Since its inauguration in 2012, Maker Party has become Mozilla's largest celebration of making and learning on the web. From getting the hang of HTML to building robots to learning about remixing using paper and scissors, people of all ages and from all backgrounds have come together to joyfully explore the culture, mechanics and citizenship of the web.
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The WITS acronym was created in 1993 when Principal Judi Stevenson began teaching students four simple conflict resolution strategies: Walk away, Ignore, Talk it out and Seek help. These were eagerly adopted by teachers, counselors and administrators and soon, "using your WITS" was a common phrase in many public schools.
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TED-Ed’s commitment to creating lessons worth sharing is an extension of TED’s mission of spreading great ideas. Within TED-Ed’s growing library of lessons, you will find carefully curated educational videos, many of which represent collaborations between talented educators and animators nominated through the TED-Ed platform. This platform also allows users to take any useful educational video, not just TED’s, and easily create a customized lesson around the video. Users can then distribute TED-Ed lessons, publicly or privately, and track their impact on the world, a class, or an individual student.
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