Nicole Fields-Kyle is the director of programs and operations at Concrete Jungle, a company that transforms overlooked and underutilized nutrients into healthy food sources for communities in need.
Follow host Cecil as he tracks that compositing bin from the Aglanta Eats festival with Chef Cheryll all the way to the Truly Living Well Farm where we hear from Think Green founder, Khari Diop.
In this episode of Let's Go Enviro, we hear from the Atlanta Beltline's director of design, Kevin Burke. He's been working on this project since 2009 with the goal of bringing less pollution and healthier lifestyles to the city's population.
In order to understand the building blocks of sustainable construction, host Raiany Silva heads over to Arabia Mountain High School where she engages in a lesson on environmental design.
Sustainability has been defined as the balance of the environment, the economy, and equity. In this segment of Let's Go Enviro, hear how Georgia students are being encouraged to create sustainable ideas in their curriculum.
Felicia Purdy, assistant superintendent of Seminole County schools, sits down with host Ashley Mengwasser in an episode of Classroom Conversations to discuss literacy in rural areas and the challenges of implementing new ins
Students should be utilizing the SEPs in every science class, but what does this look like in a middle school science class? This video showcases students' actions in a science class. How are the students using these practices to make sense of or figure out a phenomenon?
In the early 1760s the area north and west of Georgia’s coast previously inhabited by Native Americans was opened up for settlement. It was a wilderness where few whites lived.
This Kindergarten unit – designed for an inclusion classroom – focuses on English language arts, mathematics and science standards. During this unit, students explore Dr. Seuss’ works to master rhyming, and identifying number symbols, number words, and details in texts.
English Language Arts | Physical Health and Wellness | Professional Learning | Grades 9-12
Join GPB Education as we explore the inspiring teaching tools surrounding The Great Thanksgiving Listen from StoryCorps, a national storytelling project that invites us all to share our unique voices and build connections within our communities in order to create a more just and compassionate wor
Advice, strategies, and encouragement for teachers as they make the shift from having their students learn about science as a body of knowledge to a dynamic set of practices and concepts that help us understand the natural and designed world and solve its problems.
Florence Fleming Corley at Kennesaw State College, Tena Roberts, the archivist at Wesleyan College, and Gena Franklin, vice president of Wesleyan, report on the idea of a higher education for women in the 1800s.
Sine Die, a Latin phrase meaning "without day," is the final day of the legislative session. Host Stephen Fowler explains why this is such an important day to lawmakers and why they often work until the very last minute of the day to pass bills.
Norman and Nancy Blake and James Bryan play American string music and talk about it as the main form of entertainment at the turn of the century. Charles Wolfe, a music historian, describes how songs were a way of telling stories and spreading the news.