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John Burk

MPG of a Human | Do the Math - 1 views

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    nice calculation of the fuel efficiency of a human. 
John Burk

Free Technology for Teachers: Interactive Build a Body Lesson - 0 views

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    In Sponge Lab Biology's Build a Body students construct a human body system-by-system. To build a body students drag and drop into place the organs and bones of a human body. Each organ and bone is accompanied by a description of the purpose of that bone or organ. The systems that students can build in the Build a Body activity are the skeletal, digestive, respiratory, nervous, excretory, and circulatory systems.
Robert Ryshke

Human Development: Startling Views and Images - 0 views

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    This TED Talk by Alexander Tsiaras, a computer programmer and neuroscientist, describes some wonderful images of human development from conception to birth. Check this out.
Chelsea A Kolff

7 Billion, National Geographic Magazine - YouTube - 0 views

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    Interesting video on human population growth. Includes a ton of statistics.
John Burk

Why Can't Humans Fly Like Birds? | Wired Science | Wired.com - 0 views

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    awesome post. 
John Burk

Eric Lander - Video Library - The New York Times - 0 views

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    An interview with the mathematician and geneticist behind the Human Genome Project and the Broad Institute Really great video describing how lander fell in love with bio. 
John Burk

Studying the Diving Reflex in the Laboratory > Innovative Uses > Vernier Software & Tec... - 0 views

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    A much smaller version of the diving reflex occurs in humans and is easy to demonstrate in the lab using a few Vernier sensors, a large bowl of cold water, or a cold pack on the face. When cold water (10°C or less) contacts the face, the diving reflex is elicited. Breathing is inhibited and heart rate decreases. This response is not observed during normal breath holding in air or when the face is placed in warm water. Heart rate will actually increase in these two conditions.
John Burk

Build a Body - 0 views

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    very cool interactive simulation on human anatomy for high school students
Robert Ryshke

Resnick on the Future of Genomic Study to Map the Human Species - 0 views

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    This is a powerfully important TED talk that gives an overview of the advancing technology associated with moving the Human Genome project well into the 21st Century
John Burk

Eight great figures summarizing the evidence for a "human fingerprint" on recent climat... - 1 views

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    very interesting post with 8 graphs showing indicators that climate change is man made
Anna Moore

Harold "Doc" Edgerton - 0 views

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    looks esp cool for physics. this is a professor from MIT who took some (very famous) amazing pictures of images reflecting droplets, human movement, bullets, etc. really worth checking out.
Anna Moore

Weekly Health Tip: New Reasons to Brush and Floss - TheVisualMD Health Blog - 0 views

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    could be good to use in bio class when we do bacteria. direct clinical application of bacteria. especially useful for adding to the "human" form we use to help reinforce clinical applications of the material we learn.
John Burk

How One College President Is Breaking Down Barriers For Women In Tech - Forbes - 0 views

  • The reluctance of women to enter STEM fields seems to have deep roots — which often don’t disappear even in the face of success. One of Dr. Klawe’s favorite topics is what she calls The Imposter Syndrome. “Even women who get into MIT, and major in engineering,” she says, “often continue to second guess themselves, worrying that success was a mistake. So the first time they get a B on an exam, they switch to a major in the humanities.  Yet males can get all C’s and think they’re doing great. It’s just normal for males to overestimate their success and for women to worry that they don’t deserve to be where they are. That insecurity often haunts them into their professional lives.”
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    A very interesting article about how Harvey Mudd has increased enrollment in computer science from 10% female to 40% female in <3yrs.  Quote is particularly interesting. 
John Burk

Embracing The Challenges Of Science Education : 13.7: Cosmos And Culture : NPR - 0 views

  • I never let my students forget that pairing of difficulty with results, because I never forget it. I let them know they are engaged in a sacred task that connects them to millennia of human effort encoded in their genes. If they can fight their way to the truth, the truth will make them free, just as it did for me that day in high school physics.
  • To engage with the world in search of any kind of Truth is an expression of the search for excellence. That, by its very nature, is desperately difficult. There will always be a price to be paid in time, sweat and tears. We should never sugarcoat that reality.
  • We want to teach students more than just how to get jobs, we also want to teach them how to live with depth and for purposes that stretch beyond their own immediate interests. We should never forget that connection. If we do, we are in danger of losing more than just the next generation of science majors.
Robert Ryshke

Doom and Vroom - 0 views

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    Science Magazine's excellent resource on human population ecology. Really worth reading some of these articles. Statistics are interesting and graphs are amazingly useful.
John Burk

44 Chromosome man: Understanding Genetics: Human Health and the Genome - 0 views

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    Very interesting article about a normal man with 44 chromosomes. Could be used to add some complexity/depth to genetics unit
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