Alphabet And Letter Resources
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Alphabet And Letter Discussions
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| i am smart...in a sense. not in the sense that yale and harvard are going to war for me, but in a sense that i know facts. things like physics history, math books, and random trivial shiit. is this kind of smartness good or just a hinderance?
so far all it has gotten me is bruises and detentions when i was in school.
the only good i found in the past was proving a teacher wrong. we had a bet if i won, she would get me this energy drink i liked and if she won i would say i was wrong to the class and publically apologize to her. military pay-grades was the subject. she said that they were all different, while i said they were the same. i won. | |
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| I am in the middle of a book about my immigrant Italian family from the late 19th century when they came to this country on my father's side. Then adding my mid-20th century immigrant mother's family from Turkey.Allah Alone Knows when it will be finished. Its been a long time coming (10 years accumilating the stories).What subject are you writing about? Will you publish it or keep it in the family? | |
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| Hi everyone,
Which area(s) in math do you find difficult? And, if possible, why do you find it difficult?I'm a math teacher, writer of math books and a math web site. I hope to find out more from you students. I guess if I can figure out how you think then I should be able to help you better. | |
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| Hi Moms at myLot,I am willing to help if you or your kids have any math questions (K-12). I am a teacher. I write math books and I have a math site: http://www.onlinemathlearning.comThe site has a collection of math games, worksheets etc. that could be useful. | |
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| BY JOSH SHAFFER - Staff Writer
Published: Mon, Aug. 10, 2009 05:02AMModified Mon, Aug. 10, 2009 11:20AMFUQUAY-VARINA -- On a yellow scratch pad, Albert Clay works out a math problem that can stump a calculator -- and all of the ciphering occurs inside his white-haired head.In seconds, Clay multiplies a pair of five-digit numbers and writes down the answer in a single line. There's none of the sloppy rows of zig-zagging numbers that would normally clutter a page. Such is the beauty of his homemade formula -- titled "How to Multiply Any Number by Any Number in Your Head" -- which is registered as TXu001325432 in the U.S. Copyright Office."There may not be anybody else in the world who knows how to do this but me," said Clay, 75, a retired pharmacist. "Zip, zip, zap and add 'em together." Clay worked out his system as a high school junior in Granville County, and aside from the Oxford High School math teacher who shrugged off his achievement, he never really showed it to anyone. Now, with his copyright, he'd like to demonstrate the ease of big-number arithmetic in classrooms, or even get it into math books. Send him $33, and he'll pass along a copy, postage... | |
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