Showing posts with label Science. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Science. Show all posts

Thursday, November 3, 2011

Sustainable Prisons: What If?


Serving hard time means facing a hard reality once a sentence is served.  Former convicts often finish their sentences unprepared for jobs, much less professions, and are generally considered undesirable as employees.  An experiment (and actually a number of research projects) being conducted in Washington state brings science and nature to prisons and prisoners.  One goal is education for inmates and sustainable job training.
"We conduct ecological research and conserve biodiversity by forging collaborations with scientists, inmates, prison staff, students, and community partners. Equally important, we help reduce the environmental, economic, and human costs of prisons by inspiring and informing sustainable practices."  Sustainable Prisons Project
Washington State Department of Corrections partners with Evergreen State College by way of the Sustainable Prisons Project.   Current inmates and ex-offenders who show an interest are taught sustainability, green-collar jobs, and given educational opportunities that advance scientific research.  Some prisoners do organic gardening.  Others are trained as beekeepers.  One program has prisoners raising the endangered Oregon spotted frogs for release back into the wild.  Endangered plant life is being cultivated for transplanting in nature.

Program coordinators note the value of connecting the incarcerated to the world beyond bars and razor wire. Prisoners say they feel like they're being prepared to do something meaningful once their time is served.

Monday, February 7, 2011

The Qatar Foundation


The Qatar Foundation wants a knowledge-based society as a reality. Education, scientific research, and community development serve as the organization's focus on a mission of human development.


Some of the means of accelerating human progress include a media project, a young scientists program, and sports program. Qatar Foundation reaches out to individuals and entities to address pressing social issues.

Currently, the foundation operates three schools and also partners with Virginia Commonwealth University in Qatar.

Monday, January 10, 2011

Mind on Music

 A new study shows the human mind reacts to music in the same way it appreciates good food.  Pleasure centers are stimulated in both the anticipation and hearing of instruments being played. Vocals were excluded to limit the study's focus and rule out human voices as the possible source of pleasure.
Researchers at McGill University in Quebec found a dopamine rush that explains the "chills" and emotional euphoria of the listening experience.

The findings are published in the journal of Nature Neuroscience.

(Source.)


Thursday, January 6, 2011

ESP Study to Be Published in Prestigious Scientific Journal

 A respected psychology journal will publish research investigating the validity of extrasensory perception (ESP).  The Journal of Personality and Social Psychology has accepted the study from a Cornell emeritus professor, Dr. Daryl Bem.


The paper lends credibility to the notion that individuals possess the ability to sense future events, according to the author. 


Skeptics are weighing in to discredit the testing.  However, Bem reports several hundred requests from peers to see if his work can be validated.


Original NYT article.

Monday, December 13, 2010

Geminid: Sky's Alive Tonight

The Geminid Meteor shower blazes across the sky in the early hours of Tuesday, December 14, 2010.  Astronomers expect a spectacular light show with 100 sparking streaks per hour. 
The shower lasts through December 16, but the most impressive display is between midnight and sunrise Tuesday morning in the Northern Hemisphere.
Stargazers should set their sights in the direction of Gemini or northeast.