Category Archives: Science Education

Using DNA barcoding to identify illegal bushmeat jerky trade

This is very cool – African Bushmeat Expedition is a project which takes high school students to Africa where they both learn the techniques and at the same time do something very useful – track the appearance of wild animal meat in the market:

Although illegal wildlife poaching is conducted worldwide, the impact in Africa has been devastating. Unsustainable commercial hunting for bushmeat will inevitably lead to species extinction. In turn, localized species extinction impacts the health of native ecosystems. Marketing of illegal bushmeat can also have serious ramifications because pathogens present in the meat may be transmitted, through ingestion, to the human population. The DNA barcoding technique implemented by High Tech High students will provide a useful tool for environmental impact studies by allowing scientists and environmental groups to trace illegal bushmeat back to its localized animal populations.

What is it all about?

In 2005, Jay Vavra of High Tech High in San Diego and Oliver Ryder of the San Diego Zoological Society collaborated to create a conservation forensics course, instructing HTH students on species identification via DNA barcoding. Students studied African bushmeat trade and focused on identification of simulated bushmeat samples, using jerky from a range of species for the process. Advanced studies included experimental methods of DNA extraction and amplification as well as alternative means of DNA preservation for shipment of DNA from Africa. The next step in the study is establishing partnerships and education programs at Mweka College and other sites by bringing students to East Africa to build this novel conservation education program in Africa and to disseminate instructional material in the United States.

The expedition just ended and the participants blogged the expedition and their experiences – check out the blog here.

The assembly was greatly interested in and impressed with our work, and the meeting was a great success. It was fantastic to bring together all that we had learned in the classroom the past few years and in the field the past few weeks.

Do judges need to know their Genetics?

Jim Evans, my friend here at UNC, says Yes, in an interview with NYTimes, and again on NPR’s People’s Pharmacy. He teaches a course on genetics to judges:

A lot of judges report that they did prelaw in college because it did not involve science. One of my favorite judges, a brilliant man, is fond of telling people he “flunked science in kindergarten.” So in these workshops, I think of myself as a newfangled type of science teacher, instructing extremely smart and distinguished adults in science fundamentals.

Real Science for schools

When I go around proselatizing for Open Access, I always try to remember to point out that the potential users are not just scientists and physicians in the developing world, or researchers at low-tier or community colleges, but also high schools. So, I was very happy to hear about the existence of Real Science, a website that uses the latest freely available research to use in classrooms:

Imagine teaching the latest science on the same day it appears in the newspapers.
Imagine the kick the kids will get when they say to their parents watching the news on TV: “We did that in school today. It’s like this ….”
We get information from sources around the world, sift it to find newsworthy nuggets, then turn these into free teaching and learning resources that grab young people’s interest and hold their attention.
We devise activities that develop understanding, support groupwork and guide pupils to explore the issues – scientific, ethical, environmental – raised by the latest science news.
We provide links to free resources, activities and lesson plans for teachers and online activities for children and young people.

See, for instance how they covered recent papers on cocktail chatter, walking pterosaurs and dinosaur tracks. Do you like it?

BioRap (DNA Replication and Protein Synthesis with a Beat)

New issue of the Journal of Science Communication

New issue of the Italian Journal of Science Communication is out with some excellent articles (some translated or abstracted from Italian, all in English):
Cultural determinants in the perception of science:

Those studying the public understanding of science and risk perception have held it clear for long: the relation between information and judgment elaboration is not a linear one at all. Among the reasons behind it, on the one hand, data never are totally “bare” and culturally neutral; on the other hand, in formulating a judgment having some value, the analytic component intertwines – sometimes unpredictably – with the cultural history and the personal elaboration of anyone of us.

Collaborative Web between open and closed science:

‘Web 2.0’ is the mantra enthusiastically repeated in the past few years on anything concerning the production of culture, dialogue and online communication. Even science is changing, along with the processes involving the communication, collaboration and cooperation created through the web, yet rooted in some of its historical features of openness. For this issue, JCOM has asked some experts on the most recent changes in science to analyse the potential and the contradictions lying in online collaborative science. The new open science feeds on the opportunity to freely contribute to knowledge production, sharing not only data, but also software and hardware. But it is open also to the outside, where citizens use Web 2.0 instruments to discuss about science in a horizontal way.

The future of the scientific paper:

Will the use of the Web change the way we produce scientific papers? Science goes through cycles, and the development of communication of science reflects the development of science itself. So, new technologies and new social norms are altering the formality of the scientific communication, including the format of the scientific paper. In the future, as PLoS One is experimenting right now, journals will be online hosts for all styles of scientific contributions and ways to link them together, with different people contributing to a body of work and making science more interdisciplinary and interconnected.

Public domain, copyright licenses and the freedom to integrate science:

From the life sciences to the physical sciences, chemistry to archaeology, the last 25 years have brought an unprecedented shift in the way research happens day to day, and the average scientist is now simply awash in data. This comment focuses on the integration and federation of an exponentially increasing pool of data on the global digital network. Furthermore, it explores the question of the legal regimes available for use on this pool of data, with particular attention to the application of “Free/Libre/Open” copyright licenses on data and databases. In fact, the application of such licenses has the potential to severely restrict the integration and federation of scientific data. The public domain for science should be the first choice if integration is our goal, and there are other strategies that show potential to achieve the social goals embodied in many common-use licensing systems without the negative consequences of a copyright-based approach.

To blog or not to blog, not a real choice there…:

Science blogging is a very useful system for scientists to improve their work, to keep in touch with other colleagues, to access unfamiliar science developed in other fields, to open new collaborations, to gain visibility, to discuss with the public. To favour the building of blog communities, some media have set up networks hosting scientists’ blogs, like ScienceBlogs.com or Nature Network. With some interesting features and many potential uses.

The other books – A journey through science books:

On March 2007 JCOM issue, Bruce Lewenstein made this question: why should we care about science books? Next he analyzed some fundamental roles of science books. As a continuation for that enquiry, this text wants to be a dialogue about science, readers, and books, just a quick look at many of the other books, science books, those that do not find easily their place in bookstores and libraries; these books situated beyond labels like fiction or romance but equally memorable, necessaries and desirables.

….and several other articles, all worth checking out (you need to save and download PDFs of each, though).

Elements

Also from Miriam, not the famous old (and beloved by my kids) rote memorization of elements – but you will never forget these few basic facts about a few major elements, because it is presented in a viscerally fun way:

Chick Development Series

Miriam points to this set of pictures of the development of the chicken embryo. As I have written before, I did have to learn how to precisely stage the chick embryos, both the older stages and the early stages, in order to manipulate them at exactly the right time. Cool pics.

Your sciency movie reviews of The Incredible Hulk and The Happening on public radio!

You have to act quickly, though:

We’ve been airing audio comments on our new national public radio
show, The Takeaway (http://www.thetakeaway.org), for the past couple
of weeks. On Monday, we want to highlight your scientificky thoughts
on “THE INCREDIBLE HULK” and “THE HAPPENING”.
There’s a lot of genetics and plant biology and global warming stuff
there to sink your teeth into. Here’s what we’re looking for: By
Sunday at 3 p.m. Eastern, tell us two things about whichever movie you
saw:
1. ONE-PHRASE CAPSULE REVIEW — IT’S QUICK AND EASY!
Say, “It was __________”. Put an adjective or capsule review in the
blank: “Good,” “terrible,” “a waste of money,” “smashingly awesome,”
“not ‘happening’ for me,” etc. Be as clever or as straight-ahead as
you want to be. Both are equally great! We’ll smoosh them together
on the air.
2. ONE (SCIENCY) THING THAT STUCK OUT FOR YOU
See above. Portrayal of science, scientists, and science teachers
perhaps? Or a comment about climate change in movies?
We’re trying to get as many people on the air as possible, NOT JUST
SCIENCE BLOGGERS, so take one of the angles above (or another specific
angle), and speak in sound bites so you’re sure you’re getting to the
point quickly. This will keep the conversation in the on-air segment
moving along.
Record your comment by calling 1-877-8-MY-TAKE. Spell your name and
blog url so we can link to it. There’s a 60 second limit on the call,
so you probably won’t have more than 125 words.
or
Email an MP3 to mytake@thetakeaway.org. Include your name and blog
url so we can link to it.
Talk like you’re having a conversation with a friend. Pretend you’re
in the studio, talking with John and Adaora (the hosts!). Use any
trick you can think of to make it not sound like you’re reading!
—————————
TIPS: Write it out, read it out loud as you write, keep a check on your word
count (125 at the most!), and practice reading before you starting
recording.
If you’ve already written a review, read it out loud, and edit it down
to its essence. Remember that we’ll be linking back to your full
review so you don’t need to say it all on the air.

Brian Switek, Annalee Newitz, Matt Nisbet, PZ Myers and erv have already spoken about some of the movies – think about it and send your own brief comments and you may hear your voice on air on NPR!

Darwin Ceiling at the Museum

Anne-Marie found this article:

London’s Natural History Museum is to decorate the ceiling of one of its major rooms with a permanent art installation, inspired by evolutionary theory, in honour of Charles Darwin’s bicentennial. The 10 shortlisted entrants have now been announced and their ideas are on display.

You can see a slideshow of the proposals, but the article does not say exactly who is doing the choosing. Some internal committee, public at large?
Which proposal do you like the best? Perhaps we can influence the choosers if we write about this all over the blogs.

Robert T. Pennock is coming to North Carolina

Today, Wednesday, June 11 at 6 to 8 pm, SCONC, the Science Communicators of North Carolina, meets NESCent, the National Evolutionary Synthesis Center:

Science communicators are invited to meet some NESCent researchers at the frontiers of evolutionary biology and hear from guest speaker Rob Pennock of Michigan State (who has appointments in evolutionary biology, computer science and … philosophy?! Whoa.) talking about how evolution can be demonstrated in fast-forward by “digital organisms,” a stroke he hopes will put creationism in retreat. Munchies and bevvies, of course. RSVP Kristin Jenkins

Location: Erwin Mill building, Bay A, 2024 W. Main St., Durham
Directions: http://www.nescent.org/about/directions.php

Search for PPT slideshows by keyword

Go to http://www.slideworld.org, type in a keyword, and it will do a search of slideshows that contain that word. I typed “circadian” and found a lot….
Hat-tip: Ana

3D visualization

Another SCONC event:
RENCI to Show the Power of Visual Communications at Lunchtime Bistro:

The Renaissance Computing Institute (RENCI) invites the public to a Renaissance Bistro lunchtime demonstration and lecture from noon to 1 p.m. Thursday, June 26 in the Showcase Dome room at the RENCI engagement center at UNC Chapel Hill.
The Bistro is free and includes lunch on a first-come, first-served basis.
RENCI experts, Eric Knisley, 3D visualization researcher, and Josh Coyle, new media specialist, will demonstrate three-dimensional visualizations and interactive touch screen displays. Attendees will observe a brief demonstration of the Showcase Dome, a research environment equipped with a 15-foot tilted multi-projector dome display for interacting with data in an immersive 180-degree field of view.
RENCI at UNC Chapel Hill is located in the ITS Manning Building on UNC Chapel Hill campus, 121 Manning Drive. Parking is available in the UNC Hospitals lot on Manning Drive. For directions, see http://www.renci.org/focusareas/eduoutreach/bistro.php.
RSVP by June 23 to jshelton@renci.org.

Zoonoses on my mind

More from SCONC:
Tuesday June 17 at 6:30-8:30 pm
Science Café – A ‘One Medicine’ Approach to a Changing World

NC State’s Barrett D. Slenning MS, DVM, MPVM will share with us the view that knowing about diagnoses and treatments of animals can benefit humans. The opposite is also true, given the fact that about 60 percent of all human pathogens are zoonotic diseases, transmissible between animals and people. Join us to learn how human and veterinary medicine can join forces to protect us with rapid responses to the outbreak of disease.

Location: The Irregardless Cafe, 901 W. Morgan Street, Raleigh

The Beautiful Mind

News from SCONC (Science Communicators of North Carolina):
On Thursday, June 5 at 7 p.m. in the Banquet Hall of the Morehead Planetarium in Chapel Hill, NC:
Public Lecture:
The Beautiful Mind: Breakthroughs and Breakdowns of the Brain,
with Dr. Ayse Belger.

National Conference on Science and Technology in Out of School Time

Registration now open for the first National Conference on Science and Technology in Out of School Time – Chicago, September 17-19, 2008:

Join us at the first National Conference on Science in Out of School Time, September 17-19, 2008.
Registration is now open at www.scienceafterschoolconference.org
The conference is being organized by Project Exploration and the Coalition for Science After School; it’s designed for program leaders, researchers, funders and policy makers. We’re putting a particular emphasis on equity and access issues. Conference features include:
– A special welcome from Maggie Daley;
– Keynote address from Eric Jolly, coauthor of “Engagement, Capacity and Continuity;”
– Scientists in action: Nobel laureate and physicist Dr. Leon Lederman and paleontologist Dr. Paul Sereno;
– A conversation about equity and access with Pat Campbell and Jane Quinn;
– Breakout sessions will focus on best practices and model programs, systemic strategies for program leaders and funders, and program evaluation.
DO YOU HAVE A TOPIC YOU’D LIKE TO PRESENT? Tell us about it! Submit your idea online via the conference website. Want to be a sponsor or give out goodies to conference participants? Use the website to let us know!
Online registration, hotel and travel details can be found online: www.scienceafterschoolconference.org
Download a postcard about the conference: http://www.scienceafterschoolconference.org/pdf/ScienceTechnologyPostCard.pdf
Funding for the conference is generously provided by the Department of Education and the Motorola Foundation.
Spread the word – and hope to see you in September!
-Gabe and the team at Project Exploration

Sciencewoman at ISEF 2008

Sciencewoman is in Atlanta, judging this year’s International Science and Engineering Fair and liveblogging the whole thing:
Going to Atlanta….
First Taste of the International Science and Engineering Fair
ISEF 2008: Nobel Laureates Panel
ISEF 2008: Day 1 by the numbers
ISEF 2008: Full disclosure
ISEF 2008: Impressive science by high school students
ISEF 2008: Cool science and practical applications
ISEF 2008: Special awards and scenes from around the fair
Update: Here are the winners:
ISEF 2008: The best of the best! And they’re girls!

Removing the Bricks from the Classroom Walls: Interview with David Warlick

David Warlick is a local blogger and educator. We first met at the Podcastercon a couple of years ago, then at several blogger meetups, and finally last January at the second Science Blogging Conference where David moderated a session on Science Education.
Welcome to A Blog Around The Clock. Would you, please, tell my readers a little bit more about yourself? Who are you? What is your background? What is your Real Life job?
I’ve been an educator for more than 30 years, starting as a middle school social studies, science, and math teacher. Every once in a while, I have to remind myself that when I entered the classroom, desktop computers didn’t exist. It constantly astounds me what has been happing around us.
I remained in the classroom for almost 10 years, after which I moved to a central office position supporting instructional technology for a rural school district in NC. I’d been seduced by computers (Radio Shack Model III), and taught myself how to program them, since there wasn’t much instructional software available. After that, I moved to the North Carolina State Department of Public Instruction where I wrote and supported curriculum for the state, ran a state-wide bulletin board service (FrEdMail) and finally built the nation’s first state department of education web site.
I left the state in 1995, and started consulting, doing business as The Landmark Project. the Internet was still a wilderness, and I wanted to build landmarks for teachers and learners. I maintain a number of web sites which, combined, receive more than a half-million page views a day. I’ve also had the opportunity to visit educators across the U.S. and Canada, and even in Europe, Asia, and South America.
It seems that I should be near the end of my career. But it certainly doesn’t feel like it.
What do you want to do/be when (and if ever) you grow up?
I always wanted to be Johnny Quest’s father, Dr. Benton Quest (1960s cartoon series). Wikipedia describes him as: “…’one of the three top scientists in the world,’ and apparently something of a Renaissance man; his scientific and technical know-how spans many fields.” I wanted to travel the world, have great toys to play with, and solve problems for people. I got part of it, in that I get to travel the world and play with great toys, and there’s some adventure, thought it has more to do with navigating exotic airports than defeating evil despots.
But now that all the travel is starting to wear me down, I’m thinking I’d like to settle back to one or two interests, and study/work the hell out of them. Digital photography has always appealed to me. I also enjoy composing music with a computer. I’d also like to find some topic and set up a web site/blog/social network around that topic. No idea, though, what it might be.
You are quite an evangelist for the use of online tools in the classroom. You used to teach with a blackboard and chalk – how and when did you get to embrace the modern tools in education?
My main subject was History. It’s what I had studied in college. But I always taught about History from the perspective of technology, focusing in on the invention of the bow & arrow, agriculture, paper, the steam engine and explore how these technologies affected and changed our cultures. The first time I saw a Radio Shack Model I computer operate, I knew, at that moment, that this was one of those technologies that was going to change everything. Here was a machine that you operated by communicating with it. I was thunder-struck. I was seduced.
However, it was sometime later that I started to learn, and am continued to learn that it isn’t the fact that we have a machine that we can communicate that makes computers so important. It’s that they give us new ways of communicating with each other. This, I’ve learned as an educator — not as a technologist.
SBC%20Saturday%20004.jpgOne of the important concepts you write about is the Flat Classroom. Can you, please, explain it to my readers?
It’s simple. According to a recent PEW Internet & American Life study, 64% of American teenagers have produced original digital content and published it to a global audience. How many of their teachers are published authors, artists, musicians, composers, or film makers? From the perspective of our children’s information experience, they are more literate than many of their teachers. Our classrooms are flat.
The central question that we should be asking today is, “How do we drive learning if we can no longer rely on gravity?” Where do we get the energy. It’s a sobering and threatening idea for most educators. However, I think that once we can get to the other side of this problem, we, teachers and learners, will be much happier. Here are just a few ideas:
* We need to redefine literacy to reflect today’s information landscape and not just teach it as skills, but to instill it as habit.
* We, as teachers, need to model learning, not just inflict it. We need to practice new literacy in front of our students.
* What students learn has become less important. The answers are all changing. It as important today to be able to invent answers to brand new questions. What’s become more important is how students are learning.
* We need to understand our students information experience and learn to harness the energy that comes from it, to replace the vanishing energy of gravity.
“Please turn off your cell-phones, i-Pods and other electronic devices, kids” – why is this sentence, spoken at the beginning of a class period, wrong? What should a teacher say instead?
This is wrong on so many levels. But principally, we have to recognize, accept, and respect our students out-side-the classroom information experiences. For the first time in history, we are preparing our children for a future we can not clearly describe. So much is changing and so fast. I think that there are clues in our students information experience that we can use to better prepare them for that future.
I recently read about six schools in New York City (where they’ve banned cell phones) that are giving cell phones to all of their students (2,500 of them), preloaded with 130 minutes of talk time. More minutes are added based on test scores, good behavior, and other activities. The teachers are starting to use text messaging to share homework assignments, remind them of upcoming tests, and other activities. What I’d love to see is text-messaging become a platform for doing homework assignment in collaboration.
I know that this may seem weird to some, but no less (NO LESS) weird than many of the applications we use every day would have seemed 20 years ago, or even 10 years ago.
What is your basic advice to teachers who are not themselves Internet-savvy, yet want to take a plunge and get their students to produce online content, be it blogs, podcasts or videos? How do you explain the pros and cons and the usual traps some teachers fall into?
Be a good teacher, and pay attention to your students information experiences. Your students can teach you a lot about these new tools, and what better way to model yourself as a lifelong learner.
Become 21st century literate. Once you’ve accomplished that, then you can teach yourself what ever you need to know. Most of the teachers who are doing extraordinary things in their classrooms didn’t learn it in a workshop. They learned it by engaging on online conversations with other innovative educators.
When and how did you discover science blogs? What are some of your favourites? Have you discovered any new cool science blogs while at the Conference?
I have to plead the 5th on this one. I do not read any science blogs regularly, though SEED may well take the place of WIRED as my favorite magazine. I’m fascinated by science, all areas of science. Science constantly reminds me of the frontiers we have yet to chart.
Is there anything that happened at this Conference – a session, something someone said or did or wrote – that will change the way you think about science communication, or something that you will take with you to your job, blog-reading and blog-writing?
It thrills me to see that part of learning science is learning how to talk about science. And this is what the Science Bloggers conference is about. It’s about the softer side of our explorations, bringing them home, and making them a part of the everyday conversations of the rest of us. I think that, deep down, we all crave frontiers.
It was so nice to see you again at the Conference and thank you for the interview.
============================
Check out all the interviews in this series.

A cellular riddle

It takes 38 minutes for the E.coli genome to replicate. Yet, E.coli can bo coaxed to divide in a much shorter time: 20 minutes. How is this possible?
Larry poses the riddle and provides the solution.
The key is that complex biochemical processes are taught sequentially, one by one, because that is how we think and process information. Yet, unless there is a need for precise timing (in which case there will be a timer triggering the starts and ends of cellular events), most processes occur all the time, simultaneously, in parallel. How do we teach that?

What makes a memorable poster, or, when should you water your flowers?

What makes a memorable poster, or, when should you water your flowers?Being out of the lab, out of science, and out of funding for a while also means that I have not been at a scientific conference for a few years now, not even my favourite meeting of the Society for Research on Biological Rhythms. I have missed the last two meetings (and I really miss them – they are a blast!).
But it is funny how, many years later, one still remembers some posters from poster sessions. What makes a poster so memorable?

Continue reading

Discover Your Summer Resource Guide

Latest from Project Exploration

Project Exploration has just released Discover Your Summer 2008, a summer science resource guide. The guide includes more than 160 programs for middle and high school students throughout the Midwest, along with tips on how to apply for programs successfully. Thanks to a special partnership with the Self Reliance Foundation, students can also access information about programs in Discover Your Summer in Spanish.
SPECIAL LIMITED OFFER – We have print copies available on a first-come, first-served basis. We can give you up to 100 copies of the guide. If you can come get them, we can give them to you! Please call Vanessa Uribe at 773.834.7614 or email vuribe@projectexploration.org to reserve copies.
DOWNLOAD THE GUIDE FOR FREE – The guide can be downloaded here: http://www.projectexploration.org/dys.htm. We are regularly adding programs to the online database.
TAKE OUR SURVEY – please give us feedback on how you’re using the guide. We’ll send you our sincere thanks – and a gift – for your efforts! http://www.projectexploration.org/dys.htm.
Please help us spread the word about this unique and important effort to ensure that all students have access to science.

Related: Riding the Dinosaurs toward Science Literacy: Interview with Gabrielle Lyon

It’s just a Theory….

The new edition (first online edition) of Scope, the MIT Grad Program in Science Writing’s student webzine, is out (hat-tip to Tom) with several great articles. Check out, for instance, Words (Just Might) Hurt Me: The Trouble with ‘Theory’.

Protein Structure

Learn everything you need to know about protein structure, explained clearly and as simply as the topic allows:
Beta Strands and Beta Sheets
Loops and Turns
Levels of Protein Structure
Examples of Protein Structure
Evolution and Variation in Folded Proteins
I think these should be included into the Basic Concepts collection.
Update: Larry has put together a compilation of all his bog posts on Protein Structure.

Comparing MS Excel with Open Office spreadsheet

The OpenOffice challenge: can you do what needs to be done?
Exploring OpenOffice: what did we learn?, part I
Exploring Open Office: part II, can we have our pie and eat it too?

SciBarCamp

Toronto SciBarCamp starts tonight and I am so jealous for not being there. Perhaps next time. For now, I’ll just follow it via blogs.

AAAS and NSF Communicating Science Workshop – April 3 – Raleigh, NC

Got an e-mail from AAAS and will try to go if at all possible:

The American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS), in partnership with the National Science Foundation (NSF) and North Carolina State University, will be holding a one-day workshop “Communicating Science: Tools for Scientists and Engineers” on Thursday, April 3, 2008. We aim to extend an invitation to the faculty scientists, engineers, and Ph.D. students at your institution who would like to attend this workshop, in order to learn more about communicating science to news media and the general public. Please feel free to forward this invitation to faculty scientists and engineers at your institution.
The AAAS Center for Public Engagement with Science and Technology has partnered with NSF to provide resources for scientists and engineers, both online and through in-person workshops, to help researchers communicate more broadly with the public.
Although traditional scientific training typically does not prepare scientists and engineers to be effective communicators outside of academia, NSF and other funding agencies are increasingly encouraging researchers to extend beyond peer-reviewed publishing and communicate their results directly to the greater public. Further, scientists and engineers who foster information-sharing and respect between science and the public are essential for the public communication of and engagement with science.
There is no registration fee for science and engineering faculty and Ph.D. students to attend this workshop; however, space is limited, and pre-registration is required. Please register by Wednesday, March 26, 2008. A registration form is enclosed. You can register by sending the requested information by email to tlohwate@aaas.org or by faxing or mailing the registration as indicated on the form.
The workshop will be held in the Walnut Room at the Talley Student Center at North Carolina State University in Raleigh. A map and directions can be found at http://www.ncsu.edu/student_center/driving_directions.html. We expect that both those who are interested in science communication and those who are already familiar with ways to communicate science broadly will find “Communicating Science: Tools for Scientists and Engineers” useful and informative.

Here is the program, see you there:
8:30 – 9:00 am Breakfast
9:00 – 9:30 am Welcome and Introduction
9:30 – 9:45 am Who is “General Public?”: Defining Audience
9:45 – 10:30 am Practice Research Messages and Public Talks
10:30 – 10:45 am Break
10:45 – 11:30 am Media Panel
11:30 am – 12:00 pm Enhancing Your Message: Gestures and Language
12:00 – 1:00 pm Lunch – provided
1:00 – 2:30 pm Practice Interviews
2:30 – 2:45 pm Break
2:45 – 3:30 pm Public Outreach Panel
3:30 – 4:00 pm Conclusion and Materials Review

Scienceblogs interview with Felice Frankel

My Scifoo friend and prize-winning science photographer Felice Frankel just gave a great interview to Ginny on Page 3.14.

Jobs: work with Project Exploration!

POSITION ANNOUNCEMENT:

Title: Manager of Web and Publications
Reports to: Director of Operations
Project Exploration Background: Cofounded in 1999 by paleontologist Paul Sereno and educator Gabrielle Lyon, Project Exploration is a nonprofit science education organization that works to make science accessible to the public– especially minority youth and girls–through personalized experiences with science and scientists. Project Exploration meets its mission through youth development programs, services for schools and teachers, and public programs such as exhibits and online initiatives.
Position Summary & Responsibilities:
The Manager of Web and Publications will serve as lead artistic designer and project manager for all organizational print and web publications. He/she will collaborate with cross-departmental staff to provide quality graphic design services to support the organization’s educational, promotional, development, and earned revenue objectives. He/she must demonstrate superior independent judgment in regards to organizational branding and image. He/she will be responsible for the development, design, content, and maintenance of organization’s web site.
Job Duties and Responsibilities:
Design:
* Lead the layout and graphic design for printed and web-based publications.
* Produce creative visual elements utilizing manual and computer-assisted design techniques.
* Work proactively to develop project guidelines and deadlines to ensure timely and cost-effective delivery. Coordinate with staff members to effectively incorporate photographic, editorial and design elements and to meet project deadlines.
* Serve as project manager to oversee workflow of print and production vendor services.
* Coordinate with all department directors to integrate print and electronic media and aligning print and web publications to meet organization’s style guidelines.
* Provide oversight and long-term planning of graphic design and publication projects.
* Develop signage for earned revenue traveling exhibits and organization events.
Web and Internet Technologies:
* Develop and execute new content for the existing web strategies, as well as develop new web pages as needed by the organization.
* Utilize project management software and shared calendar to facilitate cross-departmental projects.
* Assist staff with development of e-commerce and other online fundraising campaigns
* Lead content development, design and execution of web site.
* Support staff in developing any web-related exhibit development.
* Provide web site traffic reports as scheduled.
Qualification Requirements:
* Bachelor’s degree or university diploma in marketing, fine arts, or communications with a minimum of five years experience in web and print development.
* Expertise in problem-solving with the ability to sort through complex issues and conduct comparative analysis of multiple solutions.
* Effective time management skills and ability to utilize work plans to prioritize competing and interdependent tasks and meet deadlines.
* Advanced programming experience and web authoring with HTML, XML, XHTML, CSS2, PHP/MYSQL, ActionScript, and JavaScript
* Extensive knowledge of print design and prepress procedures.
* Expertise with graphic design software, particularly with Photoshop, Illustrator, InDesign, Dreamweaver, and Flash.
* Team-leadership and management skills.
* Excellent verbal and written communication skills.
Salary: Competitive; excellent benefits and professional growth opportunities
Position begins: Immediately
Send cover letter, resume, references, and salary history to:
Director of Operations
Project Exploration
950 East 61st Street
Chicago, IL 60637
773-834-7625 fax
jobs@projectexploration.org
No phone calls, please.
For more information about Project Exploration, visit www.projectexploration.org

The so-called Facebook Scandal

[rant]So, if you organize a study-group online instead of in meat-space, the old fogies who still remember dinosaurs go all berserk. A student is threatened by expulsion for organizing a Facebook group for studying chemistry. Moreover, as each student got different questions, nobody did the work for others, they only exchanged tips and strategies. See the responses:
The Star:

Yet students argue Facebook groups are simply the new study hall for the wired generation.

Yes, they are.
Greg:

How much of this is a matter of administrative fear of the internet?

100%.
Larry:

Today, that sense of “honor” seems horribly old-fashioned. To most students it will not seem like cheating if they ask their friends for help with the assignments and share information. That’s what happened on the Facebook study group.

Old-fashioned is too nice a term. It is outdated and anachronistic.
Post-Diluvian Diaspora:

Honestly, do you not see the difference between studying together and exchanging answers on a graded assignment?

The problem is in a stupid professor who thinks in terms of “graded assignments” in the 21st century.
This all stems from the old German universities of a couple of centuries ago, where getting a degree was essentially a hazing process. Toughening the individual. For what? For replicating and preserving the hierarchy, both within the academia and in society as a whole. The educational systems around the world, at all levels, are still based on such outrageous ideas.
No individual can know everything needed knowing. No individual can make the necessary societal changes on one’s own. So why teach them as if it is all up to an individual? Both learning and social change are communal processes. What we need to be teaching is how to be a member of a community, how to network, how to contribute, how to share, how to pull together in order to increase the global knowledge and, by using this knowledge, to increase the global welfare.
Science is supposed to be a collaborative activity. Why is it organized (and taught) as if it was a competitive activity? How does that affect science? Negatively, by increasing secretiveness and sometimes outright fraud.
The Web is changing all this. The teenagers already grok that the old selfish notions of intellectual property are going by the way of the dodo. They naturally think in terms of networks, not individuals. And thinking in term of newtorks as opposed to a linear, hierarchical, individualistic focus, is necessary for speeding up the advancement of knowledge and societal good.
In other words, it is not important what each individual knows or does, it is important what the interactions between individuals can do, and how the group or community (or global community) learns and acts upon the knowledge.
Thus, education, especially science education, from Kindergarden through post-doc and beyond, should be organized around collaborations, teaching people and letting them practice the networking skills and collaborative learning and action. Individuals will make mistakes and get punished by the group (sometimes as harshly as excommunication). They will learn from that experience and become more collaborative next time. The biggest sin would be selfish non-sharing of information.
If I could, I would not give individual students grades on their individual performance at all. I would give a common grade for the entire class. Each individual will then get that same grade. If the last semester’s cohort got an A, do you think that this semester’s group would settle for anything less? And how do they get an A? By pooling their resources, sharing all the information, closely collaborating on all assigned projects, and coaxing/teaching/punishing individuals who are not pulling their weight. Neither the reward nor the punishment would be meted out by some outside self-appointed ‘authority’, but by peers – the people who matter the most.
Then, they would take this approach to the Real World, where such things really matter, where sucess is that of a community, not that of any individual.
So, if you do not get this, if you are not mentally ready for the 21st century, if you still harbor the outdated competition-based, individualistic mindset, you should not be in the teaching business. Quit today. Save yourself the embarassment of being laughed at by your students. Save your students from having to deal with an authoritarian. Save the society from promulgating the counter-productive, anti-social methods of knowledge-acquisition and knowledge-use.[/rant]

The jigsaw puzzle as a metaphor for the way science works

I did this again this morning.

Zoo School X-Press

Regular readers must be familiar by now with the ZooSchool in Asheboro, NC. Today’s news from the school – their students have put up the first issue of their online newspaper, the ZSX-Press. Go check it out!
In related news, and also at the Asheboro Zoo and related to education, The NC Zoo and NC Zoo Society will be hosting the No Child Left Inside Conference Thursday (today), March 6th, which will be held in the MPR [multi-purpose room] of the Stedman Education Building. I wish I could go. Perhaps someone there will write about it and post something online.

Reptile & Amphibian Day at the Museum

News from SCONC:

The NC Museum of Natural Sciences presents Reptile & Amphibian Day on Saturday, March 15 from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Dozens of displays, activities and presentations highlight reptiles and amphibians from North Carolina and around the world. Here’s your chance to get up-close and personal with hundreds of live animals, from giant pythons to bearded dragons. Meet reptile expert Dr. Brady Barr, the first person to capture and study all 23 crocodilian species in the wild.

Three Exam System? Can we design something better?

That is what Anne-Marie asked after a week with seven mid-term exams. In a few weeks, she’ll have another bunch of exams all at the same time. And then a finals week in May.
This is, obviously, not the most efficient system. So, have you, as a student or a teacher, encountered a better system?

Good news

The Florida Board of Education passed new science standards.

Science Cafe in Raleigh – Teenage Brains

Science Cafe on Teenage Brains :
Teenagers sometimes act as though they were from a different planet. On Tuesday February 19, the Museum of Natural Sciences will host a science cafe entitled “Altered States: Inside the Teenage Brain” at Tir Na Nog in Raleigh at 6:30p.m. The session will be led by Wilkie Wilson, Duke professor and director of BrainWorks, a program for brain research and education. Wilson studies the effects of drugs on learning and memory, and has helped write several books on teenage drug use. RSVP to Katey Ahmann by Monday, February 18.

The Island Project

As I promised the other day, I went to Carrboro Century Center this afternoon (right after meeting with Anton around the corner) to see the Island Projects designed by the Chapel Hill High School students of Rob Greenberg.
I did not see all of them – they were doing this in “shifts” throughout the afternoon and I could only stay for an hour – but I saw several of the projects and talked to a number of students (and to Rob himself). I have to say I was really, truly impressed with their work, as well as with their enthusiasm as they explained the details of their projects to me and other visitors. They really did their homework!
Their assignment was to design an island – this means inventing an island that does not really exist but is very geologically similar to the islands that truly exist in the same geographical location. They had to do the research on this – what kind of soil is there, what are the sources of water, energy, what kind of climate is there throughout the year, etc.
Then, they had to design a human habitation on the island in such a way as to leave the least intrusive environmental foot-stamp, i.e., to make the island economy as self-sustained and energy-independent as possible. Not surprisingly, most of the students picked the tropics, for two obvious reasons: lots of sunshine (so they could load their buildings with solar panels and have no expenditure on heating) and the possibility of (eco)tourism as a source of island income.
Some of the groups also had some wind-power sources, though they readily admitted this was supplemental as there is not going to be much wind on such islands except during typhoon seasons (during which they hope the wind-turbines will not get broken).
One group located their island in the Ryukyu archipelago south of Japan and nicely incorporated Buddhist and Shinto religion and martial arts into their tourist offerings, paying attention to the local culture (karate was invented there).
In order to keep the environmental stamp low, the off-season population has to bee quite small, e.g., 500-1000 people, doubling or tripling when the tourists are on the island as well. The food production was probably the most difficult obstacle for them, with only some of the islands having fertile enough soil for tilling instead of letting it just grow a forest.
I have to admit I gave several groups a “third degree”, but they handled it quite well. I would start by asking about the size of the island. The smallest I saw was only about 3 miles in diameter. The largest was about 14 miles from tip to tip of a horseshoe shape. This was my starting point for the questioning about transportation (especially for the tourists): a tiny island can be walked, but what about a bigger island? Bicycles, monorail and electrical cars/buses were the most frequent solutions they offered. But then, the next question: where does the electricity for electric buses come from? Sun and wind, mostly, as well as some garbage incineration.
Interestingly, not a single group thought of horses as a means of transportation for tourists! No pony-crazed kids in that bunch, I guess. Horses may not be good for the smallest of these islands, but for bigger ones they would be an excellent alternative. Bikes need pre-built bike-trails. Horses beat their own trails in a matter of a few months (and those trails are smart, as horses will find the most efficient ways to negotiate the landscape). Trail-ride horses need very little in terms of space and food. Most people who see horses only on TV have this idea that horses need vast expanses of space to run around and enormous quantities of food. But a horse that works several hours a day carrying tourists around (walk, occasional slow trot) prefers to sleep in a stall – protected from heat, insects, snakes, predators, and bullying by other horses. A few small paddocks can be rotated in the off-season. Such a horse also needs only some grass, hay and a handful of grain (which can be raised by using horse droppings as a fertilizer and horsepower for ploughing) – this is not a racehorse or an Olympic showjumper with huge energy requirements – trail riding takes surprisingly little effort from the horses and overfeeding them (which some people do) makes them nervous, dangerous and unhappy. And those super-modern tourists who are afraid of horses can use golf-carts, I guess, and stick to the less wild parts of the island.
I know it is impossible for the school to organize such a trip for all the students, but perhaps they can, on their own, make an appointment to visit the Smart House at Duke and get additional ideas about the ways to make buildings environmentally friendly and energy-efficient.
In any case, I was really impressed by the students and the quality of their work. They have learned a lot about the way to do research, about the Earth, and about the trade-offs one needs to deal with when designing environmentally friendly human habitats – something that, I hope, many of them will bring to their lives and careers later on. Kudos to their teacher, Rob Greenberg, for pulling this off – what a great example of science education that is really meaningful for the students’ lives.
I hope that some of their projects will be made available online as well, so other teachers around the world can use Rob’s experience and replicate this in some manner in the future.
Some pictures under the fold…

Continue reading

Zoo School – perhaps you can help

If you read my blog you must be aware how enchanted I am with the ZooSchool in Asheboro, NC. Unfortunately, at the last moment something came up, so the delegation of two teachers and six students could not make it to the Conference three weeks ago. I intend to go and visit there some time soon and I hope they can make it to the Conference next year.
But in the meantime, they need something that WE can help with – some lab coats. They have placed a proposal on DonorsChoose (read it carefully to understand why they need these) and I hope you feel generous today and help them get funded. I just did.

Darwin Day in the Guardian

Karen is excited this morning, reading the enormous Guardian edition full of good Darwiny goodness, chockful of articles by Dawkins and many others, as well as extracts from Darwin’s works.
The only part I find a little too narrow is The best Darwinian sites on the web which mentions only a small handfull of such sites, e.g., Darwin Online, Darwin Correspondence Project, Darwin Day Celebration, AboutDarwin.com and Darwin Today (the last one yet to launch next month). I know, I know, these are the biggest and bestest, but there are so many others that I feel are snubbed by being left out – they should at least have been linked from a sidebar or a box. How about Talk Origins, Panda’s Thumb, The Dispersal of Darwin, The Beagle Project and The Beagle Project Blog, The Friends of Charles Darwin, or hundreds of other links you can find, for instance, here?

The Island Project

I mentioned before that Carrboro Citizen is my favourite newspaper, the only one I read in hardcopy. Perhaps I like it because it is hyperlocal. Perhaps that is why I have this mindset that those who live in Carrboro already read it and those who don’t will have no interest. So, I rarely blog about their articles. But sometimes something jumps at me as worthy of mention as interesting to anyone anywhere. This week’s edition has one such article – School project an atypical lesson in problem solving – which describes a science project led by Chapel Hill High School Earth and environmental science teacher Rob Greenberg:

The assignment was to pick a location anywhere in the world and create an ancient island there — during pre-human times. The location would predicate the topography, climate and ecology of the island, which would all be included in a map and key the students were to draw of the island they would name.
The second part of the assignment was to draw a map of the island today, including infrastructure designed to leave the smallest footprint, paying attention to all elements of human existence, including dealing with their water, energy and waste requirements within a 10-square-mile area with a population of 1,000 to 2,000. They were also to design a community building — be it a school or recreation or town center.

You can see more details of the project on Greenberg’s website and if you are in the area, please come to the Carrboro Century Center from 2 to 6 p.m. this Sunday to see what the students have done.
What a great way to teach creative thinking and problem solving!

Science+Art+Technology+Media – meetings around the World

There were already two Science Foo Camps (in summers of 2006 and 2007) and two Science Blogging Conferences (in winters of 2007 and 2008).
But the hunger for such meetings is far from satiated. So, if you have time and money and can travel, you can choose to attend the SciBarCamp on March 15-16, 2008, where Eva is one of the organizers and Larry will be there.
Or you can go to the International Science Media Fair in Trieste on April 16-20, 2008. I’ll be there, on two panels, one about Open Access, another on Science Blogging.
Or, a little later, you can attend the World Science Festival in NYC on May 28 – June 1, 2008.
Northeast US, Southeast US, California, Canada, Europe – not bad for geographic distribution for now, don’t you think?

Open Students

Open Students is a new blog for students about open access to research. It is run by Gavin Baker (who also recently joined Peter Suber at Open Access News – Congratulations!) and sponsored by SPARC, the Scholarly Publishing and Academic Resources Coalition, as part of its student outreach activities.
The blog will cover the issues of Open Science as it affects the college students and will have frequent guest-bloggers (students, librarians, researchers, publishers…) – of which you can be one if you contact Gavin.

Basic and oh-not-so-basic science blog posts

You probably know that John Wilkins has been collecting a list of science blog posts under the heading of Basic Concepts in Science – where various science bloggers (and not only Seed sciencebloggers) took some time to explain some very basic terms, concepts and ideas in various scientific disciplines.
Recently, John also started collecting another list of blog posts, these a little more difficult to comprehend (perhaps necessitating reading the Basic posts first) – the Intermediate concepts in science. Check them out.

Bone anatomy

Oh, how I wish eSkeletons website existed back at the time I was teaching anatomy! Very, very cool! You can focus on human bones only, look at movement, insertions and origins, etc. Or you can make comparison between bones of several primates. Thanks Anne-Marie.

I inform people against their will!

I’ve heard this one last year (02.16.2007) but heard it again today (it will probably re-air tomorrow – check your local NPR station) – the This American Life episode about Quiz Shows. It was composed of three stories:
The first one is kinda weird – the guy was lucky with questions on the Irish version of Who Wants To Be A Millionaire, he was shy and this win gave him self-confidence, and he is using the money to live and to help other people.
The third story totally floored me – I hope someone like Zuska or Amanda or Echidne does the analysis of it – it is about a failed quiz show for girls. Intended to showcase how smart the girls are it ended up showcasing how stupid they were, to the horror of the question-writer for the show. It really made my jaw drop and I don’t know what can be done!
But the second story, a fun story about a puzzle competition at MIT, had a snippet (between minutes 42 and 45 when you click on “Full episode” (I don’t see a transcript anywhere) that really made me raise my eyebrows. One of the competitors is talking about his life, his work at Hallmark and his colleagues there. One day, they go out to lunch (the guys from Humor department, thus presumably intelligent, curious and funny) and someone mentions the Hallmark cards that show chimps yet use the word “monkeys” to describe them. The guy tells them a little bit about the difference between monkeys and apes, a little trivia about errors in “The Planet of the Apes” and a tiny little bit about Prosimians. The other guy’s response? “Speaking of animals, would you like to see the rat’s ass that I give?” Wow! Anti-intellectual and proud of it?! The guy’s thought: “Oh, that’s my problem: I inform people against their will!”
And that is, in one sentence, the problem with science communication – we try to inform people against their will.
Discuss.

NCSU helps Baghdad Zoo veterinarians

From Russ Williams, director of the N.C. Zoo Society.

Sports Doping at the Planetarium

From SCONC:

On Thursday, February 7, SCONCs will migrate to the Morehead Planetarium and Science Center in Chapel Hill. MPSC will open its exhibits to SCONC members for a special viewing at 6:00 p.m. in the NASA Digital Theater, followed by Morehead’s Current Science Forum at 7:00 p.m. in the Banquet Hall. This month’s topic, “Victory At Any Cost?” covers the arresting subject of performance-enhancing drugs. Dr. Mario Ciocca, head physician for six UNC athletic teams, will talk about the effects of steroids, growth hormones and other banned substances, and the science used to detect them. Ciocca will lead the public roundtable discussion to follow.
This is an issue with local ties in the Tarheel State. Years before Marion Jones’s admitted steroid use, she was a standout freshman on the UNC women’s basketball team that won the 1994 National Championship. Prior to her current legal and financial troubles, Jones owned a large home in this area.
RSVP for the SCONC meeting to Helen Chickering by Tuesday, February 5.

The Science of Baking

From SCONC:

Following the smashing success of their previous programs on “The Science of Beer” and “the Science of Chocolate,” the Duke Chapter of Sigma Xi, The Scientific Research Society, will present “The Science of Baking” On Thursday, January 31, at 4:30 p.m. The featured guests are Emily Buehler, author of Bread Science: The Chemistry and Craft of Making Bread, and Frank Ferrell from Ninth Street Bakery. The event includes free samples, sandwiches, pastries and drinks. The meeting will be held in room 2002 of the Duke North Building. RSVP ASAP to Mary Holtschneider.

Science Bloggers: Help a Biology Teacher!

On the heels of David Warlick’s session on using online tools in the science classroom and the student blogging panel, here is the opportunity for some of us (that means YOU!) to actually do something about science education online:
Elissa Hoffman is a high school teacher and she has started a blog for her AP Biology class at Appleton East High School in Appleton, WI. She would like it to be a platform with which she can introduce her students to current science research and scientists. One of the things she’d really like to do is find people who’d be interested in “guest blogging” on various topics in biology (or science in general). She has found two already (and I am third), but would like to find more. If you think may be interested, Elissa would be really, really appreciative.
The blog is here and the call for guest-bloggers here. As you can see, Elissa has already posted a few cool posts on evolution and behavior. She is looking for a blog post on a topic of the blogger’s choosing, which could be virtually anything from advice on science as a career to subject-specific knowledge, and then some responses to the kids’ comments/questions.
If you are interested in contributing one post and later responding to students’ comments, you can email Elisse at hoffmanelissa AT aasd DOT k12 DOT wi DOT us.

Open Education Declaration

On the heels of David Warlick’s session on using online tools in the science classroom, this initiative is really exciting:

Teachers, Students, Web Gurus, and Foundations Launch Campaign to Transform Education, Call for Free, Adaptable Learning Materials Online
Cape Town, January 22nd, 2008–A coalition of educators, foundations, and internet pioneers today urged governments and publishers to make publicly-funded educational materials available freely over the internet.
The Cape Town Open Education Declaration, launched today, is part of a dynamic effort to make learning and teaching materials available to everyone online, regardless of income or geographic location. It encourages teachers and students around the world to join a growing movement and use the web to share, remix and translate classroom materials to make education more accessible, effective, and flexible.
“Open education allows every person on earth to access and contribute to the vast pool of knowledge on the web,” said Jimmy Wales, founder of Wikipedia and Wikia and one of the authors of the Declaration. “Everyone has something to teach and everyone has something to learn.”
According to the Declaration, teachers, students and communities would benefit if publishers and governments made publicly-funded educational materials freely available online. This will give students unlimited access to high quality, constantly improving course materials, just as Wikipedia has done in the world of reference materials.
Open education makes the link between teaching, learning and the collaborative culture of the Internet. It includes creating and sharing materials used in teaching as well as new approaches to learning where people create and shape knowledge together. These new practices promise to provide students with educational materials that are individually tailored to their learning style. There are already over 100,000 such open educational resources available on the Internet.
The Declaration is the result of a meeting of thirty open education leaders in Cape Town, South Africa, organized late last year by the Open Society Institute and the Shuttleworth Foundation. Participants identified key strategies for developing open education. They encourage others to join and sign the Declaration.
“Open sourcing education doesn’t just make learning more accessible, it makes it more collaborative, flexible and locally relevant,” said Linux Entrepreneur Mark Shuttleworth, who also recorded a video press briefing. “Linux is succeeding exactly because of this sort of adaptability. The same kind of success is possible for open education.”
Open education is of particular relevance in developing and emerging economies, creating the potential for affordable textbooks and learning materials. It opens the door to small scale, local content producers likely to create more diverse offerings than large multinational publishing houses.
“Cultural diversity and local knowledge are a critical part of open education,” said Eve Gray of the Centre for Educational Technology at the University of Cape Town. “Countries like South Africa need to start producing and sharing educational materials built on their own diverse cultural heritage. Open education promises to make this kind of diverse publishing possible.”
The Declaration has already been translated into over 15 languages and the growing list of signatories includes: Jimmy Wales; Mark Shuttleworth; Thomas Alexander, former Director for Education at the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development; Lawrence Lessig, founder and CEO of Creative Commons; Andrey Kortunov, President of the New Eurasia Foundation; and Yehuda Elkana, Rector of the Central European University. Organizations endorsing the Declaration include: Wikimedia Foundation; Public Library of Science; Scholary Publishing and Academic Resources Coalition; Canonical Ltd.; Centre for Open and Sustainable Learning; Open Society Institute; and Shuttleworth Foundation.
To read or sign the Cape Town Open Education Declaration, please visit: http://www.capetowndeclaration.org.

Go and sign the Declaration!

Update:
David Wiley of the USU Center for Open and Sustainable Learning has more.

Student Blogging

During the Student blogging panel–from K to Ph D at the Conference (actually, the session I enjoyed the best of all – and that is not easy as all the sessions were fantastic), a point came up about the way universities are slowly changing their attitudes toward students blogging. Actually, one of the panelists, Sarah Wallace, is a direct beneficiary of a recent 180-degrees turn by Duke University. Instead of looking askance at student blogging, Duke is now actively encouraging students to write blogs about their research, providing them with the platform and tech support and faculty guidance.
So, it is nice to see that another batch of Duke students is blogging right now – from Hawaii – Nicholas School Students Visit Hawaii’s Marine National Monument:

A group of our Master of Environmental Management students, professors Andy Read and Dave Johnston, and environmental journalist Eugene Liden are exploring Papahanaumokuakea, America’s largest marine wilderness, through Jan. 25. As they make their way through the Northwestern Hawaiian islands, they will be sending back regular blog posts and photos about what they are learning. They also are videotaping the experience, and we will make clips available soon after the trip. I thought you might want to check out the site and share it if you think people in your area might be interested. So far they have spent three days in Oahu, and yesterday they flew to Midway and should post from there by tomorrow.

Check them out – the new generation of science bloggers is coming up! And they are good!

Life Sciences in North Carolina

OK, this may not be very new, but for all of you taking a look at science in North Carolina next week due to the focus on the Science Blogging Conference, The Scientist has published a number of essays looking at every aspect of Life Science in the state – check it out: The State of Life Sciences.
For the latest news on life science in North Carolina, visit the Bioscience Clearinghouse, a very useful website hosted by The North Carolina Association for Biomedical Research.