Not exact matches
PRODUCT PERKS Explore numbers, patterns, measurement, grouping, and more with this set of colorful tiles Tiles can supplement lessons in counting, addition, subraction, grouping, pattern matching, and more Four vibrant colors (red, blue, yellow, and green) Soft, durable, and quiet foam material WHAT TO TEACH Sorting - Sort the Color Tiles into unique groups Patterns - Create patterns using Color Tiles One More and One Less - Comparing numbers 1 through 10 Number Sense - Exploring the numbers 0 through 10 Make Ten - Increasing number sense by investigating the combination of Color Tiles needed to make a train of 10 tiles Addition - Developing the concept of addition Measuring - Take common objects for size comparison and estimate which object is longer
Fractions - Introduce fractions Probability - Investigate probability Logical Thinking - Exploring problem solving and spatial reasoning RESOURCES Learning About... Color Tiles INCLUDES 400 Foam Color Tiles 1 Storage
Fractions - Introduce
fractions Probability - Investigate probability Logical Thinking - Exploring problem solving and spatial reasoning RESOURCES Learning About... Color Tiles INCLUDES 400 Foam Color Tiles 1 Storage
fractions Probability - Investigate probability Logical Thinking - Exploring problem solving and spatial
reasoning RESOURCES Learning
About... Color Tiles INCLUDES 400 Foam Color Tiles 1 Storage container
This task promotes deep
reasoning about grade - level
fraction concepts, and students engage in the task appropriately.
There was some buzz
about this last week, but now it's official: Writer Matt
Fraction revealed on Twitter yesterday that Apple will not carry the second issue of his comic, Sex Criminals, and he quoted Apple's stated
reason why: «We found that one or more of your In - App Purchases contains content that many audiences would find objectionable, which is not in compliance with the App Store Review Guidelines.»
These credits are sold at a
fraction of the regulatory market price to buyers concerned
about reducing their carbon footprint for
reasons other than compliance with the law, as documented in State of the Voluntary Carbon Markets 2008, published by the Ecosystem Marketplace and New Carbon Finance.
For this
reason, some
fraction of the apparent «global warming» we have heard so much
about is probably not real, but an artefact of the non-climatic biases.