This book will study a variety of classroom management theorists and their theories, noting the historical background of the theorist, a basic overview of the theory, and a professional critique of the theory. It will also discuss practical applications for the theories for both elementary and secondary classrooms.
20 Results
Software Carpentry lesson that teaches how to use databases and SQL In the late 1920s and early 1930s, William Dyer, Frank Pabodie, and Valentina Roerich led expeditions to the Pole of Inaccessibility in the South Pacific, and then onward to Antarctica. Two years ago, their expeditions were found in a storage locker at Miskatonic University. We have scanned and OCR the data they contain, and we now want to store that information in a way that will make search and analysis easy. Three common options for storage are text files, spreadsheets, and databases. Text files are easiest to create, and work well with version control, but then we would have to build search and analysis tools ourselves. Spreadsheets are good for doing simple analyses, but they don’t handle large or complex data sets well. Databases, however, include powerful tools for search and analysis, and can handle large, complex data sets. These lessons will show how to use a database to explore the expeditions’ data.
- Subject:
- Applied Science
- Computer Science
- Information Science
- Mathematics
- Measurement and Data
- Material Type:
- Module
- Provider:
- The Carpentries
- Author:
- Amy Brown
- Andrew Boughton
- Andrew Kubiak
- Avishek Kumar
- Ben Waugh
- Bill Mills
- Brian Ballsun-Stanton
- Chris Tomlinson
- Colleen Fallaw
- Dan Michael Heggø
- Daniel Suess
- Dave Welch
- David W Wright
- Deborah Gertrude Digges
- Donny Winston
- Doug Latornell
- Erin Alison Becker
- Ethan Nelson
- Ethan P White
- François Michonneau
- George Graham
- Gerard Capes
- Gideon Juve
- Greg Wilson
- Ioan Vancea
- Jake Lever
- James Mickley
- John Blischak
- JohnRMoreau@gmail.com
- Jonah Duckles
- Jonathan Guyer
- Joshua Nahum
- Kate Hertweck
- Kevin Dyke
- Louis Vernon
- Luc Small
- Luke William Johnston
- Maneesha Sane
- Mark Stacy
- Matthew Collins
- Matty Jones
- Mike Jackson
- Morgan Taschuk
- Patrick McCann
- Paula Andrea Martinez
- Pauline Barmby
- Piotr Banaszkiewicz
- Raniere Silva
- Ray Bell
- Rayna Michelle Harris
- Rémi Emonet
- Rémi Rampin
- Seda Arat
- Sheldon John McKay
- Sheldon McKay
- Stephen Davison
- Thomas Guignard
- Trevor Bekolay
- lorra
- slimlime
- Date Added:
- 03/20/2017
This textbook is intended for use in introductory Entrepreneurship classes at the undergraduate level. Due to the wide range of audiences and course approaches, the book is designed to be as flexible as possible. Theoretical and practical aspects are presented in a balanced manner, and specific components such as the business plan are provided in multiple formats. Entrepreneurship aims to drive students toward active participation in entrepreneurial roles, and exposes them to a wide range of companies and scenarios.
- Subject:
- Business and Communication
- Material Type:
- Textbook
- Provider:
- Rice University
- Provider Set:
- OpenStax College
- Author:
- Chris Littel
- Michael Laverty
- Date Added:
- 07/12/2022
Play with a bar magnet and coils to learn about Faraday's law. Move a bar magnet near one or two coils to make a light bulb glow. View the magnetic field lines. A meter shows the direction and magnitude of the current. View the magnetic field lines or use a meter to show the direction and magnitude of the current. You can also play with electromagnets, generators and transformers!
- Subject:
- Physical Science
- Physics
- Material Type:
- Simulation
- Provider:
- University of Colorado Boulder
- Provider Set:
- PhET Interactive Simulations
- Author:
- Archie Paulson
- Carl Wieman
- Chris Malley
- Danielle Harlow
- Kathy Perkins
- Michael Dubson
- Date Added:
- 10/22/2006
Students learn the basic principles of filtering as well as how to apply digital filters to extract part of an audio signal by using an interactive online demo website. They apply this knowledge in order to isolate a voice recording from a heavily noise-contaminated sound wave. After completing the associated lesson, expect students to be able to attempt (and many successfully finish) this activity with minimal help from the instructor.
- Subject:
- Applied Science
- Career and Technical Education
- Electronic Technology
- Engineering
- Material Type:
- Activity/Lab
- Provider:
- TeachEngineering
- Provider Set:
- TeachEngineering
- Author:
- Ayoade Adekola
- Chris Light
- Connor McKay
- Dehui Yang
- Kyle R. Feaster
- Michael B. Wakin
- Date Added:
- 10/14/2015
Generate electricity with a bar magnet! Discover the physics behind the phenomena by exploring magnets and how you can use them to make a bulb light.
- Subject:
- Physical Science
- Physics
- Material Type:
- Simulation
- Provider:
- University of Colorado Boulder
- Provider Set:
- PhET Interactive Simulations
- Author:
- Archie Paulson
- Carl Wieman
- Chris Malley
- Danielle Harlow
- Kathy Perkins
- Michael Dubson
- Date Added:
- 04/01/2008
Data Carpentry’s aim is to teach researchers basic concepts, skills, and tools for working with data so that they can get more done in less time, and with less pain. Interested in teaching these materials? We have an onboarding video available to prepare Instructors to teach these lessons. After watching this video, please contact team@carpentries.org so that we can record your status as an onboarded Instructor. Instructors who have completed onboarding will be given priority status for teaching at centrally-organized Data Carpentry Geospatial workshops.
- Subject:
- Applied Science
- Geology
- Information Science
- Mathematics
- Measurement and Data
- Physical Geography
- Physical Science
- Social Science
- Material Type:
- Module
- Provider:
- The Carpentries
- Author:
- Anne Fouilloux
- Arthur Endsley
- Chris Prener
- Jeff Hollister
- Joseph Stachelek
- Leah Wasser
- Michael Sumner
- Michele Tobias
- Stace Maples
- Date Added:
- 08/07/2020
Data Carpentry lesson to learn how to work with Amazon AWS cloud computing and how to transfer data between your local computer and cloud resources. The cloud is a fancy name for the huge network of computers that host your favorite websites, stream movies, and shop online, but you can also harness all of that computing power for running analyses that would take days, weeks or even years on your local computer. In this lesson, you’ll learn about renting cloud services that fit your analytic needs, and how to interact with one of those services (AWS) via the command line.
- Subject:
- Applied Science
- Computer Science
- Information Science
- Mathematics
- Measurement and Data
- Material Type:
- Module
- Provider:
- The Carpentries
- Author:
- Abigail Cabunoc Mayes
- Adina Howe
- Amanda Charbonneau
- Bob Freeman
- Brittany N. Lasseigne, PhD
- Bérénice Batut
- Caryn Johansen
- Chris Fields
- Darya Vanichkina
- David Mawdsley
- Erin Becker
- François Michonneau
- Greg Wilson
- Jason Williams
- Joseph Stachelek
- Kari L. Jordan, PhD
- Katrin Leinweber
- Maxim Belkin
- Michael R. Crusoe
- Piotr Banaszkiewicz
- Raniere Silva
- Renato Alves
- Rémi Emonet
- Stephen Turner
- Taylor Reiter
- Thomas Morrell
- Tracy Teal
- William L. Close
- ammatsun
- vuw-ecs-kevin
- Date Added:
- 03/28/2017
Data Carpentry lesson to understand data structures and common storage and transfer formats for spatial data. The goal of this lesson is to provide an introduction to core geospatial data concepts. It is intended for learners who have no prior experience working with geospatial data, and as a pre-requisite for the R for Raster and Vector Data lesson . This lesson can be taught in approximately 75 minutes and covers the following topics: Introduction to raster and vector data format and attributes Examples of data types commonly stored in raster vs vector format Introduction to categorical vs continuous raster data and multi-layer rasters Introduction to the file types and R packages used in the remainder of this workshop Introduction to coordinate reference systems and the PROJ4 format Overview of commonly used programs and applications for working with geospatial data The Introduction to R for Geospatial Data lesson provides an introduction to the R programming language while the R for Raster and Vector Data lesson provides a more in-depth introduction to visualization (focusing on geospatial data), and working with data structures unique to geospatial data. The R for Raster and Vector Data lesson assumes that learners are already familiar with both geospatial data concepts and the core concepts of the R language.
- Subject:
- Applied Science
- Computer Science
- Information Science
- Mathematics
- Measurement and Data
- Material Type:
- Module
- Provider:
- The Carpentries
- Author:
- Anne Fouilloux
- Chris Prener
- Dev Paudel
- Ethan P White
- Joseph Stachelek
- Katrin Leinweber
- Lauren O'Brien
- Michael Koontz
- Paul Miller
- Tracy Teal
- Whalen
- Date Added:
- 08/07/2020
How did scientists figure out the structure of atoms without looking at them? Try out different models by shooting light at the atom. Check how the prediction of the model matches the experimental results.
- Subject:
- Physical Science
- Physics
- Material Type:
- Simulation
- Provider:
- University of Colorado Boulder
- Provider Set:
- PhET Interactive Simulations
- Author:
- Carl Wieman
- Chris Malley
- Kathy Perkins
- Michael Dubson
- Mindy Gratny
- Sam McKagan
- Wendy Adams
- Date Added:
- 01/01/2007
Discover what controls how fast tiny molecular motors in our body pull through a single strand of DNA. How hard can the motor pull in a tug of war with the optical tweezers? Discover what helps it pull harder. Do all molecular motors behave the same?
- Subject:
- Genetics
- Life Science
- Material Type:
- Simulation
- Provider:
- University of Colorado Boulder
- Provider Set:
- PhET Interactive Simulations
- Author:
- Chris Malley
- Kathy Perkins
- Meredith Betterton
- Michael Dubson
- Thomas Perkins
- Wendy Adams
- Date Added:
- 12/01/2007
Did you ever imagine that you can use light to move a microscopic plastic bead? Explore the forces on the bead or slow time to see the interaction with the laser's electric field. Use the optical tweezers to manipulate a single strand of DNA and explore the physics of tiny molecular motors. Can you get the DNA completely straight or stop the molecular motor?
- Subject:
- Physical Science
- Physics
- Material Type:
- Simulation
- Provider:
- University of Colorado Boulder
- Provider Set:
- PhET Interactive Simulations
- Author:
- Archie Paulson
- Chris Malley
- Kathy Perkins
- Michael Dubson
- Thomas Perkins
- Wendy Adams
- Date Added:
- 08/01/2007
Did you ever imagine that you can use light to move a microscopic plastic bead? Explore the forces on the bead or slow time to see the interaction with the laser's electric field. Use the optical tweezers to manipulate a single strand of DNA and explore the physics of tiny molecular motors. Can you get the DNA completely straight or stop the molecular motor?
- Subject:
- Physical Science
- Physics
- Material Type:
- Simulation
- Provider:
- University of Colorado Boulder
- Provider Set:
- PhET Interactive Simulations
- Author:
- Archie Paulson
- Chris Malley
- Kathy Perkins
- Michael Dubson
- Thomas Perkins
- Wendy Adams
- Date Added:
- 08/01/2007
An OER database of public domain/creative commons books and websites dedicated to Tennessee history. Includes several interviews with Tennesseans on a variety of issues.
- Subject:
- History
- U.S. History
- Material Type:
- Primary Source
- Reading
- Author:
- Chris Demas
- Colin Cox
- Michael Pagel
- Tabetha Garman
- Date Added:
- 07/28/2021
How did Rutherford figure out the structure of the atom without being able to see it? Simulate the famous experiment in which he disproved the Plum Pudding model of the atom by observing alpha particles bouncing off atoms and determining that they must have a small core.
- Subject:
- Physical Science
- Physics
- Material Type:
- Simulation
- Provider:
- University of Colorado Boulder
- Provider Set:
- PhET Interactive Simulations
- Author:
- Carl Wieman
- Chris Malley
- Kathy Perkins
- Michael Dubson
- Sam McKagan
- Wendy Adams
- Date Added:
- 03/01/2007
How did Rutherford figure out the structure of the atom without being able to see it? Simulate the famous experiment in which he disproved the Plum Pudding model of the atom by observing alpha particles bouncing off atoms and determining that they must have a small core.
- Subject:
- Physical Science
- Physics
- Material Type:
- Simulation
- Provider:
- University of Colorado Boulder
- Provider Set:
- PhET Interactive Simulations
- Author:
- Carl Wieman
- Chris Malley
- Kathy Perkins
- Michael Dubson
- Sam McKagan
- Wendy Adams
- Date Added:
- 03/02/2011
Explore stretching just a single strand of DNA using optical tweezers or fluid flow. Experiment with the forces involved and measure the relationship between the stretched DNA length and the force required to keep it stretched. Is DNA more like a rope or like a spring?
- Subject:
- Genetics
- Life Science
- Material Type:
- Simulation
- Provider:
- University of Colorado Boulder
- Provider Set:
- PhET Interactive Simulations
- Author:
- Chris Malley
- Kathy Perkins
- Meredith Betterton
- Michael Dubson
- Thomas Perkins
- Wendy Adams
- Date Added:
- 12/01/2007
Software Carpentry lesson on how to use the shell to navigate the filesystem and write simple loops and scripts. The Unix shell has been around longer than most of its users have been alive. It has survived so long because it’s a power tool that allows people to do complex things with just a few keystrokes. More importantly, it helps them combine existing programs in new ways and automate repetitive tasks so they aren’t typing the same things over and over again. Use of the shell is fundamental to using a wide range of other powerful tools and computing resources (including “high-performance computing†supercomputers). These lessons will start you on a path towards using these resources effectively.
- Subject:
- Applied Science
- Computer Science
- Mathematics
- Measurement and Data
- Material Type:
- Module
- Provider:
- The Carpentries
- Author:
- Adam Huffman
- Adam James Orr
- Adam Richie-Halford
- AidaMirsalehi
- Alex Kassil
- Alex Mac
- Alexander Konovalov
- Alexander Morley
- Alix Keener
- Amy Brown
- Andrea Bedini
- Andrew Boughton
- Andrew Reid
- Andrew T. T. McRae
- Andrew Walker
- Ariel Rokem
- Armin Sobhani
- Ashwin Srinath
- Bagus Tris Atmaja
- Bartosz Telenczuk
- Ben Bolker
- Benjamin Gabriel
- Bertie Seyffert
- Bill Mills
- Brian Ballsun-Stanton
- BrianBill
- Camille Marini
- Chris Mentzel
- Christina Koch
- Colin Morris
- Colin Sauze
- Damien Irving
- Dan Jones
- Dana Brunson
- Daniel Baird
- Daniel McCloy
- Daniel Standage
- Danielle M. Nielsen
- Dave Bridges
- David Eyers
- David McKain
- David Vollmer
- Dean Attali
- Devinsuit
- Dmytro Lituiev
- Donny Winston
- Doug Latornell
- Dustin Lang
- Elena Denisenko
- Emily Dolson
- Emily Jane McTavish
- Eric Jankowski
- Erin Alison Becker
- Ethan P White
- Evgenij Belikov
- Farah Shamma
- Fatma Deniz
- Filipe Fernandes
- Francis Gacenga
- François Michonneau
- Gabriel A. Devenyi
- Gerard Capes
- Giuseppe Profiti
- Greg Wilson
- Halle Burns
- Hannah Burkhardt
- Harriet Alexander
- Hugues Fontenelle
- Ian van der Linde
- Inigo Aldazabal Mensa
- Jackie Milhans
- Jake Cowper Szamosi
- James Guelfi
- Jan T. Kim
- Jarek Bryk
- Jarno Rantaharju
- Jason Macklin
- Jay van Schyndel
- Jens vdL
- John Blischak
- John Pellman
- John Simpson
- Jonah Duckles
- Jonny Williams
- Joshua Madin
- Kai Blin
- Kathy Chung
- Katrin Leinweber
- Kevin M. Buckley
- Kirill Palamartchouk
- Klemens Noga
- Kristopher Keipert
- Kunal Marwaha
- Laurence
- Lee Zamparo
- Lex Nederbragt
- M Carlise
- Mahdi Sadjadi
- Marc Rajeev Gouw
- Marcel Stimberg
- Maria Doyle
- Marie-Helene Burle
- Marisa Lim
- Mark Mandel
- Martha Robinson
- Martin Feller
- Matthew Gidden
- Matthew Peterson
- Megan Fritz
- Michael Zingale
- Mike Henry
- Mike Jackson
- Morgan Oneka
- Murray Hoggett
- Nicola Soranzo
- Nicolas Barral
- Noah D Brenowitz
- Noam Ross
- Norman Gray
- Orion Buske
- Owen Kaluza
- Patrick McCann
- Paul Gardner
- Pauline Barmby
- Peter R. Hoyt
- Peter Steinbach
- Philip Lijnzaad
- Phillip Doehle
- Piotr Banaszkiewicz
- Rafi Ullah
- Raniere Silva
- Robert A Beagrie
- Ruud Steltenpool
- Ry4an Brase
- Rémi Emonet
- Sarah Mount
- Sarah Simpkin
- Scott Ritchie
- Stephan Schmeing
- Stephen Jones
- Stephen Turner
- Steve Leak
- Stéphane Guillou
- Susan Miller
- Thomas Mellan
- Tim Keighley
- Tobin Magle
- Tom Dowrick
- Trevor Bekolay
- Varda F. Hagh
- Victor Koppejan
- Vikram Chhatre
- Yee Mey
- csqrs
- earkpr
- ekaterinailin
- nther
- reshama shaikh
- s-boardman
- sjnair
- Date Added:
- 03/20/2017
Students will have to solve the real world problem of locker smell leakage by building an air filter that will cover the vents on the top of a locker. This project goes well with a curriculum on the particle nature of gases and phase changes.
- Subject:
- Applied Science
- Chemistry
- Engineering
- Mathematics
- Measurement and Data
- Physical Science
- Material Type:
- Activity/Lab
- Lesson Plan
- Provider:
- Lane County STEM Hub
- Provider Set:
- Content in Context SuperLessons
- Author:
- Allison Machado
- Chris Michael
- Date Added:
- 06/27/2017
Deficiencies in methods reporting in animal experimentation lead to difficulties in reproducing experiments; the authors propose a set of reporting standards to improve scientific communication and study design. The US National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke convened major stakeholders in June 2012 to discuss how to improve the methodological reporting of animal studies in grant applications and publications. The main workshop recommendation is that at a minimum studies should report on sample-size estimation, whether and how animals were randomized, whether investigators were blind to the treatment, and the handling of data. We recognize that achieving a meaningful improvement in the quality of reporting will require a concerted effort by investigators, reviewers, funding agencies and journal editors. Requiring better reporting of animal studies will raise awareness of the importance of rigorous study design to accelerate scientific progress.
- Author:
- Amelie K. Gubitz
- Chris P. Austin
- David W. Howells
- Dimitri Krainc
- Eileen W. Bradley
- Ellis Unger
- Howard E. Gendelman
- Howard Fillit
- John D. Porter
- John Huguenard
- John L. Goudreau
- John M. McCall
- Kalyani Narasimhan
- Katrina Kelner
- Khusru Asadullah
- Linda J. Noble
- Malcolm R. Macleod
- Marc Fisher
- Michael S. Levine
- Oswald Steward
- Richard T. Moxley III
- Robert A. Gross
- Robert B. Darnell
- Robert Finkelstein
- Robert J. Ferrante
- Robert M. Golub
- Robi Blumenstein
- Ronald G. Crystal
- Shai D. Silberberg
- Sharon E. Hesterlee
- Stanley E. Lazic
- Steve Perrin
- Story C. Landis
- Susan G. Amara
- Ursula Utz
- Walter Koroshetz
- Date Added:
- 08/08/2020