2
POPSIt's Useful To Be Smart "With their attention to colors, patterns and shapes and their ability to learn about new forms, one wonders how much these creatures can learn and what limitations they might have. They couldn’t read Dr. Seuss, of course, but they might enjoy looking at the pictures."
0
POPSWatch Dr. Seuss - Horton Hears a Who! movie All the fans of Watch Dr. Seuss - Horton Hears a Who! Movie can Watch its movie from here or can watch them online for free. Readers can visit here for all the latest news and gossips about the movie.
0
POPSDownload Dr. Seuss - Horton Hears a Who! movie All the fans of Download Dr. Seuss - Horton Hears a Who! Movie can download its movie from here or can watch them online for free. Readers can visit here for all the latest news and gossips about the movie.
5
POPSHORTON HEARS A WHO NOT PRO LIFE This clip is for the benefit of certain clippers who said I did not know what I was talking about when I said the Dr. Seuss story, "Horton Hears A Who" is not anti-abortion.
0
POPSFree Download Dr. Seuss' Horton Hears a downloads with speed and safety and trust me no frauds at all. Click here to download free Horton Hears a right now. The best part is that you can watch downloaded movies how many times you want and everything is free of cost.
0
POPSFree Download Dr. Seuss' Horton Hears a The story line is very interesting, the first scene starts with; The imaginative elephant Horton hears a cry for help coming from a tiny speck of dust floating through the air. Suspecting there may be life on that speck and despit
8
POPSHow the Grinch Stole Health Care There's a scene from the animated version of "How the Grinch Stole Christmas" that fits George W. Bush to a tee. The lines from the poem read: And the one speck of food that he left in the house was a crumb that was even too small for a mouse. Then he did the same thing to the other Whos' houses, leaving crumbs much too small for the other Whos' mouses! But in the 1966 televised adaptation of Dr. Seuss' classic, the Grinch actually goes back for that final crumb, leaving the family with... nothing. This scene is remindful of yet another last-minute move by our president to inflict hardship on those less fortunate than he is. (And what an appropriate time of year for Bush to demonstrate his aptitude for misgovernance.)
9
POPSTutorial: Concrete vs. Abstract Thinking
The Dr. Seuss book Green Eggs and Ham "ends with the narrator changing his mind from rejecting green eggs and ham under any circumstances to trying them and actually liking them. At a concrete level of understanding, the story is about a stubborn person changing his mind. At a more abstract level of understanding, it is about people in general being capable of modifying their thoughts and desires even when they are convinced that they cannot or do not want to do so. This more abstract level of understanding can be appreciated by two and three year old children only if the higher level of meaning comes out of a discussion of the book with a more mature adult. At older ages and higher levels of thinking, this same process of more mature thinkers facilitating higher levels of abstraction in less mature thinkers characterizes the process of teaching abstract thinking. For example, this is how great philosophers, like Socrates and Plato, taught their pupils how to think abstractly. "