This document invites the reader to visit Tamazunchale, Mexico, highlighting its beautiful tourist areas like the Rio Santa Maria Picula, Rio Claro, and Tamazunchale center. It notes there are many areas to visit along with comfortable hotels at great prices and good local gastronomy, encouraging the reader to come and fully enjoy their holidays.
1) The document summarizes key legal considerations and compliance requirements for Malaysia's Goods and Services Tax (GST), including exemptions, registration thresholds, filing returns, and challenges of interpretation.
2) Businesses must register for GST if their annual sales turnover exceeds RM500,000, and there are penalties for failing to register. Returns are due by the end of the month following the taxable period.
3) Interpretation of what constitutes a taxable good or service could be challenging, as seen in UK cases involving potato chips and chicken dishes. This may lead to disputes over tax liability.
This document invites the reader to visit Tamazunchale, Mexico, highlighting its beautiful tourist areas like the Rio Santa Maria Picula, Rio Claro, and Tamazunchale center. It notes there are many areas to visit along with comfortable hotels at great prices and good local gastronomy, encouraging the reader to come and fully enjoy their holidays.
1) The document summarizes key legal considerations and compliance requirements for Malaysia's Goods and Services Tax (GST), including exemptions, registration thresholds, filing returns, and challenges of interpretation.
2) Businesses must register for GST if their annual sales turnover exceeds RM500,000, and there are penalties for failing to register. Returns are due by the end of the month following the taxable period.
3) Interpretation of what constitutes a taxable good or service could be challenging, as seen in UK cases involving potato chips and chicken dishes. This may lead to disputes over tax liability.
Paragraf ringkasan mengenai bagaimana menambahkan file video ke slide presentasi. File video dapat ditambahkan dengan mengklik tombol insert, memilih movie, dan memilih file video yang telah disimpan atau yang tersedia di komputer. Kemudian double klik file video yang ingin ditambahkan ke slide presentasi.
This document discusses best practices for maintaining test security and integrity. It begins by providing examples of cheating scandals in various school districts. It then outlines 10 best practices, which include: defining cheating and irregularities; providing teacher training; assigning test coordinators; implementing secure chain of custody procedures; monitoring tests; conducting data analyses to detect anomalies; establishing procedures for investigating allegations; ensuring proper investigation and documentation of any incidents; making testing policies known; and disciplining those found guilty of violations. The document concludes by presenting a hypothetical scenario for discussion about a teacher's report of possible test score manipulation.
Textbooks present knowledge as factual and as unbiased when, in fact, the information they convey is seldom either of these. These slides show how a few major corporations control the textbook industry and the information K-12 students ultimately learn from them. This, in turn, can lead to misguided views of the U.S., of literature, of science, and of the world at large. Textbooks can be and often are hegemonic. Teachers must engage students in critical inquiry and critical literacy if learning is to be truly empowering.
Duck Duck Go es un motor de búsqueda establecido en Valley Forge, Pensilvania, que utiliza información de sitios públicos para mejorar los resultados. Fue fundado por Gabriel Weinberg y financiado inicialmente por él mismo, con el objetivo de ser apoyado por publicidad. Ha experimentado un crecimiento continuo en usuarios desde su creación.
This document discusses shades of meaning between similar words. It explains that words can have subtle differences in connotation and denotation. Shades of meaning refers to these small differences in implied meanings. The document provides examples of word pairs like "quietly" and "softly" that have similar but distinct shades of meaning. It emphasizes choosing stronger or more precise shades of meaning to accurately convey ideas. Students practice identifying and replacing words with more appropriate shades of meaning in sentences.
This document discusses the mechanics and punctuation of dialogue in stories. It explains that quotation marks are used to indicate characters' words. A new paragraph should begin when the speaker changes. Commas are usually used to separate quotations from the rest of the sentence. Punctuation like periods and commas always go inside the closing quotation mark. The document provides examples of correctly and incorrectly punctuated dialogue.
This document discusses measuring lengths to the nearest fraction of an inch. It introduces common fractions used in measuring, including halves, quarters, and eighths of an inch. It provides examples of measuring arrows to varying degrees of precision depending on the specified nearest fraction. Students are instructed to practice measuring lengths and writing their answers. The document emphasizes reading directions carefully to know whether to measure to the nearest whole inch, half inch, quarter inch, or other specified fraction of an inch.
The document provides instructions for a brainstorming activity where small groups generate ideas on index cards for why people immigrate to the United States. The groups then categorize their ideas into two groups based on either "push factors" that push people out of their home country, or "pull factors" that pull people into a new country like the United States.
This document provides examples of different types of leads or introductions for writing, including setting leads, give away leads, and season leads. The setting leads establish the time and place, such as on a sultry summer day on a farm or during a snowy dusk. The give away leads reveal something important upfront, like a character bursting in with an exciting letter. The season leads establish the story takes place during a particular season, like late one winter night or in the summer. Many of the examples are brief excerpts from children's books to illustrate these different lead styles.
This document contains a quiz about immigration to America through Ellis Island. It includes questions about vocabulary words like immigrant, push factors, pull factors, and prejudice. It asks about places like Ellis Island and facilities there like the hospital. Questions also cover cultural aspects, the inspection process, difficulties faced after arriving, and outcomes for immigrants who didn't pass the medical exam.
This document discusses different types of endings for personal narratives: loop endings where the story ends where it began; happy or sad endings that leave the reader feeling positively or negatively; surprise endings that throw an unexpected twist; and summary endings that recount the highlights of the story in order. It provides an example of each type of ending.
This document discusses different text structures used to organize information, including chronological, sequential, cause/effect, problem/solution, compare/contrast, and proposition/support structures. For each structure, it provides a brief definition and example of a graphic organizer that could be used. It also outlines steps for identifying a text's structure as a reader and creating an effective structure as a writer or speaker, which involve breaking down the information and analyzing the impact.
This document discusses different types of sentences: simple, compound, complex, and compound-complex. It defines each sentence type and provides examples. A simple sentence contains one subject and one predicate. A compound sentence joins two independent clauses. A complex sentence has one independent and one dependent clause. A compound-complex sentence combines independent and dependent clauses. The document also covers sentence elements, conjunctions, and exercises to identify sentence types.
Paragraf ringkasan mengenai bagaimana menambahkan file video ke slide presentasi. File video dapat ditambahkan dengan mengklik tombol insert, memilih movie, dan memilih file video yang telah disimpan atau yang tersedia di komputer. Kemudian double klik file video yang ingin ditambahkan ke slide presentasi.
This document discusses best practices for maintaining test security and integrity. It begins by providing examples of cheating scandals in various school districts. It then outlines 10 best practices, which include: defining cheating and irregularities; providing teacher training; assigning test coordinators; implementing secure chain of custody procedures; monitoring tests; conducting data analyses to detect anomalies; establishing procedures for investigating allegations; ensuring proper investigation and documentation of any incidents; making testing policies known; and disciplining those found guilty of violations. The document concludes by presenting a hypothetical scenario for discussion about a teacher's report of possible test score manipulation.
Textbooks present knowledge as factual and as unbiased when, in fact, the information they convey is seldom either of these. These slides show how a few major corporations control the textbook industry and the information K-12 students ultimately learn from them. This, in turn, can lead to misguided views of the U.S., of literature, of science, and of the world at large. Textbooks can be and often are hegemonic. Teachers must engage students in critical inquiry and critical literacy if learning is to be truly empowering.
Duck Duck Go es un motor de búsqueda establecido en Valley Forge, Pensilvania, que utiliza información de sitios públicos para mejorar los resultados. Fue fundado por Gabriel Weinberg y financiado inicialmente por él mismo, con el objetivo de ser apoyado por publicidad. Ha experimentado un crecimiento continuo en usuarios desde su creación.
This document discusses shades of meaning between similar words. It explains that words can have subtle differences in connotation and denotation. Shades of meaning refers to these small differences in implied meanings. The document provides examples of word pairs like "quietly" and "softly" that have similar but distinct shades of meaning. It emphasizes choosing stronger or more precise shades of meaning to accurately convey ideas. Students practice identifying and replacing words with more appropriate shades of meaning in sentences.
This document discusses the mechanics and punctuation of dialogue in stories. It explains that quotation marks are used to indicate characters' words. A new paragraph should begin when the speaker changes. Commas are usually used to separate quotations from the rest of the sentence. Punctuation like periods and commas always go inside the closing quotation mark. The document provides examples of correctly and incorrectly punctuated dialogue.
This document discusses measuring lengths to the nearest fraction of an inch. It introduces common fractions used in measuring, including halves, quarters, and eighths of an inch. It provides examples of measuring arrows to varying degrees of precision depending on the specified nearest fraction. Students are instructed to practice measuring lengths and writing their answers. The document emphasizes reading directions carefully to know whether to measure to the nearest whole inch, half inch, quarter inch, or other specified fraction of an inch.
The document provides instructions for a brainstorming activity where small groups generate ideas on index cards for why people immigrate to the United States. The groups then categorize their ideas into two groups based on either "push factors" that push people out of their home country, or "pull factors" that pull people into a new country like the United States.
This document provides examples of different types of leads or introductions for writing, including setting leads, give away leads, and season leads. The setting leads establish the time and place, such as on a sultry summer day on a farm or during a snowy dusk. The give away leads reveal something important upfront, like a character bursting in with an exciting letter. The season leads establish the story takes place during a particular season, like late one winter night or in the summer. Many of the examples are brief excerpts from children's books to illustrate these different lead styles.
This document contains a quiz about immigration to America through Ellis Island. It includes questions about vocabulary words like immigrant, push factors, pull factors, and prejudice. It asks about places like Ellis Island and facilities there like the hospital. Questions also cover cultural aspects, the inspection process, difficulties faced after arriving, and outcomes for immigrants who didn't pass the medical exam.
This document discusses different types of endings for personal narratives: loop endings where the story ends where it began; happy or sad endings that leave the reader feeling positively or negatively; surprise endings that throw an unexpected twist; and summary endings that recount the highlights of the story in order. It provides an example of each type of ending.
This document discusses different text structures used to organize information, including chronological, sequential, cause/effect, problem/solution, compare/contrast, and proposition/support structures. For each structure, it provides a brief definition and example of a graphic organizer that could be used. It also outlines steps for identifying a text's structure as a reader and creating an effective structure as a writer or speaker, which involve breaking down the information and analyzing the impact.
This document discusses different types of sentences: simple, compound, complex, and compound-complex. It defines each sentence type and provides examples. A simple sentence contains one subject and one predicate. A compound sentence joins two independent clauses. A complex sentence has one independent and one dependent clause. A compound-complex sentence combines independent and dependent clauses. The document also covers sentence elements, conjunctions, and exercises to identify sentence types.
This document provides examples of multi-step word problems to solve using bar models. It includes problems involving adding, subtracting, multiplying and dividing amounts of money, envelopes, biscuits, and other quantities. The document demonstrates using bar models to represent the amounts and relationships in the word problems in order to arrive at the solution. It also gives a 3-step problem example involving money spent on school equipment to model the process of solving multi-step real world math problems.