Sentences with phrase «using scientific language»

Lead by example - by using scientific language openly and without ceremony in your own speech, the children will follow suit.
The problem with this is that the language to sell a product can appear to use scientific language and terms when the theories or concepts being discussed are pseudoscience.
But is a science paper the best place to «not» use scientific language, or maybe it's okay in science papers to be scientific and then to have folks such as yourself, talking to a non scientific audience, explain what it means using relatable percentages, such as the «roll of the dice» analogy (which really isn't that bad because it is relatable).

Not exact matches

In short, inclusive language is supposedly scientific, its use necessitated by modern English.
Most linguistic analysts take these terms for granted when any true scientific procedure would require their clarification as a necessary step to their proper use in language.
Scientific language («The temperature was -5 degrees Fahrenheit») seeks language that has a certain kind of precision lacking in our ordinary speech — a precision that we can quantify and test, that can be used to settle disputes about how cold it actually is.
The use of such language is neither in whole nor in part a properly scientific or historical use.
While the scientific use of language to designate is an important function of words and necessary to some disciplines, to permit words only this function would be sterilizing reductionism.
Math is considered by most to be a «universal language» that is used in every scientific endeavor.
Thus while we use the language of science, without jealousy, for scientific purposes, we may confine it to these; and repel and reprove its upholders, should they attempt to exalt it and to «stretch it beyond its measure.»
Through sensory play and sensory bins children are using the scientific method and are also building pre-math skills, fine motor skills, language skills, imaginative play, and much much more.
Through this activity, you will help your child develop her observation skills, increase her ability to express herself and, without realizing it, she will be using mathematical and scientific language.
She has been awarded prizes for her writing about the scientific labor force, biomedical engineering, cancer genetics, depression, women's health, electronic medical records, apes that use sign language, and other topics by IEEE - USA, the American Association of University Professors, the American Psychological Association, the American Society of Journalists and Authors, Radcliffe College, and other organizations.
Then they examined the next six months» worth of published scientific papers in those fields for specific language used in the published Wikipedia entries, and compared it to the language in the entries that never got published.
When you're writing a scientific manuscript, for instance, you know that your audience is other experts, so you use technical language and dive deep into details.
Babies are born with the ability to learn and use language, a feature of human behavior that, like other behavioral capabilities, emerged from eons of biological evolution — a scientific explanation that author Tom Wolfe rejects in his new book, The Kingdom of Speech.
And today, «no country with ambitions to advance in the scientific realm can hope to succeed without use of the English language
Many in the scientific community have posited that both speech and language are lateralized — that is, we use only one side of our brains for speech, which involves listening and speaking, and language, which involves constructing and understanding sentences.
Many universities have already started to use English as the teaching language for some of their courses in line with scientific and education needs, they noted, so «the voices that raise in the name of the defense of the French language thus seem to us totally out of touch with reality.»
Proponents of climate change tend to use more conservative, tentative language to report on the science behind it, while skeptics use more emotional and assertive language when reinterpreting scientific studies, says research from the University of Waterloo.
For example, the NCFS found language such as «reasonable scientific certainty» to be meaningless and recommended that it not be used in court because it gives the false impression of scientific rigor.
With Erez Aiden, Michel recently used millions of books digitized by Google to build a scientific tool for measuring trends in our shared culture, history, and language going back hundreds of years.
«Cancer is still largely a scientific challenge, and when people use engineering language, it can create wildly unrealistic expectations,» William Kaelin Jr., professor of medicine at the Dana - Farber Cancer Institute in Boston, said during a panel discussion.
The Boolean string «research misconduct» OR «research integrity» OR «research malpractice» OR «scientific fraud» OR «fabrication, falsification» OR «falsification, fabrication» was used to search: Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI - EXPANDED), Social Sciences Citation Index (SSCI), Arts & Humanities Citation Index (A&HCI), Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Science (CPCI - S), BIOSIS Previews, MEDLINE, Business Source Premier, CINAHL Plus, SPORTDiscus, Library, Information Science & Technology Abstracts, International Bibliography of the Social Sciences, America: History & Life, Teacher Reference Center, Applied Social Sciences Index And Abstracts (ASSIA), ERIC, Index Islamicus, CSA linguistics and language behaviour, Physical Education Index, PILOTS, Social Services Abstracts, Sociological Abstracts, Proquest Dissertation & Theses, ECONLIT, Educational Research Abstracts (ERA) Online, Article First, Economic and Social Data Service, Francis, Geobase, Georefs, Global Health (CABI), Index to Theses, International Bibliography of the Social Sciences (IBSS), IEEE Xplore, INSPEC, JSTOR, Mathematical Sciences Net (MathSciNet), PubMEd, Russian Academy of Sciences bibliographies, Sciencedirect, Teacher Reference Center, EMBASE, EMBASE Classics, PSYCHINFO.
After all, in a film written by a musician also responsible for its soundtrack, it seems a bit excessive to expect accurate scientific concepts or even appropriate use of technical language.
China has some strong programs when it comes to using the native languages of minority groups for school instruction, according to a report published in 2005 and released online in July by the United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization, or UNESCO.
Sandwiched among the dramatic vignettes of the story, Greenwood pauses to pepper the book with historical sidebars about the «secret code» language used by those who helped shuttle slaves north to safety; a biographical sketch of Harriet Tubman, known as «Moses» to those along the route; a brief history of storytelling among southern slaves; a scientific explanation for the «swamp ghosts» many slaves encountered along their escape routes; an inside look at some of the methods used to hide slaves from capture; and much, much more.
The NCPI seeks to translate scientific knowledge in Early Childhood to a more accessible language facilitating its use in public policies and professional practices.
This update to their seminal 2008 report uses the latest scientific evidence to rebut several common myths regarding how best to support the linguistic and academic achievement of young children who are learning more than one language — from the Foundation for Child Development
Reading, Mathematical, Scientific literacy (PISA) Information Dimension: Use language, symbols and text interactively Communication Dimension: use knowledge and information interactivUse language, symbols and text interactively Communication Dimension: use knowledge and information interactivuse knowledge and information interactively
But in their darkest moments, IQ tests became a powerful way to exclude and control marginalized communities using empirical and scientific language.
Describe the relationship between a series of historical events, scientific ideas or concepts, or steps in technical procedures in a text, using language that pertains to time, sequence, and cause / effect.
This blog doesn't talk down to the reader, but also doesn't overwhelm her / him with the language already used by trainers or the scientific community.
Also, you have a much higher chance of getting the attention of the media and the public when you oversimplify complex scientific topics, exaggerate, use shrill language, etc..
Just prior to Obama's climate change speech, The Washington Post reported that a one of Obama's scientific advisors used the war on coal language:
Of course, including religious people and using religious language will not answer all questions, and we do not seek a public policy formed by religious people or a scientific discourse answerable to faith statements.
These deviations from the traditional scientific process are brought about by a combination of strategies and tactics: professionalization of climate scientists, [39] the use of artificially constructed scientific consensus, [40] a wide range of rhetorical devices, [41] intimidating language, [42] «bullying» strategies, [43] political attacks, [44] and even civil and criminal litigation.
But that's I think because the public is uninformed about specifics, and even when an equally carefully worded phrase is used, where 98 % of scientists know it's not consensus, the same 50/50 split among the public will come up, and all that means is they don't know scientific language and the specifics of the issue well and otherwise it says a lot less than you might think at first glance it says.
Scientific language provides a lot of terminology that one is supposed to use to express limited degrees of confidence.
How much does it effect the big scientific programs / unifying theories / wicked problems like climate change which includes so many subjective judgements and imprecise use of language (and complexity)?
In announcing the change, President Obama emphasized the need to «make scientific decisions based on facts, not ideology,» yet the new policy, as well as the language that the president used to explain it, underscores that the stem cell debate is in important ways not about scientific facts at all, but about the difficulty of balancing competing moral preferences.
You will have simplified, and used less technical language than you would have in writing for your scientific peers.
Later that year, the then Director of the Tyndall Centre, Professor Mike Hulme warned that the language being used — not just by the media, but also by politicians, campaigners, and scientists — in the discussion around climate change was increasingly removed from anything scientific, and was likely to encourage people to switch off:
This obsession tracks those techniques, from the old - fashioned use and abuse of language to the deployment of bots, online crowds, and personalized targeting on social media — as well as the latest scientific research on persuasion, belief, and how information and ideas are spread.
My goal here is not to dumb down your language or make it impossible to use technical or scientific terms.
Studies in English language were selected if they were controlled trials (crossover or parallel groups) comparing stimulants with placebo, were published in peer reviewed scientific journals, reported quantitative data on independent effects for aggression related behaviours, used a rating scale or method of observation to assess aggression related behaviours, and included children or youth (mean age < 18 y) with ADHD.
He uses a scientific method to code their verbal and body language second by second, along with every change in their heart rates, blood pressures and other physiological measures of tension and calmness.
HEXACO personality inventory revised (HEXACO PI - R) based on HEXACO six factor model (Honesty - Humility (H); Emotionality (E); Extraversion (X); Agreeableness (A); Conscientiousness (C) and Openness to Experience (O)-RRB- was translated into the Lithuanian language and adapted for the use in scientific research in 2011 (Truskauskaite et al., 2011).
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z