This site provides useful animations for use in teaching students how the current positioning of continents and other land-bodies were formed. I would suggest that educators teaching in the classroom produce these animations on a projector screen, as they are provided in small dimensions which are easy to navigate but hard to see on the average size computer screen. It may be the case that superior Java skills would allow a more proficient user to change these settings.
This site features a Flash animation that illustrates how to grid the earth with the latitude (paral...
This website was so fun to look at and it could be so much fun for students to use in a classroom. ...
This mirror site for NOAA's World Data Center (WDC) for Paleoclimatology offers Java applets on annu...
I used this website in an in-class activity on Continent-Continent Collision. I pointed students to...
The goal of the PALEOMAP Project is to illustrate the plate tectonic development of the ocean basins...
These animations give a paleo perspective on global warming, drought, and global temperature pattern...
In this article we first explain the process of how to create animations in Windows Movie Maker 2, t...
Undergraduates today have grown up with instant access to video animations to explain any number of ...
This site contains a variety of plate tectonic animations, paleogeographic reconstructions, and pale...
The use of computer animations to help students visualize processes they cannot observe directly is ...
Users can choose a time in geologic history, select the link, and see what the Earth looked liked in...
Research has shown that creating animations of science concepts enhances preservice teachers underst...
Well-crafted and scientifically accurate videos and animations can be effective ways to teach dynami...
There is a need for research-informed instructional approaches that promote school students’ deep co...
This Flash animation illustrates continental growth. It shows a convergent boundary where a terrane ...
This site features a Flash animation that illustrates how to grid the earth with the latitude (paral...
This website was so fun to look at and it could be so much fun for students to use in a classroom. ...
This mirror site for NOAA's World Data Center (WDC) for Paleoclimatology offers Java applets on annu...
I used this website in an in-class activity on Continent-Continent Collision. I pointed students to...
The goal of the PALEOMAP Project is to illustrate the plate tectonic development of the ocean basins...
These animations give a paleo perspective on global warming, drought, and global temperature pattern...
In this article we first explain the process of how to create animations in Windows Movie Maker 2, t...
Undergraduates today have grown up with instant access to video animations to explain any number of ...
This site contains a variety of plate tectonic animations, paleogeographic reconstructions, and pale...
The use of computer animations to help students visualize processes they cannot observe directly is ...
Users can choose a time in geologic history, select the link, and see what the Earth looked liked in...
Research has shown that creating animations of science concepts enhances preservice teachers underst...
Well-crafted and scientifically accurate videos and animations can be effective ways to teach dynami...
There is a need for research-informed instructional approaches that promote school students’ deep co...
This Flash animation illustrates continental growth. It shows a convergent boundary where a terrane ...
This site features a Flash animation that illustrates how to grid the earth with the latitude (paral...
This website was so fun to look at and it could be so much fun for students to use in a classroom. ...
This mirror site for NOAA's World Data Center (WDC) for Paleoclimatology offers Java applets on annu...