Grades 6 -12: Fall Programs from Global Nomads




As you prepare for class to begin again, I want you to know about the exciting lineup of GNG.
PULSE programs we have planned for the fall semester:

  • The Future of America
  • The Issue of Landmines
  • Darfur
  • Global Environmental Issues
  • Threat of Nuclear Weapons
  • Arab World and the U.S. (Egypt)

Visit http://www.gng.org/programs/index.html and click on individual programs to learn more and sign up.

Also, it is with a mixture of excitement and nostalgia that I say farewell for now. I have decided to pursue an MBA program in Singapore, which will keep me away from GNG operations for at least a year (I will remain on the organization’s Board of Directors).

It has been a pleasure working with you, and I hope we can remain in contact in the future. Going forward, please address all program-related queries to Lisa Inks at lisa@gng.org or call 212-529-0377.

I wish you a wonderful semester of GNG programs.

Very best wishes,
David Macquart

Grade 3-6: Chocolate & Vanilla with the Camden Children's Garden


Chocolate & Vanilla
Cost: $70.00

Vanilla is the favorite ice cream flavor by far in the USA. Chocolate comes in second. Both flavors have been known for thousands of years, and they both originated from tropical ecosystems. We will explore where these flavors come from, and how they get to our tables.

1. The program begins with an exploratory of what the students already know about the subject. We will look at what and where are tropical rainforests around the world.
2. We then explore vanilla - what kind of plant it is, how it is pollinated and where it comes from?
3. Chocolate is next. We will view a short video on how chocolate is harvested.
4. We will discuss what other flavors come from the tropics.
5. If the teacher opts to have some chocolate candy or vanilla wafers to hand out, this is the time to hand them out.
5. Time is allowed for questions and answers.

Betsy Payne
bpayne@camdenchildrensgarden.org
3 Riverside Drive
Camden, NJ 08103
Phone: (856) 365-8733
Fax: (856) 365-9750
http://www.camdenchildrensgarden.org

Grade 8-12 New Programs from McMillen Center for Health Education


STDs Not for Me
Cost: $125.00
Youth learn about new responsibilities that come with adolescence and are taught about consequences of sexual activity. All sexuality programs are taught from abstinence until marriage basis.

Upon completion of this program the student will be able to:

1. Name common sexually transmitted diseases/infections and their symptoms.
2. State that some STDs can be asymptomatic but still may be transmitted to others.
3. Identify two benefits of sexual abstinence before marriage.
4. Identify several non-physical ways one can demonstrate love and caring in a relationship.
5. Identify the organs of the male and female reproductive systems and describe their functions.
6. Give an example of how a decision or choice affects others.

Balance Your Act
Cost $125.00

Youth obesity is a rising problem in the U.S. Participants will learn the causes of youth obesity as well as determine their current weight status. Participants will increase their energy output by designing a basic exercise program, and decrease their energy intake by identifying and decreasing their simple sugar and fat intake.

Upon completion of this program the student will be able to:

1. Describe balance and what “out of balance” means.
2. List 3 reasons for increases in overweight individuals in the U.S.
3. Develop exercise program by using F.I.T.T.
4. List 3 ways to decrease amount of energy coming into the human body.
5. List 3 adjectives that mean a food contains less fat.
6. State that carbonated beverages are a large source of empty calories in U.S.
7. List 2 ways to know your balancing act is working.
8. Describe negative aspects of being overweight

Linda Hathaway
lhathaway@mcmillencenter.org
600 Jim Kelley Boulevard
Fort Wayne, IN 46816
Phone: (260) 456-4511
Fax: (260) 456-9655
http://www.mcmillencenter.org

Grade 7-12: The Nine Who Made A Difference


Ball State University Presents: The Nine Who Made A difference

BROADCAST DATE:
TUESDAY, DECEMBER 4, 2007
10 AM AND 1 PM ESTGRADES 7-12
COST: FREE

The first day of school is always filled with great anticipation. You're enrolled in what some architects have called the most beautiful high school in America. As you make your way toward Central High School in Little Rock, Arkansas, you become aware of an angry mob that has gathered across the street from the high school. In fact, the governor has called out the National Guard to maintain order, but every time you attempt to enter the school the guardsmen block your way. This is the scene that greeted "the Little Rock Nine," as they were called by the media, in September 1957. Central High School in Little Rock, Arkansas, was the first important test for the implementation of the U.S. Supreme Court's historic Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka decision of May 17, 1954. The Little Rock controversy was the first test of the national resolve to enforce equality in public school education in the face of massive Southern defiance during the period following the Brown decision. Many individuals and organizations in and around the city took up the cause for civil rights, such as Mrs. Daisy Bates, who helped the students gain access to the high school. On May 27, 1958, Ernest Green (one of the "Little Rock nine") became the first African-American to graduate from Central High School. Central High School National Historic Site commemorates the events that surrounded the crisis of 1957. It has been 50 years since the desegregation of Central High School. Join the rangers and other special guests of this national historic site to examine the issues and compelling stories that have evolved from the desegregation of Little Rock Central High School.


Jeff Mohl
Teacher's College Outreach Programs
Muncie, IN 47306
Phone: (765) 285-4679
Fax: (765) 285-5455

Grade 3-8: Tails from the Tetons



Few landscapes in the world are as striking and memorable as Grand Teton National Park in northwestern Wyoming. The mountains, valleys, lakes, river and skies are home to an amazing variety of animal communities. In this EFT, we will focus on the Grand Teton's intact temperate ecosystems and the animals that inhabit them, including wolves, bears, buffalo, antelope, and many others. Come along as we explore this majestic national park and study its amazing inhabitants.


BROADCAST DATE:
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 16, 2007
10 AM AND 1 PM
COST: FREE

Ball State University Electronic Field Trip Website:
Jeff Mohl
Teacher's College Outreach Programs
Muncie, IN 47306
Phone: (765) 285-4679
Fax: (765) 285-5455

Grade K-12: America's Spaceport with John F. Kennedy Space Center


John F. Kennedy Space Center has launched ALL U.S. Human Spaceflight Missions. Preparing a vehicle to liftoff into space requires a special location, massive facilities, unique equipment and tools, and a world-class workforce.

Participants in this DLN event discover just what it takes to prepare a vehicle for space through hands-on activities. They also use age-appropriate mathematical calculations to more fully understand related processes.


Program Format

Interactivity throughout a virtual tour of the Kennedy Space Center with videos, demonstrations and hands-on activities.Videoconference Lesson Plan:
http://nasadln.nmsu.edu/dln/admin/media/download.jsp?file_id=735

Objectives

K-4: Students participating in "America's Spaceport" will point out the nose cone and fins of a rocket with 100 % accuracy and compare 5 rockets by size from tallest to shortest. Students also discover how many of their classmates combined in a one square yard area can expand to fill the Vehicle Assembly building to within one whole student.

5-8: Students participating in "America's Spaceport" will compare their height to the Vehicle Assembly Building to the nearest inch, calculate the area of the VAB to the nearest student, and compare their weight to the weight of the Crawler-Transporter to the nearest pound.

9-12: Students participating in "America's Spaceport" will explain the possible impact zone of a rocket launch failure at one and two meters distances to the nearest percent

Cost: Free

Damon Talley
damon.talley@aesp.nasa.okstate.edu
OSU Kennedy Space Center, FL 32955
(321) 867-4213Fax: (321) 867-1742
http://nasadln.nmsu.edu/dln

Grades 5-8: Sports Challenge! with the New York Hall of Science

Why do balls bounce? How does a surfer stay on the board? Explore the science of sports through classroom activities and demonstrations of our exhibits.

This program consists of two Virtual Visit connections. The first presents the interactive program and the second allows the students to share back their post-visit work and research


Program Description

Students explore the physical properties involved with athletic activity by engaging in table top experiments as well as interacting with a New York Hall of Science Explainer and exhibits. Investigate how different surfaces change how a ball bounces, the importance of muscle memory and why what kinds of balls travel the fastest.

Program Format

Virtual Visit #1
1. Introductions and pre-visit activity discussion.
2. Students explore how different surfaces affects how a ball will bounce both through demonstrations of exhibits and classroom activities.
3. Students predict and discuss the various speeds of a thrown tennis ball softball and baseball and compare that to demonstration with speed gun in pitching cage.
4. Students explore how reaction time and muscle memory are important for athletic achievement both through demonstrations of exhibits and classroom activities.
5. Students explore how balance and center of gravity are important for athletic achievement both through demonstrations of exhibits and classroom activities.
6. Conclusions and farewells.
Virtual Visit #2
1. Greetings and recap of Virtual Visit #1.
2. Students will share outcomes of post-visit activities.

Objectives

Learning objectivesStudents will be able to:-Observe how properties of the physical world play out in sports.- Explore relationships between gravity, force and speed.- Learn different physical skills athletes need to excel.- Identify laws of science in relationship to sports.

Grades 5-8
Cost: $200

Chris Lawrence
clawrence@nyscience.org
http://www.nyscience.org/teacherconnections/programs/virtual-visit.php?mainId=5&subId=23&tertiaryId=15
47-01 111th street
Queens, NY 11368
Phone: (718) 699-0005 ext. 319
Fax: (718) 699-1341

Grades 2-12: Green Programming by Liberty Science Center

Green Power
Grade(s): 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11

Liberty Science Center’s E-Quest exhibit offers guests the opportunity to explore and experiment with a variety of earth’s energy sources. The different areas that may be visited are the bio-stored station, the surface station, the geothermal station, the ocean station and the nuclear station.

Program Format

1. Take a quick tour of the exhibition area.
2.Discuss Energy consumption in the United States
3. To examine the concepts of renewable and non-renewable energy.
4. To explore alternative forms of energy.
5. To evaluate different forms of energy and their effectiveness for use in different areas of the world.
6. Time is allowed for questions and answers.

Objectives

• To examine the concepts of renewable and non-renewable energy.
• To explore alternative forms of energy.
• To evaluate different forms of energy and their effectiveness for use in different areas of the world.

It's Easy Being Green: Green Building
Grade(s): 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12

In Skyscraper! Achievement and Impact, guests will learn about the science, technology, planning and construction behind these amazing structures. The exhibition is housed in gallery space located in the newly-constructed wing at the far left of the lobby on the ground floor. At 12,800 square feet, including a 1,500-square-foot mezzanine gallery, Skyscraper! is the largest permanent exhibition at Liberty Science Center. It is also the most comprehensive single exhibition ever mounted on the topic, larger than the entire Skyscraper Museum in lower Manhattan.


Program Format

1. Being with a tour of the exhibition area
2. To define green building and describe what it encompasses.
3. To compare and contrast renewable and nonrenewable resources.
4. To construct a model using green building principles.
5. Time is allowed for questions and answers.

Objectives

• To define green building and describe what it encompasses
•To compare and contrast renewable and nonrenewable resources.
• To construct a model using green building principles.

Sabina M. Santos
ssantos@lsc.org
http://www.lsc.org/educators/studentprograms/e-connections
Liberty Science Center
Jersey City, NJ 07305
(201) 451-0006 ext. 1382
Program Costs: $190

Grades 3-12: Albany Institute of History & Art


Thank you for listing the Albany Institute of History & Art's Videoconferencing lessons on your website. We would like to update our information for the 2007 - 08 school year. Here is our updated information:

The Albany Institute's Virtual Field Trips are exciting real-time interactive programs. New York State Certified Teachers use objects, images and inquiry-based teaching methods to engage students in lessons that focus on art and history. Students are active participants in the lesson; they observe, analyze and express their ideas about objects and images presented.
Virtual Field trips are intended for individual classes or groups of 30 students or fewer. In addition to a main camera, a special "document camera" allows for close inspection of individual objects. Each lesson is approximately 60 minutes and was co-written with K-12 teachers, and corresponds with New York State and National Standards.

Scheduling a Virtual Field Trip
Reservations are required at least two weeks in advance for all Virtual Field Trips and Virtual Teacher Workshops. Please contact Tracy Grosner at 518.463.4478, ext. 405 or grosnert@albanyinstitute.org to schedule your lesson. Additional Teacher Materials for each Virtual Lesson can be found on our website, http://www.albanyinstitute.org/, under "Education."
Availability
Monday through Friday, 9:00 am - 4:00 pm (EST)
Fees
Virtual Field Trips are $125.00 each and an hour Virtual Teacher Workshops is $100 .00. Each school is responsible to pay for connection fees for the videoconferencing call.
Discounts are available for bulk purchashing of lessons.
Recording & Distribution
Recording of programs is prohibited.
Technology Required
We can connect via IP, at speeds up to 384K or ISDN at speeds up to 128K. Please contact your district's technology coordinator for further information.
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The Serious and the Smirk
Recommended: grades 3 -8
In this inquiry-based lesson, students are asked, "What can we learn from a portrait?" Using the Albany Institute's collection and digital imaging technology, students will identify, analyze, and connect visual clues, symbols, and metaphors to history and material culture.
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Ancient Egypt Part I: Art & Culture
Recommended: grades 3 - 8
The Albany Institute's collection of art and artifacts from ancient Egypt and its three mummies provide students with an opportunity to learn about ancient Egyptian hieroglyphs and symbols; funerary objects and religious practices; and the culture and customs of daily life.
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Traders & Culture: Colonial Life in America
Recommended: grades 3 - 8
The lives of people who settled in the Hudson Valley in the 17th, 18th and 19th centuries and the Native Americans who lived alongside them are illuminated for students through the exploration of the Albany Institute's collection of paintings, account books, furniture, ceramics, maps, metal ware, documents, tools, and more. Analyzing images of the area from different moments in time, students see visual evidence of the region's development and discuss key themes such as the fur trade, agriculture and commerce.
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Art, Artists and Nature: The Hudson River School
Recommended: grades 4 - 12
The landscape paintings created by the 19th century artists known as the Hudson River School celebrate the majestic beauty of the American wilderness. Students will learn about the elements of art, early 19th century American culture, the creative process, environmental concerns and the connections to the birth of American literature. Through viewing paintings and drawings by artists such as Thomas Cole and Frederic Church, students learn how these artists expressed their ideas and feelings in paintings, while also reflecting prevailing ideas about Americans' relationship to the rapidly transforming natural environment.
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Struggle for the Vote: New York Women
Recommended: grades 9 -12
Focusing on Susan B. Anthony, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Lucy Burns and the life of Albany artist and activist, Alice Morgan Wright, students will explore the difficult path women forged to earn the right to vote. Objects, images and documents from the Albany Institute's collection will illuminate this story of struggle and persistence.
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The Civil War
Recommended: grades 8 -12
Using primary sources, images and objects from the Albany Institute's collection, students will be introduced to a major conflict in American History, the Civil War. This lesson focuses on how the Civil War affected daily life in America, including the art, material culture, and political atmosphere of our country.
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The Rise of Modern America
Recommended: grades 8-12
Photographs, objects, works of art and other primary sources from the late 19th century will provide students with connections to this fascinating time period in American History. This lesson focuses on American art and culture, the reconstruction of the South, manufacturing, transportation, expansion, urbanization and society from the 1870s to the early 20th century.
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Virtual Teacher Workshops
This program demonstrates the possibilities of integrating lessons via videoconferences into classroom curricula. A New York State Certified Teacher briefly reviews the content of the lessons described above and introduces teachers to this exciting new
way to connect with the art, artifacts and library resources of the Albany Institute.


Tracy Grosner
School and Teacher Program Coordinator
Albany Institute of History & Art
125 Washington Avenue
Albany, NY 12210
518.463.4478, ext. 405
grosnert@albanyinstitute.org
http://www.albanyinstitute.org/

Grades 3-6: New Programs from The Mariners' Museum

Messages on the Waves by The Mariners' Museum
Ocean currents and tides affect our weather, travel at sea, and the movements of marine life. They can also have an effect on our ability to communicate. Explore the motion of the ocean as we examine the currents and tides, the factors that influence them, and how people have put them to use for commerce and communication.

Using several interactive activities, students will learn about the science of tides and currents, and how they have affected human history. Students will learn the patterns of several major currents, and practice their geography skills in the course of this program

Red Sky in the Morning, Sailors Take Warning by The Mariners' Museum

This science program explores the forces behind the development of hurricanes and tropical storms. Students will examine the history of these killer storms, learn how to track a hurricane, and participate in experiments and activities designed to aid their understanding of a hurricane and how it affects life on our coastal regions.

During the course of the program, students will identify myths and facts about weather lore, learn about how to create a hurricane plan for their family, and make their own barometer.

http://www.mariner.org/educationalad/teachers/index.php

Stacy Hasselbacher
Stacy-H@mariner.org
100 Museum Drive
Newport News, VA 23606
(757) 591-7748

Grade 5-12: SEA MONSTERS: Truth or Tale by Mote Marine Laboratory

Dare to enter the deep. Come face to face with monstrous beasts. But what is the most dangerous one of them all?

Availability: By Request/On Demand ONLY
Audience: Education: Grade(s): 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, Public Library: Library Patrons

Grade 1-2: SEA ME READ: Clumsy Crab by Mote Marine Laboratory

COMING SOON! THIS PROGRAM IS NOT YET AVAILABLE FOR REGISTRATION.Nipper's huge, clumsy claws always seem to get in the way! While playing with his friends, his big claws break things, and are just plain clumsy! When Nipper's friend Octopus is in trouble, can his big, clumsy claws save the day? Find out as we read this exciting story from the sea!

Availability: By Request/On Demand ONLY
Audience: Education: Pre-K Students, Kindergarten, Grade(s): 1, 2