*Note: It is very important that you have these links for the last slide of your presentation. (You'll be doing minimal citation work, so these links are a must for Mrs. Young!)
*Do not use the Viewpoints section for this presentation. Your best bets here are: Reference and Biography sections.
*To get the Permalink: Click on the image of the chain that reads "Get Link."
*To get the Permalink: Click on the citation box (the square with the check mark) and copy the address to save in your drive (on a document devoted to links to resources used).
*To get the Permalink: Click on the image of the chain that reads "Get Link."
Celia Hunter
Rosalie Edge "Getting Over Rosalie"
Not crowd sourced. Developed and maintained by the Tennessee Historic Society.
*Harvey Broome
*Robert (Bob) Marshall
*Robert Sterling Yard
*Harvey Broome
*Benton MacKaye
*Aldo Leopold
*Magnifier to search for others such as Zahniser, Mardy Murie, etc.
Theodore Roosevelt and the Environment
and
*You may use images from internet resources (reputable online organizations directly related to your selected environmentalist) as long as you create a direct link to that image in your resources slide.
If you need general images, you may use these without any need to create a citation.
*You may use any of these photos as long as you download them and use the image with the citation at the bottom (as it looks when downloaded).
For Everyone: This is a 9 minute tutorial. This guy uses words such as "like" and "super" a lot, but he has 165K followers for a reason. He gives the most important information you need in a quick and efficient manner. *Note, you can ignore the part where he converts it to PowerPoint, but pay attention to the importance of selecting "free" items, and downloading as a pdf.
For the Overachievers: This is a short series of four 3-4 minute videos created by Canva to help us create excellent presentations. You can watch all 4 of them or pick and choose. Either way, you'll pick up on some good techniques.