Problem: Article: For a vegetable soup that does not use broth, add 4-6 cups of water into a large pan, and simmer all the ingredients for 45 minutes to 1 hour, using a very low heat. Add all the vegetables, garlic, and spices at the same time.  The pan needs to be large enough to include the 4 cups of vegetable stock, so choose a heavy-bottomed stockpot.  Do not boil the water; this may cause the vegetables to burn. Stir the soup occasionally. When all of the vegetables are soft, the soup is ready to be served. For a quicker vegetable soup, you will need to sauté the vegetables and use broth. Heat the olive oil until it begins to slightly bubble.  Lower heat will make the process go very slowly, and higher heat will cause the oil to burn. If you don't have olive oil, coconut oil, palm oil, avocado oil, or butter is also acceptable. Continue to cook these for about 8 minutes over low heat. They will begin to simmer and will become fragrant. Stir them occasionally, about once every minute. This includes the green beans, celery, corn, and any other vegetables you will include in the soup. Sauté the vegetables over low heat for another 5 minutes. You will know the vegetables are well-cooked when they become soft and fragrant; you never want the vegetables to turn dark brown.  Stir the vegetables occasionally with a long wooden or metal stirring stick. Twice every minute should suffice. If your vegetables start to get very hot and sizzle constantly, this means they are frying. Turn the heat down if this happens. Turn the heat up if the vegetables are not sizzling at all. Stir the pot to make sure the ingredients are all mixing together. Then, increase the heat to high. This will cause the vegetables to simmer. If the soup begins to boil, lower the heat a little bit. You will need to watch the soup and make sure it doesn’t go beyond a simmer  Turn down the heat to medium or low if it boils. You want the soup to bubble slightly but not to be at a rolling boil. If you had turned down the heat of the soup, it may be appropriate to turn it up again to medium or high so the soup returns to a simmer. After 25-30 minutes, the potatoes and carrots should be soft. If a fork can pass easily through an entire chunk of potato or carrot without stopping at any hard spots, your soup is done. After you add a bit of each seasoning, stir thoroughly to mix the spice into the entire soup. Taste test to see if the amount of spices is to your liking. In general, start with just 1 tablespoon (14.8 ml) of each spice, including salt and pepper. Then, add more if you want a stronger flavor.  Be careful because it's a lot easier to add spices to a soup than it is to take them out. If you would like to season the soup further, you can add more spices or seasonings, such as dry or fresh oregano, thyme, or parsley. Dried Italian seasoning blends or poultry seasoning are good additions as well. Spices like cayenne and red pepper flakes will make the soup spicy. Carefully ladle the soup into bowls—remember, the soup will be very hot.
Summary: Simmer all the vegetables in 4-6 cups of water. Heat the olive oil in a large pan. Add the minced garlic, carrots, potatoes, and celery. Add all other vegetables. Add the diced tomatoes. Add 4-6 cups of chicken, beef, or vegetable stock. Cook the soup to cook for 25 to 30 minutes. Check that the potatoes and carrots are cooked. Add salt, pepper, and any other seasonings you desire. Serve and enjoy your delicious vegetable soup.

Problem: Article: While many email marketing applications have built-in analytics, you may consider getting a third party system to help you process the data or statistics on your campaigns. Some software can give you a more comprehensive or visual representation of your analytics, while others may track something that your current content management system does not. The size and scope of your e-blast campaign will dictate which kind of software you require. Popular analytics software includes Google Analytics, Klipfolio, DOMO, Tibco and Tableau Software. Click-through rate or CTR is how often customers click on links contained in your email. There is also a conversion rate, which tracks how many people took action after clicking your link, as well as a rate for how many people opened and read your email. Many email blast software will have these metrics built in. Do not make things in the email blast confusing or complicated as it can prevent people from taking action or even reading the blast.  To calculate your CTR, divide the number of clicks by the number of emails that you've sent.  If your click rate is fairly low, try to come up with new methods to attract people to your links. Conversion rates track things like how many people RSVPed to an event, purchased a product, or signed a petition. Adding images to an email may also help improve your click through rate. Average click rate for an email blast is 5.6%, though it will vary depending on the type of business you have. By tracking the statistics on each of your emails, you'll be able to develop concise reports about what works and what doesn't for your target audience. Take note of the specific days and times for your highest open and conversion rates. Test different tones and subject lines and see what causes your audience to read the blast. Stick to the things that your consumer tends to favor or enjoy and avoid repeating aspects of emails that do poorly according to the stats. Take external factors, like fashion trends, into account when you are analyzing the metrics. It's not always how you are crafting the blasts, but what's happening in society that may make it more successful than others. Is your email list growing or shrinking? If more people are unsubscribing than are registering to your list, it's a good sign that you need an entire strategic overhaul on your email policies. If there are a lot of people unsubscribing it could be because your content is not relevant to the people that you're sending it to. In this case, try to segment your list differently or change the type of content that's being delivered through your email blasts.  For example, if you see that 10% of your list unsubscribed because of your last email blast, try to identify what consumers didn't like about the email. Do not inundate customers with useless emails. Always ensure there is a plan to action or a promotion within the email.
Summary: Choose analytics software that works for your organization. Understand the statistics. Find things that encourage people to engage. Watch the growth of your list.

Problem: Article: Now that you have your educational roadmap, make a lesson plan which specifically lists how you will get them to each step in that road. Every skill that will need to be mastered in order to get them between those mini-goals will need to be planned and written down. When making your lesson plan, keep learning styles in mind. Every student learns differently and if you want your whole class to have equal opportunity for success, you will need to accommodate these. Plan to use sound, visuals, manipulatives, physical activity and the written materials along with your student centered lessons for facilitating, introducing, modeling, giving guided practice and periodic homework all for each subject, whenever possible. If you are in an environment where you can interrelate subject matters, such as science and math or English and history, do some of that. This will help students understand how information is applied and is more related to the situations they will encounter in the real world. Life is not broken up into class subjects, after all. Find ways that you can collaborate with other teachers to provide your students with engaging, integrative lessons.
Summary:
Outline each course that you teach to achieve education goals; the school may require each teacher to have a course syllabus or similar document. Consider learning styles. Mix subject matter to build cross-curricular, multiple skills.