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Video 1: How to add decimals
Video 2: Examples of adding decimals
Video 3: Common mistakes made when adding decimals
Video 1: How to add decimals
Video 2: Examples of adding decimals
Video 3: Common mistakes made when adding decimals
Video 1: An introduction to adding decimals
Video 2: Adding decimals with ones and tenths parts
Video 3: Adding decimals (tenths)
Video 4: Adding decimals (hundredths)
Video 5: Adding decimals with ones, tenths and hundredths
Online activity: This activity poses four questions where you are required to add different forms of decimals
Part 1: Applications of decimals
Part 2: Examples showing how the application of decimals is used in everyday life
Part 3: Common misconception when applying decimals
Patterns and processes of evolution. How evolution and natural selection are reflected in the similarities and differences of organisms.
Video 1: Explores the conversion of fractions to decimals: tenths, hundredths and thousandths
Video 2: Two examples of converting fractions to decimals
Video 1: Dividing a decimal by a whole number with fraction models
Video 2: Dividing a decimal by a whole number on the number line
Video 3: Example of dividing a decimal by a whole number
Online activity 1: Dividing decimals by whole numbers
Video 4: Visually dividing a whole number by a decimal
Online activity 2: Dividing whole numbers by decimals
Outcomes:
Cellular respiration is the process by which cells derive energy from glucose. The chemical reaction for cellular respiration involves glucose and oxygen as inputs, and produces carbon dioxide, water, and energy (ATP) as outputs. There are three stages to cellular respiration: glycolysis, the Krebs cycle, and the electron transport chain.
Introduction to passive and active transport
Food webs are models that demonstrate how matter and energy is transferred between producers, consumers, and decomposers as the three groups interact within an ecosystem. Transfers of matter into and out of the physical environment occur at every level. Decomposers recycle nutrients from dead plant or animal matter back to the soil in terrestrial environments or to the water in aquatic environments. The atoms that make up the organisms in an ecosystem are cycled repeatedly between the living and nonliving parts of the ecosystem.