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Archive for the ‘education’ category: Page 90

Jan 3, 2022

Elon Musk Thinks Every Child Should Learn About These 50 Cognitive Biases

Posted by in categories: education, Elon Musk, neuroscience

Would the world be more rational if we did as Musk recently suggested and taught kids about cognitive biases in school?

Jan 2, 2022

Kids build DIY microscope from LEGO & cheap phone parts

Posted by in categories: education, mobile phones

A DIY microscope made out of LEGO bricks and smartphone lenses could be a powerful learning tool, teaching children not only how to use microscopes, but also how they work.

Seeing is learning: Microscopes are an essential scientific tool, right up there with bunsen burners and petri dishes, which means they’re also essential to any child’s science education.

But even when young people have access to microscopes, they’re often only taught how to use the instruments — put a slide here, look through there — and not how they actually work.

Jan 1, 2022

NASA Bids to Extend the Life of ISS Through 2030

Posted by in categories: education, life extension

And calls out to collaborating agencies to do their part.

NASA Administrator Bill Nelson revealed on Friday that the Biden administration has committed to extend the operations of the International Space Station (ISS) through 2030, and to continue cooperating with international partners in Europe (ESA, European Space Agency), Japan (JAXA, Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency), Canada (CSA, Canadian Space Agency), and Russia (State Space Corporation Roscosmos) for research endeavors.

“The International Space Station is a beacon of peaceful international scientific collaboration and for more than 20 years has returned enormous scientific, educational, and technological developments to benefit humanity. I’m pleased that the Biden-Harris Administration has committed to continuing station operations through 2030,” Nelson said.

Continue reading “NASA Bids to Extend the Life of ISS Through 2030” »

Jan 1, 2022

Alzheimer’s Risk Gene May Impair Neuroprotective Mechanism

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, education, genetics, neuroscience

Our bodies have some healing and regenerative capabilities. For most of us, cuts will mend, we’ll recover from mild infections, and at the cellular level, | Genetics And Genomics.


The leading scientific social networking website and producer of educational virtual events and webinars.

Continue reading “Alzheimer’s Risk Gene May Impair Neuroprotective Mechanism” »

Dec 31, 2021

Iran space launch fails to put payloads into orbit: Official

Posted by in categories: education, space

Iran’s space launch on Thursday has failed to put its three payloads into orbit after the rocket was unable to reach the required speed, a defence ministry spokesman said in remarks carried on state television.

The attempted launch, which came as indirect United States-Iran talks take place in Austria to try to salvage a 2015 nuclear deal, drew criticism from the US, Germany and France.

Continue reading “Iran space launch fails to put payloads into orbit: Official” »

Dec 31, 2021

Never Stop Learning. The Future Of Education

Posted by in categories: education, futurism

Do you like to keep learning?

Why should be stop at 16, or after University?

Continue reading “Never Stop Learning. The Future Of Education” »

Dec 31, 2021

Interstellar voyage to find the Second Earth | Space Documentary 2021

Posted by in categories: education, space travel

I do not own this video. It is owned by ABC Australia. Interstellar voyage to find the second Earth — space documentary.
Support me: http://www.paypal.me/sovereignspace.

A documentary showcasing interstellar travel to visit an Earth-like planet, a bona fide Earth 2.0 to see if there is life on it. Follow this amazing adventure in state of the art CGI and with the world’s leading scientists.

Dec 30, 2021

Is social media killing intellectual humility?

Posted by in categories: education, information science, internet

An echo chamber is an infinity of mirrors. Photo: Robert Brook via Getty Images

“One way the internet distorts our picture of ourselves is by feeding the human tendency to overestimate our knowledge of how the world works,” writes philosophy professor Michael Patrick Lynch, author of the book The Internet of Us: Knowing More and Understanding Less in the Age of Big Data, in The Chronicle of Higher Education. “The Internet of Us becomes one big reinforcement mechanism, getting us all the information we are already biased to believe, and encouraging us to regard those in other bubbles as misinformed miscreants. We know it all—the internet tells us so.”

Dec 30, 2021

How AI Is Improving Education, Healthcare And Farming In India

Posted by in categories: education, food, robotics/AI

From preventing blindness to helping children read to forecasting floods, AI has come a long way from the specialised labs where it emerged, here’s how it is reshaping lives in India.

Dec 30, 2021

A Neuroscientist Prepares for Death

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, education

Lessons my terminal cancer have taught me about the mind.

By David J. Linden

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