GACE - Elementary Education Test I & II Combo (501)
Syntax
Phrases and sentences from words
Idioms
Phrases or words used only in specific locations or cultures
Consumer sovereignty
Process through which consumers vote with their dollars
Bacteria
Prokaryotic, single-celled organisms that lack cell nuclei
Scholar-officials
A class of career government officials who functioned between the populace and the government
Atlas
A collection of maps, usually bound into a book, that contains geographic features, political boundaries, and perhaps social, religious, and economic statistics
Glide reflection
A combination of a reflection and a translation
Climax community
A community that is established and flourishing
Summary statement
A concise presentation of the essential data from a passage
Degenerative disease
A condition in which diseased tissues or organs steadily deteriorate
Scientific notation
A convenient method for writing very large and very small numbers
Repeating decimal
A decimal that continues forever by repeating a string of digits
Terminating decimal
A decimal that has a fixed number of digits
Chronic disease
A disease that is long lasting, often continuing for more than three months
Pathogen
A disease-causing organism
Plane
A flat surface that extends forever in two dimensions
Rounding numbers
A form of estimation that is very useful in many mathematical operations
Regression
A form of statistical analysis used to predict a dependent variable (y) from values of an independent variable (x)
Linear function
A function defined by the equation f(x) = mx + b
Population
A group of individuals of one species that live in the same general area
Persuasion
A piece of writing whose purpose is to change the minds of the audience members or to get them to do something
Joint
A place where two bones meet, they enable movement
Quadrilateral
A polygon with four sides
Triangle
A polygon with three sides
Point
A position in space, on a line, or on a plane
Parasitism
A predator that lives on or in its host, causing detrimental effects to the host, but not to the parasite
Isosceles trapezoid
A quadrilateral where the nonparallel sides are congruent
Trapezoid
A quadrilateral with exactly one pair of parallel sides
Parallelogram
A quadrilateral with two pairs of parallel sides
El Niño
A sequence of changes in the ocean and atmospheric circulation across the Pacific Ocean
Conspicuous strategies
A sequence of teaching events and teacher actions used to help students learn new literacy information and relate it to their existing knowledge
New Deal
A series of public programs beginning in 1933 that were designed to assist Depression-wracked Americans and to promote economic recovery
Exponent form
A shorthand way of writing repeated multiplication
Electroscope
A simple device used to indicate the existence of a positive or negative charge
Models
A small object, usually built to scale, that represents in detail another, often larger, object
Feudalism
A social system in which the wealthy protected the weak in return for labor and service
Cone
A space figure having a circular base and a single vertex
Sphere
A space figure having all its points the same distance from the center
Function
A special type of relationship between two values in which each input value corresponds to exactly one output value
Base words
A stand-alone linguistic unit that cannot be deconstructed or broken down into smaller words
Hypothesis
A statement of the researcher's expectations for the outcome of the research problem, a summary statement of the problem to be addressed in any research document, an unproved theory or educated guess followed by research to best explain a phenomena
Element
A substance that cannot be broken down into other substances
Indicator
A substance that changes color when it comes into contact with an acid or a base
New South
A term sometimes used to describe the South after the Civil War, it refers to a South no longer dependent on slave labor and based on industry instead
Ice age
A time period in which glaciers advance over a large portion of a continent
Translation
A transformation that "slides" an object a fixed distance in a given direction
Rotation
A transformation that turns a figure about a fixed point called the center of rotation
Equilateral triangle
A triangle with all three sides the same length
Acute triangle
A triangle with exactly three acute angles
Scalene triangle
A triangle with no sides the same length
Obtuse triangle
A triangle with one obtuse angle
Right triangle
A triangle with one right angle
Isosceles triangle
A triangle with two sides the same length
Metaphor
Any time one thing is used in place of something else in text, signifying some sort of resemblance
Root words
A word from which another word is developed
Black Death
An outbreak of plague that killed about one-third of the European population during the 14th century
Combination
An unordered collection of distinct elements
Vaccines
Antigens given in very small amounts, which stimulate both humoral and cell-mediated responses
Intrusive rock
Any igneous rock that was formed below the earth's surface
Contractions
Shortened form of two words in which one of more letters have been deleted
Pictographs
Show comparison of quantities using symbols, each symbol represents a number of items
Line graphs
Show trends, often over a period of time
Magnetic domains
Small areas in iron where atomic magnetic fields line up in the same direction
Bases
Contain the elements oxygen and hydrogen (OH)
Acid
Contains one element of hydrogen (H)
Manifest destiny
The 19th century doctrine that the US had the right and duty to expand throughout the North American continent
Phonological awareness
The ability of the reader to recognize the sound of spoken language
Phonemic awareness
The ability to break down and hear separate or different sounds and to distinguish among the sounds one hears, the acknowledgement of sounds and words
Energy
The ability to cause change in matter, such as heating a frozen liquid changes it from a solid to a liquid
Inferential comprehension
The ability to create or infer a hypothesis for a given statement based on collected facts and information
Fluency
The ability to read in much the same manner as speaking, with fluidity and smoothness
Evaluative comprehension
The ability to understand and sort facts, opinions, assumptions, persuasive elements, and the validity of a passage
Narration
Discourse that is arranged chronologically
Exposition
Discourse whose only purpose is to inform
Description
Discourse whose purpose is to make an experience available through one of the five senses
Historic causation
The concept that events in history are linked to one another by an endless chain of cause and effect
Meninges
The connective tissues that protect the central nervous system
Centripetal force
The constraining force directed toward the center of a circle that keeps an object moving in a circular path
Natural numbers
The counting numbers
Frost wedging
The cycle of daytime thawing and refreezing at night
Corroborated
The data presented is more consistent with this theory than with any other theory
Endocrine system
Manufactures proteins called hormones
Convergence
Occurs when the oceanic crust collides with either another oceanic plate or a continental plate, also includes continent-to-continent plate collisions
Bill of Rights
The first 10 amendments added to the US Constitution that spell out limits on governmental authority
Convenience sampling
The method of choosing items arbitrarily and in an unstructured manner from the frame
Median
The middle number of a set
Order of operations
The order in which mathematical operations should be performed: parentheses, exponents, multiply, divide, add, subtract
Chronology
The ordering of events through time, often listen along a timeline or in a list by date
Classification
The paragraph presents grouped information about a topic
Perimeter
The sum of the lengths of the sides of any polygon
Mean
The sum of the numbers given divided by the number of items being averaged
Information Revolution
The sweeping changes during the latter half of the 20th century as a result of technological advances and a new respect for the knowledge provided by trained, skilled, and experienced professionals in a variety of fields
Friction
Resistance to motion
Biodiversity
The variety of species, organisms, and habitats available on the Earth
Cardiac output
The volume of blood per minute that the left ventricle pumps
Peristalsis
The wavelike contractions that carry food down the pharynx to the stomach
Antecedent
The word or word group that a pronoun stands for or refers to
Monotheism
The worship of one God
Plate tectonics
Theory of the origin of glacial activity that demonstrates that some continental masses, now in temperate climates, were at one time blanketed by snow
Chromatography
Uses the principles of capillarity to separate substances
Indirect measurement
Using an alternate method for measuring, such as using scale drawings
Personification
Whenever an author gives human life to an inanimate item
*DOMAIN V*
*HEALTH, PHYS ED, & THE ARTS*
*DOMAIN III*
*MATHEMATICS*
*DOMAIN I*
*READING & ENGLISH LANGUAGE ARTS*
*DOMAIN IV*
*SCIENCE*
*DOMAIN II*
*SOCIAL STUDIES*
Code of Hammurabi
A Babylonian code of laws
Skepticism
A Greek word meaning a method of obtaining knowledge through systematic doubt and continual testing
Nationalism
A believe in one's own nation, or country, people
Civilization
A high level of cultural and technological development
Variable
A letter that is used to represent one or more numbers, includes a factor that is changed
Questioning technique
A mathematic process in which students devise questions to clarify the problem, eliminate possible solutions, and simplify the problem-solving process
Gross domestic product
A measure of the economy's output during a specified time period
Decimal
A number written with a whole-number part, a decimal point, and a decimal part
Rectangle
A parallelogram with a right angle
Rhombus
A parallelogram with all sides equal length
Square
A rectangle with all sides of equal length
Kamikaze
A typhoon that dispersed a Mongol invasion fleet threatening Japan from the west in 1281, in WWII this term was used to describe Japanese pilots who deliberately crashed their planes into enemy targets
Prior knowledge
All of an individual's prior experiences, education, and development that precede his or her entrance into a specific learning situation or his or her attempts to comprehend a specific text
Circle graph
Also called pie charts, a circular graph that shows quantities in proportional sectors
Capitalism
An economic system based on private ownership of capital
Traditional economy
An economy based on traditional ways of doing things
Mixed economy
An economy in which certain sectors are left to private ownership and the free market, while others are regulated by the government
Command economy
An economy in which decisions about production and allocation are made by the government
Global warming
An enormous environmental issue today, it is caused by the "greenhouse effect"
Inferencing
An evaluative process that involves the reader in making a reasonable judgment based on the information given and engages children in literally constructing meaning
Counterexample
An exception to a proposed rule or conjecture that disproves the conjecture
Law
An explanation of events that occur with uniformity under the same conditions
Fraction
An expression of numbers in the form of x/y where x is the numerator and y is the denominator
United Nations
An international organization composed of most countries of the world and dedicated to promoting peace, security, and economic development
Permutations
An ordering of a certain number of elements of a given set
Prefixes
Beginning units of meaning that can be added to a base word or root word
Guess-and-check strategy
Calls for students to make an initial guess at the solution, check the answer, and use that outcome to guide the next guess
Doppler effect
Change in experienced frequency due to relative motion of the source of the sound
Hormones
Circulate in the bloodstream and stimulate actions when they interact with target tissue
Dollar voting
Consumers, in effect, voting for the goods and services that they want with their dollars
Biomes
Communities that are ecologically similar in regards to temperature, rainfall, and the species that live there
Similie
Comparisons between two objects, or between a person and an object, that use the words "like" or "as" to identify the similarities
Behavior
Complex responses, which may or may not be instinctual
Oxides
Compounds that are formed when oxygen combines with another element
Kansas-Nebraska Act
Congressional act that allowed the territories of Kansas and Nebraska to decide for themselves whether to allow slavery, it repealed the Missouri Compromise
Missouri Compromise
Congressional solution to the addition of slave states to the union, it forbade slavery to areas north of latitude 36°30′ N
Ray
Consists of all the points on a line starting at one given point and extending in only one of the two opposite directions along the line
Species
Defined by the ability to successfully reproduce with members of their own kind
Vocabulary
Demonstrates the strong ties between oral and written language, increasing it will help students with both comprehension and fluency
Regression equation
Derived from a known set of data
Sequence of events
Details are presented in the order in which they have occurred
Symmetry
Equal on both sides
Suffixes
Ending units of meaning that can be "affixed" or added onto the ends of root or base words
Summarizing
Engages the reader in pulling out the essential bits of information in a longer passage or excerpt of text and making them into a cohesive whole
Fungi
Eukaryotic, mostly multicellular organisms
Protists
Eukaryotic, single-celled organisms
Matter
Everything in the world is made up of this which is defined by the space it takes up and it's mass
Agricultural Revolution
Experimentation that resulted in the increased production of crops as well as a new and more technical approach to the management of agriculture
Variable addition
Explains the concept of multiplication, which is simply repeated addition
Future tense
Expresses an action or a condition of a future time
Past perfect tense
Expresses an action or a condition that occurred as a precedent to some other action or condition
Present perfect tense
Expresses an action or a condition that started in the past and is continued to or completed in the present
Present tense
Expresses an action that is currently happening or is always true
Past tense
Expresses an action that occurred in a past time
Future perfect tense
Expresses an action that started in the past or the present and will conclude at some time in the future
Line
Extends forever in one dimension
Genes
Factors transferred from parents to their offspring
Stalacites
Icicle-like structures of calcium carbonate that hang from the roofs of caves
Semantic cues
For example, does that make sense to you?
Syntactic cues
For example, does that sound right?
Equation
Formed when an equals sign is placed between two expressions
Fault
Fractures in the earth's crust that have been created by either tension or compression forces transmitted through the crust
Conditional statements
Frequently written in the "if-then" form
Sinkholes
Funnel-shaped depressions created by dissolved limestone
Popular sovereignty
Grants citizens the ability to directly participate in their own government by voting and running for public office
Graphic organizers
Graphical representations of the content in a text
Mixed number
Has an integer part and a fractional part
Accuracy
How close a measurement comes to the "true" value
Monsoons
Huge wind systems that cover large geographic areas and that reverse direction seasonally
Topic sentence
Indicates what the passage is about
Active learning
Involves a learning atmosphere full of action
Daimyos
Japanese lords of great lands who were of the highest social classes
Shogun
Japanese warriors who served the Daimyos and who followed a code of honor
Figurative language
Language that uses creative or poetic methods to convey points
Glaciers
Large bodies of slow-moving ice
Jim Crow laws
Laws enacted after the Civil War that resulted in the segregation of whites and blacks, with blacks being forced to use inferior facilities
Plants
Like animals, multicellular, eukaryotic organisms
Compound
Made of two or more elements that have been chemically combined
Monitoring comprehension
Making certain that the text is making sense to the reader
Percent
Means "per 100," 10% is 10 parts out of 100
Monitoring
Means self-clarifying
Spectrophotometry
Measures the percent of light at different wavelengths absorbed and transmitted by a pigment solution
Direct measurement
Measuring something directly
Phonics
Method for teaching students to read which relies on studying the rules and patterns found in language, the connection between the sounds and letters on a page
Animals
Multicellular, eukaryotic organisms
Orogeny
Natural mountain building
Social support systems
Networks that students develop with their peers that provide support when students experience challenges and difficulties
Essential nutrients
Nutrients that the body needs but cannot make by itself
Manipulatives
Objects a student can use to reinforce a lesson
Reflection
Objects have the same shape and size, but the figures face in opposite directions
Compound words
Occur when two or more base words are connected to form a new word
Libraries
Offer resources such as survey information from various departments and bureaus of the federal and state government, magazines and periodicals in a wide range of topics, artifacts, encyclopedias, and other reference materials, and usually access to the Internet
Dikes
Old lava tubes that form when magma entered a vertical fracture and hardened
Subduction
Plate collisions that are either intercontinental or ocean floor collisions with a continental crust
Profit
Positive gain from an investment or business operation after subtracting for all expenses
Truman Doctrine
President Harry S. Truman's foreign policy declaring the US "leader of the free world"
Rifting
Process by which the Earth's crust is forced apart, generally occurs in mid-ocean ridges
Introductory statement
Provides a bridge between any previous, relevant text and the content to follow, it provides information about the text and also sets the tone and parameters
Irrational numbers
Real numbers that cannot be written as the ratio of two integers
Macroeconomics
Refers to the functioning of the economy on the national level, as well as the functioning of the aggregate units that comprise the national economy
Semantics
Refers to the meaning expressed when words are arranged in a specific way
Estimating and testing for reasonableness
Related skills that students should employ before and after solving a problem, students compare their estimate to the sum that they actually compute to determine if their answer is reasonable
Working backward strategy
Requires students to determine a starting point when solving a problem where the final result and the steps to reach the result are given
Plates
Rigid blocks of the earth's crust and upper mantle
Supporting details
Sentences that give more information about the topic and the main idea
Sample space
Set of all possible outcomes for an experiment or trial
Logical order
So a reader can follow the information easily and quickly
Opinion
Something that a person believes, thinks, or feels
Fact
Something that is true and can be proved
Denseness property
States that if all real numbers are ordered from least to greatest on a number line, there is an infinite set of real numbers between any two given numbers on the line
Main idea
States the important idea or ideas that the author wants the reader to know about a topic
Simplifying
Strategy used when the best way to solve a problem is to break it into a series of simpler problems
Schemata
Structures that represent generic concepts stored in the memory
Question answering
Students answer questions regarding a text, either out loud in small groups, or individually on paper
Passive learning
Students are taught in a non-stimulating and inactive atmosphere
Summarization
Students go over the main point of the text along with strategically chosen details that highlight the main point
Salt
Substance formed when an acid and a base combine chemically
Sectional endings
Suffixes that impart a new meaning to the base or root word
Histograms
Summarize information from large sets of data that can be naturally grouped into intervals
Random sampling
Supplies every combination of items from a frame, or stratum, with a known probability of occurring
Exponent
Tells how many times the base is multiplied by itself
Precision
Tells us how exact a measurement is
Mediated scaffolding
Temporary support or guidance provided to students in the form of steps, tasks, materials, and personal support during initial learning
Relative humidity
The actual amount of water vapor in a certain volume of air compared to the maximum amount of water vapor this air could hold at a given temperature
Coefficient addition
The addition of variables
Dew point
The air temperature at which water vapor begins to condense
Volume
The amount of cubic space that an object occupies
Quotient
The answer to a division problem
Product
The answer to a multiplication problem
Mood
The atmosphere or attitude the writer conveys through descriptive language
Background knowledge
The basic knowledge most children bring to their learning experiences
Neuron
The basic unit of the nervous system
Refraction
The bending of light as it enters a different medium
Immunity
The body's ability to recognize and destroy an antigen before it causes harm and to fight disease through special proteins that destroy infection
Central nervous system
The brain and the spinal cord, it is responsible for the body's response to environmental stimuli
Demography
The branch of science of statistics most concerned with the social well-being of people
Weathering
The breaking down of rocks at or near the earth's surface
Causation
The change in one of those data points caused the other data points to change
Condensation
The change in phase from gas to liquid
Evaporation
The change in phase from liquid to gas
Cardiovascular system
The closed circulatory system that carries oxygenated blood and nutrients to all cells of the body and returns carbon dioxide waste to the lungs for expulsion
Industrial Revolution
The development of power-driven machinery fueled by coal and steam
Range
The difference between the highest and lowest value of data items
Tolerance interval
The difference between the lower and upper levels of tolerance
Circumference
The distance around a circle
Emergent literacy
The early reading and writing behaviors that precede and develop into conventional literacy
Détente
The easing of tensions or strained relations between rivals
Wave-particle duality
The exhibition of both wavelike and particle-like properties by a single entity, usually a quantum phenomenon relating to photons, electrons, and protons
Control
The experiment conducted under normal conditions
Stamp Act
The first direct tax on British colonists in America
Kinetic friction
The force of friction of two surfaces in contact with each other when there is relative motion between the surfaces
Static friction
The force of friction of two surfaces that are in contact but do not have any motion relative to each other, such as a block sitting on an inclined plane
Caldera
The formation left by the collapse of a volcano cone into an empty magma chamber
Theory
The formation of principles or relationships that have been verified and accepted
Upper limit
The greatest acceptable measure of error
Tolerance
The greatest measure of error allowed
Abrasion
The grinding action of sand, pebbles, and other rock fragments in a stream
Rule of law
The ideal that the law applies not only to the governed, but to the government as well
Erosion
The inclusion and transportation of surface materials by another moveable material (usually water, wind, or ice)
Phagocytosis
The ingestion of foreign particles
Fusion
The joining of atomic nuclei which results in the release of large amounts of energy
Correlation
The joint movement of various data points, a measure of association between two variables
Greatest common factor
The largest number that is a factor of all the numbers in a problem
Lower limit
The least acceptable measure of error
Trophic levels
The levels of feeding relationships that determine energy flow and chemical cycling
Line of reflection
The line where a mirror may be placed, the distance from a point to this line is the same as the distance from the points image to this line
Hyperbole
The literary version of exaggeration
Statement support
The main idea is stated and the rest of the paragraph explains or proves it
Density
The mass of a substance contained per unit of volume
Statistics
The mathematical science that deals with the collection, organization, presentation, and analysis of various forms of numerical data
Weight
The measure of Earth's pull of gravity on an object
Entropy
The measure of how much energy or heat is available for work
Mass
The measure of the amount of matter in an object
Volcanism
The movement of magma through the crust as well as its emergence as lava onto the Earth's surface
Whole numbers
The natural numbers and zero
Peripheral nervous system
The nerves that connect the central nervous system to the rest of the body
Frequency of the interval
The number of data values in any interval
Area
The number of square units covered by a polygon
Frequency
The number of times any particular data value occurs
Mode
The number that occurs with the greatest frequency in a set of numbers
Base
The number to be multiplied as many times as indicated by the exponent
Question generating
The opposite of question answering, where students learn to ask questions and think critically about texts
Exfoliation
The peeling away of the outer layers from a rock
Scientific Revolution
The period beginning in the 16th century that was dominated by scientific study, particularly applied to the study of physics
Prehistory
The period of mankind's achievements before the development of writing
Character
The person, such as a hero or villain, represented in a story
Setting
The place or location where a story occurs
Point of averages
The point on the respective averages of the x and y values
Integers
The positive and negative whole numbers and zero
Periodization
The practice of dividing time into a number of discrete periods or blocks of time
Scientific method
The process by which researchers over time endeavor to construct an accurate representation of the world
Discussion
The process by which students are encouraged to see the range of possibilities in a text by sharing their thoughts about it in a group
Deductive thinking
The process of arriving at a conclusion on the basis of other statements that are all known to be true, such as theorems, axioms, or postulates
Evolution
The process of change over a long period of time
Inductive thinking
The process of finding a pattern from a group of examples
Active listening
The process of repeating back what was said in the form of a question
Word analysis
The process readers use to figure out unfamiliar words based on written patterns
Gametogenesis
The production of the sperm (spermatogenesis) and egg cells (oogenesis)
Supply
The quantities of a good or service that a producer is willing and able to sell at different prices during a given period of time
Demand
The quantity of goods and services that consumers are willing and able to purchase at different prices during a given period of time
Flexibility
The range of motion around a joint or muscle
Specific gravity
The ratio of the density of a substance to the density of water
Comprehension
The reader can ascribe meaning to text
Niche
The relational position of a species or population in an ecosystem
Coordinate pair
The relationship between a pair of values
Laws of thermodynamics
The relationship between heat, forms of energy, and work (mechanical, electrical)
Ovulation
The release of the egg into the fallopian tube
Fossil
The remains or trace of an ancient organism that has been preserved naturally in the earth's crust
Taxonomy
The science of classification
Culture
The set of values, conventions, or social practices associated with a particular group
Least common multiple
The smallest number in a group of numbers that all the given numbers will divide into evenly
Molecule
The smallest particle of a substance that can exist independently and has all of the properties of that substance
Atom
The smallest particle of an element that retains the properties of that element
Magnetic field
The space around a magnet where its force will affect objects
Content area vocabulary
The specific vocabulary related to the particular concepts of various academic disciplines
Fission
The splitting of an atomic nucleus which releases large amounts of energy
Equilibrium
The state of balance between opposing forces of change
Cold War
The state of political tension and military rivalry between the Soviet Union and the West from the end of WWII to the 1980s
Economics
The study of how a society allocates its scarce resources to satisfy what are basically unlimited and competing wants, a study of the production, consumption, and distribution of goods and services
Ecology
The study of how living organisms interact with the physical aspects of their surroundings (their environment) including soil, water, air, and other living things
Biogeography
The study of how the surface features of Earth (form, movement, and climate) affect living things
Geography
The study of location and how living things and Earth's features are distributed throughout the Earth
Electrostatics
The study of stationary electric charges
History
The study of the past, especially aspects of human past, like political incidents, economic events, and cultural and social conditions
Dynamics
The study of the relationship between motion and the forces affecting motion
Morphology
The study of word structure
Dermis
The thicker inner layer of the skin
Epidermis
The thinner outer layer of the skin
Themes
The underlying messages, above and beyond all plot elements, that writers want to convey
Literal comprehension
The understanding of the basic facts of a given passage
Text structure
The use of headings, sidebars, and more that give important clues to the reader about what to look for in a story
Opportunity cost
The value of the sacrificed alternative
Cause and effect
This pattern describes how two or more events are connected
Decode
To change communication signals into messages
Active immunization
Treatment that provides immunity by challenging an individual's own immune system to produce an antibody against a particular organism
Passive immunization
Treatment that provides immunity through the transfer of antibodies obtained from an immune individual
Marshall Plan
US program for rebuilding the economic foundation of Western Europe following WWII
Alphabetic principle
Understanding that written words are composed of patterns of letters that represent the sounds of spoken words
Subjunctive mood
Used for conditional clauses or wish statements that pose untrue conditions
Bar graph
Used to compare various quantities
Correlation coefficient
Used to describe the strength of the association between the variables, as well as the direction of the association
Indicative mood
Used to make unconditional statements
Electrophoresis
Uses electrical charges of molecules to separate them according to their size
Stalagmites
Water that falls on a constant spot on the cave floor and evaporates, leaving a deposit of calcium carbonate
Precipitation
Water that falls to Earth in the form of rain and snow
Topic
What the paragraph or story is about
Comparison-contrast
When a paragraph describes the differences of similarities of two or more ideas, actions, events, or things
Predation
When a predator eats its prey
Monopoly
When a single company owns all or nearly all of the market for a given type of product or service
Destructive interference
When a trough and a crest of different shapes meet, the two pulses will cancel each other out and the medium will assume the equilibrium position
Substitution
When an equation is solved for either of two variables, then the solution is substituted to find the remaining variable
Secularism
When emphasis shifts away from religion to the state
Strategic instruction
When information is carefully combined with what the learner already knows and understands to produce a more generalizable, higher-order skill
Tangent
When objects make contact at a single point or along a line without crossing
Linear combinations
When one or both of two equations are replaced with an equivalent equation so that they can be combined and one variable eliminated
Inflammatory response
When the blood supply to the injured area increases, causing redness, heat, and swelling
Constructive interference
When two crests or troughs of the same shape meet
Competition
When two or more species in a community use the same resources
Symbiosis
When two species live close together
Wave interference
When two waves meet while traveling along the same medium
Textual marking
Where students interact with the text as they read, for example, with sticky notes, to help them focus on the importance of small things and provide a reference point for review
Prime numbers
Whole numbers greater than 1 that have only two factors: 1 and the number itself
Composite numbers
Whole numbers that have more than two different factors
Transitions
Words that signal relationships between ideas that can help to improve the flow of a document