Found here.
No search function, but words can be found by alpha.
Here is an A & E biography on Frederick Douglas. It’s found on Hulu.com. I can’t embed it because the coding doesn’t work with WordPress. It’s about 50 minutes long.
Enjoy it!
We will continue to work on Measurement this week.
There will still be a test when we’ve gone over all of it again!
Don’t forget your AR book. You need to come back ready to test on it!
Here is a variety of information from biography.com
New (to me) math game - Math Run
Nice photo essay . . .
Monday: Fraction all types + & -
Tuesday: Decimals + & -
Wednesday: Test
Thursday: Measurement – length (customary & metric)
Friday: Measurement – weight/mass (customary & metric)
President Obama’s letter about Greensboro Sit-ins
Published January 24, 2010 In The News , USA History Leave a CommentObama: Greensboro sit-ins left mark on nation
SUNDAY, JANUARY 24, 2010 (Updated 7:47 am)
In 1960, four young students from North Carolina A&T walked into a Woolworth store in Greensboro, North Carolina, sat down at a lunch counter and reignited a movement for social justice that would forever change America.
Inspired by the words and deeds of a young preacher who catalyzed a bus boycott in Montgomery, Alabama, Franklin E. McCain, Joseph A. McNeil, David L. Richmond and Jibreel Khazan (Ezell Blair Jr.) decided that enough was enough.
They knew they would be the subject of ridicule and bigotry upon taking their seats. But they also knew that what was happening in Greensboro and throughout the country was an affront to America’s founding ideals of freedom, equality and justice for all.
After ordering coffee and being refused service, the men who would become known as the Greensboro Four left the lunch counter, but the moments they sat in those chairs have had a lasting impact on our nation.
The quiet dignity of this simple act sparked other sit-ins in Greensboro and across the country.
The lessons taught at that five-and-dime challenged us to consider who we are as a nation and what kind of future we want to build for our children.
We know the rest of the story. One year later, the Freedom Riders made their brave trek across the South. Two summers after that, the same Montgomery preacher who inspired the Greensboro Four would stand on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial and pronounce his dream for America. One year later came the Civil Rights Act, and the next year, the Voting Rights Act, which helped secure for African Americans — and all Americans — a fundamental right to share in the blessings of this country.
To the four young men who courageously sat down to order a cup of coffee 50 years ago, and to all who they inspired, I simply say, thank you.
Too cool!



