Vocabulary, Grade 3

Vocabulary, Grade 3
Author: Raymer
Publisher: Carson-Dellosa Publishing
Total Pages: 82
Release: 2009-01-04
Genre: Juvenile Nonfiction
ISBN: 0742420736

Wonder what's in a word? Reading for Every Child: Vocabulary benefits students in grade 3 through fun, flexible, hands-on activities that help students learn and practice grade-appropriate vocabulary words and concepts. This 80-page book uses research-based methods and includes enrichment activities, word play and puzzles, and teacher resource pages.

Irrigation Record

Irrigation Record
Author: New South Wales. Water Conservation and Irrigation Commission
Publisher:
Total Pages: 380
Release: 1914
Genre:
ISBN:

Choice of Law in Practice

Choice of Law in Practice
Author: Symeon Symeonides
Publisher: BRILL
Total Pages: 1920
Release: 2020-12-15
Genre: Law
ISBN: 9004435883

This book is a true treasure trove of original research, incisive observations, and useful practical pointers. Written by an author who has read more than sixty thousand conflicts decisions in the last thirty years, the book skillfully guides American and foreign readers through the labyrinthine alleys of American choice-of-law litigation in the last twenty years and distills the resulting lessons for attorneys, academics, and lawmakers.

Picking Berries

Picking Berries
Author: Jerry Lipka
Publisher: Calgary : Detselig Enterprises
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2004
Genre: Berries
ISBN: 9781550592825

In this module for grades two and three, students engage in a series of hands-on activities that help them explore data, graphic representation and linear measuring. Students gather data related to the berry harvest to build and analyze tables and graphs, and they learn to read thermometers and measure the length of their shadows. The culture and math of this module connect through an engaging story of a family gathering berries at the end of summer. About the Series Math in a Cultural Context This series is a supplemental math curriculum based on the traditional wisdom and practices of the Yup?ik people of southwest Alaska. The result of more than a decade of collaboration between math educators and Yup?ik elders, these modules connect cultural knowledge to school mathematics. Students are challenged to communicate and think mathematically as they solve inquiry-oriented problems, which require creative, practical and analytical thinking. Classroom-based research strongly suggests that students engaged in this curriculum can develop deeper mathematical understandings than students who engage only with a procedure-oriented, paper-and-pencil curriculum.