If you dream of
sharing your creations beyond your classroom walls (and making extra money in the process) the following ideas will help:
Not exact matches
There is a danger that, if that is properly recognised, those critics who would like to see (mainly US) platform providers taxed on a significant
share of their revenues from outside the US will be disappointed — or, if it is not, the Government will have been tempted into measures that move
beyond the value
creation principle.
The district will
share lessons learned from best practices around bring your own device implementation, equipping buses with Wi - Fi, and its
creation of
Beyond Textbooks, a comprehensive program that supports curriculum, instruction, assessment, and multi-level interventions.
A shift in education requires a focus on learners, core 21st century competencies and technology to support the
creation and
sharing of knowledge along with an understanding that education expands
beyond the school.
Students want to
share their learning and
creations well
beyond the walls of the classroom.
While the aristocracy has always provided the lion's
share of the patronage and the audience for art — as, indeed, the aristocracy of wealth does even in our more democratic days — it has contributed little
beyond amateurish efforts to the
creation of art itself, despite the fact that aristocrats (like many women) have had more than their
share of educational advantages, plenty of leisure and, indeed, like women, were often encouraged to dabble in the arts and even develop into respectable amateurs, like Napoleon III's cousin, the Princess Mathilde, who exhibited at the official Salons, or Queen Victoria, who, with Prince Albert, studied art with no less a figure than Landseer himself.
Wile the aristocracy has always provided the lion's
share of the patronage and the audience for art — as, indeed, the aristocracy of wealth does even in our more democratic days — it has contributed little
beyond amateurish efforts to the
creation of art itself, despite the fact that aristocrats (like many women) have had more than their
share of educational advantages, plenty of leisure and, indeed, like women, were often encouraged to dabble in the arts and even develop into respectable amateurs, like Napoleon III's cousin, the Princess Mathilde, who exhibited at the official Salons, or Queen Victoria, who, with Prince Albert, studied art with no less a figure than Landseer himself.