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LEARN NC
Добавлен 14 фев 2012
Automobile Parade
This may be the first annual automobile parade, held on November 4, 1899 in downtown Manhattan.
Просмотров: 686
Видео
Bed warmer
Просмотров 24 тыс.8 лет назад
Video demonstration of a bed warmer, a tool used by families in the 1700s and 1800s to keep their beds warm.
Broadax demo
Просмотров 2 тыс.8 лет назад
Historical tool demonstration, showing a man using a broad ax and adze to prepare timber for construction.
Pitchfork
Просмотров 4078 лет назад
Video showing construction of a pitchfork or hayfork and describing its use in early farming.
The Power of Historical Narratives
Просмотров 1,8 тыс.9 лет назад
At the Meuse-Argonne American Cemetery, Katie Gulledge, a middle school teacher in Cary, N.C., talks about her visit to France as part of a LEARN NC project. LEARN NC collaborated with the American Battle Monuments Commission, educators from Virginia Tech, and teachers from North Carolina and Virginia to create a teaching guide about World War I. The free guide - “Bringing the Great War Home: T...
NC History Promo
Просмотров 2879 лет назад
Copyright 2010 LEARN NC. Creative Commons License creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/
LEARN NC Web conference archive: Tiering to avoid tears
Просмотров 5919 лет назад
Archive of the web conference "Tiering to Avoid Tears: Developing Assignments That Address All Learners' Needs," which took place Sept. 27, 2010.
LEARN NC Web conference archive: Deaf learners and successful cognitive achievement
Просмотров 1719 лет назад
Archive of the web conference "Deaf Learners and Successful Cognitive Achievement," which took place Oct. 25, 2010. Closed captioning transcript provided by David Sperling.
Dean McDiarmid-Full Interview
Просмотров 499 лет назад
Copyright LEARN NC. Creative Commons License creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/
Dean McDiarmid Interview: Opening remarks
Просмотров 479 лет назад
Copyright LEARN NC. Creative Commons License creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/
Shrinking ice, rising seas
Просмотров 2189 лет назад
NASA synopsis: Sea level rise is an indicator that our planet is warming. Much of the world's population lives on or near the coast, and rising seas are something worth watching. Sea level can rise for two reasons, both linked to a warming planet. When ice on land, such as mountain glaciers or the ice sheets of Greenland or Antarctica, melt, that water contributes to sea level rise. And when ou...
Crossing a Cravasse
Просмотров 1179 лет назад
Ciprian Popoviciu's climbing partner, Vance Cook, crosses a crevasse on the ice falls of the Khumbu Glacier at Mount Everest in April 2008. Climbers use ladders to cross crevasses. It is dangerous and climbers must use both hands on the guide ropes to keep themselves steady on the ladder. Copyright 2009 Ciprian Popoviciu. All Rights Reserved
LEARN NC Web conference archive: Engaging deaf learners in the mainstream classroom
Просмотров 869 лет назад
Archive of the web conference "Engaging Deaf Learners in the Mainstream Classroom," which took place April 18, 2011. Copyright 2011 LEARN NC.
LEARN NC Web conference archive: Who cares-Using real world perspectives to engage gifted learners
Просмотров 1009 лет назад
Archive of the web conference "Who Cares? Using Real-World Perspectives to Engage Academically Gifted Learners," which took place Jan. 10, 2011. Copyright 2011 LEARN NC.
LEARN NC Web conference archive: Using knowledge of student cognition to differentiate instruction
Просмотров 269 лет назад
LEARN NC Web conference archive: Using knowledge of student cognition to differentiate instruction
LEARN NC Web conference archive: The power of nonfiction
Просмотров 3419 лет назад
LEARN NC Web conference archive: The power of nonfiction
LEARN NC Web conference archive: Inclusion strategies for students with autism spectrum disorders
Просмотров 1439 лет назад
LEARN NC Web conference archive: Inclusion strategies for students with autism spectrum disorders
LEARN NC Web conference archive: Differentiating with technology
Просмотров 5249 лет назад
LEARN NC Web conference archive: Differentiating with technology
LEARN NC Web conference archive: Managing/improving behavior in inclusive educational environments
Просмотров 1779 лет назад
LEARN NC Web conference archive: Managing/improving behavior in inclusive educational environments
Using technology to differentiate by learning environment
Просмотров 3609 лет назад
Using technology to differentiate by learning environment
Using technology to differentiate by process
Просмотров 3,5 тыс.9 лет назад
Using technology to differentiate by process
Using technology to differentiate by product
Просмотров 2,2 тыс.9 лет назад
Using technology to differentiate by product
The benefits of teaching with nonfiction
Просмотров 1,3 тыс.9 лет назад
The benefits of teaching with nonfiction
Using virtual worlds to engage gifted learners
Просмотров 3,1 тыс.9 лет назад
Using virtual worlds to engage gifted learners
Using technology to differentiate by content
Просмотров 4,1 тыс.9 лет назад
Using technology to differentiate by content
Supporting autistic students in inclusion settings
Просмотров 10 тыс.9 лет назад
Supporting autistic students in inclusion settings
I live in the foothills, we still talk like this - and I love my people
When I bought penny candy I would ask for a poke and the lady would poke me and laugh………
Can't believe I am the first one to comment. Great video!
Blue cap is uncle bill. ❤❤
Blue cap is uncle bill. ❤❤
(Pi:ląhuk. Nahą:pipi Charles mįkilá:kewa. Raleigh, NC watí:wa. Míma Monacan Yesą.) Thank you. Good day. My name is Charles. I live in Raleigh, NC. I am of the Monacan people. (Yesą́ Nǫ:sa: Wągi:tá oho: One people, Many Cousins) (Wita:he:hu:k meku: All friends are welcome)
Well this video was not useful mostly just had propaganda
Well this video was not useful mostly just had propaganda
❤❤❤
GOD Bless you all, from MICHIGAN
I live in tri-cities area of Tennessee and this video definitely rings home!
i grew up in eastern ky i worked in my uncle's fields it was the hardest work i ever done
3:47 the way the video was edited,I thought someone was throwing tobacco on that guy's head.
How i. Remember.
Jim Tom mis u
I remember friends at school who picked tobacco. They would get tobacco rash. Nasty looking rash.
I am from Mississippi and i recognised 19 out of 20. Beautiful. We even had a convenience store chain called the Tote Sum store. lol
Takes me back to my childhood. "Jah eet yet?" Yes'um
I wish that the mountain people would quit selling their land to Northerners let's keep North Carolina North Carolina
They dont care about family all i remember about him was he called soda. Pop he died 1997 my mom died 2001
My dad was from Tabor City North Carolina did not know much about him saw him every 10 years did not care if l seen him or not his family did not care if they seen us or not guess that is what they mean sometimes you have to step away
I so love this video. My people, my family. 😊😊
Very good vidio, i learned a bunch
Thank You Papa and Mama Sharpe for sharing your friendship and contribution of service to this country. We will always Cherish and Remember you! Rest In Paradise Mama Jessie.🙏🏾💐❤️
Southern people are wonderful!
3:45 ßounds just like a slave owner.
My parents were from Gibson, Georgia. I was born in D.C. and raised inside the beltway. During a summer vacation visiting my folks after a decade away I wrote down several of their dialectic sayings and expressions. And today, even though I was a newspaper reporter and editor in my everyday speech I still use "ain't" and "ya'll." And if you didn't know when my mother said Bennett she wasn't speaking a name, she was saying "being that," as in "bennett you ain't do'n nuth'n why don't you carry the trash out to the can." RIP mom and dad, I reckon ya'll was alright.
I am from Massachusetts and this scares the Shyt outta me.
I had ancestors who came from Cadburn NC what part of NC is it located?
R.I.P Popcorn.
Great job. Enjoyed your reenactment!
I have just started writing with a goose quill pen. I have been struggling with the start of a letter after dipping, to be "globby." I think it must take many hours of practice. The pen feels like it wants to turn over in my hand. I just wrote my first full letter, and I was quite unhappy with the result. But after seeing your letter, I think that the uneven distribution of ink is par for this method. I am interested in how you get several words from one dip. I run out of ink after about 4 or 5 letters. Thank you for the tutorial.
Everybody in Scotland knows what a poke is.
Eeerrk, crakky..."Don't slam the screen door, Jeunier".
Thank you Lord, for these Appalachian mountains .... I can't think of a better place to be born and raised
Ain't nothing wrong with mountain folk or the way they talk , mighty fine folks
Finest people in the whole wide world !
I grew up in central North. Carolina, working in tobacco was how we made money for lots of things growing up. Mom and Dad didn’t give us spending money. I have worked in tobacco, worked in hay, mowed grass among other dirty jobs for money. When l grew up l raised 27 crops of tobacco on my father’s farm and worked a third shift job. My son worked on the farm as long as he was in school and college. Makes a difference growing up working.
Jim tom too hahaha real mountain men that's sidgoggly
Popcorn Sutton last of the real moonshiners
As a historian and cigar smoker, I found this video to be very interesting.
Bangladesh tobacco price 1.5 dulars
Popcorn sutton
I've been to Asheville NC isn't it just about the same
I grew up in Salem, SC, mountains of South Carolina. I learned these words when I was just a little bitty girl!
We bailed it up into bales for the market. Y’all must do it different. Southwest, Va here.
Yeap, my friend in Cynthiana, KY bailed it up into bales. I remember stripping it and then a big bunch of leaves (sorry, I don't remember much about it) would be layed into some contraption that had twine running through it. We'd pull down a handle, I think, and it would in ratchet fashion tighten up the bale. At some point we'd tie off the bale and drop down the wall in front (maybe we pulled the wall out?) and then push the bale over. I miss those times :(
My father grew up on a tobacco farm. He spoke about how the daily tasks shaped him early on during his youth in the early mid-1900s... My father didn't go into much detail about his life, and I recently found out that his father indeed lived with them but was sick with Black-Lung from working as a Coal Miner in the Kentucky mining industry when he could find work. My dad's family eeked out an existence by selling tobacco as best they could. A documentary about Kentucky displayed how difficult and segregated life was for him at that time, and I'm blessed he and his brothers were able to survive that era long enough to relocate to the Midwest. My father served in the Air Force for double digit years, and earned a Master's Degree in Chemistry. He ultimately became the head supervisor for all the Chicago Board of Health Labs [~30], and had a Genius IQ that allowed him to repair expensive lab equipment instinctively. My dad was grossly underpaid, constantly gaslit, and lived under the constant threat of being fired with his reputation ruined due to glass-ceiling ra:cial politics back then. He was loved by all, yet he was a hard man for me to love because he took the weight of the world out on me sometimes. However, as an older man I'm relearning how much I indeed appreciate my father. I'm preparing for a new growing season, and I'll try my hand at some tobacco in honor of my dad... When he died, I did not cry... I'm crying now...
My family came over from Germany and lived in the mountains and slowly migrated down east of Charlotte. Part of me feels like I belong up there in those hills.
Lotta money up there now
This was a very great and informative video, easy to watch, too! Thank you to all of you who helped make it, you taught me a lot :)
I’m curious. Why is it that the people let the dark brown tribal people get reclassified and taken into slavery and no longer reacted? Why are only the ones who have mostly European blood accepted while we all know that all the dark skinned Americans are misclassified as so called African Americans? Now many are confused how do you think our Land Spirits are going to deal with that reality? When did the tribe become white only no blackies? We have not learned our lessons yet have we?