What makes Alonso tick?
- Subject:
- Applied Science
- Computer Science
- Computer, Networking and Telecommunications Systems
- Graphic Arts
- Visual Arts and Design
- Material Type:
- Lesson
- Provider:
- Khan Academy
- Provider Set:
- Pixar
- Date Added:
- 04/11/2023
What makes Alonso tick?
Get to know more about Ana.
Get to know more about Beth.
Find out what makes Brian tick.
Getting to know more about Dominic Glynn!
Get to know more about Eben Ostby.
Let's get to know Fran Kalal.
Find out more about Hayley.
Getting to know Kim White.
Get to know more about Matt Wong.
How did Rob start out?
Find out more about Susan Fong!
Learn about Tony DeRose.
A module for the course: CS 59974: Special Topics in Artificial Intelligence - "Machine Learning in Action". Delivered at the City College of New York in Spring 2020 by Hunter McNichols as part of the Tech-in-Residence Corps program.
A module for the course: CS 59974: Special Topics in Artificial Intelligence - "Setting up Jupyter Notebooks". Delivered at the City College of New York in Spring 2020 by Hunter McNichols as part of the Tech-in-Residence Corps program.
How to give constructive feedback.
Students listen to the story, Glo Goes Shopping. They learn about saving, spending, decision making and opportunity cost. They learn to use a decision-making grid to make decisions. Mathematics skills include learning about rows and columns in a grid.
To understand why people trade, suppose you were limited to consuming only items you could find within walking distance of your house. Or, perhaps even worse, only items you could produce yourself. For most of us, this restriction would severely diminish the variety of goods and services we enjoy on a daily basis. Therefore, the simplest answer to the question is that people (or entire countries) trade because they will enjoy a wider variety of goods.
Students listen to the book The Goat in the Rug, about a Navajo weaver who uses a number of resources and intermediate goods to make a traditional Navajo rug. The students are placed in groups to learn about productive resources and intermediate goods. They play a matching game and make posters to classify the natural resources, human resources, capital resources and intermediate goods used in the story.
Going Viral STEM Kit. The Natural Sciences Education & Outreach Center collaborates with CSU faculty, National Parks and citizen science programs to translate their current scientific research into unique STEM experiences for students in the form of Educational Kits that can be checked out. Each kit contains just about all of the materials needed (minus common things like water and paper towels) to explore some really interesting scientific research topics.The kits are available for teachers and informal educators in Colorado to check out for a duration of a week by submitting either a local pickup form or a delivery form available at the linked website. Please use the contact information on the STEM Kit overview page to learn more. https://www.cns-eoc.colostate.edu/stem-kits/ This kit is provided free for educational use. This resource is also available in Spanish in the linked file.