Movie Choices Each Movie Is Approximately 30 Minutes Unless Noted

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Movie Choices Each Movie Is Approximately 30 Minutes Unless Noted Movie Choices Each Movie is approximately 30 minutes unless noted Preschool - 2nd Grade Kindergarten - 2nd Grade 2nd - 4th Grade Wild Kratts (mostly animated): o Tasha the Polar Bear o Reading Rainbow - Desert Life o Mom of a Croc o Cara the Sea Turtle o Biotrackers - Habitats o Whale of a Squid o Cain the Coyote o Amazing North America (45 min.) o Aardvark Town o Tau the Lion o Awesome Animal Builders (45 min.) o Flight of the Draco o Lena the Leopard o Wonders Down Under (45 min.) o Mystery of Squirmy Wormy o Penguin Adventures o Adventures in Asia (45 min.) o Platypus Cafe o Bats in the Belfry o Deep Sea Dive (45 min.) o Build it Beaver o Scary Creatures o Swingin’ Safari (45 min.) o Honey Seekers o Skeletons o Totally Tropical Rainforest (45 min.) o Bass Class o 30MPH o Dinosaurs & Other Creature Features o Birds of a Feather o The Biggest & The Fastest (45 min.) o Mimic o Something Extra o The Jeff Corwin Experience (45 min.) o Stuck on Sharks o Legs! o Little Howler o Secrets of Animal Survival Kratt’s Creatures: o Raptor Roundup o Black & White o Creatures of the Night o Speaking Dolphinese o Animals Undercover o Hanging with the Monkeys o Blowfish Blowout o Mysteries of the Deep o Weird Creatures o A Huge Orange Problem o Spy Tools o The Cow Show o Walk on the Wetside o Marshmania! o Googly Eye The Night Guru The Magic Schoolbus: o Mgobo of Baboon Mountain o Spins a Web o Phantom Wolves o Ants in the Pants o Big 5, Little 5 o In a Beehive o Sharks o Butterfly & the Bog Beast o Maximum Cheetah Velocity 4th - 6th Grade o Predator & Prey o Migration 6th Grade & Up o Africa’s Deadly Dozen (45 min) Life in the Undergrowth (Insects) (50 min.) o India’s Deadly Dozen (45 min.) o Invasion of the Land o The Jeff Corwin Experience (45 min.) o Taking to the Air o The Silk Spinners Life in the Freezer (Antarctica/Penguins) (30 min.) o Parasitic, Symbiotic & Commensal Relationships o The Bountiful Sea o Supersocieties o The Ice Retreats o The Big Freeze Growing Up Series (42 min.) o Footsteps in the Snow o Wolf o Sitka Deer Planet Earth Series (50 min.) o Moose o Pole to Pole o Black Bear o Mountains o Walrus o Deep Ocean o Seal o Shallow Seas o Penguin o Freshwater o Polar Bear o Deserts o Zebra o Ice Worlds o Giraffe o Caves o Rhino o Great Plains o Hyena o Jungles o Baboon o Forests o Gorilla o Africa’s Deadly Dozen o Orangutan o India’s Deadly Dozen River Monsters (40 min) Life in Cold Blood (Reptiles & Amphibians) (50 min.) o Piranha o The Cold-blooded Truth o Freshwater Shark o Invaders of the Land o Death Ray o Dragons of the Dry o Killer Catfish o Sophisticated Serpents o Alaskan Horror o Armored Giants.
Recommended publications
  • DOUG ALLAN Edited Transcript of an Interview with Cameraman, Diver
    DOUG ALLAN Edited Transcript of an interview with cameraman, diver and former BAS Base Leader, Mr Doug Allan, at his home in Bristol, conducted by Chris Eldon-Lee, 19th June 2011. BAS Archive ref: AD6/24/1/128 Transcribed by Mike Dixon, September 2015. Doug Allan Part 1; ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- [Part 1, 00.00.00] Chris: This is Doug Allan, recorded by Chris Eldon-Lee, on the 19th June 2011. Doug Allan Part 1. Doug: My name is Doug Allan, and I was born on the 17th July 1951 in Dunfermline, in Scotland. [Part 1, 00.00.20] Chris: And what about your parents, what were they up to? Doug: My father was a photographer and a freelance cameraman for BBC Scotland and various other people, my mother was - initially looked after me and my brothers and sisters. I’m one of five, I’ve got one twin brother, one younger brother, two younger sisters, so mother was more or less a housewife for all of those but then she also went into business. She was also helping Dad withhis business and then they also set up a Hairdressing business latterly. But father had a very successful freelance photography journalist business until he unfortunately had a car accident in about 1972– 73. He broke his leg rather badly and he was a long time off work and it did leave him rather unable to be as active as he was beforehand. He became a producer with Fife Educational Television Service which back in those days, Fife was rather ahead of the game really: he would record with the BBC and [with] peoples permission he would record programmes off the television and then they had a system within Fife Schools for sending those programmes out so the schools could look at them anytime they wanted.
    [Show full text]
  • Redalyc.DAVID ATTENBOROUGH. Naturalist and Pioneer of Nature
    Mètode Science Studies Journal ISSN: 2174-3487 [email protected] Universitat de València España León, Bienvenido DAVID ATTENBOROUGH. Naturalist and pioneer of nature and wildlife documentaries Mètode Science Studies Journal, núm. 1, 2011, pp. 117-123 Universitat de València Valencia, España Available in: http://www.redalyc.org/articulo.oa?id=511751285012 How to cite Complete issue Scientific Information System More information about this article Network of Scientific Journals from Latin America, the Caribbean, Spain and Portugal Journal's homepage in redalyc.org Non-profit academic project, developed under the open access initiative DAVID ATTENBOROUGH Naturalist and pioneer of nature and wildlife documentaries by Bienvenido León ir David Attenborough’s (London, 1926) passion for his work, televising nature, has not faded green wave one bit after over half a century travelling round the world. At 84 he remains fully active, S seeking new nature stories to bring to the screen. In-between trips, which are still regular, he writes scripts for projects, at his home in the quiet suburb of Richmond, just outside London. Though not on display, countless trophies and diplomas are secreted in a cupboard in this house, witness to the fact that Sir David has received major recognition for promoting public awareness of nature. The most recent of these was the Prince of Asturias Award in 2009. «An amazing experience» he recalls, «especially the way the city celebrates the event. With those wonderful local music bands I knew nothing about. We had a great time. It was marvellous!». monograph «people must know about science, because it is the very basis of our civilization» On the left, frames taken from the documentary The Private Life of Plants (BBC, 1995) and The Blue Planet (BBC, 2002), both presented by David Attenborough.
    [Show full text]
  • UNESCO Kalinga Prize Winner – 1981 Sir David Attenborough
    Glossary on Kalinga Prize Laureates UNESCO Kalinga Prize Winner – 1981 Sir David Attenborough A British Legend of Science Serials, Britain’s Best Known Natural History Film Maker & Arguably the World’s Foremost Television Naturalist [Born: May 8, 1926 in London, England …………] Mankind has Probably done more damage to the earth in the 20th Century than in all of Previous human history. ... David Attenborough “If we [humans] disappeared over right, the world would Probably be better off.” The Daily Telegraph, London, 12, November, 2005 … David Atenborough “It seems to me that natural world is the greatest source of excitement, the greatest source of visual beauty; the greatest source of intellectual interest . It is the greatest source of so much in life that makes life worth living.” … David Attenborough. 1 Glossary on Kalinga Prize Laureates David Attenborough : A Biographical Profile World’s Best Known Broadcasters, Humanists and Naturalists Born : May 8, 1926 London, England Residence : Richmond, London Nationality : British Field : Naturalist Alma mater : Clare College, Cambridge (Natural Sciences) Notable Prizes : Order of Merit, Order of the Companions of Honour, Royal Victorian Order, Order of the British Empire, Fellow of the Royal Society Sir David Frederick Attenborough, OM, CH, CVO, series is in production. He is also a former senior CBE, FRS (born on May 8, 1926 in London, England) manager at the BBC, having served as controller of is one of the world’s best known broadcasters and BBC2 and director of programming for BBC naturalists. Widely considered one of the pioneers Television in the 1960s and 1970s. of the nature documentary, his career as the He is the younger brother of director and actor respected face and voice of British natural history Richard Attenborough.
    [Show full text]
  • Animal Representation in Nature Documentaries Narrated by David Attenborough, 1950S-2000S: a Multimodal Approach
    Animal Representation in Nature Documentaries Narrated by David Attenborough, 1950s-2000s: A Multimodal Approach by Katherine Louise Pearce. A thesis submitted to The University of Birmingham for the degree of MASTER OF PHILOSOPHY Department of English School of Humanities The University of Birmingham September 2015 University of Birmingham Research Archive e-theses repository This unpublished thesis/dissertation is copyright of the author and/or third parties. The intellectual property rights of the author or third parties in respect of this work are as defined by The Copyright Designs and Patents Act 1988 or as modified by any successor legislation. Any use made of information contained in this thesis/dissertation must be in accordance with that legislation and must be properly acknowledged. Further distribution or reproduction in any format is prohibited without the permission of the copyright holder. List of abbreviations BNC British National Corpus LOB Lancaster-Oslo-Bergen Corpus NHU Natural History Unit (BBC) PE Planet Earth PE01 Planet Earth episode 1 PE02 Planet Earth episode 2 PE03 Planet Earth episode 3 PE04 Planet Earth episode 4 PE05 Planet Earth episode 5 PE06 Planet Earth episode 6 PE07 Planet Earth episode 7 PE08 Planet Earth episode 8 PE09 Planet Earth episode 9 PE10 Planet Earth episode 10 PE11 Planet Earth episode 11 TEU Travel and Exploration Unit (BBC) ZQD Zoo Quest for a Dragon ZQD1 Zoo Quest for a Dragon episode 1 ZQD2 Zoo Quest for a Dragon episode 2 ZQD3 Zoo Quest for a Dragon episode 3 ZQD4 Zoo Quest for a Dragon episode 4 ZQD5 Zoo Quest for a Dragon episode 5 ZQD6 Zoo Quest for a Dragon episode 6 ZQM Zoo Quest to Madagascar ZQM1 Zoo Quest to Madagascar episode 1 ZQM2 Zoo Quest to Madagascar episode 2 ZQM3 Zoo Quest to Madagascar episode 3 ZQM4 Zoo Quest to Madagascar episode 4 ZQM5 Zoo Quest to Madagascar episode 5 ZQWA Zoo Quest to West Africa ZSL Zoological Society of London 1.
    [Show full text]
  • School Lists: DVD Unless Indicated
    SCHOOL LISTS Michelangelo Prehistoric Park (Also check TV Channels and Paul Cezanne ENGLISH, LANGUAGE AND Series for additional Rembrandt READING information) Vincent Van Gogh Series Single Grammar for Children ANIMALS Art on a Shoestring Descriptive Words & Phrases Series Impressionists Nouns Animal Atlas Rainy Day Art 1 & 2 Punctuation Animal Passport Vatican Museums Sentences Family Time World Art 1 & 2 Verbs Disney Nature BIOGRAPHIES Kids Love Spanish African Cats Series 1. Basic Words Chimpanzee Great Composers 2. Alphabet & Numbers Crimson Wing Bach 3. Family Earth Beethoven 4. Food Monkey Kingdom Mozart Little Pim Migration Indiana Living Biography Series English/ESL, French, Spanish Oceans Evan Bayh 1. Eating and Drinking Wings of Life Bobby Slick Leonard 2. Wake up Smiling Jack Hanna’s Animal Richard Lugar 3. Playtime Adventures Single 4. In My Home Africa Adventures Bonhoeffer – Agent of Grace 5. Happy, Sad and Silly Single Brannaman, Buck 6. I Can Count America’s Wildlife Survivors Brooks, Mel Sign a Lot Animal Holiday Campbell, Glenn ABC Games Bears Carter, Jimmy Big Surprise Bear Family and Me Clash, Kevin-Being Elmo Signing Time Dolphins Ebert, Roger V. 1-13 India, Kingdom of the Tiger Farley, Chris Baby Signing Time V.1-4 Island of Lemurs Faye, Tammy Practice Time ABC’s Jobz for Dogz Jefferson, Thomas (Ken Burns) Practice Time 123’s Komodo-Secrets of the Dragon Jobs, Steve-One Las Thing Writing for Children March of the Penguins Johnston, Daniel Expository Writing Our Feathered Friends JFK Presidency Revealed Story Writing Planet Ant King, Dr. Martin Luther Types of Writing Steve Irwin, the Crocodile Lee, Harper-Hey Boo Writing Process Hunter Lewis, C.S.
    [Show full text]
  • Sir David Attenborough
    Sir David Attenborough David Attenborough is a wildlife film-maker and naturalist (a scientist who studies animals and their behaviour). He has been making television programmes for over 60 years and is considered by many to be a national treasure. Early Life David Frederick Attenborough was born in London on 8th May 1926. He lived on the campus of University College, Leicester as his father was a principal there. He lived with his parents, Mary and Frederick, and his two brothers, Richard and John. As a child, David loved science and nature: he collected fossils, rocks, and other items, such as bird eggs. After finishing school, he continued his fascination by studying natural sciences at Cambridge University. After finishing university, he was called to do two years’ service in the Royal Navy. He spent those two years in North Wales. Television In 1952, David joined the BBC (British Broadcasting Corporation) as a producer. In 1954, he began working on a series called ‘Zoo Quest’. This was filmed in many interesting places and showed animals in their natural environment. This was quite unusual at the time and the show was incredibly popular The Life Collection When David joined the BBC, • 1979 - Life on Earth he had only seen one • 1984 - The Living Planet television programme. • 1990 - The Trails of Life David left the BBC in 1972 so he could • 1993 - Life in the Freezer write and produce his own shows. In 1979, he started a series called ‘Life on • 1995 - The Private Life of Plants Earth’ which also became popular.As well • 1998 - The Life of Birds as making many other shows throughout his career, he continued to make other • 2002 - The Life of Mammals ‘Life’ programmes.
    [Show full text]
  • POLAR REGIONS: SCIENCE Heatthe Isoff Deborah Herridge Slaps on Her Snow Shoes and Wraps up Warm for a Chilly Look at Life in the Freezer
    POLAR REGIONS: SCIENCE heatThe isoff Deborah Herridge slaps on her snow shoes and wraps up warm for a chilly look at life in the freezer... ACTIVITY 1 Pole Position MODELLING THE EARTH’S TEMPERATURE... The coldest parts of our planet are the top and bottom – the Arctic in the north and the Antarctic in the south. But why, in places where for half the year the sun never sets, is it so cold? As the Earth moves around the Sun it’s tilted on its axis: an imaginary line through the planet between the North and South poles around which it rotates. The tilt always points the same way in space. The part of Earth which runs around the middle of the planet, the equator, is consistently close to the Sun ACTIVITY 2 as the Earth makes its orbit and so is consistently warm; the poles are not. During a year’s orbit, the North Pole is tilted towards the Sun in summer, keeping it in constant daylight, and away from it in winter, Threatening thaws keeping it dark. The opposite is true at the South Pole, ASSESS THE IMPACT OF MELTING ICE... meaning the seasons are reversed. Imagine if the Earth wasn’t tilted – what would happen to the seasons? Ninety percent of the Earth’s ice is in Antarctica, a continental land mass covered with ice at an TRY: average thickness of about 2,000 metres. The We can demonstrate how there are warm and cool parts of the Arctic is a little different. Here the ice is much planet using an old football or globe to represent thinner and there is no land as the ice floats the Earth and a strong torch to represent on the Arctic Ocean.
    [Show full text]
  • Ariane Whitehead Head Ofproduction: Anna Leon Missing Linkeditorialteam
    Mon 3rd 1:05 B37 Biological Sciences (BS) Thurs 13th 5:00 Staff Common Room (BS) Research Seminar: Dr Ben Evans (McMaster Round Table Talks: Ruben Heleno, ‘Seed pre- University, Canada), ‘Duplicate gene evolution dation and seed dispersal by birds - a new use and expression regulation in polyploid clawed for food webs,’ Ellie Whittaker (TBA), Prof frogs (Xenopus)’ Keith Edwards, ‘A personal view on how to get money from the BBSRC’ Tue 4th 1:00 2D24 Psychology Department (PD) Talk: Kerry Schofield, ‘Some touch of mad- ness: differentiating between healthy and at-risk schizotypy’ Lunchtime (BS) BioSoc, Film: check email for details Evening (Java) BE Ball hosted by BioSoc and Tubes Wed 5th 4:00 2D2 (PD) External Talks: Professor Marius Usher (Birkbeck - University of Lon- don), ‘Neural synchrony, visual grouping and selective attention’ Mon 17th 1:05 B37 (BS) Research Seminar: Dr Thurs 6th 5:00 Staff Common Room (BS) Mary Cameron (London School of Hygiene & Round Table Talks: Amy Chen TBA, Krystina Tropical Medicine), ‘Future measures for house Golabeck, ‘Shouting at the neighbours: coopera- dust mite control’ tive territory defence or selfish advertisement in the group-living pied babbler,’ Dr Steve Soffe Tue 18th 1:00 2D24 (PD) Talk: Nick Scott-Samu- TBA el ‘Motion matters’ 5:15 Staff Common Room (BS) Workshop in Mon 10th 1:05 B37 (BS) Research Seminar: Dr Ecology and Animal Behaviour: Natalie Hempel Kerry Franklin (Royal Society University Re- de Ibarra , (University of Exeter), ‘Colour vision search Fellow, University of Leicester),
    [Show full text]
  • 2014 18 Lifetime Achivement Award 2014 20
    INDEX PAGE INTRODUCTION JURY COORDINATORS 10 THE PRIX EUROPA AWARDS 2014 18 LIFETIME ACHIVEMENT AWARD 2014 20 COMPETING TELEVISION ENTRIES TV DOCUMENTARY 22 TV FICTION 46 TV CURRENT AFFAIRS 74 TV IRIS 92 PRIX GENEVE-EUROPE 108 COMPETING RADIO ENTRIES RADIO DOCUMENTARY 120 RADIO CURRENT AFFAIRS 156 RADIO FICTION 174 RADIO MUSIC 210 COMPETING ONLINE ENTRIES ONLINE 232 SPECIAL EVENTS 264 2 If I were to pick one word to describe the PRIX EUROPA, I would choose ‘gathering’. This year, for the 28th time, the PRIX EUROPA will gather the cream of the crop of European media. From all over the continent, people who share the same passion for television, radio and web will come to Berlin to compete against each other, and so pay testament to the dynamism of European public broadcasting. However, the strength of the festival goes beyond the competition itself. Its real virtue is that it gets young and old from different cultures, religions and languages communicating with and learning from each other. What’s more, this sort of collaboration helps us to understand each other – and that is of crucial moral, civil, social and cultural value in the turbulent world of the moment. I look forward to this exceptional event and to meeting you there. Yours sincerely, Roger de Weck PRIX EUROPA President Director General of Schweizerische Radio- und Fernsehgesellschaft - SRG SSR Welcome to Berlin, where PRIX EUROPA has built its home - with good reason. It is a city where ideas count more than high salaries, imagination defeats protocol, and talent can find space to develop.
    [Show full text]
  • Environmental Science a Level
    Environmental Science A Level This is a programme of activities and resources to prepare you to start A level Environmental Science. It is aimed to be used throughout the remainder of the Summer term and over the Summer Holidays to ensure you are ready to start your course in September. Book Recommendations The books below are all popular science books and great for extending your understanding of Science, the natural world and potential future developments. Bryson is available as an eBook from Hampshire library service. https://www.hants.gov.uk/librariesandarchives/library/whatyoucanborrow/ebooksaudi obooks A Short History of Nearly Everything by Bill Bryson A whistle-stop tour through many aspects of history from the Big Bang to now. This is a really accessible read that will re- familiarise you with common concepts and introduce you to some of the more colourful characters from the history of science! This Changes Everything by Naomi Klein (2014) is an important contribution to the discussion of strategy and tactics for climate action. What the future looks like by Jim Al-Khalili In a sweeping look at the state of numerous fields of research, theoretical physicist Jim Al-Khalili edits a collection of essays by leading scientists on everything from artificial intelligence to teleportation. Will humans settle on other planets? Will we augment ourselves with bionics? Can we permanently rid ourselves of disease, or balance our insatiable need for energy with our planet’s rapidly changing climate? Wilding: The Return of Nature to a British Farm by Isabelle Tree The story of the “Knepp experiment,” an effort to restore 3,500 acres of England from farmland to wilderness.
    [Show full text]
  • If You Care About Wildlife, You Should Care About Factory Farming
    23 May 2017 Compassion in World Farming launches STOPTHEMACHINE campaign with crucial message: if you care about wildlife, you should care about factory farming Yesterday (22nd May), Compassion in World Farming launched its new campaign in a one- night only event at the Natural History Museum. STOPTHEMACHINE explores the link between factory farming and the devastating impact this is having on some of the world’s most iconic wild animals. The campaign calls for an urgent rethink of the way we produce and consume food before it is too late. Factory farming is driving many species, including the Sumatran elephant, African penguin and Brazilian jaguar, to the brink of extinction but we can halt this decline. The everyday food choices we all make could help save these much-loved animals. The launch event was attended by actors Peter Egan and Evanna Lynch, and a number of influential figures including leading British environmentalist Tony Juniper and conservationist Stanley Johnson. Chris Darwin, naturalist and great-great-grandson of Charles Darwin, who attended the launch said: “I know Charles [Darwin] would want to stop the machine because he loved the natural world. “Ultimately, we have got to put factory farming to bed. In the museum. Out of history. Right now.” Award-winning wildlife expert and presenter Simon King OBE, who helped launch the campaign, said: “The final goal of every campaign like this is that it no longer needs to exist. “We’re not powerless in this battle. I’d like to hope that you go away from this evening feeling empowered.” He went on to read the D.H.
    [Show full text]
  • Books Movies
    Master Naturalist Advanced Training Book & Movie Option We are offering book and movie advanced training options for 2012. You may read a book from the approved list that will count for 2 hours of Advanced Training per book, 2 book maximum. You may watch a nature documentary or movie that will count for 1 hour of Advanced Training per movie, 2 movie maximum. Books Aldo Leopold – A Sand County Almanac Charles Darwin - The Origin of Species David Beerling - The Emerald Planet Edward O. Wilson - The Future of Life Jane Goodall - In the Shadow of Man John McPhee - Basin and Range John Muir – any of his writings or biographies Joseph Cornell – Sharing Nature with Children Marie Read - Secret Lives of Common Birds: Enjoying Bird Behavior through the Seasons Mark Kurlansky - Cod Mark Kurlansky - Salt: A World History Michael Canfield, et al - Field Notes on Science & Nature Nick Lane - Oxygen Rachel Carson – Silent Spring Richard B. Alley - Earth, the Operator’s Manual Richard Louv – Last Child in the Woods Ted Cable – any of his books on interpretation Movies Strange Days on Planet Earth (Tonya has these available for check out) DVD 1 (1 hr credit) – “Invaders” & “The One Degree Factor” DVD 2 (1hr credit) – “Predators” & “Troubled Waters” Planet Earth (Tonya has these available for check out) DVD 1 (1 hr credit) –“From Pole to Pole,” “Mountains” & “Fresh Water” DVD 2 (1hr credit) – “Caves,” Deserts” & “Ice Worlds” DVD 3 (1 hr credit) – “Great Plains,” “Jungles” & “Shallow Seas” DVD 4 (1hr credit) – “Seasonal Forests” & “Ocean Deep” DVD 5 (1hr credit)–“Saving Species,” Into the Wilderness” & “Living Together” The Life Series by David Attenborough – any of the episodes “Life in Cold Blood,” “Life in the Undergrowth,” “The Private Life of Plants,” “The Life of Mammals,” “The Life of Birds,” “Life on Earth,” “Life in the Freezer.” If you have a book or movie that is not listed, please ask Mary ([email protected]) or Tonya ([email protected]) for approval.
    [Show full text]