Saturday, September 24, 2016

A Guide for Using Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry in the Classroom (Literature Units) by Michael Levin *eBooks Online Free »PDF

A Guide for Using Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry in the Classroom (Literature Units) This reproducible book presents an exciting approach to teaching well-known literature! It includes sample plans, author information, vocabulary building ideas, cross-curriculum activities, sectional


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A Guide for Using Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry in the Classroom (Literature Units)

Title:A Guide for Using Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry in the Classroom (Literature Units)
Author:Michael Levin
Rating:4.73 (250 Votes)
Asin:1557344396
Format Type:Paperback
Number of Pages:48 Pages
Publish Date:1994-01-01
Genre:

Editorial :

This resource is directly related to its literature equivalent and filled with a variety of cross-curricular lessons to do before, during, and after reading the book. This reproducible book presents an exciting approach to teaching well-known literature! It includes sample plans, author information, vocabulary building ideas, cross-curriculum activities, sectional activities and quizzes, unit tests, and many ideas for culminating and extending the novel.

But it’s not, look at the title.

The bulk of the book is trying to prove that Tesla’s most famous documented invention (I’m not including his alleged remote wireless transmission of power, which was undocumented), in 1881, of a brushless AC motor, is no big deal. One major problem though is that the publisher went cheap in graphic layout, there is no graphics, all code is printed out in regular text type which makes code and spacing very hard to read. But instead the author tries to make Tesla look foolish or small for following US patent law.

What did I like about this book? A few tidbits, such as the sidebar on the ancient Persian “Baghdad Battery” discovered in 1938 but understood better only in the 1990s, the details of which I did not know exactly, and some rather obscure technical matters relating to a improved AC motor that uses less copper known as a “split-phase design” that the author makes the plausible case tha

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