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The National STEM Guitar Project, in partnership with NSF Advanced Technological Education (ATE) Centers with funding provided through a grant from The National Science Foundation (#1304405), hosts innovative Guitar Building Institutes around the United States. The 5-day institutes, combined with additional instructional activities comprising 80 hours, provide faculty training on science, technology, engineering and math (STEM) for middle, high school, and post-secondary faculty. The institutes present and teach participants hands-on, applied learning techniques to help engage students and spark excitement for learning STEM subject matter.
Nationwide, there are increasing concerns from businesses about the supply of science, technology, engineering, and mathematics trained workers. Science and math test scores in the U.S. are among the lowest around the world.
The goal and objective of the STEM Guitar Building Institutes is to showcase a new way to present learning for students with applied methods.
All the window and door trim is done and there is screening in the windows.
There's still a lot left to do, but my god, I may actually finish it this year in time for chickens.
i have my new addiction, Starbucks Tazo Passion tea...*drools*...plus it's a pretty color...i need more pretty colored drinks added to my day...
Get Project Profile making services online with Bkash, Rocket or Nagad mobile payment in Bangladesh from Rayhans.
Project 366-1 2009 March 17 76/365
This nest is small, no more than 3-4 inches across. I walked within a few feet of it and never saw it while the leaves were on the trees last summer. The nest builder wasn't opposed to a bit of man-made material.
Wendy Maruyama
The Tag Project/Executive Order 9066
Sept. 8 - Nov. 3, 2012
Reception: Friday Sept.21, 6-8pm at SAC
Dinner & Taiko drum show: Friday Sept. 21, 8-10pm, Old South Church
Mary Norton Hall, 645 Boylston St. $100 per person, $90 SAC members.
Artist Lecture: Saturday Sept. 22, 11:00 am, Old South Church, Mary Norton Hall, 645 Boylston St.
In 1942, President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed Executive Order 9066 authorizing the internment of tens of thousands of American citizens and resident aliens of Japanese ancestry. Wendy Maruyama, a third generation Japanese-American and highly regarded artist/furniture maker based in San Diego, has created a compelling body of work examining this period in American history.
The exhibition includes three integrated parts: Executive Order 9066, the Tag Project, and a selection of historical artifacts. Executive Order 9066 involves a series of wall-mounted cabinets and sculptures referencing themes common in the internment camps. Maruyama's pieces integrate photo transfers based on the documentary photographs of Dorothea Lange and Toyo Miyatake in conjunction with materials such as barbed wire, tarpaper and domestic objects. The Tag Project consists of groupings of 120,000 recreated paper identification tags suspended from the ceiling. The suspended tags evoke a powerful sense of the humiliation endured by the internees and the sheer numbers of those displaced.
Maruyama's inclusion of actual objects owned or made by the internees brings an intensely personal awareness to the impact of Executive Order 9066. Included objects range from actual suitcases used by families during their relocation to an array of items made by internees from available materials in the camps.
Haven't had much time to take pictures, quickly took this one last night. Old milk cans and an old tea pot, I love old things.
You can find them for sale here
picperfic.co.uk/ourshop/cat_983366-All-bags.html
I designed these cute bags for small knitting/crochet projects but they'd be brilliant for so many more occasions!
Make-up, nappies, undies, crayons....
Specs:
Quality quilting weight cotton fabrics
Fully stabilised using a woven cotton fusible interfacing on both the main fabric and the lining
Cute Kam Snaps for closure
Measures 9" x 8" tall and 5 1/2" deep at base, 23cm x 20cm tall and 14cm deep at base
Perfect for holding a small/medium project
Will easily hold up to 200g yarn
I hope you enjoy these cute little bags as much as I do!
The Eden Project is a visitor attraction in the United Kingdom, including the world's largest greenhouse.
Inside the artificial biomes are plants that are collected from all around the world. The project is located in a reclaimed Kaolinite pit, located 2 kilometers (1.25 mi) from the town of St Blazey and 5 kilometres (3 mi) from the larger town of St Austell, Cornwall.
The complex is dominated by two enclosures consisting of adjoining domes that house plant species from around the world. Each enclosure emulates a natural biome. The domes consist of hundreds of hexagonal and pentagonal, inflated, plastic cells supported by steel frames. The first dome emulates a tropical environment, and the second a Mediterranean environment.
The project was conceived by Tim Smit and designed by architect Nicholas Grimshaw and engineering firm Anthony Hunt and Associates (now part of Sinclair Knight Merz). Davis Langdon carried out the project management, Sir Robert McAlpine and Alfred McAlpine did the construction and MERO designed and built the biomes. Land Use Consultants led the masterplan and landscape design. The project took 2½ years to construct and opened to the public on 17 March 2001.
Lots and lots of pins - turning a pair of very long curtains from my house in England into two pairs of curtains to fit two rooms in my house in New Zealand.
Wednesday, 28th September 2016
Tem resenha lá no blog! É só clicar aqui.
________________________
My band's page on Facebook: The Knockers
My blog: Over The Heel
Facebook: Sabrina Franzoni
A tale of three flags. Today is a flag day in Finland: flags must be flown from all public buildings, and most private buildings with flagpoles follow this as well. Today's particularly important, being the day of the Kalevala.
Top left: looking down Laivapojankatu (near home). Top right: looking down Jaalaranta (near home). Bottom: Nokia Research Centre (my office). All in Ruoholahti.
(Not an overly windy day, as you can tell. The flag at work refused to co-operate. Also, apologies for the quality: I forgot my camera today, so these were taken with my N90 and later cropped to fit in the same image.)
London Muslim Centre. Photo by Asad Mirza, Urdu Press Officer, British High Commission, New Delhi, India.
Red Cross volunteer Carmella Ditmars hands out pillowcases to students during The Pillowcase Project presentation at the Wharton Public Library on July 30.
Photo taken July 30, 2014 in Wharton, NJ
American Red Cross/Erica M. Viviani
The fear and loathing of project work.
Ryan still trying hard, but nearly had enough for the day.
Cinderella.
NSW.
I'm going to a Fringe Festival performance this evening. I've bought tickets for about half a dozen shows and bought 'fringe addicts price' tickets. So this lunch time I went out to buy my fringe addict card. The booking office is in Cuba Street, quite a long walk from my office. But today they have a sales bike on the waterfront near Wagamama, just down the road from my office. They were giving out Fringe Festival brochures and were surprised when I walked straight up to them and asked to buy and addicts card.
Friday, 12th February 2016