“This song is a celebration of the beauty of the smallest state, by Timmy May, sung by David Kearsley.”
Source: www.youtube.com
“This song is a celebration of the beauty of the smallest state, by Timmy May, sung by David Kearsley.”
Source: www.youtube.com
Source: sites.google.com
Win up to $2,000 for a classroom project
Source: thejournal.com
The Brown Rudnick Center for the Public Interest funds classroom projects for Boston, NYC and Providence schools. K-12 teachers can apply, so give it a chance.
I was just informed that our proposal to receive a Giant Traveling Map from National Geographic was accepted! Two years ago we had the South America map come to Rhode Island, and last year the Giant Traveling map of Africa came to the Ocean state and many schools found it to be a way to make an event of it. We’ll be receiving the map of North America that comes with an excellent set of resources on how to interactively teach, explore, learn and play with this specific map as a part of your curriculum. This map will soon be coming to Rhode Island; it will be available for schools and teachers to use from March 21st to April 19th. The Alliance wants to make this accessible to as many RIGEA members as possible. For schools with 4 RIGEA members, this map can be rented for a free of charge for two days (if you are interested in more days, let me know). Remember that it’s free for teachers, administrators and parents to sign up to become RIGEA members—consider this your chance to recruit them for a good cause for your school AND the Alliance. For schools without 4 RIGEA members, they can still rent the map for $200 per day, but I have faith in your recruiting skills.
SCHEDULING THE MAP:
For those interested, please send your request to rigea@ric.edu with the following information
Source: rigea.org
Aerial video footage of Rhode Island in the US. Part of the Skyworks HD aerials video collection. SkyWorks films all over the world, including Wales, South Africa and Qatar…but I’m partial to their work right here in in the Ocean State.
Source: www.youtube.com
By announcing they intended to abandon Pawtucket, R.I., the new owners of the Red Sox’ Class AAA team reminded fans that beyond baseball’s innate poetry, it is a cold business.
Source: www.nytimes.com
This NY Times article is a great exploration of the economic geography of baseball and the place-based traditions that are rooted in having a team to call your own. There is a lot of anger in Pawtucket at the news that the team is planning to leave McCoy stadium. This isn’t just a devastating financial blow to the Pawtucket community; for decades, Pawtucket could hang there hat on being home to the PawSox and that communal identity was one of the defining distinctions between Pawtucket and Central Falls. Now it’s just another struggling town. How will this impact Pawtucket and Providence neighborhoods? What if the Red Sox affiliate left the state of Rhode Island entirely for, say Fall River or New Bedford? How would that impact the Ocean State?
Images Onne van der Wal took of Narragansett Bay in Rhode Island, both West and East passage along Newport and Bristol, on March 1, 2015.
Source: www.sailingscuttlebutt.com
“Last month was the snowiest February on record, with 31.8 inches falling in just 28 days, according to the National Weather Service. That was ridiculously close to 2 feet — 23.3 inches to be exact — more than the usual snowfall in February. For December through February, the total snowfall at T.F. Green Airport was 58.3 inches, the third-snowiest winter season on record.”
MORE STATS:
— 25.6 inches of snow fell in January, the fifth-snowiest on record.
— The average low temperature for February was 8.5 degrees, more than 15 degrees below normal. The average high was 28.3 degrees, which was 12 degrees below normal.
— Records low temperatures were posted on Feb. 21 (minus 5), and on Feb. 24 (minus 3)
But at least we aren’t in Boston, which had 102 inches on March 1st, and it almost feels as if we are living in the Arctic Circle, but not quite.
Source: www.providencejournal.com
There may be a counterintuitive explanation for the deep freeze that hit New England this winter: The rapidly warming Arctic is causing big disruptions in the jet stream, which carries weather across North America. Is this the worst winter you’ve experienced?
Tags: physical, weather and climate, Arctic, Boston, climate change, podcast.
Source: www.pri.org