Today's schedule is C-D-A-B
C Block Criminology 12 - Today we'll start with a second look at the BC Crime trends from 1998 - 2007 and then
we'll talk about the disparity (difference) between the public perception of
violent crime and the actual rates of violent crime in Canada...hint take a look to the left. The crime
data indicate that rates have declined significantly in the past few years and
are now far less than they were a decade ago. Suspected causes for the
crime rate drop include an increasing prison population, more police on
the street, the end of the crack epidemic and the age structure of
society. The data sources show relatively stable patterns in the crime
rate. Ecological patterns show that crime varies by season and by urban
versus rural environment, however there is evidence of gender patterns
in the crime rate: Men commit more crime than women. Age is one of the
largest influences on crime; young people commit more crime than the
elderly (and there are fewer young people in society). Crime data show
that people commit less crime as they age, but the significance and
cause of this pattern are still not completely understood. Similarly,
racial and class patterns appear in the crime rate. However, it is still
unclear whether these are true differences or a function of
discriminatory law enforcement. After we'll watch an episode of Criminal Minds "The Crossing"
from season 3. From tv.com:
The team members try to identify a stalker before he can attack a woman
who is being stalked in Silver Spring, Maryland. Meanwhile, Hotch and
Rossi are called as consultants on a possible battered woman syndrome
murder case in Boston.
D Block Social Studies 11 - Today we'll have the block to work on the bill into law comic / cartoon
that we started yesterday. Don't forget to use the Make it Law sheet we
used to form ideas yesterday and the legislative process steps I
outlined with you in class. If you need help look in your Counterpoints
textbook and the Parliament of Canada "Follow That Bill" website.
A Block Law 12 - Today we'll start by reviewing the three sections of the Charter of
Rights and Freedoms that limit your individual rights (Reasonable
Limits, Notwithstanding Clause and Where the Charter Applies). After
this we'll look at the R. v. Oakes (1986) case which established the "Oakes Test" in Canadian law which allows reasonable limitations on rights and freedoms through legislation if it can be demonstrably justified in a free and democratic society. When we finish this we'll watch an episode of Law & Order from season 9 (episode 1) called "Cherished". From tv.com:
After
a baby girl is found dead, Briscoe and Curtis investigate the family
and learn that her adopted family and brother were trying to keep some
painful secrets. Jack gets a new partner, Abbie Carmichael, who
had a 95% percent success rate in her four years with Special
Narcotics. Together McCoy and Carmichael try to prove that the little
girl's brother committed the crime
The episode
deals with some pretty heavy stuff (child abandonment and fraud) and to
see a real life example check out the Pravda news article here.
The real life case surrounds a couple who adopted a child from a
Russian orphanage and a decision was handed down in the case in 2008.
From the Salt Lake Tribune:
A
Tooele Utah mother who admitted to killing a 14-month-old boy she and
her husband adopted from Russia was sentenced Friday to prison for up to
15 years. Kimberly K. Emelyantsev, 34, who had pleaded guilty to
second-degree felony child-abuse homicide in the death of Nicoli
Emelyantsev, offered a tearful apology in 3rd District Court.
B Block Geography 12
- Today we'll do a brief introduction to topographic maps and I'll show
you how to identify location, estimate area, calculate slope, and
determine direction on them. We'll look at large versions of the 1:50000
scale topographic maps for the Comox Valley (92F10 and 92F11). For a
large copy of the Forbidden Plateau 92F11 map click on the Online - En
ligne (PDF or TIFF) at the GEOSCAN Fast-Link site. Using these maps we'll try to make sense of topographic maps in partners.
Here are a few webpages to help:
Natural Resources Canada Toporama
Reading Topographic Maps
Mount Union College Reading Topo Maps
United States Geological Survey Reading Topo Maps
Idaho State University Interpreting Topo Maps
National Wildfire Coordinating Group Reading Topographic maps pdf
Natural Resources & Water Queensland Australia Interpreting Topo Maps pdf
How Stuff Works Reading a Topographic Map
How to Read Topographical Maps
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