I also used the National Geographic DVD-ROM set to supplement social studies/geography, as I would read aloud 10 question quizzes taken from old issues and I would give candy prizes for those who got the most correct per round. It was another Friday afternoon thing I would do for students that had to stay with me for 6 hours a day (not counting lunch/therapy sessions). Sadly, haven't yet found work like that yet, despite having a few interviews recently.
Ah, candy bribery, one of the most effective instructional aides ever invented, though not one I could use much, most of the people I've taught were adults and either enthusiastic sci/med major or soldiers, and the latter you can yell at. Surprisingly fear and terror are handy tools for instruction even on subjects requiring critical reasoning In any event a very different audience then you presumably work with, though I don't recall your specific specialty.
Good luck on the job hunt, though, I've a lot of friends in education and until very recently it had been a fairly dry market, in state, lots of cuts and it hit the more junior staff and new teachers hardest of course, though we have a micro-boom for a little while do to a lot of retirements attached to an impending pension alteration.
Still, I think the Scientific Method is one of those things that eventual gets so ingrained into you that it just fades into the background as a technique or method akin to those a trained artist or writer has, but especially early on I imagine it does feel confining. As fond as I am of history, I think formal study of it would drive me insane, too much uncertainty, too reliant on biased or inaccurate primary sources or very slanted secondary ones.
There are methodologies and epistemological approaches that might ground a scientific type in the historical storm, but yeah, it's like winding one's way through the Minoan Labyrinth. But it certainly does teach people how to assess source material critically
So does law apparently, ironically 90% of what I know about history methodology I learned about two months back while visiting one of my warbuddies who is doing his grad work in history and shares my fondness for long arguments over good dark beers.
Speaking of history, I'm going to post something shortly in order to ridicule it.
Just finished reading it
Well, let's just say that when I read that piece on Thursday, I thought to myself, "Oh God, please do not let Joel read this and post it as if it were worthy of discussion."
Ah, Joel. Well, if there's two issues he tends to be most sympathetic to the right on its God and Guns so it might not have appealed to him as much, but one can never tell. The author is a red meat vendor of flavor closer to John Birch than Ann Coulter, obviously of the alternate persuasion, though it is often hard to tell on the fringe, and his 'degree' is in homeopathic medicine and he's a self-proclaimed author/expert on attention deficit disorder so I can't see his brand of rabble-rousing appealing too much to Joel, though it's hard to guess.
The intuitive mind is a sacred gift and the rational mind is a faithful servant. We have created a society that honors the servant and has forgotten the gift.
- Albert Einstein
King of Cairhien 20-7-2
Chancellor of the Landsraad, Archduke of Is'Mod
- Albert Einstein
King of Cairhien 20-7-2
Chancellor of the Landsraad, Archduke of Is'Mod
You remember how many people on wotmania would say to never click on one of my links?
17/01/2013 05:11:59 AM
- 821 Views
Eh. This isn't markedly more gross than most medicine, and it saves lives. Pretty neat.
17/01/2013 06:09:10 AM
- 479 Views
Well, I thought it'd get more to read the article if I hinted that some might find it "gross."
17/01/2013 07:01:09 AM
- 548 Views
I've avtually heard about it before.
18/01/2013 04:57:14 AM
- 784 Views
Well as medicine and biology goes that's not especially gross
18/01/2013 05:22:04 AM
- 502 Views
Did I ever post a link two years ago to artifical beef made from human waste products?
19/01/2013 11:37:53 AM
- 536 Views
Probably, I'm familiar with it...
19/01/2013 12:49:14 PM
- 488 Views
Yeah, that collage drew a lot of attention from visitors from the state
19/01/2013 02:49:50 PM
- 427 Views
Re: Yeah, that collage drew a lot of attention from visitors from the state
19/01/2013 04:43:34 PM
- 481 Views
Yeah, it's not for the faint of heart
19/01/2013 04:55:48 PM
- 564 Views
Re: Yeah, it's not for the faint of heart
19/01/2013 06:29:37 PM
- 517 Views
After the Z-pack I took recently, I'm beginning to think I could use one to restore intestinal flora
18/01/2013 03:24:41 PM
- 445 Views
Have you tried kefir? Unpasteurized apple cider vinegar? Other probiotics? *NM*
18/01/2013 03:40:25 PM
- 319 Views