Do any of you girls or women wear or own reflective clothing for safety purposes?I bought a jacket and I feel like I made the wrong decision.It was under 50 bucks and I thought I could use it for safety reasons considering I dont own flares or reflective signs or anything for when my car breaks down at nightand it has once already
Usually when they say there'll be a Fire Drill it won't be real fire, it would just be a test(at least at my school).
The twisting of space-time by heavy objects is *very* *very* small. The twist from things like our sun and the planets can barely be measured at all. If nothing else was going on, then yes, the moon and the planets would gradually decrease the radius of their orbits. But the fact is, a lot of other things are going on, like solar light pressure, tides, loss of mass in the sun, gravity from the other planets and asteroids, etc. These other things are much much more significant than the space-time twisting. Some of them make the Earth go away from the sun, and some make the Earth go closer. But all of them added together don't add up to enough for anybody to notice. In numbers, the twisting energy loss would make the Earth get closer to the sun by about 2 micrometers every billion years.
Evaluate the teaching methods versus content. Content: Maybe the content was not interesting to the audience, or too hard for the audience. Teaching methods: Did you liven up the instruction? Or did you sit and speak/lecture? Did you show power point with a lot of information? The main thing is don't give up. Evaluate what you're doing, and see where you can improve. Ask your students what they would like to see done differently! Keep up the great work! We all need teachers!
Sounds like my dog. He's terrified of my smoke alarm. But he's a dog and has no idea what's going on and hasn't got enough brain to ever figure it out and realize all by himself that it isn't going to hurt him. You are a human being with enough brains to have made it into high school. This is ridiculous behaviour for someone your age. Perhaps you need to see a psychologist and learn how to cope, because a fire drill is very small potatoes in the scale of things that are scary. And what will you do when you're older and at work one day and a real fire alarm goes off? I bet you have a bunch of other things you can't deal with either. Perhaps much of the problem comes from your parents who will rescue you from doing anything difficult, help you avoid things instead of telling you to face up to them or teaching you how to deal with them. I'm helping my dog to learn that a smoke alarm isn't going to hurt him and I would do the same for a child of mine.