There’s something about the world we live in that is so jaw
droppingly amazing you find yourself wondering how fantastic it all is. From the tiny subatomic particles to the
stars and galaxies it is pretty impressive.
How sad it is then that our educational system too often manages to take
this world and its beauty and make it plain boring. Packaging up facts to be memorised until it
reaches blackboard scrapping dimensions.
Learning should have never have been left in the hands of the few. It is far too precious and the methods of
learning too varied for such restrictive hands.
Mind you, finance could have something to do with it. I remember being involved with writing a
computer aided package for educational purposes and being shocked how far
behind the games industry our output was.
Then it was pointed out the vast sums being spent in the gaming industry
and how miniscule the amounts used in educational packages. You get for what you pay, as they say. I was sent this link (see below) this week
and found myself loving the way it takes you from the small to the
massive. Allowing you to get a glimpse
of this wonderful world and its weirdness.
Click on start and then the planet looking icon above. Then just slide the bar (located AT THE
BOTTOM of this link) to the left or right; Be sure to slide the bar both ways to see the
very small and the very large.
Friday, 25 May 2012
Wednesday, 23 May 2012
angels whose feet walk upon this earth even as their souls are soaring through the high heavens
Our news is so often dominated by celebrities whose lives are followed by masses hungry for their latest intrigue or disaster. Or alternatively, by our politicians, who disappoint us with their greed and corruption. In a world where the bankers have stolen breathtaking amounts of money and even our clergy fight to free themselves from the stain of child abuse it is often hard to find news that lifts the soul. But this week a death notice strangely left me moved. On Page 26 of the newspaper there was a small article at the very bottom about a certain Don Ritchie from Australia who had died at the age of eighty six. Not a celebrity, nor politician, nor clergyman, he didn’t raise money for charity, nor was he famous. He lived near the sheer cliffs of Sydney Harbour and during five decades he managed to save between 160 lives. People, who having lost all hope, had come to end it all by jumping off the cliffs. Ritchie would spot would be suicides, from his home nearby, and walk to the cliff edge and smile and ask “Can I help you in some way?” A modest man who courted neither celebrity nor praise, he helped by engaging with the desperate and often invited them back to his home for tea and a chat. His quiet approach worked and because of Ritchie so many were saved and so many returned to thank the quiet man for his help. As one survivor described him, “An angel who walks amongst us”. So in this world where so much crap grabs the headlines and good men are rarely found, I’d like you to remember one Don Ritchie.
Tuesday, 22 May 2012
Killing students with pranks
I remember teaching in the chemistry lab in college, don’t ask
why or how I ended up teaching a subject I know nothing about. It is one of the perversities of my life that
I always end up doing stuff that I am in no way trained to do. Anyway, the class was about using a
centrifuge and understanding how it worked and following basic safety
rules. So in a class about twenty I
brought up students in pairs and explained how the centrifuge worked. Showing them all the switches, how to lift
the lid and put in samples in small tubes, balance them, then close the lid, lock
it and turn it on. When they turned it
off I pointed out they needed to wait until the spinning had stopped completely
before opening the device. After nine
pairs I was becoming bored with the same spiel.
Repeating the exact same words and actions again and again! However, I had noticed that all the students
were most nervous when opening the lid after the centrifuge had been
spinning. So for the last pair I waited
until they reached in to open the lid and then screamed at the top of my
voice. The poor guy nearest to me nearly
passed out. He slumped against the bench
and turned very pale. I know, I know it
was unforgiveable. There was a shocked
silence in the class and disbelief at what I had done. There is no excuse for what I did, none. I could
have easily given someone a heart attack.
I don’t know what is wrong with me when I get bored there is a Jekyll
and Hyde factor that takes over. I have
long said, to whoever will listen, I am not a fit person to be with young
people.
There’ s a memory of being at school myself, so completely
bored with the class that I remember thinking that an earthquake or alien
invasion would really be preferable to this.
To this day whenever I see a line of school kids in uniform there is an
uncontrollable emotion of delight that I no longer have to endure a class of
any sort combined with a cruel thought of “suckers”!
Monday, 21 May 2012
Amusing Flotsam
At the 1994 annual awards dinner given by the American Association for Forensic Science, AAFS President Don Harper Mills astounded his audience in San Diego with the legal complications of a bizarre death. Here is the story.
“On 23 March 1994, the medical examiner viewed the body of Ronald Opus and concluded that he died from a shotgun wound of the head. The decedent had jumped from the top of a ten- story building intending to commit suicide (he left a note indicating his despondency). As he fell past the ninth floor, his life was interrupted by a shotgun blast through a window, which killed him instantly. Neither the shooter nor the decedent was aware that a safety net had been erected at the eighth floor level to protect some window washers and that Opus would not have been able to complete his suicide anyway because of this.”
”Ordinarily,” Dr. Mills continued, “a person who sets out to commit suicide ultimately succeeds, even though the mechanism might not be what he intended. That Opus was shot on the way to certain death nine stories below probably would not have changed his mode of death from suicide to homicide. But the fact that his suicidal intent would not have been successful caused the medical examiner to feel that he had homicide on his hands. “The room on the ninth floor whence the shotgun blast emanated was occupied by an elderly man and his wife. They were arguing and he was threatening her with the shotgun. He was so upset that, when he pulled the trigger, he completely missed his wife and the pellets went through the a window striking Opus.
“When one intends to kill subject A but kills subject B in the attempt, one is guilty of the murder of subject B. When confronted with this charge, the old man and his wife were both adamant that neither knew that the shotgun was loaded. The old man said it was his long-standing habit to threaten his wife with the unloaded shotgun. He had no intention to murder her – therefore, the killing of Opus appeared to be an accident. That is, the gun had been accidentally loaded.
“The continuing investigation turned up a witness who saw the old couple’s son loading the shotgun approximately six weeks prior to the fatal incident. It transpired that the old lady had cut off her son’s financial support and the son, knowing the propensity of his father to use the shotgun threateningly, loaded the gun with the expectation that his father would shoot his mother. The case now becomes one of murder on the part of the son for the death of Ronald Opus.
There was an exquisite twist. “Further investigation revealed that the son [Ronald Opus] had become increasingly despondent over the failure of his attempt to engineer his mother’s murder. This led him to jump off the ten-story building on March 23, only to be killed by a shotgun blast through a ninth story window.
“The medical examiner closed the case as a suicide.”
I love this story but of course it is one of those internet bogus things. The talk was indeed given at the American Association for Forensic Science by AAFS President Don Harper Mills but he had made it up to illustrate the complexities that can occur in forensic law. It is a sad affair that some of the most dominant things circulated on the internet and read so widely and shared so avidly are complete rubbish. At times I feel guilty that I too am adding to the flotsam that circulates like plastic rubbish in the oceans. But the story is a funny one and so, as you know it is untrue, perhaps no harm is done!
Sunday, 20 May 2012
My Two Minds
Interesting article in this month’s edition of the New Scientist (May 2012). Entitled “My Two Minds” it highlights the advantage of being bilingual. Being able to speak two languages is of course a million miles away from learning two languages. I must confess to spending seven useless years learning French at secondary school. Since it was a compulsory subject, in those days, everyone, no matter their aptitude, was required to study it. However, such was my dire ability; I was granted the only exception in a school of five hundred pupils. Following some discussion among staff it was decided that my inability to understand anything in French threatened to unfairly humiliate the teaching staff in the end of term exam and I was granted an exemption. I was relieved beyond measure as I have long suffered from what I call a blackboard memory. I can keep only a certain amount of stuff in my head and once overloaded must remove existing material to make room for new items. So when asked to memorise table, chair and light in French it seemed my brain carefully removed the few French verbs that may have crept slowly and painstakingly onto the board of my limited brain. Strangely, with anything mathematical I was okay. Perhaps mathematical and scientific formula could be squeezed onto my limited blackboard with greater density? Who knows and who cares? This article however, seems to indicate that I should.
It turns out that being bilingual leads to better brain development. Studies have shown that bilinguals out perform monolinguals in 15 verbal and non-verbal tests. This brain development begins early and bilingual babies (babies exposed to two languages from birth) show increased neural development. It is as if being exposed to two languages at even this early stage invigorates learning in a fundamental way. The bilingual brain has two languages competing for attention and as a result our brain appoints a Fat Controller within the brain to decide which word to use and inhibiting the same word in the other language. This process is remarkably similar to those cultivated in commercial brain training programs.
I can remember an example of this vividly in my own home. At a large gathering of Greek and English friends my youngest son discovered a large tick had bitten him on the stomach and while its head was buried deep in his juicy flesh its derriere was happily wriggling in relish in plain sight. In outraged anguish he howled his distress first in English with loads of expletives. Then, a few seconds later, he repeated his howl in fluent Greek with an even richer stream of obscenities and curses. Most would have settled for one or the other but being bilingual he obviously felt duty bound to explode fully in both. The Fat Controller must have been on a tea break.
The ability to curse in Greek is an art form. I remember passing a Greek kicking his broken motorbike and hearing him curse with growing volume, his bike, his boss, his wife, the Virgin Mary, Jesus and finally God. It seemed that not until he had insulted the full house could his anger be fully spent. The New Scientist article seemed to bear out cultural differences such as this. Indeed, it appears that bilingual people act differently depending on what language they speak. They seem to have two mental channels one for each language, like two different minds. For example Japanese-English bilinguals when asked to complete a set of unfinished sentences in two separate sessions – first in one and then in the other language demonstrated very different endings depending on the language. Given the sentence
“Real friends should …..” In Japanese was followed by
“… help each other out”
Whereas in English this became
“…be very frank”
It would appear that each language brings to mind the culture and experience it has sprung from. Once, I over heard my eldest son on the phone to a Greek friend and remonstrated that his use of the F___ word seemed totally uncalled for. Not a bit, he informed me, if you spoke Greek properly, you have to curse! But expletives aside, the article finished by indicating those who are bilingual seem to suffer less from dementia and Alzheimer’s. Even when occupation and education factors were taken into account! It is difficult to learn a new language in latter life but apparently the benefits of doing so add considerably to our cognitive systems even at this late stage. “Learn a language at any age to remain mentally stimulated. That’s a source of cognitive reserve” – exhorts the article.
Speaking as someone who learned French for seven years and failed to speak it, then lived in Greece for almost a decade and failed again, I have a huge Brechers Brook mental hurdle about languages. An image of a limited blackboard appears closer to the truth than I care to admit. By not managing to speak those languages, perhaps, I have served to further reduce the area of brain space/blackboard available to me upstairs. The conclusion appears to be, don’t do as I did, do as I say, learn a language, any language for your brain’s sake.
Saturday, 19 May 2012
The Path
I asked my son to make an inspiring video that I could use
in a course I was teaching for women returning to science and engineering. All of these women had stopped working in
their fields to bring up children, look after parents, move abroad or because of
serious health issues. The course was
designed to get them back into employment.
It was inspiring to have such wonderful groups of women all over the UK
trying to get their career back. When
one got a job interview the word was spread via online conferences and momentum
build up with others taking the plunge as well.
Towards the end of the course several got job offers and we all felt
their triumph and shared their success.
In these days of economic trials things are even harder. So here is the video for anyone who is interested. At times it is tricky to read but I like it!
Friday, 18 May 2012
My favourite Song
Some songs just stick with you. This one I have played and played until the
entire family want to throw up on the floor if they hear it again. Strangely, I just cannot hear it enough. It was the same with Cold Play’s Viva La Vida,
I have to wait until no one is around before playing it. One of my neighbours on our rough estate, a
huge monster with tattoos and a string vest used to sit in his garden with a
cigarette hanging from his lips and play Goria Gaynor’s “I will survive” again and again. Such an unexpected choice but I could
understand, some pieces feel as if they are written for just you. My favourite so far is the Avett Brother’s
Murder in the City. I don’t like their
other stuff but this one piece touches me every time I play it. Do listen to each word because it is the
words that make you sit up and like it – lines like
“Always remember, there is nothing worth sharing
Like the love that let us share our name”
Like the love that let us share our name”
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