20 Most Repeated Read Alouds
1. Yellow
Yellow is the most optimistic color, yet surprisingly, people lose their tempers most often
in yellow rooms and babies cry more in them. The reason may be that yellow is the hardest
color on the eye. On the other hand, it speeds metabolism and enhances concentration;
think of yellow legal pads and post-it notes.
2. Shakespeare
A young man from a small provincial town -- a man without independent wealth, without
powerful family connections and without a university education -- moved to London in the
late 1580's and, in a remarkably short time, became the greatest playwright not of his age
alone but of all time. How did Shakespeare become Shakespeare?
3. Domestication
Domestication is an evolutionary, rather than a political development. They were more
likely to survive and prosper in an alliance with humans than on their own. Humans
provided the animals with food and protection, in exchange for which the animals
provided the humans their milk and eggs and – yes -- their flesh.
4. Market research:
Market research is vital part of the planning of any business. However experienced you or
your staff may be in a particular field, if you are thinking of introducing a service to a new
area. It is important to find out what the local population thinks about it first.
5. Marine biologist
The speaker is a marine biologist who became interested in the Strandlopers, an ancient
people who lived on the coastline, because of their connection to the sea. Their way of life
intrigued him. As a child he had spent a lot of time by the sea, exploring and collecting
things – so he began to study them, and discovered some interesting information about
their way of life, how they hunted, what tools they used, and so on.
6. Transportation
Not a lot is known about how the transportation of goods by water first began. Large
cargo boats were being used in some parts of the world up to five thousand years ago.
However, sea trade became more widespread when large sailing boats travelled between
ports, carrying spices, perfumes and objects made by hand.
7. Historian
As a historian, if you really want to understand the sensibilities of those who lived in the
past, you must be like a novelist and get into the skins of your characters and think and
feel as they do. You are asked to imagine what it's like to be a peasant in medieval times,
asking the sort of questions a peasant might ask. What the writer is saying is that a
historian needs imaginative sympathy with ordinary people in the past.
8. Energy and pollution
Humans need to use energy in order to exist. So it is unsurprising that the way people
have been producing energy is largely responsible for current environmental problems.
Pollution comes in many forms, but those that are most concerning, because of their
impact on health, result from the combustion of fuels in power stations and cars.
9. Recent trend
A recent trend in the entertainment world is to adapt classic works of literature for either
TV or movies. One argument is that this is to everyone’s benefit, as it introduces people
to works they might otherwise never have, but is rarely done successfully.
10. History
History rubs shoulders and often overlaps with many other areas of research, from myths
and epics to the social sciences, including economics, politics, biograph, demography, and
much else besides. Some histories are almost pure narratives, while others go in for
detailed, tightly-focused analyses of, for example, the parish records of a Cornish village in
the 16th century.
11. Flags
In the Middle Ages, the design and use of flags were considered a means of identifying
social status. Flags were, therefore, the symbols not of nations, but of the nobility. The
design of each flag resembled the “devices” on the noble’s Coat of Arms, and the size
of the flag was an indication of how high the owner stood in the nobility.
12. Quotes
Many papers you write in college will require you to include quotes from one or more
sources. Even if you don't have to do it, integrating a few quotes into your writing can add
life and persuasiveness to your arguments. The key is to use quotes to support a point
you're trying to make rather than just include them to fill space.
13. University
A university is a lot more than just classes and exams, university is a concept that offers
you a host of possibilities to develop both academically and personally. Find out about the
different projects, clubs and societies that are in your university. You will definitely find
something you are interested in.
14. Moods
Moods may also have an effect on how information is processed, by influencing the extent
to which judges rely on pre-existing, internal information, or focus on new, external
information. Positive moods promote more holistic and top-down processing style, while
negative moods recruit more stimulus-driven and bottom-up processing.
15. Spelling system
The problem begins with the alphabet itself. Building a spelling system for English using
letters that come from Latin – despite the two languages not sharing exactly the same set
of sounds – is like building a playroom using an IKEA office set.
16. Modern Buildings
Modern buildings have to achieve certain performance requirements, at least to satisfy
those of building codes, to provide a safe, healthy, and comfortable environment.
However, these conditioned environments demand resources in energy and materials,
which are both limited in supply, to build and operate.
17. Hamburg University
Three professors from Hamburg University's medical faculty traveled last month to
Ingeborg's sitting room in East Berlin to test her on the work she carried out in pre-war
Germany.
18. Energy efficiency
This finding is understandable in certain cases in spite of its high significance; that is
because energy efficiency of building operation just represents a single aspect of
sustainability.
19. Integration
Currently, Integration is increasingly needed in the business environment. This need
emerges from the efficiency and synergy requirements necessary in a complex and
turbulent environment. In other words, integration is needed to facilitate coordination,
which is again related to the building of competitive advantage.
20. US student debt
The numbers on US student debt, after all, are truly staggering. The average 2015 US
university graduate who took out loans to help pay for tuition enters the workforce with
$35,000 in student debt.
Yellow is the most optimistic color, yet surprisingly, people lose their tempers most often
in yellow rooms and babies cry more in them. The reason may be that yellow is the hardest
color on the eye. On the other hand, it speeds metabolism and enhances concentration;
think of yellow legal pads and post-it notes.
2. Shakespeare
A young man from a small provincial town -- a man without independent wealth, without
powerful family connections and without a university education -- moved to London in the
late 1580's and, in a remarkably short time, became the greatest playwright not of his age
alone but of all time. How did Shakespeare become Shakespeare?
3. Domestication
Domestication is an evolutionary, rather than a political development. They were more
likely to survive and prosper in an alliance with humans than on their own. Humans
provided the animals with food and protection, in exchange for which the animals
provided the humans their milk and eggs and – yes -- their flesh.
4. Market research:
Market research is vital part of the planning of any business. However experienced you or
your staff may be in a particular field, if you are thinking of introducing a service to a new
area. It is important to find out what the local population thinks about it first.
5. Marine biologist
The speaker is a marine biologist who became interested in the Strandlopers, an ancient
people who lived on the coastline, because of their connection to the sea. Their way of life
intrigued him. As a child he had spent a lot of time by the sea, exploring and collecting
things – so he began to study them, and discovered some interesting information about
their way of life, how they hunted, what tools they used, and so on.
6. Transportation
Not a lot is known about how the transportation of goods by water first began. Large
cargo boats were being used in some parts of the world up to five thousand years ago.
However, sea trade became more widespread when large sailing boats travelled between
ports, carrying spices, perfumes and objects made by hand.
7. Historian
As a historian, if you really want to understand the sensibilities of those who lived in the
past, you must be like a novelist and get into the skins of your characters and think and
feel as they do. You are asked to imagine what it's like to be a peasant in medieval times,
asking the sort of questions a peasant might ask. What the writer is saying is that a
historian needs imaginative sympathy with ordinary people in the past.
8. Energy and pollution
Humans need to use energy in order to exist. So it is unsurprising that the way people
have been producing energy is largely responsible for current environmental problems.
Pollution comes in many forms, but those that are most concerning, because of their
impact on health, result from the combustion of fuels in power stations and cars.
9. Recent trend
A recent trend in the entertainment world is to adapt classic works of literature for either
TV or movies. One argument is that this is to everyone’s benefit, as it introduces people
to works they might otherwise never have, but is rarely done successfully.
10. History
History rubs shoulders and often overlaps with many other areas of research, from myths
and epics to the social sciences, including economics, politics, biograph, demography, and
much else besides. Some histories are almost pure narratives, while others go in for
detailed, tightly-focused analyses of, for example, the parish records of a Cornish village in
the 16th century.
11. Flags
In the Middle Ages, the design and use of flags were considered a means of identifying
social status. Flags were, therefore, the symbols not of nations, but of the nobility. The
design of each flag resembled the “devices” on the noble’s Coat of Arms, and the size
of the flag was an indication of how high the owner stood in the nobility.
12. Quotes
Many papers you write in college will require you to include quotes from one or more
sources. Even if you don't have to do it, integrating a few quotes into your writing can add
life and persuasiveness to your arguments. The key is to use quotes to support a point
you're trying to make rather than just include them to fill space.
13. University
A university is a lot more than just classes and exams, university is a concept that offers
you a host of possibilities to develop both academically and personally. Find out about the
different projects, clubs and societies that are in your university. You will definitely find
something you are interested in.
14. Moods
Moods may also have an effect on how information is processed, by influencing the extent
to which judges rely on pre-existing, internal information, or focus on new, external
information. Positive moods promote more holistic and top-down processing style, while
negative moods recruit more stimulus-driven and bottom-up processing.
15. Spelling system
The problem begins with the alphabet itself. Building a spelling system for English using
letters that come from Latin – despite the two languages not sharing exactly the same set
of sounds – is like building a playroom using an IKEA office set.
16. Modern Buildings
Modern buildings have to achieve certain performance requirements, at least to satisfy
those of building codes, to provide a safe, healthy, and comfortable environment.
However, these conditioned environments demand resources in energy and materials,
which are both limited in supply, to build and operate.
17. Hamburg University
Three professors from Hamburg University's medical faculty traveled last month to
Ingeborg's sitting room in East Berlin to test her on the work she carried out in pre-war
Germany.
18. Energy efficiency
This finding is understandable in certain cases in spite of its high significance; that is
because energy efficiency of building operation just represents a single aspect of
sustainability.
19. Integration
Currently, Integration is increasingly needed in the business environment. This need
emerges from the efficiency and synergy requirements necessary in a complex and
turbulent environment. In other words, integration is needed to facilitate coordination,
which is again related to the building of competitive advantage.
20. US student debt
The numbers on US student debt, after all, are truly staggering. The average 2015 US
university graduate who took out loans to help pay for tuition enters the workforce with
$35,000 in student debt.
Good job sir 👍
ReplyDeleteHelping a lot
You're A philanthropists!
ReplyDelete