jewish from communities which once existed in contemporary Ukraine and Romania.
HOUSTON Jefferson Early Learning Center bears little resemblance to elementary schools many adults recall attending in their earliest years. The classrooms have child-sized boats and construction vehicles children can play on, and ceilings painted to resemble outer space. There are no desks all space is devoted to learning through play. Windows are low to the ground so children can easily look outside.
Lawyers as Lobbyists: Regulatory Advocacy in American Finance By Brian Libgober , Northwestern University and Daniel Carpenter , Harvard University Administrative agencies have undertaken an increasingly substantial role in policymaking. Yet the influence-seeking that targets these agencies remains poorly understood. Reporting exceptions under the Lobbying Disclosure Act allow many of the most powerful advocates to characterize their activity as lawyering, not lobbying, and thereby fly under the
Recently, I was preparing for a podcast interview with the wonderful Jennifer Gonzalez ( Cult of Pedagogy ) and one of the last questions centered around a piece of advice I would give to teachers after years of reading and writing about cognitive sciences. It is tough to boil down over a century of research into a single thought or phrase. But, as a teacher, it is nice to have a somewhat all-encompassing focus to shape how you think about the classroom and instruction.
Recently, I was preparing for a podcast interview with the wonderful Jennifer Gonzalez ( Cult of Pedagogy ) and one of the last questions centered around a piece of advice I would give to teachers after years of reading and writing about cognitive sciences. It is tough to boil down over a century of research into a single thought or phrase. But, as a teacher, it is nice to have a somewhat all-encompassing focus to shape how you think about the classroom and instruction.
A poet-anthropologist reflects on the resistance of rural women in the Brazilian Cerrado whose wisdom and knowledge help cultivate life amid the devastation of large-scale plantations. Pequi Winds is part of the collection Poets Resist, Refuse, and Find a Way Through. Read the introduction to the collection here. In the vast territory of the Brazilian Cerrado, rural women transfigure the pain of environmental destruction into beauty.
I thought that for the 1,000th SCTV blog post Id make an effort to do something a bit different. But then I came to my senses and thought why break the habit of a lifetime?
A virtual wrecking ball took aim last Monday at the relatively small, wonky corner of the Department of Education that I write about every week: evaluation studies and data collection. The Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) posted on X that it had terminated 89 of these contracts worth $881 million. These particular cuts stunned people involved in education research because they didnt go after woke studies about equity, diversity or culturally relevant pedagogy all more obvious targets
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