
A donor heart beating in a mechanical system which keeps it warm, oxygenated, with nutrient enriched blood pumping through.

A donor heart beating in a mechanical system which keeps it warm, oxygenated, with nutrient enriched blood pumping through.

Photo Manipulation
This is a ordinary photo from SU history. Give it to students and ask for an analysis of this source. What makes it reliable, and what doesn’t. Then show them this picture and ask again.
Teachers think that these days kids are used to visual manipulations, They live in a world in which visual information is always transformed in a way. That being the case, Stalins trics always work wonders in classroom because it’s so obvious what happened to the man that vanished.
If you have more time ask them to manipulate photo’s themselves and present them. You can provide them with those photo’s and ask what they would manipulate if your were, Stalin.
This one should be fairly easy as is the next one,
but with that one you can always show this one as an answer.
It is important that the students question themselves what the importance of the photo’s are for our idea of history. Oftentimes the fact that there are visual resources make a history seem more important.
Is it bad that I’m kind of proud that the first Photoshop was the Soviet government?
Barreleye
Macropinna microstoma
February 23, 2009—With a head like a fighter-plane cockpit, a Pacific barreleye fish shows off its highly sensitive, barrel-like eyes—topped by green, orblike lenses—in a picture released today but taken in 2004. The fish, discovered alive in the deep water off California’s central coast by the Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute (MBARI), is the first specimen of its kind to be found with its soft transparent dome intact. The 6-inch (15-centimeter) barreleye (Macropinna microstoma) had been known since 1939—but only from mangled specimens dragged to the surface by nets.
Photos © Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute
Because of their low metabolic rate, Koalas rest for 16-18 hours a day. They also spend 3-5 hours a day eating on average 18 g of eucalypt leaves, a plant that is toxic to most species.