Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Abeka Book, LLC, known as A Beka Book until 2017, is an American publisher affiliated with Pensacola Christian College (PCC) that produces K-12 curriculum materials that are used by Christian schools and homeschooling families around the world. [3] [4] [5] It is named after Rebekah Horton, wife of college president Arlin Horton.
Abeka, formerly known as A Beka Book, is a publisher affiliated with Pensacola Christian College that produces K–12 curriculum materials that are used by Protestant fundamentalist [49] [50] and other conservative Evangelical Christian schools, as well as non-fundamentalist Christian schools [citation needed] and homeschooling families around ...
Khan Academy is an American non-profit [3] educational organization created in 2006 by Sal Khan. [1] Its goal is to create a set of online tools that help educate students. [4] ...
Paper flashcards have been used since at least the 19th century. Reading Disentangled (1834), a set of phonics flashcards by English educator Favell Lee Mortimer, is believed by some to be the first known usage of flashcards. [5] A single-sided hornbook was also known to have been used for early literacy education.
Download as PDF; Printable version; In other projects ... Pages in category "12th-century literature" The following 6 pages are in this category, out of 6 total.
The Fall 2009 issue of the University of San Francisco literary journal Switchback features a story by Charles Haddox, "The Ugly Duckling", about a girl who has her own ugly duckling experience after being chosen to play the role of Princess Camilla in her junior high school's production of the play.
Scribe of Eadwine Psalter (mid-12th century, English). This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in the 12th century.. The 12th century in Western Europe saw an increase in the production of Latin texts and a proliferation of literate clerics from the multiplying cathedral schools.
[18] Holmes died in 1894, the last of the fireside poets, and one literary magazine called it "the closing of an era in American literature". [ 12 ] Critics, meanwhile, began re-examining the role of these poets in the canon and distinguishing between popularity and aesthetics. [ 19 ]