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Looking at picture books is a good way for children to practice talking. Learning that pictures depict real things is a step in learning that words stand for something and that printed words tell a story. Looking at picture books with a child is different from reading because the goal is to get the child to talk. This activity will prompt children to understand new words and discover better ways to express themselves. From the Series:Language Is The Key
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Video Length: 1222
Date Found: February 12, 2009
Date Produced: January 01, 1997
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ResearchChannel |
May 16, 2010
City in Five Acts: Interpreting Urban Experience You’re invited to the sixth lecture in the University of Washington's NEXT CITY: Sustainable Urbanization series. Daniel S. Friedman, Dean of the UW College of Built Environments, will deliver the Spring 2010 Provost Distinguished ...
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ResearchChannel |
March 09, 2010
Understand the role information systems can play in clinical and translational research, drawing upon the experience of the Biomedical Informatics Core of the CTSA-funded Institute of Translational Health Sciences (www.iths.org). The University of Washington’s Dr. Peter Tarczy-Hornoch, ...
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ResearchChannel |
October 31, 2009
Author and illustrator Maurice Sendak isn’t afraid to show the darker side of childhood. Find out what inspired his book “Where the Wild Things Are” and what made the story so groundbreaking. In this 1991 interview host Marcia Alvar also asks Sendak about other projects, including how the ...
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ResearchChannel |
June 27, 2009
A love for travel inspired author and photographer Phil Borges' striking portraits of indigenous peoples around the world, but his work with various humanitarian organizations, and the creation of the non-profit Bridges to Understanding to bring digital storytelling to teens around the ...
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ResearchChannel |
April 04, 2009
In this University of Maryland, Baltimore County program, Ed Beimfohr sits down with Christopher Corbett, author of "Orphans Preferred: The Twisted Truth and Lasting Legend of the Pony Express," for a discussion of the beloved American myth of the Wild West. Behind the image of a lone rider ...
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