Debbie Mickle
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Explore how writers use storyboards to visualize books and movies, learn how actors train and use fight choreography to portray stories on stage, and become a work of art yourself on this episode of The Creative Corner.
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Does commemorating the past and preserving our history get in the way of progress? Learn about debates in Hampton, Virginia among community members, developers, and archaeologists about how best to preserve history, and then write reflections in a journal.SOLs:Standard VS.1c, d, gStandard VS.7c
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Join Jacob, Sarah and Lenore, NASA interns as they explore force, motion, energy, and simple and compound machines. Learn how NASA uses these machines and how to find examples within your own home.
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Jerry Samford interviews Michael Lewis about his love of astronomy and what we need to do to preserve dark night skies for future generations.
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Join science lover and Miss America 2020, Camille Schrier, as she uses her kitchen as her laboratory. Explore how the reaction of baking soda and vinegar can blow up a balloon and cause bath bombs to fizz. Developed for students in grades 6-10.
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Join Lauren Paullin and Art for the Journey as you explore the intersection of Art and Science on this episode of "The Creative Corner."
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NASA eClips™ at Home fuels kids’ curiosity as they investigate science and the world around them through the lens of NASA. This show is created, directed, filmed and produced (at home) by the National Institute of Aerospace (NIA)/Center for Atmospheric Research and Education interns Sarah Adewumi, Lenore Miller and Jacob Wologo. The series builds upon already developed NASA eClips™ video segments and introduces hands-on activities for students in grades 4-7.
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Episode 3: Take a LOOK at the root of the week (VIS). Learn about the different types of media in our world and why it is important to be media literate. Test your media literacy skills while investigating a 1980’s milk commercial. Learn what strategies companies used to get consumers on board with their products and ideas. Leave this episode with a media literacy toolkit!
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Join Joe as he explores weather! Look to the sky and get a better glimpse of clouds. Tour the major storms such as tornadoes, hurricanes and thunderstorms. Dive into the water cycle and see how NASA studies the water cycle to help predict future weather patterns. Investigate wet weather by exploring the types of precipitation and the tools we use to measure it. Developed for students in grades 4-6.
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Episode 3: How does 1619 help us connect the past with the present? Students will learn about the annual commemoration that recognizes the arrival of the first Africans at Fort Monroe in 1619 through video clips and images. Students will create their own one-pager, a digital canvas similar to word art, that illustrates the connections they make as they learn about the events of 16 19 at Fort Monroe, Virginia. Developed for students in grades 4-7.