Curated OER
My Daily Activities
In this daily activities learning exercise, students fill in times of when they do certain daily activities, using am and pm, 12 statements total. A reference web site is given.
Curated OER
Stories to Graphs: Practice A
Ninth graders interpret graphs. In this Algebra I lesson, 9th graders examine graphs as an interpretation of a story. Students match graphs to story problems and create their own graphs given a story situation.
PBS
Pbs: Shower vs. Bath: Ratio and Rate
Compare the cost of taking a shower with the cost of taking a bath. This interactive exercise focuses on using what you know about ratios to make a prediction about whether a shower or a bath is most cost effective and then requires...
PBS
Pbs Kids: Peg + Cat: Games: Bubble Bath
Help Pet and Cat fill the bathtub with water by picking a container and pouring water into the tub. You will have to estimate how many containers it will take to fill the tub with water and then see if you are correct.
TED Talks
Ted: Ted Ed: How Taking a Bath Led to Archimedes' Principle
This video explains how the early Greek mathematician Archimedes discovered the principle relating density, volume, and displacement of water. [3:01] Includes a brief quiz and a list of additional resources to explore.
Science Buddies
Science Buddies: Recycling Greywater: Can Plants Tolerate It?
Water is a valuable resource many often take for granted. This exercise however gives you the opportunity to learn about and discover how greywater (water that has been used for washing or bathing) can be used for watering ornamental...
PBS
Pbs Kids: Peg and Cat: Scrub a Dub
Help the farmer clean up his animals so he can take their photos. Match the animals to their right-sized bath tools.
Curated OER
Educational Technology Clearinghouse: Maps Etc: England, Ad 584
A map of England and Wales in AD 584 at the end of the conquest of the Britons by West Saxons under Ceawlin and Cutha. The map is color-coded to show the territories of the native Britons or Welsh, Angles, Saxons, Jutes, and the Scots...