Director James Cameron reveals the science of his deep-sea exploration.
Published:
2012-12-11 22:49:00
Found in: Earth Science and Education
On June 19, the National Assessment of Educational Progress released the first national report card gauging the performance in hand-on and research-oriented interactive computer tasks by U.S. children. And the overall grades: Well, they show lots of room for improvement.
Published:
2012-06-19 10:14:46
Found in: Education and Science & Society
A provocative editorial in the Journal of the American Medical Association questions the value of attending scientific conferences. It’s a theme that reemerges every few years. And in times of tight budgets, the idea seems worth revisiting.
Published:
2012-04-03 16:30:16
Found in: Climate Change, Education, Environment and Science & Society
Many journals – and the authors who publish their novel data and analyses in them – rely on “impact factors” as a gauge of the importance and prestige of their work. However, a new analysis turns up subtle ways that journals can game the system to artificially inflate their impact factor.
Published:
2010-06-15 16:54:17
Found in: Ecology, Education, Environment and Science & Society
Young scientists converge in San Jose, Calif., where they will compete for over $4 million in scholarships and prizes.
Published:
2010-05-10 11:46:20
Found in: Education and Science & Society
A measure of U.S. science literacy has increased - to 28% (p. 13)
Found in: Education and Science & Society
Over the past two decades, science literacy in the United States – an estimate of the share of adults who can follow complex science issues and maybe even render an informed opinion on them – has nearly tripled. But – and it’s a big but -- the proportion of people who fall into this category remains small. Just 28 percent. (p. 13)
Found in: Education and Science & Society
The Nobel Peace Prize will pay dividends in the developing world by funding scholarships for climate-science studies. The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, which received the 2007 Nobel Prize, announced today that it is investing its winnings as seed money for these scholarships. They’d go to residents of nations expected to experience dramatic impacts of climate change.
Published:
2009-12-16 10:12:07
Found in: Climate Change, Education, Environment and Science & Society
Earlier this week, I met with Zack Lemann at the Insectarium, a roughly 18-month-old Audubon museum. He gave me a behind-the-scenes tour of its dozens of living exhibits hosting insects and more -- including tarantulas and, arriving that day for their Tuesday debut, white (non-albino) alligators. But the purpose of my noon-hour visit was to sample the local cuisine and learn details of preparations for a holiday menu that would be offered through tomorrow at the facility’s experiential cafe: Bug Appetit. There’s Thanksgiving turkey with a cornbread and wax worm stuffing, cranberry sauce with meal worms, and Cricket Pumpkin Pie. It’s cuisine most Americans would never pay for. But at the Insectarium, they don’t have to. It’s offered free as part of an educational adventure.
Published:
2009-11-28 17:00:38
Found in: Ecology, Education, Environment, Food Science and Nutrition
Philadelphia — On brainstorming possible keynote speakers for a major public health conference, the granddaughter of ocean giant Jacques Cousteau does not exactly stand out. But in Philadelphia on Sunday, filmmaker and diver Celine Cousteau stood before the 11,000 or so attendees of the American Public Health Association's annual meeting to explain just why exactly she was there to give the opening session's address.
Published:
2009-11-11 12:46:18
Found in: Education and Science & Society