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3:21 Hawaii Innovation Grant Program-Healthy Eating Living Purposefully (HELP)
The "Healthy Eating Living Purposefully" (HELP) grant is a year long funding to promote our student led programs in educating others about creating healthy recipes from the garden and serving healthy meals to create value added products and be able to compete in the industries of Hospitality, Arts/Communications, Metals/Industrial Art, Natural Resources/Biology and Physical Education/Health through industry experts.
Uploaded Jul 18, 2018 by G. Ilagan
Our foundation started with the Healthy Eating Living Pono mobile education bus that teaches the community about healthy recipes while promoting health and fitness by gathering data and providing demonstrations regarding staying healthy and living purposefully while learning skill that can improve student engagement, academic rigor and attendance. -
9:03 Are GMOs Good or Bad? Uploaded Apr 25, 2018 by D. Henriques
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16:04 Genetic Engineering will change everything Uploaded Apr 25, 2018 by D. Henriques
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5:03 what is epigenetics Uploaded Apr 25, 2018 by D. Henriques
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2:42 DNA to protein Uploaded Apr 22, 2018
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2:26 Transcription and translation Uploaded Apr 22, 2018
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2:26 Transcription and Translation Uploaded Apr 22, 2018
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4:51 Class Of 2015
Students singing a song at the 2015 graduation.
Uploaded Apr 05, 2018 -
00:49 Meiosis Animation Uploaded Mar 01, 2018 by D. Henriques
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7 Billion: How did we get so big so fast?
It was just over two centuries ago that the global population was 1 billion — in 1804. But better medicine and improved agriculture resulted in higher life expectancy for children, dramatically increasing the world population, especially in the West.
Uploaded Feb 27, 2018
As higher standards of living and better health care are reaching more parts of the world, the rates of fertility — and population growth — have started to slow down, though the population will continue to grow for the foreseeable future.
U.N. forecasts suggest the world population could hit a peak of 10.1 billion by 2100 before beginning to decline. But exact numbers are hard to come by — just small variations in fertility rates could mean a population of 15 billion by the end of the century.