Nachdem ich einige fortgeschrittene Videos gemacht habe, fülle ich nun die Lücke am Anfang :)
- Subject:
- Career and Technical Education
- Material Type:
- Lesson
- Author:
- Jörg Amelunxen
- Date Added:
- 06/16/2015
Nachdem ich einige fortgeschrittene Videos gemacht habe, fülle ich nun die Lücke am Anfang :)
Discover the differing approaches to memorialization among African Americans and white southerners, in Richmond, Virginia, in the years immediately after the Civil War. This resource is part of the How the Monuments Came Down collection.
Nachdem ich einige fortgeschrittene Videos gemacht habe, fülle ich nun die Lücke am Anfang :) Hier geht es um Variablen und was man damit so machen kann :)
Nachdem ich einige fortgeschrittene Videos gemacht habe, fülle ich nun die Lücke am Anfang :)
Discover how African American political organizing in Richmond, Virginia, in the first decades after the Civil War, secured a measure of power amid ongoing fights against injustice.
Nachdem ich einige fortgeschrittene Videos gemacht habe, fülle ich nun die Lücke am Anfang :)
Discover how white southerners in Richmond, Virginia, honored General Robert E. Lee through a monument of his likeness unveiled in the former Confederate capital in 1890.
Dies ist dann mal Video Tutorial Nr.2 ....
Discover John Mitchell, Jr. and Maggie L Walker, two African American leaders in Richmond, Virginia, whom a historian in this clip refers to as “the vanguard” of Black resistance to white supremacy there.
Learn why white city leaders in Richmond, Virginia, in the early 20th century, embraced the nationwide “City Beautiful” movement through the construction of Monument Avenue, a grand boulevard lined with statues to Confederates.
Learn why blackface minstrelsy in the early 20th century sought to “parody and caricature Black ambition and achievement,” as explained by historians in this clip. Note to Teachers: The video clip, Caricatures of African Americans, includes depictions of blackface; in an effort to provide authentic and transparent resources about the historical experiences of Black Americans, these moments were not censored.
Learn about Jackson Ward, a historic African American neighborhood in Richmond, Virginia, and why white city leaders supported the construction of an interstate highway through its center in the 1950s.
This website gives you the opportunity see the world through different people all over the world on a variety of topics. Watch videos, see lesson plans about global issues and looking at it from a lense of focus on 100 people.
Learn how brave women fought for the right to vote and won 100 years ago.
very usefull to understand liquid
Discover the motivations, strategies, and success of the Crusade for Voters, a pathbreaking initiative that made possible the election of the first majority-Black city council in Richmond, Virginia, in 1977.
Take a 10-minute guided tour of FRED, the St. Louis Fed's free economic data website. Simple step-by-step activities equip users to find and graph economic data, mastering FRED's look and feel. The guide also shows how to customize, save, and share a FRED graph.
Coders storyboard a project based on randomized idea(s) and create a project based on their storyboard. The purpose of this project is to synthesize understandings into a project with up to three randomized ideas.
This is a lesson about teaching 1st unit vocabulary in 10th grade. It consists of a lesson plan and a list of 1st unit words.Bu ders ,10.sınıf 1.ünite kelimelerinin öğretimi ile ilgilidir. Bir ders planı ve 1.ünite kelime listesinden oluşmaktadır.
In this unit, students will understand where “fake news” comes from, why it exists and how they can think like fact checkers to become fluent consumers, evaluators, and creators of information. They will apply this knowledge by selecting a controversial topic to evaluate, synthesize, and analyze all aspects before sharing with a local audience.