View allAll Photos Tagged handsonlearning

photo by R. Charles O'Connor

We had an architect in training at The Young People's Room at the Downtown Branch! They were shy, so we didn't take their picture. We wanted to share their excellent work with you.

 

Photo courtesy of Jesse S.

HISP 655 Vernacular Architecture students meet at Bostwick House for an 'outside the classroom' session

ENES 100, Introduction to Engineering Design-Hovercraft Competition at the A. James Clark School of Engineering Kim Building at the University of Maryland, College Park. (Alan P. Santos Photography)

She's hard at work creating a penguin with an egg, olives, and carrot slices.

VetTRAC summer program, an initiative of InclusiveVT.

Photo by Robert Hoffman PVUSD Science Curriculum Coach, Watsonville, CA

VetTRAC summer program, an initiative of InclusiveVT.

hundreds of students from Grades 4 to 12 participated in our annual VSB Science Celebration— for elementary students— and the District Science Fair —for secondary students.

  

Thank you to all the teachers and staff who work tirelessly to organize these events. And to our community partners at Langara College and Science World.

 

Photo by Robert Hoffman PVUSD Science Curriculum Coach, Watsonville, CA

Let loose and sculpt using fabric, wire and an exterior fabric hardener to create fun and funky birds who won’t be flying south any time soon! Spend the day with Rita Wildschut as she leads you through the creation of this whimsical addition to your garden or pond environment. Back by popular demand, this workshop is a delightful way to explore the creativity you didn’t know you had.

M • Jul 16 • 9am–4pm

Photo by Robert Hoffman PVUSD Science Curriculum Coach, Watsonville, CA

UW-Madison Bachelor of Business Administration LEAD Course, Fall 2015 Screen printing & Bookmaking Project in response to Just Mercy by Bryan Stevenson

A collaboration of Wisconsin School of Business, Wheelhouse Studios at Memorial Union, and UW-Madison’s Go Big Read Program

Photo by John A Kilmer - University of Florida

Are you at all familiar with soil horizons? Here you can see a paleosol, an ancient soil frozen in time with its original layered structure still intact. The dark layer is the Organic (O) or top soil (A) layer. Next you have the washed eluviation layer (E) where groundwater percolated down to the subsoil (B). This paleosol was preserved because it was covered in a pyroclastic rock flow from a volcano. The 'welded tuff' above the organic layer is made up of bits of rocks and ash that sealed the soil in place.

Photo by Robert Hoffman PVUSD Science Curriculum Coach, Watsonville, CA

1 2 ••• 34 35 37 39 40 ••• 79 80