The Palm Beach Daily News: March 19, 2014
Who could pass up a leisurely lunch spent chatting about natural selection with Charles Darwin; lingering over a sandwich and lively discussion with Frederick Banting and Charles Best, the discoverers of insulin; or simply enjoy an espresso with Enrico Fermi while talking about quantum theory and particle physics?
Rosarian Academy seventh-grade pupils did just that recently at a special luncheon designed to encourage them to begin thinking more seriously about encountering the world through a scientistÕs eyes.
– See more at: http://www.palmbeachdailynews.com/news/news/local/rosarian-kids-dress-as-favorite-scientists/nd4yN/#sthash.qD4IoEt4.dpu
Who could pass up a leisurely lunch spent chatting about natural selection with Charles Darwin; lingering over a sandwich and lively discussion with Frederick Banting and Charles Best, the discoverers of insulin; or simply enjoy an espresso with Enrico Fermi while talking about quantum theory and particle physics?
Rosarian Academy seventh-grade pupils did just that recently at a special luncheon designed to encourage them to begin thinking more seriously about encountering the world through a scientistÕs eyes.
– See more at: http://www.palmbeachdailynews.com/news/news/local/rosarian-kids-dress-as-favorite-scientists/nd4yN/#sthash.qD4IoEt4.dpuf
Who could pass up a leisurely lunch spent chatting about natural selection with Charles Darwin; lingering over a sandwich and lively discussion with Frederick Banting and Charles Best, the discoverers of insulin; or simply enjoy an espresso with Enrico Fermi while talking about quantum theory and particle physics?
Rosarian Academy seventh-grade pupils did just that recently at a special luncheon designed to encourage them to begin thinking more seriously about encountering the world through a scientistÕs eyes.
– See more at: http://www.palmbeachdailynews.com/news/news/local/rosarian-kids-dress-as-favorite-scientists/nd4yN/#sthash.qD4IoEt4.dpuf
rimmings fills the bill nicely for most students.
It was for 14-year-old Guillermo Wulff, an eighth-grader at Rosarian Academy, too.
On March 7, Rosarian Academy seventh- and eighth-graders participated in an Oxf Hunger Banquet to provide students an opportunity to walk in someone elseÕs shoes for a single-meal exercise that turned into a socioeconomic learning opportunity. Few learning experiences focus on the inequalities in our world more powerfully.
– See more at: http://www.palmbeachdailynews.com/news/news/local/walking-in-their-shoes/nfFzs/#sthash.RFGBPCkf.dpuf
rimmings fills the bill nicely for most students.
It was for 14-year-old Guillermo Wulff, an eighth-grader at Rosarian Academy, too.
On March 7, Rosarian Academy seventh- and eighth-graders participated in an Oxf Hunger Banquet to provide students an opportunity to walk in someone elseÕs shoes for a single-meal exercise that turned into a socioeconomic learning opportunity. Few learning experiences focus on the inequalities in our world more powerfully.
– See more at: http://www.palmbeachdailynews.com/news/news/local/walking-in-their-shoes/nfFzs/#sthash.RFGBPCkf.dpuf
As school lunches go, a nice warm burrito with all the trimmings fills the bill nicely for most students.
It was for 14-year-old Guillermo Wulff, an eighth-grader at Rosarian Academy, too.
On March 7, Rosarian Academy seventh- and eighth-graders participated in an Oxf Hunger Banquet to provide students an opportunity to walk in someone elseÕs shoes for a single-meal exercise that turned into a socioeconomic learning opportunity. Few learning experiences focus on the inequalities in our world more powerfully.
– See more at: http://www.palmbeachdailynews.com/news/news/local/walking-in-their-shoes/nfFzs/#sthash.RFGBPCkf.dpuf
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As school lunches go, a nice warm burrito with all the trimmings fills the bill nicely for most students.
It was for 14-year-old Guillermo Wulff, an eighth-grader at Rosarian Academy, too.
On March 7, Rosarian Academy seventh- and eighth-graders participated in an Oxf Hunger Banquet to provide students an opportunity to walk in someone else’s shoes for a single-meal exercise that turned into a socioeconomic learning opportunity. Few learning experiences focus on the inequalities in our world more powerfully.