Blog.growingwithscience.com is a subdomain of growingwithscience.com, which was created on 2008-03-07,making it 16 years ago.
Discover blog.growingwithscience.com website stats, rating, details and status online.Use our online tools to find owner and admin contact info. Find out where is server located.Read and write reviews or vote to improve it ranking. Check alliedvsaxis duplicates with related css, domain relations, most used words, social networks references. Go to regular site
HomePage size: 160.595 KB |
Page Load Time: 0.434141 Seconds |
Website IP Address: 198.54.126.138 |
Bayer Crop Science Homepage | Crop Science US www.cropscience.bayer.us |
APASET | Asia-Pacific Association of Science, Engineering and Technology wpadmin.apaset.com |
Plant Science Today blog.aspb.org |
Popular Science Homepage | Popular Science link.popsci.com |
Carnegie Science Careers | Carnegie Institution for Science jobs.carnegiescience.edu |
CogSIMA 2023 Conference 2023.cogsima.org |
Science Salsa – Tasty science that makes your life better / Ciencia sabrosa que mejora tu vida. sciencesalsa.ivanfgonzalez.com |
Science Connected Magazine - Science Literacy, Education, Communication magazine.scienceconnected.org |
Helpful Tips for Growing Your Business - Our Small Business Blog blog.mycorporation.com |
blog.dblp.org – A blog about the dblp computer science bibliography blog.dblp.org |
GESIS Blog – Growing Knowledge in the Social Sciences blog.gesis.org |
Science Videos, Science News, Science Search, Tech Search, Tech News: Quick SciTech. scitech.quickfound.net |
Blog | GrowJoy | Gardening tips to get you growing! blog.growjoy.com |
The Data Blog | A blog about data mining, data science, machine learning and big data, by Philippe F data-mining.philippe-fournier-viger.com |
Rezoomo Blog | Recruitment Blog | HR Blog | Career Blog blog.rezoomo.com |
date: Sat, 11 May 2024 20:30:29 GMT |
server: Apache |
x-powered-by: PHP/8.1.28 |
vary: accept,content-type,Accept-Encoding |
link: https://blog.growingwithscience.com/wp-json/; rel="https://api.w.org/", https://wp.me/sPiZ; rel=shortlink |
content-security-policy: upgrade-insecure-requests; |
content-length: 147404 |
content-type: text/html; charset=UTF-8 |
charset="utf-8" content="text/html" http-equiv="content-type"/ |
content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1.0" name="viewport"/ |
content="max-image-preview:large" name="robots" |
content="WordPress 6.3.4" name="generator"/ |
content="website" property="og:type"/ |
content="Growing With Science Blog" property="og:title"/ |
content="https://blog.growingwithscience.com/" property="og:url"/ |
content="Growing With Science Blog" property="og:site_name"/ |
content="https://s0.wp.com/i/blank.jpg" property="og:image"/ |
content="" property="og:image:alt"/ |
content="en_US" property="og:locale"/ |
content="@ScienceAntics" name="twitter:creator"/ |
content="@ScienceAntics" name="twitter:site"/ |
Ip Country: United States |
Latitude: 37.751 |
Longitude: -97.822 |
Toggle mobile menu Toggle search field Search for: Home About/Contact Bug Archive Experiment Archive Science Books For Kids Seed Photo Archive Home About/Contact Bug Archive Experiment Archive Science Books For Kids Seed Photo Archive Rise Up to The Sky for #Arborday March 31, 2023 / Roberta / 1 Comment Arbor Day is coming up April 28, 2023. Looking for ways to participate? Consider reading the new picture book, Rise to the Sky: How the World’s Tallest Trees Grow Up by Rebecca E. Hirsch and illustrated by Mia Posada as part of your celebration. The book starts with a simple question: What are the tallest living things? Do you know? If you guessed trees, then you are right. Next are a series of illustrations that show visually how tall some of the biggest trees are. Unlike Mia Posada’s eye-catching illustrations in Plant’s Can’t Sit Still , this time she uses cut paper collage to compare big trees to some man-made structures. Young readers will then discover how trees get so big. Starting with a seed, trees use sunlight, water, and carbon dioxide from the air to grow, grow, grow. The text is a straightforward introduction to such concepts as photosynthesis, capillary action, and the stages of the life cycle of trees. Back matter includes further information about parts of trees (leaves, roots, trunk, etc.) and tree growth as well as information about where the world’s tallest trees live, two activities, and suggestions for further reading. Rise Up to the Sky will appeal to budding arborists and nature lovers alike. Perfect to accompany units on life cycles and plants, or to prepare for a trip to see redwoods. And, don’t forget to share a copy for Arbor Day. Related Activity Suggestions: 1. Plant a tree for Arbor Day or any day. Preferably choose trees that grow naturally in your area and make sure they have plenty of room to reach their mature height. 2. Huge trees start from small seeds. Take a walk and look for tree seeds. Check our Seed Photo Archive for examples. An acorn is a seed of an oak A pine seed germinating 3. Download a free teacher’s guide with activities at Lerner. More Tree Science Activity Suggestions (From This Blog): Trees -botany More tree science Tree Transpiration How far does the water have to travel from roots to top of the tree? Leaf litter decomposition Tree leaf age -find out how long an individual leaf stays on a tree Want to find more great books like this one? Visit our giant, redwood-sized list of tree books for kids . Reading age †: ‎ 5 – 10 years Publisher †: ‎ Millbrook Press ™ (April 4, 2023) ISBN-10 †: ‎ 1728440874 ISBN-13 †: ‎ 978-1728440873 Disclosure: This book was provided as an E-ARC for review purposes. Also, I am an affiliate with Amazon so I can provide you with cover images and links to more information about books and products. As you probably are aware, if you click through the highlighted title link and purchase a product, I will receive a very small commission, at no extra cost to you. Any proceeds help defray the costs of hosting and maintaining this website. Bug of the Week: Desert Hackberry Butterflies September 28, 2022 / Roberta / 0 Comments On a recent hike, my son joked that we could identify one type of tree by recognizing the butterflies hanging around it. The butterflies were the Empress Leilias, and American snout butterflies. Can you guess the tree? In this case it was the desert hackberry, Celtis pallida . Unlike its relative the netleaf hackberry ( previous post ), the desert hackberry keeps its leaves all winter long. When ripe, the bright orange fruit are a favorite of many species of birds. A tree that supports both birds and butterflies, doesn’t require much water, and is green all year? Sounds like a wonderful choice for desert landscaping! STEM Friday #Kidlit A River’s Gifts September 23, 2022 / Roberta / 1 Comment Right in time for World Rivers Day (September 25, 2022), let’s jump in with wonderful example of picture book nonfiction, A River’s Gifts: The Mighty Elwha River Reborn by Patricia Newman and illustrated by Natasha Donovan. Running through the book is the story of the Elwha River, which courses from Olympic National Park to the ocean in Washington state. Centuries ago several varieties of salmon and trout swam up the river to have their young. Then in the early 1900s people dammed the river, blocking the salmon from swimming upstream and flooding the landscape. The salmon numbers dwindled and wildlife disappeared. But the dams fell into disrepair and members of the Lower Elwha Klallam Tribe and others persistently advocated to get them removed. Finally, in 1992, Congress passed The Elwha River Ecosystem and Fisheries Restoration Act, allowing for the dams to be demolished. Since that time, the river has made strides towards recovery. In addition to the uplifting story of the restoration of the river and the salmon, plus the wildlife and people that rely on them, Patricia Newman packs the book with STEM. Young readers will learn about river vocabulary words like headwaters, channels, riverbanks, etc. Do you know what an alevin is? Find out in the wonderful illustration of the life cycle of salmon. Learn about the workings of a hydroelectric dam and how the dams were removed. Explore how important salmon are to ecosystems through food webs. See examples of wildlife and other kinds of fish found in and around the river. This book is jam-packed with all the fascinating information needed to truly understand the impact of the main story. Natasha Donovan’s illustrations ( website ) are the water that keep it all flowing. In the note in the back matter, she explains that she grew up on the West Coast and had a wealth of sensory experiences to draw on for her work. A River’s Gifts is one of those special books that fit into many different lessons: geography, history, science, technology (dams), nature, ecology, art, and literature, to name a few. Essential for American Indian and Alaska Native Heritage Month, Earth Day, and of course, World River’s Day, readers will return to it again and again. Invest in a copy today! Related Activities: Find out more about the book and download a Teacher Guide at Patricia Newman’s website . Check out the river-related books and activity suggestions at STEM Tuesday LitLinks activity : Write a persuasive poem through the eyes of a salmon. The book trailer is lovely. Reading age †: ‎ 8 – 12 years Publisher †: ‎ Millbrook Press ™ (September 6, 2022) ISBN-10 †: ‎ 1541598709 ISBN-13 †: ‎ 978-1541598706 Disclosure: This book was provided as an E-ARC for review purposes. Also, I am an affiliate with Amazon so I can provide you with cover images and links to more information about books and products. As you probably are aware, if you click through the highlighted title link and purchase a product, I will receive a very small commission, at no extra cost to you. Any proceeds help defray the costs of hosting and maintaining this website. Come visit the STEM Friday blog each week to find more great Science, Technology, Engineering and Math books. « Older posts Search for: Follow Us Facebook Twitter Pinterest Instagram Subscribe to Blog via Email Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email. Email Address Subscribe For more information, see Roberta Gibson Writes . Recent Posts Rise Up to The Sky for #Arborday Bug of the Week: Desert Hackberry Butterflies STEM Friday #Kidlit A River’s Gifts Sunflowers For Bees, Birds, and Butterflies #Nonfiction Monday #kidlit: Swoop and Soar Categories Amphibians ants Astronomy Bats beach science bees beetles Biology bird activities birds Book Review Botany Bug of the Week Build an Insect STEAM activity butterflies Chemistry Citizen Science Compost Science Deserts Earth Science Engineering Find Out More Fish flies Floating and Sinking Fun Science Activity Fungi Garden Week Gardening With...
Domain Name: GROWINGWITHSCIENCE.COM Registry Domain ID: 1416973232_DOMAIN_COM-VRSN Registrar WHOIS Server: whois.namecheap.com Registrar URL: http://www.namecheap.com Updated Date: 2021-08-11T14:45:19Z Creation Date: 2008-03-07T19:27:23Z Registry Expiry Date: 2025-04-28T11:59:59Z Registrar: NameCheap, Inc. Registrar IANA ID: 1068 Registrar Abuse Contact Email: abuse@namecheap.com Registrar Abuse Contact Phone: +1.6613102107 Domain Status: clientTransferProhibited https://icann.org/epp#clientTransferProhibited Name Server: RS11A.REGISTRAR-SERVERS.COM Name Server: RS11B.REGISTRAR-SERVERS.COM DNSSEC: unsigned >>> Last update of whois database: 2024-05-17T14:02:08Z <<<