Write an article based on this "Identify crucial academic skills. Identify complementary, life-improving skills. Identify emotional and social skills."
article: These include reading and essential math skills used in many other subjects. Prioritize crucial lessons. Think about what skills your students will need to employ in order to make it through elementary and secondary school, be ready for higher education and progress onward throughout their lives. Think about the skills you use as an adult, such as good communication skills, including questioning and courageous speaking skills, and finding/looking up what you need to know. Plan and follow through on ways to build those skills in your students. These should be skills which students will need to function in various areas of life. Encourage not only following learned processes and procedures, but also to find ways to use initiative, self-expression within guidelines -- without being unruly or disruptive. Once the crucial skills have been identified, consider complementary skills for happy, productive lives. Praise and place value on their using creative skills and problem solving, being opportunity makers and help them be providers of interesting questions and giving answers and information in class. Give them crucial emotional outlets including participating at their age level in arts, music and expression as a creator and a performer, not only being a spectator. It’s not just academic skills which make people more functional, self-actualizing human beings. Apply techniques in your classroom to help students develop self-confidence, overcome shyness/"stage fright" by many steps, building self-esteem one effort at a time, coping with stress and disappointment (not just taking the easy escape), learning to not be overly defensive. They need to learn to accept reality without embarrassment by encouraging their efforts and trying again, and not unfairly blaming others for difficulties. They need ways to interact, being inclusive of other students needs, and productive coordination with others.

Write an article based on this "Round all of your numbers to multiples of ten or one hundred. Count out how many numbers you added when you rounded. Add the two rounded numbers together in your head. Subtract the number you added when rounding. Add the numbers in sets, then add the set totals together, as an alternative. Add the numbers by places if that’s easier for you."
article: Multiples of ten and one hundred are much easier to add together! Multiples of ten are easier to manage, but using hundreds can be helpful for larger numbers.  Always round up because it’s easier to keep track of how much you’re adding to your original numbers as you round. Here’s an example problem: 423+678. You’d round it like this: 430 + 680 or 500+700. You’ll need to take away the numbers you added when rounding. You can count off these numbers or simply add them in your head. Hold onto this number. In the problem listed above, you’ll count out 7 places for rounding 423 to 430 and 2 places for rounding 678 to 680. Add 7+2=9. Since you rounded, it’s easier to calculate this total in your head. However, this isn’t your final answer! For the problem above, you’d add 430+680=1110 You can use simple subtraction or count backwards from the sum of your rounded numbers. This will give you your final total! To solve the problem above, you’d subtract or count back 1110-9 =1101. When you’re adding several numbers together, you may find it easier to pair numbers together to create round numbers that end in “5” or “0,” then add those round numbers together. For example, let's say you're adding 1+8+2+7+3. You could add 8+2 = 10 and 7+3=10. That leaves you with 1+10+10=21. Break the number apart into just tens and ones. For example, 42+35+17 would become two problems: 40+30+10 and 2+5+7. It’s easy to add 40+30+10=80. Next, you’d just need to count 2+5+7=14. Finally, add your two sums together to get a final sum of 80+14=94. You can also do this with numbers in the hundreds. You can break the number down into just the hundreds, just the tens, and just the ones. However, using one of the other techniques may be easier when adding big numbers.

Write an article based on this "Upload your image Open your HTML file. Begin with the img tag. Find the URL of your image. Place the URL in a src attribute. Add an alt attribute. Save your changes."
article:
. There are many free image hosting services, such as Picasa Web Albums, Imgur, Flickr, or Photobucket. Read the terms carefully. Some services will reduce your image quality, or take down your image if too many people view it (since this uses up the host's bandwidth).  Some blog-hosting services let you upload images using the blog administrator tools. If you have a paid web host, upload the image to your own site using an FTP service. Creating an "images" directory is recommended to keep your files organized.  If you want to use an image on another website, ask the creator for permission. If she grants it, download the image, then upload the image to an image hosting site. Open the HTML document for the web page where the image will be displayed. If you are trying to insert an image on a forum, you can type directly in the post. Many forums use a custom system instead of HTML. Ask for help from other forum-goers if this doesn't work. Find the point in your HTML body where you'd like to insert an image. Write the tag <img> here. This is an empty tag, meaning it stands alone, with no closing tag. Everything you need to display your image will go inside the two angle brackets. <img> Visit the web page where your image is hosted. Right-click the image (control-click on Mac) and select "Copy Image Location." You can also click "View Image" to see the image alone on a page, then copy the URL in your address bar. If you uploaded the image to an images directory in your own website, link to it with /images/yourfilenamehere. If this doesn't work, the images directory is probably inside another folder. Move it up to the root directory. As you may already know, HTML attributes go inside a tag to modify it. The src attribute is short for "source," and tells the browser where to look to find the image. Write src=" " and paste the image URL in between the quotation marks. Here's an example: <img src="http://www.exampleimagehost.com/my-cute-dog.jpg"> Technically your HTML has everything it needs to display the image, but it's best to add an alt attribute as well. This tells the browser what text to display when the image fails to load. More importantly, this helps search engines figure out what your image is about, and lets screen readers describe the image to visually impaired visitors. Follow this example, changing the text inside the quotation marks:  <img src="http://www.exampleimagehost.com/my-cute-dog.jpg" alt="my dog eating a tangerine"> If the image is not important to the page content, include the alt attribute with no text (alt=""). Save the HTML file to your website. Visit the page you just edited, or refresh the page if you already had it open. You should now see your image. If it's the wrong size or you're unhappy with it for another reason, continue to the next section.