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Friday, 27 November 2015

Amazing Facts For Kids


Welcome to the home page of amazing and cool facts for kids. We have a collection of 

awesome facts on various 

subjects. These topics will provide kids, as well as adults plenty of enjoyment. Choose from 

the many odd topics 

covering 

everything from microbes to the mighty universe. There are awesome facts, kid-friendly 

videos, riddles, quizzes, pictures, 

and downloadable documents.

We have compiled some of the best-loved and coolest amazing facts that kids love to read. 

Kids will be intrigued on how 

important and unique these facts are, and that even some adults are unaware about it. This 

distinctive way of 

presentation will only help increase your child’s general awareness.

Topics that range from facts on Animals, Countries, Earth, Food, History, Human, 

Languages, Math, Nature, Technology, 

Science, Space, and the Universe. If you are looking for a specific topic, you can either view 

that topic by going directly 

to 

the menu links listed below, or click on the topic that you would like to read.

Facts About Nature


Here are some intriguing facts for children on weather 

and nature that will amaze the kids. These amazing facts 

depicted in a fun manner so that the kids will easily 

memorize them.


  • Tired of the chill? Take a holiday to the hottest planet in our planetary system – Venus. At more than 800 degrees centigrade, it is even hotter than Mercury, despite Mercury being closest to the sun. The reason being that it has plenty of clouds and carbon dioxide that retain the heat it gets from the sun.
  • Did you know that one tree can sustain two individuals for their entire lives? In other words, it can provide enough oxygen for two individuals to live off their entire lives.
  • Did you know the Amazon rainforest produces half the world's oxygen supply?
  • Did you know Bali has the world’s largest variety of flora?
  • Plants also make and store ten times the energy that is used by humans.
  • Did you know the Atlantic Ocean is saltier than the Pacific Ocean?
  • Did you know the typical wave height of a Pacific tsunami is between six and nine meters?
  • There are no rivers in Saudi Arabia.
  • Did you know there is over 200 times more gold in the world's oceans than has ever been mined?
  • The seeds from the Artic Lupine, a wild flower found in Alaska, have been grown in the lab after being frozen in the ground for over 10,000 years. The bristle-cone pine is considered to be the oldest living species in the United States. Some of them are believed to be over 4,500 years old.
  • Antarctica is the coldest place on our planet, where it is believed that a temperature of 126.9 degrees Fahrenheit beneath zero was once recorded.
  • Did you know that it could get cold as minus 160 degrees Fahrenheit, ten miles over the earth’s surface?
  • Did you know that 90% of an iceberg sits under water?
  • The tropical rainforest gets about 80 to 400 inches of annual rainfall. If there is heavy rain, it gets about 2 inches of rain per hour. The driest place on Earth is the Atacama Desert in Chile, where it receives an annual rainfall of only three-hundredths of an inch.
  • Did you know that fire normally moves faster uphill than downhill?
  • The largest snowfall ever recorded in a day was close to 76 inches at Silver Lake, Colorado on April 14-15, 1921. Wonder for how many were the schools shut.
  • The 6,300-foot summit of New Hampshire’s Mount Washington experiences some of the worst weather in the world. The strongest wind recorded there was 231 miles per hour. The official lowest temperature officially recorded is 47 below zero Fahrenheit. However, the cold often combines with the wind to produce wind-chills of 150 degrees below zero. Furthermore, the ground is permanently frozen in a layer from 20 to 100 feet below the surface. Since 1851, over 100 people have died of falls or exposure on the mountain.
  • Dairy animals now and again take a seat in a field when they know it is going to rain. (That way, they are sparing a dry spot to sit for themselves).
  • One inch of rain is equal to 10 inches of snow.
  • Windmills always turn counter-clockwise, unless they are in Ireland.
  • Did you know that glass is made from sand and that diamonds from coal?
  • The lowest place in North America is the Death Valley at 282 feet below sea level.
  • Did you know the only continent with no active volcanoes is Australia?
  • Did you know 45,000 thunderstorms around the world occur every day?
  • Either ball lightning can smash a glass window to pieces or it can at times mildly float through the glass window without even breaking it.
  • Roy Sullivan, A U.S. park ranger, was struck by lightning seven times during his life and lived to tell about each of those strikes.
  • A lightning bolt is 4 times hotter than the sun.
  • The Earth is struck by lightning strikes over 100 times per second.
  • Did you know that the Empire State Building once was stuck by lightning 9 times in 20 minutes?
  • The odds of being struck by lightning are 600,000 to one.
We are certain that you and your kids loved reading these facts. Visit us regularly for more amazing facts. Enjoy.

Wednesday, 25 November 2015

Tuesday, 24 November 2015

Lion and Mouse

Lion and Mouse


Once, when a Lion was asleep. A little Mouse began, running up and down upon him. This soon wakened the Lion, who placed his huge paw, upon him! and opened his big jaws, to swallow him. "Pardon, O King!" cried the little Mouse, "Forgive me this time. I shall never repeat it, and I shall never forget your kindness. And who knows, but I may be able to do you a good turn, one of these days?" The Lion was so tickled, at the idea of the Mouse, being able to help him, that he lifted up his paw, and let him go. Sometime later, a few hunters captured the King, and tied him to a tree, while they went in search of a wagon to carry him on. Just then the little Mouse, happened to pass by, and seeing the sad plight in which the Lion was, ran up to him and soon gnawed away the ropes, that bound the King of the Beasts. "Was I not right?" said the little Mouse, very happy to help the Lion.

Sunday, 22 November 2015

The Neuroscience Behind Stress and Learning

The Neuroscience Behind Stress and Learning


The realities of standardized tests and increasingly structured, if not synchronized, curriculum continue to build classroom stress levels. Neuroimaging research reveals the disturbances in the brain's learning circuits and neurotransmitters that accompany stressful learning environments. The neuroscientific research about learning has revealed the negative impact of stress and anxiety and the qualitative improvement of the brain circuitry involved in memory and executive function that accompanies positive motivation and engagement.

The Proven Effects of Positive Motivation

Thankfully, this information has led to the development of brain-compatible strategies to help students through the bleak terrain created by some of the current trends imposed by the Common Core State Standards and similar mandates. With brain-based teaching strategies that reduce classroom anxiety and increase student connection to their lessons, educators can help students learn more effectively.
In the past two decades, neuroimaging and brain-mapping research have provided objective support to the student-centered educational model. This brain research demonstrates that superior learning takes place when classroom experiences are relevant to students' lives, interests, and experiences. Lessons can be stimulating and challenging without being intimidating, and the increasing curriculum requirements can be achieved without stress, anxiety, boredom, and alienation as the pervasive emotions of the school day.
During my 15 years of practicing adult and child neurology with neuroimaging and brain mapping as part of my diagnostic tool kit, I worked with children and adults with brain function disorders, including learning differences. When I then returned to university to obtain my credential and Masters of Education degree, these familiar neuroimaging tools had become available to education researchers. Their widespread use in schools and classrooms globally has yet to occur.
This brain research demonstrates that superior learning takes place when classroom experiences are motivating and engaging. Positive motivation impacts brain metabolism, conduction of nerve impulses through the memory areas, and the release of neurotransmitters that increase executive function and attention. Relevant lessons help students feel that they are partners in their education, and they are engaged and motivated.
We live in a stressful world and troubled times, and that is not supposed to be the way for children to grow up. Schools can be the safe haven where academic practices and classroom strategies provide children with emotional comfort and pleasure as well as knowledge. When teachers use strategies to reduce stress and build a positive emotional environment, students gain emotional resilience and learn more efficiently and at higher levels of cognition.

Neuroimaging and EEG Studies

Studies of electrical activity (EEG or brain waves) and metabolic activity (from specialized brain scans measuring glucose or oxygen use and blood flow) show the synchronization of brain activity as information passes from the sensory input processing areas of the somatosensory cortex to the reticular activating and limbic systems. For example, bursts of brain activity from the somatosensory cortex are followed milliseconds later by bursts of electrical activity in the hippocampus, amygdala, and then the other parts of the limbic system. This data from one of the most exciting areas of brain-based learning research gives us a way to see which techniques and strategies stimulate or impede communication between the parts of the brain when information is processed and stored. In other words, properly applied, we can identify and remove barriers to student understanding!
The amygdala is part of limbic system in the temporal lobe. It was first believed to function as a brain center for responding primarily to anxiety and fear. Indeed, when the amygdala senses threat, it becomes over-activated. In students, these neuroimaging findings in the amygdala are seen with feelings of helplessness and anxiety. When the amygdala is in this state of stress-induced over-activation, new sensory information cannot pass through it to access the memory and association circuits.
This is the actual neuroimaging visualization of what has been called theaffective filter by Stephen Krashen and others. This term describes an emotional state of stress in students during which they are not responsive to learning and storing new information. What is now evident on brain scans during times of stress is objective physical evidence of this affective filter. With such evidence-based research, the affective filter theories cannot be disparaged as "feel-good education" or an "excuse to coddle students" -- if students are stressed out, the information cannot get in. This is a matter of science.
This affective state occurs when students feel alienated from their academic experience and anxious about their lack of understanding. Consider the example of the decodable "books" used in phonics-heavy reading instruction. These are not engaging and motivating. They are usually not relevant to the students' lives because their goal is to include words that can be decoded based on the lesson. Decodability is often at the expense of authentic meaning to the child. Reading becomes tedious and, for some children, confusing and anxiety-provoking. In this state, there is reduced passage of information through the neural pathways from the amygdala to higher cognitive centers of the brain, including the prefrontal cortex, where information is processed, associated, and stored for later retrieval and executive functioning.
Additional neuroimaging studies of the amygdala, hippocampus, and the rest of the limbic system, along with measurement of dopamine and other brain chemical transmitters during the learning process, reveal that students' comfort level has critical impact on information transmission and storage in the brain. The factors that have been found to affect this comfort level such as self-confidence, trust and positive feelings for teachers, and supportive classroom and school communities are directly related to the state of mind compatible with the most successful learning, remembering, and higher-order thinking.

The Power of Joyful Learning

The highest-level executive thinking, making connections, and "aha" moments of insight and creative innovation are more likely to occur in an atmosphere of what Alfie Kohn calls exuberant discovery, where students of all ages retain that kindergarten enthusiasm of embracing each day with the joy of learning. With current research and data in the field of neuroscience, we see growing opportunities to coordinate the design of curriculum, instruction, and assessment in ways that will reflect these incredible discoveries.
Joy and enthusiasm are absolutely essential for learning to happen -- literally, scientifically, as a matter of fact and research. Shouldn't it be our challenge and opportunity to design learning that embraces these ingredients?

ہمارے پڑوسی

                                     ہمارے پڑوسی                                               

سنتے ہیں کہ اچھے پڑوسی اللہ کی نعمت ہیں، لیکن یہ بات شاید ہمارے پڑوسیوں نے نہیں سنی۔ ہم نہیں کہتے کہ ہمارے پڑوسی اچھے نہیں ہیں۔ صرف آپ کے سامنے ایک نقشا سا کھینچتے ہیں جس سے آپ کو اندازہ ہو گا کہ ہمارے پڑوسی کیسے ہیں۔ سب سے پہلے مرزا صاحب کو لیجئے۔ یہ حضرت ریڈیو بجانے کے بہت شوقین ہیں، بلکہ یوں لگتا ہے کہ مارکونی صاحب کو ریڈیو ایجاد کرنے کا خیال مرزا صاحب کے ذوق و شوق کو دیکھ کر ہی آیا تھا۔ اللہ جھوٹ نہ بلوائے تو چوبیس گھنٹوں میں سے کوئی بائیس گھنٹے ان کا ریڈیو بجتا ہے بلکہ چیختا ہے اور پورے زور و شور سے چیختا ہے۔ ان کو غالباً ریڈیو کی آواز کم کرنے کا طریقہ نہیں معلوم، اسی لیے تمام محلے والوں نے اپنے اپنے ریڈیو بیچ کر روئی کے بنڈل خرید لیے ہیں اور رو ئی نکال نکال کر کانوں میں ٹھونستے رہتے ہیں۔ ان کے ریڈیو پر دنیا بھر کے دور دراز کے ریڈیو اسٹیشنوں سے نشر ہونے والے پروگرام پورا محلہ (روئی ٹھونسنے کے باوجود) آسانی سے سن لیتا ہے۔ البتہ قریب کھڑے ہوئے آدمی کی آواز نہیں سنائی دیتی۔ قریشی صاحب بھی کچھ اسی قسم کا شوق رکھتے ہیں۔ انہیں موسیقی سے بہت لگاوٴ ہے۔ لیکن فرصت انہیں آدھی رات کے بعد ہی نصیب ہوتی ہے ، اسی لیے یہ ٹھیک اسی وقت ستار، ہارمونیم اور طبلہ بجانا شروع کرتے ہیں جب مرزا صاحب کا ریڈیو بند ہوتا ہے۔ اس طرح ہمارے محلے میں چوبیس گھنٹے بجلی، پانی اور گیس کی سہولت کے ساتھ موسیقی بھی چوبیس گھنٹے دستیاب ہے۔ محلے میں آدمی رات کو رونق میں مزید اضافہ اس وقت ہو جاتا ہے۔ جب جمالی صاحب کے دوستوں ج کی محفل جمتی ہے۔ اس محفل میں خوب خوب قہقہے لگائے جاتے ہیں اور وہ ادھم مچا ہے کہ توبہ ہی بھلی، کبھی کبھی ان کے دوستوں میں سے کوئی صاحب تانیں بھی اڑاتے ہیں۔ اس سارے ہنگامہ ہاوٴ سے یہ فائدہ ہوتا ہے کہ محلے میں رات بھر کوئی چور پاس پھٹک تک نہیں سکتا۔ اس سارے شور شرابے پر جلالی صاحب البتہ بہت خفا ہوتے ہیں۔ جلالی صاحب کئی سال یورپ میں رہ چکے ہیں اور کہتے ہیں کہ یورپ کے کسی شہر میں یہ سارا شور و غل ہو تو فوراً پولیس آ جائے اور ان بدتمیزوں کو پکڑ کر لے جائے۔ ان کا کہنا ہے کہ یورپ میں لوگ رات دس بجے کے بعد سیڑھیاں بھی دبے قدموں چڑھتے اترتے ہیں تاکہ گھروں میں سوئے ہوئے لوگوں کی نیند خراب نہ ہو لیکن اس کا کیا علاج کہ ابھی جلال صاحب کی موٹر سائیکل میں سائلنسر یعنی شور کم کرنے والا آلہ نہیں ہے۔ نتیجہ یہ ہے کہ حضرت جب موٹر سائیکل پر سوار ہو کر آتے جاتے ہیں تو پھٹ پھٹ کا ایک ایسا کان پھاڑ دینے و الا شور سنائی دیتا ہے کہ قبر میں پڑے مردے بھی سن لیں تو ہڑبڑا کر اٹھ بیٹھیں یا کم از کم کروٹ تو ضرور لیں۔ ہمارا جی چاہتا ہے کہ ان سے پوچھیں کہ اگر ایسی موٹر سائیکل یورپ کے کسی شہر میں چلائی جائے تو کیا ہو۔ کیا وہاں پولیس ایسے بدتمیزوں کو انعام دیتی ہے۔ نازک صاحب بھی مزے کے آدمی ہیں۔ انہیں جانور پالنے کا شوق ہے۔ ان کے گھر کے باہر ایک بکرا دو بھینسیں اور ایک ہرن بندھا رہتا ہے۔ گھر کے صحن میں مور اور بطخیں ہیں اور گھر میں کسی جگہ طوطے ، چڑیاں، بلبلیں اور نہ جانے کون کون سے پرندے پال رکھے ہیں۔ غرض گھر کیا ہے اچھا خاصا چڑیا گھر ہے۔ نازک صاحب ان تمام حیوانات کی غلاظت اور اپنے گھر کا کوڑا بڑی پابندی سے روزانہ گھر سے باہر سڑک پر پھینکتے ہیں اور پھر شکایت کرتے ہیں کہ شہر میں گندگی بڑھتی جا رہی ہے ، لوگ صفائی کا خیال نہیں کرتے ، وغیرہ وغیرہ۔ ہمارے ایک اور پڑوسی طفیلی صاحب کی عادت ہے کہ وہ اکثر چیزیں ادھار مانگتے ہیں۔ مثلاً استری، اخبار، جھاڑو، برتن، کتابیں، تھوڑی سی چائے کی پتی، ذرا سا آٹا، صرف ایک انڈا، معمولی سا نمک، چٹک بھر کالی مرچیں وغیرہ اور بے چارے اکثر واپس کرنا بھول جاتے ہیں۔ ایک دفعہ وہ ہماری بجلی کی استری کئی دن تک استعمال کرتے رہے اور ہم بڑی مشکل سے مانگ کر واپس لائے تو اگلے دن آ موجود ہوئے کہا “ہماری” استری واپس کیجئے۔ خاصی مغز مارے کے بعد انہیں یاد آیا کہ وہ استری ان کی نہیں اصل میں ہماری تھی اور کافی عرصے سے ان کے گھر میں رہنے کی وجہ سے انہیں اپنی لگنے لگی تھی۔ ہمارے پڑوسیوں کی فہرست خاصی لمبی ہے اور ان سب کی دلچسپ عادتیں بیان کی جائیں تو دفتر کے دفتر بھر جائیں لیکن ہم یہ سوچ کر اس مضمون کو ختم کیے دیتے ہیں کہ آخر ہم بھی تو کسی کے پڑوسی ہیں اور ہوسکتا ہے کہ ان کو بھی ہم سے کچھ شکایتیں ہوں۔ اگرچہ ہم پوری کوشش کرتے ہیں کہ کسی پڑوسی کو ہماری وجہ سے کوئی تکلیف نہ ہو، کیوں کہ حضور اکرم صلی اللہ علیہ وسلم کا فرمان ہے کہ جس شخص کی شرارتوں سے اس کے پڑوسی محفوظ نہ ہوں وہ مومن نہیں۔ نونہال دوستو! امید ہے کہ آپ وہ سب نہیں کرتے ہوں گے جو ہمارے پڑوسی کرتے ہیں۔