The students have completed their persuasive PowerPoint presentations and finished sharing a book about the Holocaust. They are now ready for a brief break at the end of the week to relax and unwind.
Can print compete with digital in today's times? If you look at these three examples, you could say YES! It could compete at a similar cost and similar uniqueness as digital!
I have created a photo album to collect memories from my travels over the past year. The album contains photos from my trips to various national parks, cities I visited in Europe, and pictures with family and friends from different events. Flipping through the album allows me to revisit happy moments and experiences from the past year.
This document provides instructions for a persuasive PowerPoint project on the topic of whether the United States should continue to fund space exploration. Students will choose a position and develop 5 slides to argue their point of view using facts and persuasive techniques. Slide 1 is an introduction with a hook, thesis statement, and overview of 3 reasons. Slides 2-4 each present one reason using a different persuasive technique. Slide 5 is a conclusion that restates the main points and leaves the audience with a final thought. Students are prompted to use their weakest argument first and save the strongest for last.
Here are the details of the marketing campaigns nominated for the Innovations Category at Cannes Lion 2016. Great and inspiring list of marketing examples! Must see!
The document outlines Mary Meeker's presentation on global internet trends in 2016. It discusses trends around global internet users slowing to 9% annual growth, with India seeing accelerated growth of 40% annually. It also notes slowing growth in global smartphone users and unit shipments. Additional topics covered include global economic growth slowing, commodity price declines signaling weaker global growth, and China's massive capital investment driving growth in emerging Asia to replace North America, Europe and Japan as the primary engines of global economic expansion.
Can print compete with digital in today's times? If you look at these three examples, you could say YES! It could compete at a similar cost and similar uniqueness as digital!
I have created a photo album to collect memories from my travels over the past year. The album contains photos from my trips to various national parks, cities I visited in Europe, and pictures with family and friends from different events. Flipping through the album allows me to revisit happy moments and experiences from the past year.
This document provides instructions for a persuasive PowerPoint project on the topic of whether the United States should continue to fund space exploration. Students will choose a position and develop 5 slides to argue their point of view using facts and persuasive techniques. Slide 1 is an introduction with a hook, thesis statement, and overview of 3 reasons. Slides 2-4 each present one reason using a different persuasive technique. Slide 5 is a conclusion that restates the main points and leaves the audience with a final thought. Students are prompted to use their weakest argument first and save the strongest for last.
Here are the details of the marketing campaigns nominated for the Innovations Category at Cannes Lion 2016. Great and inspiring list of marketing examples! Must see!
The document outlines Mary Meeker's presentation on global internet trends in 2016. It discusses trends around global internet users slowing to 9% annual growth, with India seeing accelerated growth of 40% annually. It also notes slowing growth in global smartphone users and unit shipments. Additional topics covered include global economic growth slowing, commodity price declines signaling weaker global growth, and China's massive capital investment driving growth in emerging Asia to replace North America, Europe and Japan as the primary engines of global economic expansion.
Este documento parece ser una serie de letras de canciones que tratan sobre temas como confesiones, cadenas que romper, abuso, dolor, fe y resistencia. Expresa sentimientos de debilidad pero también una determinación a no rendirse y a seguir intentando tomar lo mejor del otro para aprender a salvar vidas.
Fireworks within city limits should be outlawed because they cause significant damage, injuries, and even death. According to statistics, fireworks cause over 33,000 fires and $35 million in property damage each year. They also result in severe burns and loss of eyesight. Several states have already banned fireworks, leading to significantly fewer fireworks-related injuries in those states. Experts recommend that only professionals handle fireworks due to the risks of death or serious injury. The costs of property damage, injuries, and loss of life are not worth the temporary enjoyment of fireworks.
Windstream Hosted Solutions is a leading provider of Infrastructure as a Service (IaaS) cloud computing, dedicated hardware, and colocation services. It has over 1000 enterprise customers, 15,000 employees, and over $6 billion in annual revenue. Its data centers are SAS-70/SSAE16 compliant with redundant power, environmental controls, and 24/7 support from over 65 engineers.
Martin Zakov is a skilled Java developer who graduated from the FastTrack'D Java program and has experience developing chat clients, social networking applications, and flight reservation systems using technologies like Java, Spring, JavaScript, AngularJS, and PostgreSQL. He has a strong work ethic and is quick to learn new technologies, and seeks to be a productive member of any team. His professional experience includes roles as a FastTrack'D developer, service center manager, and tier 1 and 2 technical support.
The document provides criteria for evaluating an anti-bullying song project on lyrics and content, advice provided, research included, and creativity. It will assess whether the lyrics strongly reflect an anti-bullying theme, include well-thought out advice to victims and bullies, include at least 5 accurately cited facts, and show excellent effort and creativity. Comments may also be provided on the project.
The document provides criteria for evaluating an anti-bullying skit project on excellence in writing, inclusion of advice, research, and creativity. A successful skit will allow characters to clearly reflect an anti-bullying theme through well-written dialogue, include well-thought out advice to both victims and bullies, contain a minimum of five accurately cited facts, and show excellent effort and creativity.
The document provides criteria for evaluating a student speech on anti-bullying. It will be rated on organization and content, research, advice, and speaker behaviors. A well-organized speech with a clear introduction, body, and conclusion that includes an anti-bullying theme and message and cites at least 5 facts would receive the highest scores. Advice to both victims and bullies is also assessed. Speaker volume, speed, eye contact, and body language are additional factors considered.
The document discusses criteria for evaluating an anti-bullying podcast program, including whether it includes excellent writing reflecting a strong anti-bullying theme, provides well-thought out advice to victims and bullies, and is based on at least 5 accurately cited facts showing effort and creativity.
This document provides definitions for common prefixes, suffixes, and word roots in the English language. It lists prefixes such as "aero-" meaning "air", "micro-" meaning "small", and "photo-" meaning "light". It also defines suffixes like "-ant/ent" indicating "one who", "-ess" denoting a female role, and "-ism" relating to a state, quality, or doctrine. Finally, it explains roots including "biblio-" referring to books, "chron-" related to time, and "phon-" concerning sound.
This document provides definitions for common prefixes, suffixes, and roots used in medical and scientific terminology. It lists and defines prefixes like aero, bio, chron, geo, and tele; suffixes like -ant/-ent, -ess, and -ism; and roots like meter, aqua, micro, and phon.
Fireworks within city limits should be outlawed because they cause significant damage, injuries, and even death. According to statistics, fireworks cause over 33,000 fires and $35 million in property damage each year. They also result in severe burns and loss of eyesight. Several states have already banned fireworks, which has led to a significant decline in fireworks-related injuries. Experts recommend that only professionals handle fireworks due to the risks of death or serious injury. The costs of property damage, serious injuries, and loss of life are not worth the temporary enjoyment of fireworks.
Possible searches and websites for prosKirk's Class
The document provides a list of possible websites to research the pros and cons of space flight. Websites are listed that discuss inventions resulting from space programs, scientific discoveries made in space, and some potential negative aspects of space exploration such as costs, risks to astronauts, space debris, and the possibility of turning space into a theater of war.
This document appears to be a template for analyzing persuasive techniques used in PowerPoint presentations. It prompts the user to identify key elements of a presentation such as the discovery or product discussed, the time period, a description and notes, the persuasive technique used, the name of any mission discussed, and potential negative impacts. The user is also prompted to provide works cited.
The document discusses the consequences of plagiarism. It begins by defining plagiarism as using another person's words, ideas or thoughts without giving them proper credit. It then explains that while plagiarism was historically an issue in academia and journalism, the internet has increased instances of plagiarism. The consequences of plagiarism in academia include failing assignments, losing privileges, lower grades, academic probation, and expulsion from school. Plagiarism in journalism can damage a publication's reputation and credibility. The document stresses that plagiarism violates intellectual property rights and can seriously harm one's academic and professional career.
This document outlines four common persuasive techniques: bandwagon, glittering generalities, testimonials, and citing statistics. Bandwagon encourages joining the crowd by claiming others are participating. Glittering generalities use vague positive words without meaning. Testimonials employ endorsements from famous people. Citing statistics provides numbers to make claims seem credible.
This document outlines six types of appeals that can be used to persuade an audience: rational appeal through citing statistics and facts; emotional appeal by stirring the emotions of the audience; ethical appeal by arguing a message is accepted by morally good people; testimonials using statements of support; bandwagon appeal arguing a message is popular; and glittering generalities using vague, positive statements.
Space exploration benefits essay exampleKirk's Class
Space exploration has provided many benefits to humanity. It has expanded our scientific knowledge of the universe and challenged us to push the boundaries of what is possible. Some key benefits include the development of GPS, weather satellites, and the ability to monitor natural disasters from space. Additional applications include satellite communications, electronics, medicine, energy research, and the ability to detect asteroids that could pose a threat to Earth. Overall, the technologies developed for space exploration have wide-ranging applications that have improved areas like agriculture, health care, mining, and more.
Possible searches and websites for prosKirk's Class
The document provides a list of possible websites to research the pros and cons of space flight. Websites are listed that discuss inventions resulting from space programs, scientific discoveries made in space, and some potential negative aspects of space exploration such as costs, risks to astronauts, space debris, and the possibility of turning space into a theater for war. The websites would allow research into both the benefits and drawbacks of human space flight and space programs.
This document appears to be a template for analyzing persuasive techniques used in PowerPoint presentations. It prompts the user to identify key elements of a presentation such as the discovery or product discussed, the timeframe, a description and notes, the persuasive technique used, the name of any mission discussed, and potential negative impacts. The user is also prompted to provide works cited.
The document defines and provides examples of several types of figurative language including alliteration, hyperbole, irony, onomatopoeia, personification, simile, metaphor, and idiom. Alliteration is the repetition of initial consonant sounds, hyperbole exaggerates for emphasis, and irony means saying one thing but meaning the opposite. Onomatopoeia uses words that imitate sounds, personification gives human traits to non-human things, and similes and metaphors make comparisons using like or than or without. Idioms have meanings not derived from the literal words.
Este documento parece ser una serie de letras de canciones que tratan sobre temas como confesiones, cadenas que romper, abuso, dolor, fe y resistencia. Expresa sentimientos de debilidad pero también una determinación a no rendirse y a seguir intentando tomar lo mejor del otro para aprender a salvar vidas.
Fireworks within city limits should be outlawed because they cause significant damage, injuries, and even death. According to statistics, fireworks cause over 33,000 fires and $35 million in property damage each year. They also result in severe burns and loss of eyesight. Several states have already banned fireworks, leading to significantly fewer fireworks-related injuries in those states. Experts recommend that only professionals handle fireworks due to the risks of death or serious injury. The costs of property damage, injuries, and loss of life are not worth the temporary enjoyment of fireworks.
Windstream Hosted Solutions is a leading provider of Infrastructure as a Service (IaaS) cloud computing, dedicated hardware, and colocation services. It has over 1000 enterprise customers, 15,000 employees, and over $6 billion in annual revenue. Its data centers are SAS-70/SSAE16 compliant with redundant power, environmental controls, and 24/7 support from over 65 engineers.
Martin Zakov is a skilled Java developer who graduated from the FastTrack'D Java program and has experience developing chat clients, social networking applications, and flight reservation systems using technologies like Java, Spring, JavaScript, AngularJS, and PostgreSQL. He has a strong work ethic and is quick to learn new technologies, and seeks to be a productive member of any team. His professional experience includes roles as a FastTrack'D developer, service center manager, and tier 1 and 2 technical support.
The document provides criteria for evaluating an anti-bullying song project on lyrics and content, advice provided, research included, and creativity. It will assess whether the lyrics strongly reflect an anti-bullying theme, include well-thought out advice to victims and bullies, include at least 5 accurately cited facts, and show excellent effort and creativity. Comments may also be provided on the project.
The document provides criteria for evaluating an anti-bullying skit project on excellence in writing, inclusion of advice, research, and creativity. A successful skit will allow characters to clearly reflect an anti-bullying theme through well-written dialogue, include well-thought out advice to both victims and bullies, contain a minimum of five accurately cited facts, and show excellent effort and creativity.
The document provides criteria for evaluating a student speech on anti-bullying. It will be rated on organization and content, research, advice, and speaker behaviors. A well-organized speech with a clear introduction, body, and conclusion that includes an anti-bullying theme and message and cites at least 5 facts would receive the highest scores. Advice to both victims and bullies is also assessed. Speaker volume, speed, eye contact, and body language are additional factors considered.
The document discusses criteria for evaluating an anti-bullying podcast program, including whether it includes excellent writing reflecting a strong anti-bullying theme, provides well-thought out advice to victims and bullies, and is based on at least 5 accurately cited facts showing effort and creativity.
This document provides definitions for common prefixes, suffixes, and word roots in the English language. It lists prefixes such as "aero-" meaning "air", "micro-" meaning "small", and "photo-" meaning "light". It also defines suffixes like "-ant/ent" indicating "one who", "-ess" denoting a female role, and "-ism" relating to a state, quality, or doctrine. Finally, it explains roots including "biblio-" referring to books, "chron-" related to time, and "phon-" concerning sound.
This document provides definitions for common prefixes, suffixes, and roots used in medical and scientific terminology. It lists and defines prefixes like aero, bio, chron, geo, and tele; suffixes like -ant/-ent, -ess, and -ism; and roots like meter, aqua, micro, and phon.
Fireworks within city limits should be outlawed because they cause significant damage, injuries, and even death. According to statistics, fireworks cause over 33,000 fires and $35 million in property damage each year. They also result in severe burns and loss of eyesight. Several states have already banned fireworks, which has led to a significant decline in fireworks-related injuries. Experts recommend that only professionals handle fireworks due to the risks of death or serious injury. The costs of property damage, serious injuries, and loss of life are not worth the temporary enjoyment of fireworks.
Possible searches and websites for prosKirk's Class
The document provides a list of possible websites to research the pros and cons of space flight. Websites are listed that discuss inventions resulting from space programs, scientific discoveries made in space, and some potential negative aspects of space exploration such as costs, risks to astronauts, space debris, and the possibility of turning space into a theater of war.
This document appears to be a template for analyzing persuasive techniques used in PowerPoint presentations. It prompts the user to identify key elements of a presentation such as the discovery or product discussed, the time period, a description and notes, the persuasive technique used, the name of any mission discussed, and potential negative impacts. The user is also prompted to provide works cited.
The document discusses the consequences of plagiarism. It begins by defining plagiarism as using another person's words, ideas or thoughts without giving them proper credit. It then explains that while plagiarism was historically an issue in academia and journalism, the internet has increased instances of plagiarism. The consequences of plagiarism in academia include failing assignments, losing privileges, lower grades, academic probation, and expulsion from school. Plagiarism in journalism can damage a publication's reputation and credibility. The document stresses that plagiarism violates intellectual property rights and can seriously harm one's academic and professional career.
This document outlines four common persuasive techniques: bandwagon, glittering generalities, testimonials, and citing statistics. Bandwagon encourages joining the crowd by claiming others are participating. Glittering generalities use vague positive words without meaning. Testimonials employ endorsements from famous people. Citing statistics provides numbers to make claims seem credible.
This document outlines six types of appeals that can be used to persuade an audience: rational appeal through citing statistics and facts; emotional appeal by stirring the emotions of the audience; ethical appeal by arguing a message is accepted by morally good people; testimonials using statements of support; bandwagon appeal arguing a message is popular; and glittering generalities using vague, positive statements.
Space exploration benefits essay exampleKirk's Class
Space exploration has provided many benefits to humanity. It has expanded our scientific knowledge of the universe and challenged us to push the boundaries of what is possible. Some key benefits include the development of GPS, weather satellites, and the ability to monitor natural disasters from space. Additional applications include satellite communications, electronics, medicine, energy research, and the ability to detect asteroids that could pose a threat to Earth. Overall, the technologies developed for space exploration have wide-ranging applications that have improved areas like agriculture, health care, mining, and more.
Possible searches and websites for prosKirk's Class
The document provides a list of possible websites to research the pros and cons of space flight. Websites are listed that discuss inventions resulting from space programs, scientific discoveries made in space, and some potential negative aspects of space exploration such as costs, risks to astronauts, space debris, and the possibility of turning space into a theater for war. The websites would allow research into both the benefits and drawbacks of human space flight and space programs.
This document appears to be a template for analyzing persuasive techniques used in PowerPoint presentations. It prompts the user to identify key elements of a presentation such as the discovery or product discussed, the timeframe, a description and notes, the persuasive technique used, the name of any mission discussed, and potential negative impacts. The user is also prompted to provide works cited.
The document defines and provides examples of several types of figurative language including alliteration, hyperbole, irony, onomatopoeia, personification, simile, metaphor, and idiom. Alliteration is the repetition of initial consonant sounds, hyperbole exaggerates for emphasis, and irony means saying one thing but meaning the opposite. Onomatopoeia uses words that imitate sounds, personification gives human traits to non-human things, and similes and metaphors make comparisons using like or than or without. Idioms have meanings not derived from the literal words.
Life is like a stick of dynamite and other examplesKirk's Class
Life is unpredictable and can change in an instant, similar to a stick of dynamite that could explode without warning. It is also mysterious like a magic show, where what you think you understand can disappear suddenly. Additionally, life is like building with blocks, where our character and values form the foundation but external forces can cause things to fall apart, though with effort we can rebuild and continue pursuing our goals even when facing challenges.
The document discusses using similes to explore one's view of life. It provides examples of how life can be compared to things like a box of chocolates, a stack of blocks, or a magic show. Students then provide their own examples, such as comparing life to a stick of dynamite or a set of blocks. The key is to develop the simile in a way that reveals one's attitude toward life.
Plot project story elements red midnightKirk's Class
The document provides a template for analyzing the plot and story elements of the novel "Red Midnight" by Ben Mikaelson. It includes sections for summarizing the exposition, rising action, climax, falling action, and resolution. The template prompts the reader to describe key details about the setting, characters, conflicts, themes, and other components of the story's plot at each stage.