Comparison of Fractions: 3 Videos
Part 1: Comparing like and unlike fractions
Part 2: Examples of comparing like and unlike fractions
Part 3: Common mistakes made when comparing fractions
Part 1: Comparing like and unlike fractions
Part 2: Examples of comparing like and unlike fractions
Part 3: Common mistakes made when comparing fractions
This online resource discusses the distribution of earth's water.
Fraction comparison with lowest common denominators.
This video explains how to order fractions by their size.
This YouTube video will guide you through a fun activity where you will draw the earth's continents and oceans.
YouTube video that explains how to use prime factorization to find the highest common factor and lowest common multiple. It is very simple using the method described in the video.
This online resource discusses the importance of the ocean, the layers and composition of the ocean and how it moderates climates.
Electric charge comes in two varieties, which we call positive and negative. Like charges repel each other, and unlike charges attract each other. Thus, two positive charges repel each other, as do two negative charges. A positive charge and a negative charge attract each other.
How do we know there are two types of electric charge? When various materials are rubbed together in controlled ways, certain combinations of materials always result in a net charge of one type on one material and a net charge of the opposite type on the other material. By convention, we call one type of charge positive and the other type negative.
This online resource investigates the features and topology of the ocean floor, the effects of wave erosion and the landforms created by coastal depositions.