The North Vancouver School District has responded to a Supreme Court of Canada ruled last week that it had discriminated against a student because...
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The North Vancouver School District has responded to a Supreme Court of Canada ruled last week that it had discriminated against a student because...
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"See Rome as it looked in 320 AD and fly down to see famous buildings and monuments in 3D. Select the 'Ancient Rome 3D' layer under Gallery in Google Earth." Via Seth Dixon
Lou Salza's insight:
Amazing opportunity for students to "see" Anciant Rome and explore monuments as they once looked and functioned.
Reneé Windle's curator insight,
May 1, 10:44 PM
This is a really interesting way to visualise what Ancient Rome looked like thousands of years ago and to learn about some of Rome's most historical landmarks in relation to the Roman Empire. Delete the scoop?
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This provies the basic overview of the layout and function of http://geteach.com . The video unlocks some great features that are not intended to be hidden, but many first time visitors tend to miss.
This is a phenomenal site, designed by an AP teacher to bring geospatial technologies into the classroom in a way that is incredibly user-friendly. This site allows you to use Google Earth with clickable layers. With multiple data layers of physical and human geography variables, this interactive globe puts spatial information in powerful, yet fun, student-inspired platform. Via Seth Dixon Delete the scoop?
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This provies the basic overview of the layout and function of http://geteach.com . The video unlocks some great features that are not intended to be hidden, but many first time visitors tend to miss.
This is a phenomenal site, designed by an AP teacher to bring geospatial technologies into the classroom in a way that is incredibly user-friendly. This site allows you to use Google Earth with clickable layers. With multiple data layers of physical and human geography variables, this interactive globe puts spatial information in powerful, yet fun, student-inspired platform. Via Seth Dixon Delete the scoop?
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