The document outlines an agenda for a presentation on using Google Earth in the classroom. It includes sections comparing Google Earth and Google Maps, demonstrating features of Google Earth like adding placemarks and measuring distances, and providing ideas for classroom projects using the software like virtual tours for literature and science. Resources for teaching with Google Earth are listed at the end.
This PowerPoint is one small part of the Astronomy Topics unit from www.sciencepowerpoint.com. This unit consists of a five part 3000+ slide PowerPoint roadmap, 12 page bundled homework package, modified homework, detailed answer keys, 8 pages of unit notes for students who may require assistance, follow along worksheets, and many review games. The homework and lesson notes chronologically follow the PowerPoint slideshow. The answer keys and unit notes are great for support professionals. The activities and discussion questions in the slideshow and meaningful. The PowerPoint includes built-in instructions, visuals, and follow up questions. Also included are critical class notes (color coded red), project ideas, video links, and review games. This unit also includes four PowerPoint review games (110+ slides each with Answers), 38+ video links, lab handouts, activity sheets, rubrics, materials list, templates, guides, and much more. Also included is a 190 slide first day of school PowerPoint presentation. Teaching Duration = 5+ weeks. Areas of Focus in the Astronomy Topics Unit: The Solar System and the Sun, Order of the Planets, Our Sun, Life Cycle of a Star, Size of Stars, Solar Eclipse, Lunar Eclipse, The Inner Planets, Mercury, Venus, Earth, Moon, Craters, Tides, Phases of the Moon, Mars and Moons, Rocketry, Asteroid Belt, NEOs, The Torino Scale, The Outer Planets and Gas Giants, Jupiter / Moons, Saturn / Moons, Uranus / Moons, Neptune / Moons, Pluto's Demotion, The Kuiper Belt, Oort Cloud, Comets / Other, Beyond the Solar System, Types of Galaxies, Blackholes, Extrasolar Planets, The Big Bang, Dark Matter, Dark Energy, The Special Theory of Relativity, Hubble Space Telescope, Constellations, Spacetime and much more. If you have any questions please feel free to contact me. Thanks again and best wishes. Sincerely, Ryan Murphy M.Ed www.sciencepowerpoint@gmail.com
Are we prepared for aliens? Are aliens real?SoggyWaffles
This PowerPoint is about aliens. Are they real? Are we prepared for them? View this PowerPoint and find out what scientists know about these subjects. And as always, thanks for watching. I'd like to thank Jordan Maron for helping, thanks uncle! You should check out his channel.
The document discusses theories about ancient aliens and evidence that supports their existence. It notes that ancient alien theorists believe that extraterrestrials visited Earth thousands of years ago and helped shape early human civilizations by influencing their technology, architecture like pyramids, and religions. The document summarizes the work of Erich von Däniken, who put forth the idea of ancient astronauts and cited structural artifacts beyond the technological capabilities of ancient humans, interpretations of ancient artwork depicting advanced technology or aliens, and origins of religions from contact with alien races, as evidence.
UFOs refer to unidentified flying objects, a term coined by the US Air Force to describe aerial phenomena that cannot be identified. Sightings of UFOs date back to the late 19th century but increased dramatically following World War II. While some UFOs have been explained as natural phenomena or human technology, the origins of many sightings remain unknown. Leading hypotheses suggest UFOs could be extraterrestrial spacecraft, objects from other dimensions, or top secret military aircraft. However, no government investigation has conclusively determined the origins or existence of UFOs. The topic continues to generate both interest and skepticism.
The document outlines an agenda for a presentation on using Google Earth in the classroom. It includes sections comparing Google Earth and Google Maps, demonstrating features of Google Earth like adding placemarks and measuring distances, and providing ideas for classroom projects using the software like virtual tours for literature and science. Resources for teaching with Google Earth are listed at the end.
This PowerPoint is one small part of the Astronomy Topics unit from www.sciencepowerpoint.com. This unit consists of a five part 3000+ slide PowerPoint roadmap, 12 page bundled homework package, modified homework, detailed answer keys, 8 pages of unit notes for students who may require assistance, follow along worksheets, and many review games. The homework and lesson notes chronologically follow the PowerPoint slideshow. The answer keys and unit notes are great for support professionals. The activities and discussion questions in the slideshow and meaningful. The PowerPoint includes built-in instructions, visuals, and follow up questions. Also included are critical class notes (color coded red), project ideas, video links, and review games. This unit also includes four PowerPoint review games (110+ slides each with Answers), 38+ video links, lab handouts, activity sheets, rubrics, materials list, templates, guides, and much more. Also included is a 190 slide first day of school PowerPoint presentation. Teaching Duration = 5+ weeks. Areas of Focus in the Astronomy Topics Unit: The Solar System and the Sun, Order of the Planets, Our Sun, Life Cycle of a Star, Size of Stars, Solar Eclipse, Lunar Eclipse, The Inner Planets, Mercury, Venus, Earth, Moon, Craters, Tides, Phases of the Moon, Mars and Moons, Rocketry, Asteroid Belt, NEOs, The Torino Scale, The Outer Planets and Gas Giants, Jupiter / Moons, Saturn / Moons, Uranus / Moons, Neptune / Moons, Pluto's Demotion, The Kuiper Belt, Oort Cloud, Comets / Other, Beyond the Solar System, Types of Galaxies, Blackholes, Extrasolar Planets, The Big Bang, Dark Matter, Dark Energy, The Special Theory of Relativity, Hubble Space Telescope, Constellations, Spacetime and much more. If you have any questions please feel free to contact me. Thanks again and best wishes. Sincerely, Ryan Murphy M.Ed www.sciencepowerpoint@gmail.com
Are we prepared for aliens? Are aliens real?SoggyWaffles
This PowerPoint is about aliens. Are they real? Are we prepared for them? View this PowerPoint and find out what scientists know about these subjects. And as always, thanks for watching. I'd like to thank Jordan Maron for helping, thanks uncle! You should check out his channel.
The document discusses theories about ancient aliens and evidence that supports their existence. It notes that ancient alien theorists believe that extraterrestrials visited Earth thousands of years ago and helped shape early human civilizations by influencing their technology, architecture like pyramids, and religions. The document summarizes the work of Erich von Däniken, who put forth the idea of ancient astronauts and cited structural artifacts beyond the technological capabilities of ancient humans, interpretations of ancient artwork depicting advanced technology or aliens, and origins of religions from contact with alien races, as evidence.
UFOs refer to unidentified flying objects, a term coined by the US Air Force to describe aerial phenomena that cannot be identified. Sightings of UFOs date back to the late 19th century but increased dramatically following World War II. While some UFOs have been explained as natural phenomena or human technology, the origins of many sightings remain unknown. Leading hypotheses suggest UFOs could be extraterrestrial spacecraft, objects from other dimensions, or top secret military aircraft. However, no government investigation has conclusively determined the origins or existence of UFOs. The topic continues to generate both interest and skepticism.
Lázso József Bíró invented the ballpoint pen in 1931. He was born in Budapest, Hungary in October 1899. His family was Jewish and he worked as both a journalist and inventor. While working as a journalist, he noticed how newspaper ink dried quickly and was viscous, which led him to experiment with different tip designs until discovering that a small ball inside the tip allowed the viscous ink to write well. He died in Buenos Aires, Argentina in 1985.
Florida is home to some of the world's largest theme parks. These include Disney World which features parades with Disney characters and acrobats interacting with guests, Typhoon Lagoon water park with huge water slides like the 65-meter Humunga Kowabonga, and Animal Kingdom which is the largest animal theme park globally and houses over 1,700 animals from 250 species. Visitors can also go rafting, experience scary yet enormous rollercoasters, and see the beautifully lit Cinderella's castle where nightly fireworks displays are held.
Thomas Edison invented the electric light bulb in 1878 in Milan, Ohio. He had two wives and three children over his lifetime. Edison died on October 18, 1931 in New Jersey, having revolutionized lighting with his invention of the inexpensive, safe electric light bulb.
Thomas Edison invented the electric light bulb in 1878 in the United States. He was born in 1847 in Ohio and had two wives and three children over his lifetime. Edison passed away in 1931 in New Jersey, leaving behind a legacy as the inventor of the light bulb which allowed people to illuminate darkness.
Dr. James Naismith invented basketball in December 1891 while working as a physical education professor at a YMCA training school, creating 13 basic rules for an indoor game to keep his gym class active on a rainy day. He was born in Ontario, Canada in 1861, had two wives and five children over his lifetime, and died in 1939 in Lawrence, Kansas at the age of 78, leaving behind the popular sport of basketball that continues to keep people fit and healthy around the world.
The three founders of YouTube, Steve Chen, Chad Hurley, and Jawed Karim, are computer scientists who invented the popular video sharing website YouTube. Steve Chen was born in Taiwan and immigrated to the United States as a teenager, Chad Hurley studied computer science in high school, and Jawed Karim moved to the US from Germany in 1992; together they created YouTube which allows people to easily upload, download, and share videos online.
Lázso József Bíró invented the ballpoint pen in 1931. He was born in Budapest, Hungary in October 1899. His family was Jewish and he worked as both a journalist and inventor. While working as a journalist, he noticed how newspaper ink dried quickly and was viscous, which led him to experiment with different tip designs until discovering that a small ball inside the tip allowed the viscous ink to write well. He died in Buenos Aires, Argentina in 1985.
Florida is home to some of the world's largest theme parks. These include Disney World which features parades with Disney characters and acrobats interacting with guests, Typhoon Lagoon water park with huge water slides like the 65-meter Humunga Kowabonga, and Animal Kingdom which is the largest animal theme park globally and houses over 1,700 animals from 250 species. Visitors can also go rafting, experience scary yet enormous rollercoasters, and see the beautifully lit Cinderella's castle where nightly fireworks displays are held.
Thomas Edison invented the electric light bulb in 1878 in Milan, Ohio. He had two wives and three children over his lifetime. Edison died on October 18, 1931 in New Jersey, having revolutionized lighting with his invention of the inexpensive, safe electric light bulb.
Thomas Edison invented the electric light bulb in 1878 in the United States. He was born in 1847 in Ohio and had two wives and three children over his lifetime. Edison passed away in 1931 in New Jersey, leaving behind a legacy as the inventor of the light bulb which allowed people to illuminate darkness.
Dr. James Naismith invented basketball in December 1891 while working as a physical education professor at a YMCA training school, creating 13 basic rules for an indoor game to keep his gym class active on a rainy day. He was born in Ontario, Canada in 1861, had two wives and five children over his lifetime, and died in 1939 in Lawrence, Kansas at the age of 78, leaving behind the popular sport of basketball that continues to keep people fit and healthy around the world.
The three founders of YouTube, Steve Chen, Chad Hurley, and Jawed Karim, are computer scientists who invented the popular video sharing website YouTube. Steve Chen was born in Taiwan and immigrated to the United States as a teenager, Chad Hurley studied computer science in high school, and Jawed Karim moved to the US from Germany in 1992; together they created YouTube which allows people to easily upload, download, and share videos online.
2. DISTANCE FROM THE SUN
• THE EARTH IS THE 3RD PLANET
CLOSED TO THE SUN AND MARS IS
THE 4RD PLANET CLOSED TO THE
SUN
3. SIZE AND ROTATION
• EARTH IS THE 5TH BIGGEST PLANET
IN THE SOLAR SYSTEM AND THE
ROTATION IS OF 24H. MARS IS THE
6TH BIGGEST PLANET AND THE
ROTATION IS THE24,6H
6. APPEARENCE
• EARTH HAS GOT MOUNTAINS,
VALLEYS, VOLCANOS AND OCEANS.
MARS HAS GOT THE SEIME BUT NO
OCEANS. THE PAPPLE CALLED MARS
THE RED PLANET AND EARTH BLUE
PANET.