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Institution with a history of "free public lectures" hosts many online. [1] [2] Free ? Gresham College: IRIS Consortium: Multidisciplinary Educational Earth-science videos, animations, lessons for educators. Animations/videos have been reviewed and evaluated by scientists/specialists in the specific discipline. Free
Action for Healthy Kids is a United States-based nonprofit organization focused on child heath. [1] The organization was founded in 2002. [2] It focuses on increasing access to healthy foods and physical activity, supporting social emotional learning, and engaging parents, caregivers and community members to transform student health, well-being and learning.
It includes the first four years of compulsory education (1° ano, 2° ano, 3° ano and 4° ano), their pupils being children between six and ten years old. After the education reform of 1986, the former primary education became part of the basic education ( educação básica ).
Beginner Books is the Random House imprint for young children ages 3–9, co-founded by Phyllis Cerf with Ted Geisel, more often known as Dr. Seuss, and his wife Helen Palmer Geisel. Their first book was Dr. Seuss's The Cat in the Hat (1957), whose title character appears in the brand's logo.
All About Us: Living and Growing is a British Sex and Relationships Education series for 5–13 year olds published by Channel 4 on VHS and DVD. The series is often referred to by its short name of Living and Growing. It covers the differences between a boy and a girl, Puberty, how babies are made and how babies are born. The programmes were ...
Reader Rabbit is an educational video game franchise created in 1984 by The Learning Company.The series is aimed at children from infancy to the age of nine. In 1998, a spiritual successor series called The ClueFinders was released for older students aged seven to twelve.
Key Stages in England are often abbreviated as KS (ex. KS1). Each key stage consists of a certain range of school years so there is no key stage for higher education. In Wales, the new curriculum replaces key stages with "progression steps" at ages 5, 8, 11, 14 and 16, "relating to broad expectations of a child’s progress".
In the News - produced by Radio News and School Radio in the early 1980s for ages 9 to 12 Wavelength - youth culture programme, with content borrowed from BBC Radio 1 in the 1980s Talks to Sixth Forms - introduced in 1935, and had distinguished speakers such as G. K. Chesterton , T. S. Eliot and E. M. Forster