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Showing posts from June, 2024

44 Better Ways To Use Smartphones In The Classroom

Using Smartphones to Collaborate Allow students group assess their classmates’ writ ups using a  Google Form   inserted in a teacher's page, and let them to see real-time constructive engagement. Then, redesign the spreadsheet and share with students. Believe it or not,they will be keenly interested.  Give room for text messages in the class, so as to group-edit and engage constructively on writing projects. Imagine the thought of students collaborating write up statements and introductory paragraphs without you uttering a word. This is one of the numerous strategies, we can employ to create a quiet and eventful writing condition as in  Studio 113 .  Make brainstorming come alive using a projected image using www.bubbl.us and www.stormboard.com . Using these two sites is totally easy. Even though you require an internet connection, students can use a cell phone. Make a public list of notes by making a Google Form available or insert Google Forms on your teacher pag

How Reverse Osmosis Works

Reverse osmosis  is one of the processes that makes  desalination  (or removing salt from seawater) possible. Beyond that, reverse osmosis is used for recycling, wastewater treatment, and can even produce energy. Water issues have become an extremely pressing global threat. With climate change come unprecedented environmental impacts: torrential  flooding  in some areas, droughts in others, rising and falling sea levels. Add to that the threat of overpopulation -- and the demand and pollution a swelling  population  brings -- and water becomes one of the paramount environmental issues to watch for in the next GENERATION . Water treatment plants and systems are now adapting reverse osmosis to address some of these concerns. In Perth, Australia (notably dry and arid, yet surrounded by sea), nearly 17 percent of the area's drinking water is desalinated sea water that comes from a reverse osmosis plant [source:  The Economist ]. Worldwide, there are now over 13,000 desalination p

How Touch screens Work

Touch Screen Backstory Automobiles,  airplanes ,  computers , and  steam engines —touchscreens belong in the cliche of these famous innovations because they do not have a particular inventor and a real, "Eureka" moment : in other words, no one man or woman invented the touchscreen. The first innovation that comes close in resemblance to using a touchscreen was known as a  light pen , a  stylus  with a  photocell  in one place end, and a cable connecting the computer to the other end, that is able to draw graphics on the screen. It was developed in the 1950s and forms an integral part of one of the foremost computer systems to possess graphics,  Project Whirlwind . Light pens do not work like recent touchscreens. Eventhough, there was nothing spectacular about the screen itself,all the work took place within the pen and the computer it was connected to. In the 1960s and early 1970s, a different approach in the development of touchscreens emanated from the researc

How Total Station Works

WHAT IS A TOTAL STATION? Theodolite A  theodolite   / θ iː ˈ ɒ d ə l aɪ t /  is a precision instrument for measuring  angles  in the horizontal and vertical planes. Theodolites are used mainly for  surveying  applications, and have been adapted for specialized purposes such as  meteorology  and  rocket launch . [1] A modern theodolite consists of a movable  telescope  mounted within two perpendicular  axes : the horizontal or  trunnion  axis and the  zenith axis. A theodolite measures vertical angles as angles between the zenith, forwards or plunged—typically approximately 90 and 270  degrees . When the telescope is pointed at a target object, the angle of each of these axes can be measured with great precision, typically to  milliradian  or  seconds of arc . A theodolite may be either transit or non-transit. In a transit theodolite, the telescope can be inverted in the vertical plane, whereas the rotation in the same plane is restricted to a semi-circle in a non-trans