This page last changed on Sep 07, 2007 by cmcintyre.

Photosynthesis: Changing Sunlight Into Food (book) by Bobbie Kalman

Email from Cynthia to Roger Hangarter <rhangart@indiana.edu> on August 10, 2007

My name is Cynthia McIntyre and I'm the project coordinator for a new NSF-funded project at the Concord Consortium: Universal Design in Science Education (see: http://udl.concord.org/).

The goal is to use Universal Design for Learning (UDL) principles to create science materials for students and teachers in grades 3-6 inclusive classrooms. The project will create materials to test the effectiveness of the approach and provide an exemplar that can inspire additional content and further development. We are currently designing seven inquiry modules around the theme of energy, including one on plants.

I'm writing to request permission to use the movie of the solar tracking of sunflower plants at your website (http://plantsinmotion.bio.indiana.edu/plantmotion/movements/tropism/solartrack/solartrack.html). 

The Concord Consortium is a nonprofit educational technology lab based in Concord, Massachusetts.

If you have any questions or need additional information, please feel free to contact me.

Many thanks,
Cynthia

Reply email to Cynthia on August 17, 2007

Dear Cynthia;

Yes you may use the solar tracking sunflower movie in the plant 
module for your NSF-funded project. It would be nice if you can 
include a link to plantsinmotion.bio.indiana.edu to let teachers know 
about the resource.

Roger

Roger P. Hangarter
Chancellor's Professor of Biology
Indiana University
915 E. 3rd St., Myers Hall
Bloomington, IN  47405-7107
Phone: 812-855-5456
http://bio.indiana.edu/~hangarterlab
http://plantsinmotion.bio.indiana.edu

Hi, you are welcome to use my video for science and educational purposes. The direct link to the downloadable and much sharper Quicktime version is:
http://dcpages.net/images/radishes022807.mp4

Please put the credit: Video by Dale Coleman (dale@dcpages.net)near the video.

BTW - there is another plant video I just made that might interest you. The page link is:
http://dcpages.net/ticklemeplant_flowers.html

The direct link for downloading is: http://dcpages.net/images/ticklemeplant_flowers.mp4

Hope this helps, Dale

Post to YouTube

I'm working on a new NSF-funded project at the Concord Consortium, which is a nonprofit educational technology lab based in Concord, MA.

The goal is to use Universal Design for Learning (UDL) principles to create science materials for students and teachers in grades 3-6 inclusive classrooms. We are currently designing seven inquiry modules around the theme of energy, including one on plants.

I'm writing to request permission to use your movie radish seeds sprouting.

Many thanks in advance!

Reply from YouTube Video creator, Dale Coleman

Hi, you are welcome to use my video for science and educational purposes. The direct link to the downloadable and much sharper Quicktime version is:
http://dcpages.net/images/radishes022807.mp4

Please put the credit: Video by Dale Coleman (dale@dcpages.net) near the video.

BTW - there is another plant video I just made that might interest you. The page link is:
http://dcpages.net/ticklemeplant_flowers.html

The direct link for downloading is: http://dcpages.net/images/ticklemeplant_flowers.mp4

Hope this helps, Dale

Document generated by Confluence on Jan 27, 2014 16:49