Sentences with phrase «science part of his talk»

Not exact matches

Coastal Ecologist, and Mass Audubon's Salt Marsh Science Project co-founder, Dr. Robert Buchsbaum talks about about birds and vegetation on salt marshes in this 6.32 minute video filmed by Rick Hydren, as part of his «Danger in the Reeds» video series.
But on visiting each of the three classrooms, I brightened — seeing the joy and hope on the girls» faces as they talked about what they loved studying (e.g., Amharic, English, science, math), what they hoped to be (e.g., pilot, doctor, engineer, driver, teacher, community mentor for BiruhTesfa), and what the best / worst parts of their days are (unanimously, best = being at school, worst = work hours).
Talking to your baby teaches many elements of language... from vocabulary, adjectives, and parts of speech, to math and even science!
Kirstin Fearnley, who is part of AAAS» Education and Human Resources group, said «We hope that this will allow kids to go home and talk to their families about science
Rogers also will present the work as a part of his talk on bio-integrated technologies Feb. 17 at the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) annual meeting in Austin, Texas.
This talk is part of the monthly Colloquium Series offered by AAAS to provide a forum to explore timely topics relevant to science and society.
Steve Mirsky here, and welcome back for part 2 of Dan Falk talking about his book The Science of Shakespeare: A New Look at the Playwright's Universe.
In the past few years, another way that Kirschstein demonstrated her devotion to that future was by multiple visits, as part of an NIH outreach program for minority youngsters, to an elementary school in a low - income area of Washington, D.C., to talk about science with the students there.
Trash talking has been a part of science for centuries; Newton's seemingly magnanimous remark that he stood «on the shoulders of giants» was, to the contrary, likely understood by his contemporaries to be a disparaging reference to the short stature of his main rival, Robert Hooke.
Oppenheimer's talk was part of a bevy of presentations at the weeklong meeting devoted to communicating science to a broader audience.
It's all part of a gradual rhetorical shift away from talking about creationism and intelligent design toward casting doubt on evolution, says Joshua Rosenau, spokesperson for the National Center for Science Education in Oakland, Calif. «They have this idea,» he says, «that it's a zero - sum game, so anything you can do to knock evolution down actually promotes creationism without having to say the word.»
Other officials expected to take part in the talks include Xie Zhenhua, head of China's Climate Change and Coordinating Committee, U.S. State Department climate change envoy Todd Stern, Energy Secretary Steven Chu and White House science adviser John Holdren (ClimateWire, July 27).
The antique store I walked through to get to the magnificent room in the Ducal Palace where I gave my talk (filled with rows of seats and a small screen that contrasted delightfully with the fabulous carvings and chandelier) captured for me how I want the world to see science: as an integral part of our culture, accessible to anyone interested.
So, the messy parts of — Hooke was so closely associated with the messy effectiveness of experimentation that people were happy to not talk about him because they didn't want science to look messy.
He's an astronomer and a professor of the History of Science at NYU and he was part of a panel talking about Isaac Newton after a performance of a new play called Isaac's Eye here in New York City on February 20th.
With a transit of Venus coming up on June 5th or 6th in different parts of the world, Mark Anderson, author of the book The Day The World Discovered the Sun, talks about the great efforts to track the transits of Venus in the 1760s and the science they would produce
The SAH evenings are now part of my family's monthly routine with my 10, 12 and 16 year - old children eager to listen to a night of science talks
In part 1 of this special Darwin Day podcast, celebrating the 200th anniversary of the birth of Darwin on February 12th, Richard Milner performs part of his one - man show about Darwin; Scientific American Editor in Chief John Rennie and Darwin descendant Matthew Chapman read from The Origin of Species; and Chapman talks about his book 40 Days and 40 Nights, about the Dover intelligent design trial as well as about his efforts to get presidential candidates to discuss science — a project called ScienceDebate
In this post, MDI Biological Laboratory animal core technician Karlee Markovich talks about her experience inspiring interest in science among students at a Bangor middle school as part of Maine BioScience Day.
The title of his talk, «Dendritic Cells: A Key Target for Vaccine Science,» focuses on a career - changing finding he was part of three decades ago.
I was not only inspired by the research of young scientists, I also found it exciting to meet people from different countries and cultural backgrounds because in this one week I learned a lot from different parts of the world and I had the pleasure to talk about life itself, not only science.
Join us Tuesday, June 25, 2013 at the Kahilu Theatre in Waimea for an illuminating Astronomy Talk by Dr. Charles Beichman of the NASA Exoplanet Science Institute as he shares how Keck Observatory and NASA's Space Missions reveal different parts of the astronomical landscape.
Katherine Pollard shares science on big data and high - performance computing with an audience at Google as part of the Gladstone Open Classroom Talks series.
De Kennis van Nu Wetenschapscafe (May 8, 2016): Martijn van Calmthout talks about it with bioinformatics professor Berend Snel, Erik van Nieukerken from the Naturalis Biodiversity Center, science journalist Ronald Veldhuizen and evolutionary microbiologist Thijs Ettema, part of the team that made the discovery — Video is in dutch!
As Dutta prepares to take part in the London Science Museum's Illuminating India events, she talks about the lure of optics, the challenge of crafting super-light sensors, and the rise in Indian women entering space sScience Museum's Illuminating India events, she talks about the lure of optics, the challenge of crafting super-light sensors, and the rise in Indian women entering space sciencescience.
There's no solid science showing that regular lubes are harmful, but we're talking about the most intimate part of your anatomy here.
Courses completed through Pelvic Health Solutions: Level I: The Physiotherapy Approach to Female and Male Urinary Incontinence — 2014 Level II: The Physiotherapy Approach to Female and Male Pelvic Pain — 2014 Level III: Treating Pain: A New Model of Care — 2014 Pregnancy and the Pelvic Floor — 2014 Pelvic Girdle Pain, Coccydynia and the Pelvic Floor — 2014 Gastrointestinal Disorders and the Pelvic Floor - Susan Clinton — 2015, 2016, 2017 Pelvic Neurodynamics — 2015 Pain Management in the Real World — Bronnie Thompson Course — 2015 The Pressure System and the Pelvic Floor — Susan Clinton Course — 2015 The Diaphragm / Pelvic Floor Piston for Adult Populations — Julie Wiebe Course — 2015 The Psoas Muscles and the Pelvic Floor — 2016 Relieving Sacro - Iliac and Pubic Pain During and After Pregnancy — Cecile Rost Course — 2016 Cultural Implications of Sex, Shame & Vulnerability — 2017 Let's Talk About Sex — 2017 Mobilization of Visceral Fascia for the Treatment of Pelvic Dysfunction — 2017 The Female Athlete — Bullet Proof Your Core and Pelvic Floor - Antony Lo — 2017 The Use of Pessaries For Pelvic Organ Prolapse in Pelvic Floor Rehabilitation - 2017 Piston Science Part 2: Clinical Decision Making - Julie Wiebe - 2017 Male and Female Sexuality - Holly Herman - 2017 Effective Communication & Collaboration for Enhanced Client Care: The Physiotherapist and the Physiotherapist Assistant Dynamic Workshop - hosted by Ontario Physiotherapy Association - April 2018
Let's talk science — Herbal Essences Bourbon Manuka Honey Shampoo & Conditioner are part of the bio: renew line, which is a formula infused with antioxidants, aloe and sea kelp to fight free radicals.
Lastly is the formidably entertaining «Mechanics: Technologies of a Fantastic World» (17 mins., HD), in which James Kakalios, a Minnesota - based physics professor who served as technical advisor on Watchmen as part of the National Academy of Sciences and Engineering's «Hollywood matchmaking» program, talks about the credibility or lack thereof of the film's science.
His talk, «Stimulating Minds and Protecting Brains,» was part of a session featuring presentations on the science of early brain development and how that affects learning, behavior, and health for a lifetime.
Tonight I am giving a talk at the Science Museum as part of their Ada Lovelace Lates event.
He recently completed a two - week intensive studying artists» publications with New York - based magazine Triple Canopy, and presented a talk on science fiction, pornography and queer desire as part of the Bodies on Display festival in September.
Past Cable Griffith, Friday, February 6th, 12 - 1 pm Come listen to Cable Griffith talk about his paintings which are influenced by nature, science, and the relationship between individual parts to a unified whole, creating landscapes of an invented world through an improvised accretion.
In the second part of the studio visit Wolfgang Petrick talks about his latest show at Michael Schultz Gallery in 2006 entitled «Good Slave, Bad Master», fire as one of the subjects of his work, Prometheus, and the relation of science and art.
Smith will also present her work as part of Speculations: Science Fiction, Chronopolitics, and Social Change — a panel talk, performance, and reception — beginning at 6:30 pm in the Hosmer Auditorium at the Everson Museum.
Lunchtime Talk Dr. Michael Dunne Friday 27 June 1.15 pm, Lecture Room, IMMA Medieval and Renaissance Science, Religion, and Nature's Secrets Dr. Michael Dunne (Head, Department of Philosophy, NUI Maynooth) introduces the overlapping areas of science, religion, and medicine in medieval and renaissance thought with reference to some key figures including Giordano Bruno and others that form part of his research on the philosophy of God, science and Ireland's medieval philosophical heScience, Religion, and Nature's Secrets Dr. Michael Dunne (Head, Department of Philosophy, NUI Maynooth) introduces the overlapping areas of science, religion, and medicine in medieval and renaissance thought with reference to some key figures including Giordano Bruno and others that form part of his research on the philosophy of God, science and Ireland's medieval philosophical hescience, religion, and medicine in medieval and renaissance thought with reference to some key figures including Giordano Bruno and others that form part of his research on the philosophy of God, science and Ireland's medieval philosophical hescience and Ireland's medieval philosophical heritage.
I don't believe he was referring to «authority» in the sense of expertise; in some sense the role of the IPCC in fixing belief around climate science is similar to Peirce's «authority», but it has no enforcement power and to me it seems far more like a step in the process of fixation and communication of scientific information, part of the publishing process, than anything like what Peirce was talking about in method 2.
Sutter's visit to Oklahoma is part of his yearlong «2 Degrees» series looking at climate change science and choices ahead of the Paris talks, starting on Nov. 30, aimed at creating a new international climate change agreement.
Wordy as the letter is, it could be boiled down much like Al Gore's 2006 movie or the collective lot of the entire catastrophic man - caused global warming into a 3 - part talking point: «the science is settled» / skeptics are industry - funded & orchestrated liars» / «reporters may ignore skeptics because of the prior two reasons.»
I think the most telling part of this interview was the end, when Bill Nye quit trying to even talk about climate change (well he never did get past shrieking «The Science is Settled!!
We talk about the less certain issues of motivation which are far from settled, because, in part, if we really fought through the science, the stakes of winning and losing are too high.
Though there are critiques of the science behind the evidence of harm from ozone concentrations of ~ 75 parts per billion, I'd like to focus on an outcome of the ozone tightening that the NYT implies is nothing but an industry talking point:
This is all part of the rapidly developing science of climate skepticism, which is either a branch of physics or logic depending on who you talk to.
(Part of the How to Talk to a Climate Skeptic guide) Objection: In October 2008, Al Gore's science adviser, James Hansen announced yet another «hottest» month on record.
The encouraging part of the experience was spending a day with town planners who passionately cared what their towns would look like in 50 - 100 years, wanted to understand the science and talk about strategies.
Ocean color scientists noted that the NPOESS platform and its VIIRS sensor will not be satisfactory for ocean color science, in part because NPOESS does not provide for lunar calibration of VIIRS and in part because of VIIRS hardware issues involving increased optical cross - talk.9 Ocean color researchers at the workshop asserted that observations should have band coverage ranging from UV to shortwave, and they suggested modifying the GCOS ECV to include ocean color records beyond chlorophyll.
A big part of the problem when it comes understanding computer science program enrollment is that we have the clueless leading the clueless — and this author has no idea what he is talking about.
He took the stage at the company's annual Faculty Summit — a two - day affair where researchers get together and talk about computer science — to answer questions from former Microsoft Research head (now part of the operating sytem team) Rick Rashid and the audience about all of them.
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