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Williams, Alyson E. – Young Children, 2008
In the real world, helping infants explore the earth is not always practical. The logistics of enjoying nature with a group of infants and toddlers in a city can be daunting; however, with a few smart policies and wise decisions about health and safety, sharing nature with young children brings rewards that more than make up for the…
Descriptors: Environmental Education, Toddlers, Infants, Rewards
Pigram, J. J. J.; Hobbs, J. E. – Journal of Physical Education and Recreation, 1975
The influence of weather in determining suitability of areas for outdoor recreation is discussed. (PS)
Descriptors: Business Cycles, Climate, Recreation, Tourism
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Lester, David – Suicide and Life-Threatening Behavior, 1986
Explored variation of suicide and homicide rates in the major standard metropolitan statistical areas of the United States to see whether regional variations in temperature and precipitation could account for some of the variation. Only the correlation between precipitation and homicide rates survived controls for latitude and longitude.…
Descriptors: Climate, Correlation, Crime, Environmental Influences
Frydenlund, Marvin M. – Parks and Recreation, 1987
A formula for assessing specific risk of lightning strikes is provided. Recent legal cases are used to illustrate potential liability. Six actions park managers can take to minimize danger from lightning are presented, and commonsense rules which should be publicly posted are listed. (MT)
Descriptors: Injuries, Legal Responsibility, Parks, Prevention
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Eagleman, Joe R. – Journal of Geography, 1981
This discussion of weather models uses maps to illustrate the differences among three types of frontal cyclones (long wave, short wave, and troughs). Awareness of these cyclones can provide clues to atmospheric conditions which can lead toward accurate weather forecasting. (AM)
Descriptors: Climate, Maps, Meteorology, Models
Young, Terrence E., Jr. – Library Media Connection, 2006
History teaches that a lack of disaster awareness and preparation are common threads among all major weather-related disasters. Weather hazards come in many forms: storm surge, high winds, blizzards, earthquakes, hurricanes, tornadoes, flooding, or a combination of these. It is important for both family and work colleagues to have an action plan…
Descriptors: Natural Disasters, Weather, Emergency Programs, School Libraries
Richard, Alan – Education Week, 2006
In this article, the author reports what the administrators and educators in Bay St. Louis-Waveland, the last district in Mississippi to reopen following Hurricane Katrina, are doing in order to keep their students in school after Hurricane Katrina. Students in this district attend classes in portable classrooms linked by wooden boardwalks that…
Descriptors: School Administration, School Districts, Natural Disasters, Weather
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Journal of College Science Teaching, 2005
According to a new study by two University of California, Berkeley, mathematicians and their Russian colleague, the water droplets kicked up by rough seas serve to lubricate the swirling winds of hurricanes and cyclones, letting them build to speeds approaching 200 miles per hour. Without the lubricating effect of the spray, the mathematicians…
Descriptors: Oceanography, Weather, Professional Personnel, Equations (Mathematics)
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Marcotte, Dave E. – Economics of Education Review, 2007
In the economics of education, no task has been more important or more difficult than identifying the relationship between school inputs and student performance. The literature on this topic has reached little resolution, largely owing to the endogeneity of school resources. In this paper I examine the effect of a vital but little studied…
Descriptors: Economics, Productivity, Performance Based Assessment, Performance Tests
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Fontaine, Joseph J.; Stier, Samuel C.; Maggio, Melissa L.; Decker, Karie L. – Science Teacher, 2007
Students can gain an appreciation for the structure and function of local environments by studying the potential impacts of small changes in local microclimate on plant distribution. The concept of microclimate is easy for students to comprehend, simple to measure, exists in all schoolyards, and has important and tangible ecological implications.…
Descriptors: Plants (Botany), Playgrounds, Botany, Ecology
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Gheytanchi, Anahita; Joseph, Lisa; Gierlach, Elaine; Kimpara, Satoko; Housley, Jennifer; Franco, Zeno E.; Beutler, Larry E. – American Psychologist, 2007
This comprehensive analysis addresses the United States' alarming lack of preparedness to respond effectively to a massive disaster as evidenced by Hurricane Katrina. First, a timeline of problematic response events during and after Hurricane Katrina orients readers to some of the specific problems encountered at different levels of government.…
Descriptors: Natural Disasters, Weather, Emergency Programs, Crisis Management
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Childs, John Brown – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 2008
Many people are invisible within and to the wider society. An adjunct aspect of that situation is that the marginalized are also invisible to one another. This "mutual invisibility" undermines the possibilities of cooperative transcommunal alliances. It is Cedric Sunray's ("Similarities between Tribes and the Ninth Ward,"…
Descriptors: Disadvantaged, Cooperation, Government Role, Federal Government
MOSAIC, 1974
A study in St. Louis shows that large urban areas can have significant local and downwind effects. (Editor)
Descriptors: Heat, Meteorology, Municipalities, Prediction
Snow, John T. – Scientific American, 1984
Although tornadoes have been one of the most elusive phenomena in meteorology, new observation techniques are now revealing how they are spawned by thunderstorms. Tornado structure and formation, thunderstorms, tornadic thunderstorms, and the evolution and structure of such thunderstorms are considered. Why the Midwest has frequent tornadoes is…
Descriptors: Meteorology, Natural Disasters, Scientific Research, Weather
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Gantz, Walter – Journalism Quarterly, 1982
Concludes that next-day weather forecasts given by television stations are usually accurate and that stations seldom change their forecasts between the early evening and late evening newscasts. (FL)
Descriptors: Content Analysis, News Reporting, Television, Television Research
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