answersLogoWhite

0


Best Answer

I need to find a catchy name to put for the title of my "book". The project was reading to Elementary Studens and now I need a catchy name for my giant book I made to present.

User Avatar

Wiki User

9y ago
This answer is:
User Avatar

Add your answer:

Earn +20 pts
Q: Could you help me find a catchy name for a school project to present to elementary students?
Write your answer...
Submit
Still have questions?
magnify glass
imp
Continue Learning about Art & Architecture

What is a catchy title for a project involving the energy of household light bulbs?

An Illuminating Experiment


For a history day project what's a catchy title for Andy Warhol?

Andy Warhol, The Prince Of Pop Art


I need a catchy name for a medieval restaurant and some names to go on the menu. I've already found guineveres garden for the salads but i need ones for side dishes main course desserts and drinks?

King Henry the ate


Catchy titles for heart disease?

PUMP IT UP..... YOUR BEST FRIEND. Were LOVE Does not COME FRM What TO DO AND WHAT not to do


What do you need on your science poster board?

It really depends on why you are doing the project, who you are doing it for (i.e. guidelines of school, etc.), and what your project is about. But generally, here are a few things you should aim to have on your board in an experimental sciences project: # Title # Your name # Problem/Purpose - what are you experimenting? # Hypothesis - what are your ideas on the result of your experiment, and why? # Materials/Procedure/Methodology - this one is iffy. I f you are doing a science fair, DEFINITELY include this part, and describe how you performed your research/experiment, and why you chose to do it this way. You may not need this section for exposition projects (e.g. reporting on a news article or something) # Observations - what did you observe during your testing/research (what did you discover or learn?) # Analysis - what do your observations mean? # Conclusion - summarize your results, and make links to the real world or the possible usage of your findings # Terminology/Glossary - if your project is very technical, you may want to include a glossary where visitors can find the meaning of some of the more obscure words in your report. # Pictures - obviously, always nice to have. Try to keep them focused on your topic. # Diagrams, graphs, maps - unlike pictures, these schematics can actually be used as PART of your observations or analysis. They are often more effective at conveying meaning than a paragraph of words. Like this one. # Background - this should ideally go at the top of your board, and should introduce the situation (e.g. the history of what you are investigating, or some pertinent data like that) # Bibliography - after spending so much time on your project, it would be really sad to be disqualified for plagiarism. Just remember to cite your sources in proper APA format.