Showing posts with label Education. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Education. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 14, 2009

Pink Palace Museum


Mother, The Younger Son and I spent the afternoon at the Pink Palace Museum. It had been a long time since we had visited this museum. Some of it had changed, but much was the same. I've always enjoyed the natural history and geology exhibits. And the shrunken head, of course. The main changing exhibit right now is Dinosaurs and Sea Monsters. We went through the entire museum except for the IMAX theater and the planetarium.

It was especially crowded, because today was free day. No admission is charged for exhibits on Tuesdays from 1-5.

The museum has a Facebook page and a Wikipedia entry. The photo above is from wikipedia.

Thursday, May 28, 2009

Global Poverty and Social Enterprise

This video:



is the first in a series of 12 lectures that are part of a political science course called Current Issues in International and Area Studies. The course description:
This course provides an opportunity to study and discuss issues and events having recent international impact and/or interest. The course will present a multidisciplinary perspective on specific subjects with the intent of linking students with the scholars and scholarship involved in understanding and explaining current international issues, events, and crisis.

Here's a lecture on Philanthropy, Non-Profits, and Global Poverty:


and here's one on Conflict and Human Rights, part 1:


and part 2:


There is a related Introduction to Political Philosophy course.

Monday, April 06, 2009

Donald in Mathmagic Land

Donald in Mathmagic Land is a 1959 Disney short starring Donald Duck and narrated by Paul Frees. I don't remember ever having seen this before, so I'm glad I can get a taste of it at youtube. part 1:


part 2, part 3

Here's a trivia question for you:

Q: What does "Donald in Mathmagic Land" have in common with the Bible?
A: They both get the value of Pi wrong.

HT: Another Old Movie Blog:
“Donald in Mathmagic Land” (1959) makes math beautiful, sings hosannas to the orderliness and sense of logic that is the foundation of beauty in art, in music, in nature, and in human beings.

Saturday, March 14, 2009

Pi Day


Today (3.14) is Pi Day. 1:59 will be Pi Minute, making it 3.14159. Pi Second will be 3/14,1:59:26. Don't worry if you missed it; you can always observe Pi Approximation Day on July 22. Pi Day has an official site and is a Facebook event. The Exploratorium is having its 21st annual celebration of the day. They have a link to the Second Life observance. There are some suitable song lyrics here. You might want to tell some jokes, like
  • Question: What do you get when you take the sun and divide its circumference by its diameter?

  • Answer: Pi in the sky by and by.
Congress even took some time away from its busy schedule to declare it officially:
Resolved, That the House of Representatives--

(1) supports the designation of a `Pi Day' and its celebration around the world;

(2) recognizes the continuing importance of National Science Foundation's math and science education programs; and

(3) encourages schools and educators to observe the day with appropriate activities that teach students about Pi and engage them about the study of mathematics.

But let's not talk about the Bible saying that pi=3, ok?

Wednesday, March 11, 2009

Why Is Science Important?


Why is Science Important? from Alom Shaha on Vimeo.

The web site has information on the project. I first learned about it at the Bad Astronomy blog.

Monday, May 05, 2008

We did too land on the moon.


But don't take my word for it. Check out any of the actual real-live scientists who explain it in detail. Of course, if you choose to fall for every wacky conspiracy theory that comes along....

Bad Astronomy has links to bunches of reputable scientists who know the difference between fact and fancy, thank you very much.

RedZero offers evidence.

NASA, as you might expect, has stepped up to defend the truth in the face of ignorance.

Wikipedia (I know, I know, but they offer good overviews with helpful links as long as you are a critical reader) has a history of the nutcase objections and includes videos debunking all that flag-waving nonsense. It even gives links to sites of the proponents of the hoax idea with their various rants.

But if you really want to jump on the conspiracy theory bandwagon with the flat-earthers, I guess this one's better than the conspiracy theory that says the Jews (or was it the US government) were responsible for the 9/11 attacks.

My favorite, though is the whole 2012 thing. How can you doubt the Mayans?

Logic, people! Whatever happened to critical thinking skills and logic?

5/20/2008:

LiveScience has a list of the top 10 conspiracy theories, and guess what: that the moon landing was a hoax is one of them.

Monday, April 21, 2008

Top 25 Creationist Fallacies

A Primer to Creationist Fallacies, Blunders and Tactical Trickery:



My favorite, of course, is the false dichotomy which sets up belief in God and acceptance of the theory of evolution as mutually exclusive.

I suppose it might be reason enough to watched Ben Stein's new Expelled video -to look for these logical fallacies and make a count of how many of them are used.

Saturday, April 19, 2008

How old are you

on Mercury? Or Pluto?


Check here and see.

The picture is from NASA.

Monday, April 14, 2008

Expelled

I've been seeing all the broo ha ha about this film, and I thought I'd start a list of link sites relating to it. The only way I'll ever see the movie is if it gets uploaded to youtube.

Expelled Exposed is a National Center for Science Education resource site. Lots of great links.

There's a great list of links at Greg Laden's blog.

My favorite story so far is the priceless tale of PZ Myers getting Expelled from Expelled while Richard Dawkins went unrecognized and got to experience the film unhindered.

update 4/17/2008:
There's been a flap about the film containing images for which they had no permissions for use. Now it seems they used music without permission, including John Lennon's "Imagine" owned now by Yoko Ono. She is apparently not a happy camper. I saw the news at Panda's Thumb. They are claiming fair use rights since the clip is less than 25 seconds long. I'm a big advocate of Fair Use but don't know if this particular use qualifies.

There's also a wonderful report that "they" from PZ Myers to Ben Stein are in cahoots to bring down Creationism/ID. I love conspiracy theories.

Threads From Henry's Web, the blog of a Methodist author, has a post which says in part,
The problem I have is that Expelled! is also squeezing some folks out, and they are making Christianity Today a co-conspirator in that process. The ones squeezed out? All those Christians, even evangelical Christians who would like much of what Christianity Today publishes, but who accept the theory of evolution.

This is one of the many problems with this movie. It frames the controversy as one between theists and atheists, between moral people and immoral people, and thus leaves out Christian evolutionists, moral atheists, and many people who are not particularly religious or anti-religious, but are simply out there doing the best science they can. As one of those Christian evolutionists, I find this implication appalling. According to this movie and its promoters, I’m a co-conspirator with a bunch of Nazis to persecute Christians.


4/21/2008:
There've been so many articles on Expelled I didn't add them here, but now that it's been released I thought I'd add some links to comments I've seen.

Evolving Thoughts thinks the Creationism/ID folks should be given the press because it leads to more people learning about science.

Quintessence of Dust wants to expose up to the alternative Stork Theory.

Reasons to Believe sees the movie as harmful to the cause, explaining,
In Reasons To Believe's interaction with professional scientists, scientific institutions, universities, and publishers of scientific journals we have encountered no significant evidence of censorship, blackballing, or disrespect.


Exploring Our Matrix pointed me to the AAAS statement. They also have links to a few interesting blog posts and reviews.

The Panda's Thumb has the numbers on the film's opening week-end. They also report the numbers from RottenTomatoes, comment on a review from Waco, Texas, a link to the NYT review, a link to Scientific American's report on Ben Stein's quote mining, a link to the Ayn Rand Institute's press release and much more. A great place to keep up with reporting on the "documentary".

Dispatches From the Culture Wars says it flopped.

4/22/2008:
Exploring the Matrix has a couple more links here and here.

Reviews by Higgaion and EvolutionBlog.

Pharyngula has links to a thorough review of the official Expelled study guide.

The Questionable Authority is one of many bloggers discussing the attempt to spin the opening of Expelled as an unmitigated success.

4/25/2008:
Dispatches from the Culture Wars has more links.

Alternet has a review, which closes with this:
Mencken's remarks that we have the right to hold controversial and even stupid beliefs is not without merit. It's a beautiful idea, and a wonderfully American notion -- this innate sense of democratic principles that we all have a say in how things should be.

Expelled takes this idea and perverts it, arguing that truth and evidence is irrelevant. All sides should be treated as equal.

But as Mencken said, free speech does not give one the right to demand that these ideas be treated as sacred.


4/29/2008:
Scroll down to see the review at the blog The Evolution of a Creationist, which closes with this:
So what is making me angry? Honestly, it's the fact that one year ago I would have fallen for Stein's presentation—hook, line, and sinker. I'm also angry at how easily Christians fall for half-truths and outright lies. I'm angry at how often we Christians check our brains at the door and are perfectly willing to serve as messenger boys for the most outrageous urban legends, folk sciences, doctrines, and just plain idiotic belief systems. I'm angry at Christianity's penchant for dismissing the claims of biological and astronomical science despite the voluminous amount of evidence in favor of evolution.


5/4/2008:
NationalReviewOnline voices this opinion of the basic problem with ID as evidenced in Expelled:

They overhauled creationism as “intelligent design,” roped in a handful of eccentric non-Christian cranks keen for a well-funded vehicle to help them push their own flat-earth theories, and set about presenting themselves to the public as “alternative science" engaged in a “controversy” with a closed-minded, reactionary “science establishment” fearful of new ideas. (Ignoring the fact that without a constant supply of new ideas, there would be nothing for scientists to do.) Nothing to do with religion at all!

I think this willful act of deception has corrupted creationism irredeemably. The old Biblical creationists were, in my opinion, wrong-headed, but they were mostly honest people. The “intelligent design” crowd lean more in the other direction.


5/6/2008:
GetReligion says, "The film, starring Ben Stein, argues that Intelligent Design should not be systematically excluded from academia. It doesn’t argue for Intelligent Design or against Darwinism so much as for academic freedom" and argues that the documentary should be taken more seriously and given more press by mainstream media. This response surprised me. It's my understanding that the film is filled with "facts" that aren't and the worst sort of propaganda. The fact that it did reasonably well at the box office does not make me expect the mainstream film reviewers and news reporters to think it deserving of press. I see a definite difference between Expelled and the Gore and Michael Moore movies, which are at least based on verifiable facts.

5/10/2008:
Boston Globe's review sees the film as a sure sign that Science is in trouble and closes with this:
"Expelled" is a shoddy piece of propaganda that props up the failures of Intelligent Design by playing the victim card. It deceives its audiences, slanders the scientific community, and contributes mightily to a climate of hostility to science itself. Stein is doing nothing less than helping turn a generation of American youth away from science. If we actually come to believe that science leads to murder, then we deserve to lose world leadership in science. In that sense, the word "expelled" may have a different and more tragic connotation for our country than Stein intended.


Panda's Thum continues to post links to reviews and articles as they are published.

5/21/2008:

Thomas Robb (HT: Dispatches from the Culture Wars) says that the Jewish Ben Stein has made this movie in order to promote race mixing in the Christian community. Amazing. Why didn't I see that coming. Hobb says,
The message of the movie is not about creationism but to trap Christians into accepting, tolerating, promoting and engaging in interracial relationships and marriage. After all as Christians we don’t want to promote the evils of Darwin - do we? The trap has been set - don't get caught!

You can't make this stuff up.

5/29/2008:

The United Methodist Reporter has a review which focuses on the appeal to emotion in the film but gives the factual errors a pass.

Tuesday, April 08, 2008

Homeschooler Public Relations

It's great to see the 51-page booklet THE HOMESCHOOLING IMAGE: Public Relations Basics free here. It assumes a willingness to actively participate in media events, interact with reporters and develop a public "face". Given those desires, this resource is invaluable.

HT: HEM

Tuesday, March 25, 2008

Readings in Ecology and Natural History

Abbey, Edward
Desert Solitaire

Ackerman, Diane
The Rarest of the Rare

Adamson, Joy
Born Free

Agassiz, Louis

Aristotle
The History of Animals
On the Gait of Animals
On the Motion of Animals
On the Parts of Animals

Attenborough, David
Life on Earth
The Living Planet

Austin, Mary
The Land of Little Rain

Bartram, William
Travels Through North & South Carolina, Georgia, East & West Florida, the Cherokee Country, the Extensive Territories of the Muscogulges, or Creek Confederacy, and the Country of the Choctaws; containing an Account of the Soil and Natural Productions of Those Regions, Together With Observations on the Manners of the Indians
Observations on the inhabitants, climate, soil, rivers, productions, animals, and other matters worthy of notice made by Mr. John Bartram, in his travels from Pensilvania [sic] to Onondago, Oswego and the Lake Ontario, in Canada

Bass, Rick
Winter Notes From Montana

Beebe, William
"12 Rules for Observing Wild Birds and Animals in the Forest"
The Book of Naturalists: An Anthology of the Best Natural History (ed. by Beebe)

Borland, Hal
Homeland From the Country
Our Natural World (ed. by Borland)

Bown, Stephen R.
The Naturalists: Scientific Travelers in the Golden Age of Natural History

Burroughs, John
Birds and Bees, Sharp Eyes, and Other Papers
Wake-Robin

Carson, Rachel
The Edge of the Sea
The Sea Around Us
Under the Sea Wind

Cooper, Susan Fenimore
Rural Hours

Corbett, Jim
Maneaters of Kumaon

Cousteau, Jacques-Yves and Phlippe Diole
Three Adventures: Galapagos-Titicaca-The Blue Holes
The Silent World

Darwin, Charles
Voyage of the Beagle
On the Origin of Species

Dillard, Annie
Pilgrim at Tinker Creek

Eiseley, Loren
The Immense Journey
The Star Thrower

Emerson, Ralph Waldo
"Nature"

Fabre, Jean Henri
Fabre's Book of Insects
Bramblebees and Others
The Life of the Caterpillar
The Life of the Fly
The Life of the Spider
The Mason-Bees
More Hunting Wasps
Story Book of Science
The Wonders of Instinct
More Books Online
More Books Online

Finch, Robert; and John Elder, eds.
The Norton Book of Nature Writing

Goodall, Jane
In the Shadow of Man

Gould, Stephen Jay
Bully for Brontosaurus: Reflections in Natural History
The Flamingo's Smile: Reflections in Natural History
Wonderful Life: The Burgess Shale and the Nature of History

Herriot, James
All Creatures Great and Small The Best of James Herriot

Hooke, Robert

Junger, Sebastian
The Perfect Storm

Krakauer, Jon
Into Thin Air

Kricher, John
A Neotropical Companion

Kurlansky, Mark
Cod

Leopold, Aldo
Excerpts from his writings
A Sand County Almanac

Lopez, Barry
"A Literature of Place"
"The Language of Animals"
Arctic Dreams

Lorenz, Konrad Z.
King Solomon's Ring

Lucretius
The Nature of the Universe
On the Nature of Things

Matthiessen, Peter
African Silences
Sand Rivers
The Snow Leopard
The Wind Birds

McPhee, John
Annals of the Former World
Coming Into the Country

Mill, John Stuart
"On Nature"

Muir, John
The Mountains of California
My First Summer in the Sierra
Our National Parks
Steep Trails
The Story of My Boyhood and Youth
A Thousand Mile Walk to the Gulf
Travels in Alaska
The Yosemite
"Snow Storm on Mount Shasta"
"Wild Wool"

Nash, Roderick
Wilderness and the American Mind

O'Brien, Dan
Equinox
The Rites of Autumn

O'Hanlon, Redmond
No Mercy: A Journey to the Heart of the Congo

Olson, Sigurd F.
The Singing Wilderness

Ondaatje, Chrstopher
Journey to the Source of the Nile

Peterson, Roger Tory and James Fisher
Wild America

Pliny the Elder
Natural History

Ruskin, John
The True and the Beautiful

Scheffer, Victor B.
The Year of the Whale

Seton, Ernest Thompson
Wild Animals at Home

Sharp, Dallas
The Lay of the Land

Stouffer, Marty
Marty Stouffer's Wild America (book)

Teale, Edwin Way
North With the Spring
Journey Into Summer
Autumn Across America
Wandering Though Winter

Thomas, Lewis
The Lives of a Cell
The Medusa and the Snail

Thoreau, Henry David
"Walking"
Walden

Tinbergen, Niko
Curious Naturalists

Van Dover, Cindy Lee
The Octopus's Garden: Hydrothermal Vents and Other Mysteries of the Deep Sea

Warner, William W.
Beautiful Swimmers: Watermen, Crabs and the Chesapeake Bay

White, Gilbert
Natural History of Selborne

Williamson, Henry
The Illustrated Salar the Salmon

Yeoman, Guy
Africa's Mountains of the Moon: Journeys to the Snowy Sources of the Nile

John Burroughs Medal winners

Friday, March 14, 2008

Pi Day



Today -3:14- is Pi Day. 1:59 will be Pi Minute, making it 3.14159. Pi Second will be 3/14,1:59:26. We'll have a pizza pie tonight.


NPR has a story on it.

Wednesday, February 27, 2008

Mister Rogers

Today is the anniversary of the death in 2003 of Fred Rogers, and my neighborhood still mourns the loss.

Thursday, September 06, 2007

Explosion?

Did you say, "Explosion"?


http://view.break.com/334365 - Watch more free videos

Now there's a chemistry experiment to get excited about. From a distance.

Saturday, August 18, 2007

Sagan's Flatland

Carl Sagan was a genius:



I posted on Abbott's original Flatland recently.



HT: TooManyTribbles

Saturday, August 04, 2007

Tour the ISS


If you go to the Nasa Space Station site and click on the Interactive Space Station Reference Guide, you can take a virtual tour.

HT: Futurismic

The photo above is from the Wikipedia article in the space station.

Thursday, August 02, 2007

That Banana Again

I wouldn't have thought the film community would be so slow on the uptake, but it seems they are just now noticing the banana video. Scanners is getting a kick out of it, and The House Next Door leads their links post with it today.

I know I've posted this video before, but I can't find it now, so here's the video in question:


Here's the video debunked:


6/13/2008:
Ray Comfort admits defeat: Bananas are not an atheists nightmare but were intelligently designed by people. HT: The Bad Idea Blog