Este documento proporciona instrucciones en 3 pasos para hacer una máscara de lucha libre con libros: 1) colorear y cortar, 2) pegar pestañas y doblar, 3) enhebrar hilo a través de agujeros.
Slides for Pasadena Public Library's Read Around the World Book Club's discussion of the book ¡¡Manu!! by Kelly Fernández, learning about the Dominican Republic on which its setting was based, and how to make Dominican muñecas limé out of clothespins and paper.
This document summarizes an art and coding event held at the Pasadena Public Library. It describes 10 puzzles where participants had to determine the direction an artist character would turn to draw various shapes. It then invited participants to design their own shape by specifying a series of turns. The document provided tips for breaking up complex designs into colors and adjusting lines and angles. It concluded by asking participants to share links to their completed designs and explained how to save the images for future use.
A Good Kind of Trouble discussion questionsAnnMarie Ppl
This document summarizes a book club discussion on the book "A Good Kind of Trouble" by Lisa Moore Ramée held on February 10, 2021 at the Pasadena Public Library. It includes discussion questions about interviews conducted with people involved in the civil rights movement, quotes from the book, perspectives on Black youth and interactions with police, and how characters in the book change. The discussion board provides resources on related topics and recommends a future book for the club to read.
The Turtle of Oman Discussion for Read Around the World Book ClubAnnMarie Ppl
Our Read Around the World Book Club for 3rd - 5th graders learned a lot about the beautiful country of Oman and read The Turtle of Oman by Naomi Shihab Nye.
Week two of NaNoWriMo Young Writers ProgramAnnMarie Ppl
This document provides an update for participants in a NaNoWriMo Young Writers Program. It congratulates students on their writing progress so far, recognizes top performers, and discusses outlining strategies and plot structures. The document encourages students to continue working hard and shares tips for developing characters, writing compelling openings, crafting a rising action, including climactic turning points, and concluding their stories.
Week one of NaNoWriMo Young Writers ProgramAnnMarie Ppl
This year at my library we did a weekly program series to encourage kids to participate in and complete the NaNoWriMo Young Writers Program! In this presentation I showed for our first week of November, we discussed the importance of having a central conflict and characters with varying intentions and motivations.
Slides for Pasadena Public Library's Read Around the World Book Club's discussion of the book ¡¡Manu!! by Kelly Fernández, learning about the Dominican Republic on which its setting was based, and how to make Dominican muñecas limé out of clothespins and paper.
This document summarizes an art and coding event held at the Pasadena Public Library. It describes 10 puzzles where participants had to determine the direction an artist character would turn to draw various shapes. It then invited participants to design their own shape by specifying a series of turns. The document provided tips for breaking up complex designs into colors and adjusting lines and angles. It concluded by asking participants to share links to their completed designs and explained how to save the images for future use.
A Good Kind of Trouble discussion questionsAnnMarie Ppl
This document summarizes a book club discussion on the book "A Good Kind of Trouble" by Lisa Moore Ramée held on February 10, 2021 at the Pasadena Public Library. It includes discussion questions about interviews conducted with people involved in the civil rights movement, quotes from the book, perspectives on Black youth and interactions with police, and how characters in the book change. The discussion board provides resources on related topics and recommends a future book for the club to read.
The Turtle of Oman Discussion for Read Around the World Book ClubAnnMarie Ppl
Our Read Around the World Book Club for 3rd - 5th graders learned a lot about the beautiful country of Oman and read The Turtle of Oman by Naomi Shihab Nye.
Week two of NaNoWriMo Young Writers ProgramAnnMarie Ppl
This document provides an update for participants in a NaNoWriMo Young Writers Program. It congratulates students on their writing progress so far, recognizes top performers, and discusses outlining strategies and plot structures. The document encourages students to continue working hard and shares tips for developing characters, writing compelling openings, crafting a rising action, including climactic turning points, and concluding their stories.
Week one of NaNoWriMo Young Writers ProgramAnnMarie Ppl
This year at my library we did a weekly program series to encourage kids to participate in and complete the NaNoWriMo Young Writers Program! In this presentation I showed for our first week of November, we discussed the importance of having a central conflict and characters with varying intentions and motivations.
The document discusses themes from the book "Emil and the Detectives" including whether children should be allowed to run freely without supervision, if taking back something stolen is considered stealing, and if Emil and the other children were right to take matters into their own hands to find the thief rather than informing adults. It also questions if Emil is a good son, if he has the right to do what he wants with his own money, and which adults helped the children in their investigation.
This document provides summaries and recommendations for several children's and middle grade books that could be used for summer reading inspiration. It describes the plots of The Last Kids on Earth and the Cosmic Beyond by Max Brallier, Gabby Garcia's Ultimate Playbook by Iva-Marie Palmer, Front Desk by Kelly Yang, The Serpent's Secret by Sayantani DasGupta, Finding Mighty by Sheela Chari and provides the ages each book is intended for. It encourages signing up for the Pasadena Public Library's Summer Reading Challenge to receive one of these books as a prize for participating.
Hour (and a half) of Code: Flappy Bird Games in ScratchAnnMarie Ppl
This virtual program introduced kids to Scratch and computer programming via a series of lessons on coding and experiments with failed or broken games that had one thing wrong that needed fixing. This program was presented on GoToMeeting by Pasadena Public Library's youth services librarian AnnMarie Kolakowski.
I share eleven different citizen science websites or apps that are easy to participate in and only require simple equipment like a computer/smartphone and Internet connection. Not just for kids, there are a lot of great citizen science projects here that adults can get involved in--I just curated this list to emphasize projects that are developmentally and cognitively doable for kids over the age of 8.
I created this for a webinar for the Pasadena Public Library, on May 8, 2020.
This slideshow introduced Pasadena Public Library's new Globe At Night kit, acquired through partnership with LAPL, which patrons can use to help scientists track changes in the light pollution that blocks our view of the stars.
The document summarizes services and resources available to educators through the Pasadena Public Library. It describes various programs for educators, students, and children including workshops, storytimes, book clubs, STEAM programs, databases, and more. It provides contact information for branch libraries and highlights additional resources like mental health kits, STEAM kits, publishing opportunities for teens, and the library's summer reading program.
This document provides tips and techniques for filming shots and animating with LEGO minifigures. It discusses different camera shots like extreme closeups, closeups, and long shots. It also covers camera angles like low and high angles. Animation tips are given such as using clear bricks to make minifigures appear to walk and move body parts like the head to show laughter. Other techniques discussed include anticipation, rebounding, and partially removing pieces to simulate swimming. Example videos are linked to demonstrate various techniques. The document concludes by instructing attendees to make a storyboard for their LEGO movie short.
This presentation was created for our Kids' Writing Workshop for 9-12 year olds at Pasadena Public Library. We did a workshop called "Make-Believe Science," inspired by two books:
"Don't Forget to Write: For the Elementary Grades" by 826 National, and "Two Truths and a Lie: It's Alive!" by Ammi-Joan Paquette and Laurie Ann Thompson.
In these slides, the kids were presented with facts and asked to identify the one that was fake. We held votes each time. The kids liked this activity and were shocked by the many unbelievable things that were actually true.
We did a number of creative writing activities for our "Journal of Parafictitious Scientific Inquiry." The kids also were asked to research real facts and write about them while doing the "Two Truths and a Lie" exercise. Kids learned a lot of facts about the world, learned about information literacy and fact-checking, and how to present something wildly untrue in a believable way. Their imaginations and bellies got quite a workout as they were laughing a lot!
Writing a Choose Your Own Adventure Story in TwineAnnMarie Ppl
We had a writing workshop at my library about doing Interactive Fiction, and kids wrote stories that could go different ways depending on the readers' choices!
I showed this presentation to teach kids about the physics of roller coasters, the importance of starting way up high and having as much potential energy as possible, so that you can generate a high level of kinetic energy to power your car through the twists and turns. We put that learning to use making roller coasters out of pipe insulators, for marbles to coast down and loop the loop!
This is an updated slideshow of the one I made in 2014 for my Curiosity Machine program. We did the balloon helicopter challenge on the CuriosityMachine.org website and learned about elastic energy.
These slides include a presentation about the connections between math and electricity (Ohm's law, calculating voltage and resistance) as well as how-to slides so that you can make your own math quiz that lights a bulb to confirm when you have the correct answer. Note, the animations won't come through in this upload but for several slides I had the kids try to calculate the answers to my questions before I showed the answers.
Web Design Basics for Kids: HTML & CSSAnnMarie Ppl
A presentation I'm giving tomorrow to our Kids' Coding Club, a group of tweens who come to Pasadena Public Library to learn about coding and computer science.
Slides from Pasadena Public Library's "Make a Penny Battery" program for kids, with information about electricity and batteries, including how the first battery was made in 1800.
Make a Wind Generator presentation on how wind power worksAnnMarie Ppl
On May 19, 2017, kids came to the Pasadena Public Library to make wind turbines that would generate electricity by turning the shaft of a hobby motor. We were inspired by a project we found at https://www.exploratorium.edu/snacks/.... But since making the light bulb come on didn't work (the motors we had either weren't strong enough or were too strong) we tested the amount of electricity generated a different way: with a digital multimeter. Kids still learned a lot about electricity, energy and wind power! Here's the presentation they watched to learn about these concepts.
This was a slideshow for a class we did at the Pasadena Public Library for children ages 8-12 to teach them about electricity and help them to construct paper circuits. You can view photos and videos from this class in our google drive folder: https://drive.google.com/open?id=0B2kplpFq1AeucGZWbHZqRWlCNTQ
This document provides explanations for common science questions about light and color. It discusses why the sky is blue and the sun appears red at sunset, which is due to scattering of light in the atmosphere. The document also notes that the sun appears white in space and is made mostly of hydrogen and helium. It introduces the concepts of additive color mixing using colored lights and subtractive color mixing using CMYK pigments. Finally, it explains the inverse square law for light intensity over distance.
Curiosity Machine: Build a Balanced DinosaurAnnMarie Ppl
This was the lesson I gave kids in paleontology and center of gravity for our curiosity machine challenge to build a balanced dinosaur at curiositymachine.org. Feel free to use these slides with a class or for any educational purpose.
On Monday, Sept. 21 at Pasadena Public Library, kids learned about polymers and created self-assembling structures using many different-shaped dice and magnets! They had to create a design that would promote certain dice connecting together and other dice repelling each other. This is the presentation I created to tie the two concepts of physical chemistry and magnetism together. You can find the official challenge and try it yourself by visiting https://www.curiositymachine.org/challenges/80/.
The document discusses themes from the book "Emil and the Detectives" including whether children should be allowed to run freely without supervision, if taking back something stolen is considered stealing, and if Emil and the other children were right to take matters into their own hands to find the thief rather than informing adults. It also questions if Emil is a good son, if he has the right to do what he wants with his own money, and which adults helped the children in their investigation.
This document provides summaries and recommendations for several children's and middle grade books that could be used for summer reading inspiration. It describes the plots of The Last Kids on Earth and the Cosmic Beyond by Max Brallier, Gabby Garcia's Ultimate Playbook by Iva-Marie Palmer, Front Desk by Kelly Yang, The Serpent's Secret by Sayantani DasGupta, Finding Mighty by Sheela Chari and provides the ages each book is intended for. It encourages signing up for the Pasadena Public Library's Summer Reading Challenge to receive one of these books as a prize for participating.
Hour (and a half) of Code: Flappy Bird Games in ScratchAnnMarie Ppl
This virtual program introduced kids to Scratch and computer programming via a series of lessons on coding and experiments with failed or broken games that had one thing wrong that needed fixing. This program was presented on GoToMeeting by Pasadena Public Library's youth services librarian AnnMarie Kolakowski.
I share eleven different citizen science websites or apps that are easy to participate in and only require simple equipment like a computer/smartphone and Internet connection. Not just for kids, there are a lot of great citizen science projects here that adults can get involved in--I just curated this list to emphasize projects that are developmentally and cognitively doable for kids over the age of 8.
I created this for a webinar for the Pasadena Public Library, on May 8, 2020.
This slideshow introduced Pasadena Public Library's new Globe At Night kit, acquired through partnership with LAPL, which patrons can use to help scientists track changes in the light pollution that blocks our view of the stars.
The document summarizes services and resources available to educators through the Pasadena Public Library. It describes various programs for educators, students, and children including workshops, storytimes, book clubs, STEAM programs, databases, and more. It provides contact information for branch libraries and highlights additional resources like mental health kits, STEAM kits, publishing opportunities for teens, and the library's summer reading program.
This document provides tips and techniques for filming shots and animating with LEGO minifigures. It discusses different camera shots like extreme closeups, closeups, and long shots. It also covers camera angles like low and high angles. Animation tips are given such as using clear bricks to make minifigures appear to walk and move body parts like the head to show laughter. Other techniques discussed include anticipation, rebounding, and partially removing pieces to simulate swimming. Example videos are linked to demonstrate various techniques. The document concludes by instructing attendees to make a storyboard for their LEGO movie short.
This presentation was created for our Kids' Writing Workshop for 9-12 year olds at Pasadena Public Library. We did a workshop called "Make-Believe Science," inspired by two books:
"Don't Forget to Write: For the Elementary Grades" by 826 National, and "Two Truths and a Lie: It's Alive!" by Ammi-Joan Paquette and Laurie Ann Thompson.
In these slides, the kids were presented with facts and asked to identify the one that was fake. We held votes each time. The kids liked this activity and were shocked by the many unbelievable things that were actually true.
We did a number of creative writing activities for our "Journal of Parafictitious Scientific Inquiry." The kids also were asked to research real facts and write about them while doing the "Two Truths and a Lie" exercise. Kids learned a lot of facts about the world, learned about information literacy and fact-checking, and how to present something wildly untrue in a believable way. Their imaginations and bellies got quite a workout as they were laughing a lot!
Writing a Choose Your Own Adventure Story in TwineAnnMarie Ppl
We had a writing workshop at my library about doing Interactive Fiction, and kids wrote stories that could go different ways depending on the readers' choices!
I showed this presentation to teach kids about the physics of roller coasters, the importance of starting way up high and having as much potential energy as possible, so that you can generate a high level of kinetic energy to power your car through the twists and turns. We put that learning to use making roller coasters out of pipe insulators, for marbles to coast down and loop the loop!
This is an updated slideshow of the one I made in 2014 for my Curiosity Machine program. We did the balloon helicopter challenge on the CuriosityMachine.org website and learned about elastic energy.
These slides include a presentation about the connections between math and electricity (Ohm's law, calculating voltage and resistance) as well as how-to slides so that you can make your own math quiz that lights a bulb to confirm when you have the correct answer. Note, the animations won't come through in this upload but for several slides I had the kids try to calculate the answers to my questions before I showed the answers.
Web Design Basics for Kids: HTML & CSSAnnMarie Ppl
A presentation I'm giving tomorrow to our Kids' Coding Club, a group of tweens who come to Pasadena Public Library to learn about coding and computer science.
Slides from Pasadena Public Library's "Make a Penny Battery" program for kids, with information about electricity and batteries, including how the first battery was made in 1800.
Make a Wind Generator presentation on how wind power worksAnnMarie Ppl
On May 19, 2017, kids came to the Pasadena Public Library to make wind turbines that would generate electricity by turning the shaft of a hobby motor. We were inspired by a project we found at https://www.exploratorium.edu/snacks/.... But since making the light bulb come on didn't work (the motors we had either weren't strong enough or were too strong) we tested the amount of electricity generated a different way: with a digital multimeter. Kids still learned a lot about electricity, energy and wind power! Here's the presentation they watched to learn about these concepts.
This was a slideshow for a class we did at the Pasadena Public Library for children ages 8-12 to teach them about electricity and help them to construct paper circuits. You can view photos and videos from this class in our google drive folder: https://drive.google.com/open?id=0B2kplpFq1AeucGZWbHZqRWlCNTQ
This document provides explanations for common science questions about light and color. It discusses why the sky is blue and the sun appears red at sunset, which is due to scattering of light in the atmosphere. The document also notes that the sun appears white in space and is made mostly of hydrogen and helium. It introduces the concepts of additive color mixing using colored lights and subtractive color mixing using CMYK pigments. Finally, it explains the inverse square law for light intensity over distance.
Curiosity Machine: Build a Balanced DinosaurAnnMarie Ppl
This was the lesson I gave kids in paleontology and center of gravity for our curiosity machine challenge to build a balanced dinosaur at curiositymachine.org. Feel free to use these slides with a class or for any educational purpose.
On Monday, Sept. 21 at Pasadena Public Library, kids learned about polymers and created self-assembling structures using many different-shaped dice and magnets! They had to create a design that would promote certain dice connecting together and other dice repelling each other. This is the presentation I created to tie the two concepts of physical chemistry and magnetism together. You can find the official challenge and try it yourself by visiting https://www.curiositymachine.org/challenges/80/.
Soluciones Examen de Selectividad. Geografía junio 2024 (Convocatoria Ordinar...Juan Martín Martín
Criterios de corrección y soluciones al examen de Geografía de Selectividad (EvAU) Junio de 2024 en Castilla La Mancha.
Soluciones al examen.
Convocatoria Ordinaria.
Examen resuelto de Geografía
conocer el examen de geografía de julio 2024 en:
https://blogdegeografiadejuan.blogspot.com/2024/06/soluciones-examen-de-selectividad.html
http://blogdegeografiadejuan.blogspot.com/
14. 1. Colorea y corta.
1. Color and cut. 2. Glue the tabs, and fold them under each other.
2. Pon pegamento en las pestañas, y únelas.
3. Enhebra el hilo a través de los agujeros.
3. Thread yarn through the holes.