The Scout Report
August 28, 2015 -- Volume 21, Number 33
A Publication of Internet Scout
Computer Sciences Department, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Research and Education
TED-Ed: Lessons Worth SharingFlackCheck.org
Go Botany: Discover thousands of New England plants
National Archives: Records of Rights
Renewable Energy Projects for the Classroom (PDF)
PLOS: Computational Biology
Modules: Free Ag Energy Curriculum for Teachers
PBS Learning Media: Teen Maps Contaminants from a Coal Plant
Cornell Laboratory of Ornithology: Macaulay Library
General Interest
Bloggingheads.tvTypographica
Embargo Watch
The Upshot: Is It Better to Rent or Buy?
Gastropod
Bombsight: Mapping the WW2 Bomb Census
America By The Numbers
Network Tools
RebelMouseMeetingBurner
In the News
A Corpse Flower Blooms in DenverCopyright and subscription information appear at the end of the Scout Report. For more information on all services of Internet Scout, please visit our Website: https://scout.wisc.edu
If you'd like to know how the Internet Scout team selects resources for
inclusion in the Scout Report, visit our Selection Criteria page at:
https://scout.wisc.edu/scout-report/selection-criteria
The Scout Report on the Web:
Current issue:
https://scout.wisc.edu/report/current
This issue:
https://scout.wisc.edu/report/2015/0828
Feedback is always welcome: scout@scout.wisc.edu
Research and Education
http://ed.ted.com/
TED-Ed
is
a
multifaceted
educational
platform
based
on
the
knowledge-proliferating
philosophies
of
TED,
the
organization
made
famous
by
its
renowned
TED
talks.
To
take
full
advantage
of
TED-Ed,
educators
will
first
want
to
explore
the
existing
Lessons,
of
which
there
are
thousands.
A
drop
down
menu
reveals
a
dozen
subjects,
including
The
Arts,
Business
&
Economics,
Health,
Mathematics,
and
others.
Various
filters,
including
Content,
Grade
Level,
and
Duration,
help
narrow
down
to
a
specific
topic.
Some
of
the
best
lessons,
such
as
"The
Benefits
of
Good
Posture,"
have
been
viewed
hundreds
of
thousands
of
times,
and
include
thought
provoking,
ready-made
multiple
choice
and
open-answer
questions
and
prompts
for
student
discussions.
Educators
who
would
like
to
use
the
platform
to
build
their
own
lessons
around
web
videos
(from
TED,
YouTube,
or
Vimeo,
for
example)
will
need
to
create
an
account.
Registration
is
easy,
however,
and
only
requires
an
email
and
password
before
creation
of
video-based
lessons
can
occur.
[CNH]
http://www.flackcheck.org
Headquartered
at
the
Annenberg
Public
Policy
Center
of
the
University
of
Pennsylvania,
FlackCheck.org
offers
resources
that
help
students
"recognize
flaws
in
arguments
in
general
and
political
ads
in
particular."
At
the
time
of
this
writing,
with
the
primaries
well
underway
in
the
United
States,
the
site
has
excellent
sections
dedicated
to
particular
candidates,
including
"Campaign
Watches"
about
Jeb
Bush,
Donald
Trump,
Rick
Santorum,
and
Rick
Perry,
among
others.
In
addition,
the
Patterns
of
Deception
section
outlines
the
misleading
arguments
that
surround
debates
on
climate
change,
immigration,
and
gun
control.
For
educators
teaching
critical
political
thinking,
or
for
anyone
who
would
like
a
tool
for
sorting
through
various
policy
debates
and
campaigns,
FlackCheck.org
is
an
excellent
resource.
[CNH]
https://gobotany.newenglandwild.org/teaching/
These
Teaching
Tools
from
Go
Botany,
an
online
arm
of
the
New
England
Wild
Flower
Society,
will
bolster
the
lesson
plans
of
educators
working
with
"students
and
informal
learners
ages
10
and
older."
Interested
readers
may
want
to
begin
with
James
Sirch's
"Next-Generation
Science
Standards,"
which
is
provided
under
Teaching
Tools.
Available
as
a
downloadable
PDF,
this
resource
outlines
the
many
ways
Go
Botany
can
be
useful
to
teachers
and
students,
from
first
grade
through
high
school.
The
Go
Botany
Plant
Quiz
Cards,
a
downloadable
resource
with
photographs
and
information
about
a
dozen
New
England
plants,
is
another
great
resource.
The
site
also
links
to
the
Go
Botany
Plant
Identification
Form
and
a
Bibliography
of
Children's
Books
on
the
Subject
of
Botany,
which
are
both
excellent
resources.
[CNH]
http://recordsofrights.org/
This
new
permanent
collection
at
the
National
Archives
showcases
documents
and
images
related
to
"the
ongoing
struggle
of
Americans
to
define,
attain,
and
protect
their
rights."
Readers
may
want
to
begin
with
the
Online
Exhibit.
Here
they
will
find
six
informative
categories:
Equal
Rights,
Rights
to
Freedom
and
Justice,
Rights
to
Privacy
and
Sexuality,
Workplace
Rights,
First
Amendment
Rights,
and
Rights
of
Native
Americans.
Each
category
contains
well-researched
annotations
and
plenty
of
primary
sources
to
spice
up
lesson
plans
and
classroom
activities.
For
instance,
the
Equal
Rights
section
provides
a
chronology
of
the
history
of
rights
in
the
United
States,
from
the
15th
Amendment
onward.
Interested
readers
may
also
enjoy
the
Museum
Exhibit,
which
details
the
Exhibit
Concept
and
offers
sections
on
African
Americans,
Women,
and
Immigrants.
[CNH]
http://www2.ivcc.edu/mimic/nsf/Resources%20for%20Teachers/Renewable%20Energy%20Projects%20-%20Handbook.pdf
This
National
Science
Foundation-sponsored
PDF,
which
was
assembled
in
2013
by
four
educators
at
the
Illinois
Valley
Community
College,
offers
a
range
of
activities
for
Middle
School,
High
School,
and
Community
College
students.
Each
lesson
is
tuned
to
the
particular
needs
of
its
target
population.
For
example,
the
Middle
School
Activities
section
begins
with
a
five-page
Introduction
to
Renewable
Energy
and
includes
a
Solar
Energy
Unit
and
a
unit
about
Wind
Turbines
as
an
Alternative
Energy
Source.
Meanwhile,
the
High
School
Activities
include
references
to
geometry
and
other
more
advanced
topics,
while
the
Community
College
Activities
explores
the
complexities
of
biofuels
and
the
power
generation
of
wind
turbines.
[CNH]
http://journals.plos.org/ploscompbiol/
The
online
journal
PLOS:
Computational
Biology
seeks
to
make
"connections
through
the
application
of
computational
methods
among
disparate
areas
of
biology,"
thereby
providing
"substantial
new
insight
into
living
systems
at
all
scales,
from
the
nano
to
the
macro,
and
across
multiple
disciplines,
from
molecular
science,
neuroscience
and
physiology
to
ecology
and
population
biology."
With
an
editorial
board
drawn
from
some
of
the
world's
great
universities,
this
open
access
journal
can
be
counted
on
for
groundbreaking
and
reliable
information
in
the
field
of
computational
biology.
Recent
articles
include
reviews
of
probability
models,
an
editorial
about
what
is
and
isn't
computational
biology
and
articles
on
topics
as
varied
as
"Asynchronous
Rate
Chaos
in
Spiking
Neuronal
Circuits"
and
Optimal
Prediction
of
Moving
Sound
Source
Direction
in
the
Owl."
[CNH]
http://agenergyia.org/modules/
For
educators
looking
for
an
entire
curriculum
about
agricultural
use
of
energy,
or
for
anyone
interested
in
the
way
agricultural
scientists
are
currently
thinking
about
the
uses
and
conservation
of
energy
resources,
this
curriculum
of
15
modules
will
be
a
true
boon.
Readers
may
download
the
modules
individually
or
choose
to
download
the
entire
curriculum
simultaneously.
Readers
may
first
browse
the
Learning
Objectives
and
Topics
Covered
of
any
particular
module,
as
well
as
view
slides.
They
may
then
download
the
module
in
a
rather
large
zip
file
format
(approximately
35MB).
Each
lesson
is
packed
with
information
and
activities,
including
syllabi,
quizzes,
press
releases,
and
visually
compelling,
informative
slides.
Topics
range
from
Ag
Energy
Basics
to
Energy
Conservation
in
Agriculture
to
lessons
about
solar
energy,
geothermal,
wind,
biofuels,
and
hydropower,
among
other
topics.
[CNH]
http://www.pbslearningmedia.org/resource/envh10.health.coalmap/teen-maps-contaminants-from-a-coal-plant/
This
PBS
Learning
Media
presentation
is
an
excellent
resource
for
teachers
working
with
students
in
grades
six
through
12,
or
for
anyone
who
is
working
with
middle
and
high
school
students
and
would
like
to
inspire
them
to
take
an
active
role
in
their
communities.
Readers
may
like
to
start
by
watching
the
three-minute
video
about
Marisol,
a
young
community
activist
who
is
working
to
raise
awareness
about
the
detrimental
health
effects
of
a
coal
plant
in
her
neighborhood
of
Little
Village
in
Chicago,
Illinois.
From
there
educators
may
want
to
examine
the
Support
Materials
on
the
site,
which
include
an
informative
background
essay
and
a
number
of
discussion
questions
to
enliven
the
thinking
of
students.
There
is
also
a
handy
Educational
Standards
section,
where
public
school
teachers
will
find
that
the
lesson
plan
meets
National
Standards
for
World
History,
U.S.
History,
Science
Literacy,
and
other
topics.
[CNH]
http://macaulaylibrary.org/
With
over
175,000
audio
and
60,000
video
recordings
of
birds
and
other
animals,
The
Macaulay
Library
at
the
Cornell
Laboratory
of
Ornithology
is
one
of
the
world's
largest
collections
of
media
documenting
biodiversity.
The
Scout
Report
has
visited
both
the
Library
and
the
Lab
previously,
but,
since
2015
is
their
Centennial,
we
thought
the
site
was
worth
a
return
trip.
Not
only
that,
the
technology
to
listen
to
media
has
improved
tremendously
over
the
years;
the
2004
Report
notes,
"Site
visitors
with
broadband
internet
connections
can
link
to
video
clips
of
bird
behavior
from
the
Lab
of
Ornithology's
Macaulay
Library."
With
today's
computing
power,
the
main
requirement
is
the
scientific
name
of
a
species,
which
will
retrieve
audio,
video,
and
maps
related
to
the
animal.
There's
a
feed
from
the
Macaulay
Library
Facebook
page,
where
an
audio
quiz
is
posted
every
few
days,
inviting
visitors
to
identify
bird
sounds.
The
Library
is
currently
partnering
with
NPR
on
the
Decoding
Nature
project
(http://www.npr.org/2015/07/31/427990342/here-s-how-to-identify-sounds-you-hear-in-nature
).
Listeners
can
record
a
clip
of
a
bird
or
other
animal
sound
in
their
backyard,
send
it
to
NPR,
and
the
Lab
will
identify
the
source.
Follow
along
at
#decodenature
on
Twitter.
[DS]
General Interest
http://bloggingheads.tv/
Most
people
may
not
know
that
Bloggingheads.tv,
which
was
founded
in
2005,
was
the
first
website
devoted
to
split-screen
video
dialogues
about
politics
and
ideas.
Founded
by
journalist
Robert
Wright
(author
of
such
classic
philosophical
works
as
The
Moral
Animal:
Why
We
Are
the
Way
We
Are
and
Nonzero:
The
Logic
of
Human
Destiny),
the
site
has
a
knack
for
drawing
together
brilliant
minds
for
crackling
conversation.
The
site
features
just
over
a
dozen
different
programs,
including
the
DMZ,
where
"liberal
Bill
Scher
and
conservative
Matt
Lewis...
hash
out
the
week's
political
events;"
Culturally
Determined,
which
covers
all
things
culture;
and
the
Wright
Show,
where
Robert
Wright
interviews
just
about
anyone
in
whom
he
has
taken
an
interest,
often
with
fascinating
results.
[CNH]
http://typographica.org/
Everyone
who
uses
a
computer
or
reads
a
magazine
lives
in
a
world
of
typefaces,
but
few
of
us
give
this
ubiquitous
art
its
proper
due.
Enter
Typographica,
a
website
entirely
dedicated
to
the
art,
science,
and
business
of
typeface
design.
Here
readers
will
find
articles
on
the
latest
innovations
in
typeface,
as
well
as
interviews
with
designers,
reviews
of
typefaces
and
type
books,
and
the
occasional
commentary.
Of
special
note,
each
year
the
site
chooses
its
Favorite
Typefaces,
which
include
a
few
dozen
creative
and
useful
examples
of
the
art,
along
with
a
helpful
description
of
what
has
been
happening
in
the
world
of
fonts
and
serifs.
In
addition,
readers
may
pursue
the
work
of
several
dozen
designers
on
the
site
and,
under
the
Foundry
tab,
examine
the
work
of
particular
companies,
from
Apple
to
tiny
boutique
houses
in
Denmark.
[CNH]
https://embargowatch.wordpress.com/
In
the
field
of
journalism,
it
is
common
for
sources
to
sometimes
request
a
press
embargo,
meaning
that
they
ask
reporters
to
refrain
from
publishing
information
until
a
certain
date
or
until
certain
conditions
are
met.
In
theory,
this
is
reasonable.
However,
there
are
times
when
journalists
perceive
embargoes
as
overly
restrictive
and
unnecessarily
entangling.
Medical
journalist
Ivan
Oransky
has
created
Embargo
Watch
to
"keep
an
eye
on
how
scientific
information
embargoes
affect
news
coverage."
Here
readers
will
find
the
latest
details
on
how
famous
journals
like
Nature,
Science,
the
Lancet,
PNAS
(and
many
others)
release
information
to
journalists
with
the
expectation
that
news
reports
will,
at
least
usually,
coincide
with
the
publication
of
the
articles
in
question.
Things
get
interesting,
of
course,
when
some
news
outlets
break
embargoes,
or
when
journals
ask
for
embargoes
that
strike
journalists
as
unreasonable.
The
blog
entries
on
this
site,
which
tend
to
be
published
monthly
or
as
problems
with
embargoes
arise,
are
insightful,
incisive,
and
informative
for
anyone
interested
in
how
journalism
works
behind
the
scenes.
[CNH]
http://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2014/upshot/buy-rent-calculator.html
As
this
excellent
interactive
resource
notes,
"The
choice
between
buying
a
home
and
renting
one
is
among
the
biggest
financial
decisions
that
many
adults
make."
And
yet
there
are
few
resources
on
the
Internet
as
fluid
and
informative
as
this
21-part
series
of
interactive
charts
and
graphs.
Here
readers
may
enter
their
prospective
home
price,
how
long
they
plan
to
stay,
mortgage
details
(rate,
down
payment,
and
length),
projected
future
growth
rates,
taxes,
closing
costs,
maintenance
fees,
and
then,
in
contrast,
the
costs
of
renting
(monthly
rate,
broker's
fee,
renter's
insurance).
Given
all
of
that
information,
the
site
calculates
whether
it
is
better
to
rent
or
own,
as
well
as
where
the
dividing
line
might
be
in
terms
of
renting
versus
the
costs
and
benefits
of
owning.
In
all,
this
is
an
extremely
helpful
and
informative
site
for
anyone
that
has
ever
considered
owning
their
own
home.
[CNH]
http://gastropod.com/
As
the
site
notes,
"Gastropod
looks
at
food
through
the
lens
of
science
and
history."
In
each
episode
of
this
gastronomic
podcast,
co-hosts
Cynthia
Graber
and
Nicola
Twilley
examine
historical
precedents
and
groundbreaking
science
of
a
unique
culinary
event,
"from
aquaculture
to
ancient
feasts,
from
cutlery
to
chile
peppers,
and
from
microbes
to
Malbec."
They
interview
experts
and
chefs,
visit
labs
and
kitchens
and
archaeology
digs,
and
generally
have
a
wonderful
time
showing
listeners
the
ins
and
outs
of
the
what
and
how
of
food
today.
Episodes
tend
to
run
about
half
an
hour
in
length,
and
each
is
accompanied
by
a
well
written
article
and
informative
Episode
Notes.
Recent
topics
have
included
sound
as
"the
forgotten
flavor
sense,"
an
expose
of
Sus
scrofa
domesticus
(the
pig),
and
an
illuminating
look
at
ice
cream.
[CNH]
http://bombsight.org
Bombsight,
a
project
of
the
British
National
Archives,
allows
readers
to
experience
the
World
War
II
bombing
of
London
through
interactive
maps,
photographs,
and
compelling
narratives.
The
landing
page
engages
readers
from
the
start,
where
a
map
of
London
is
covered
with
numbered
red
dots,
each
related
to
the
bombing
of
that
particular
location.
Selecting
one
of
the
dots
pulls
up
a
short
description
of
the
location
and
the
explosive.
Readers
may
then
click
on
"read
more"
to
navigate
to
a
page
that
includes
images
related
to
the
area,
as
well
links
to
people's
stories
related
to
the
area.
For
instance,
selecting
the
red
dot
labeled
"3"
takes
readers
to
the
Southwark
Bridge,
where
they
can
view
images
of
bombed
out
buildings
of
the
area,
medical
teams,
and
scenes
from
bomb
shelters,
as
well
as
read
accounts
from
five
different
narratives,
each
available
directly
on
the
site.
[CNH]
http://www.americabythenumbers.org/
The
PBS
documentary
series
America
By
the
Numbers
with
Maria
Hinojosa
focuses
its
formidable
attention
on
the
dramatic
demographic
shifts
taking
place
all
around
the
country.
Stories
range
from
the
small
town
of
Clarkston,
Georgia,
which
is
now
home
to
an
international
refugee
community,
to
the
struggles
of
the
Cambodian
community
in
Long
Beach,
California.
On
this
site,
readers
may
watch
trailers
for
all
nine
episodes
and
read
short
descriptions
of
those
episodes.
From
there,
they
may
select
"Click
Here
to
Watch
the
Full
Episode"
to
navigate
to
the
PBS
website,
where
the
documentary
series
can
be
viewed
in
full.
In
addition,
the
Resources
tab
includes
a
helpful
interactive
demographic
map
of
the
United
States,
and
an
Educational
Materials
section
with
curriculum
guides
and
educational
resources
designed
to
accompany
the
episodes.
[CNH]
Network Tools
https://www.rebelmouse.com/
RebelMouse
is
a
social
media
aggregator.
In
other
words,
the
links,
updates,
tweets,
photos,
and
other
content
that
readers
post
on
their
various
social
media
outlets
(Facebook,
Twitter,
Pinterest,
Instagram,
etc.)
can
now
all
appear
in
one
place
-
and
that
place
happens
to
be
beautifully
designed,
convenient,
and
free.
Readers
may
sign
up
with
their
existing
Facebook,
Twitter,
or
Google+
accounts,
or
they
can
use
the
simple
email/password
function.
From
there,
provide
the
service
with
your
sign
in
information
for
your
social
media
accounts
and
it
will
start
pulling
your
updates
and
blending
them
into
a
visually
satisfying
arrangement.
You'll
also
have
more
editorial
control
than
on
other
social
media
sites
with
the
magazine-like
format.
The
only
potential
downfall
is
that,
predictably,
others
will
have
to
also
sign
up
for
RebelMouse
before
they
can
view
your
content.
[CNH]
https://www.meetingburner.com/
For
readers
looking
for
a
free
online
platform
for
small
meetings
and
webinars,
MeetingBurner
is
a
good
choice.
The
free
service
can
host
up
to
ten
participants,
and
includes
screen
sharing,
group
chat,
audio
and
video
conferencing,
and
some
mobile
tools.
This
can
be
especially
helpful
for
small
organizations
with
a
limited
budget,
since
few
web
conferencing
providers
offer
free
plans.
However,
to
access
more
of
MeetingBurner's
advanced
features
(such
as
the
ability
to
host
up
to
50
or
250
attendees
and
recording
options),
users
must
pay
a
monthly
fee.
In
a
nutshell,
this
basic
service
is
one
of
the
few
free
web
conferencing
services
available
and
it
is
perfect
for
small
business
owners
or
non-profits
on
a
budget.
[CNH]
In the News
Foul-smelling 'corpse flower' blossoms in Denver (+video)
http://www.csmonitor.com/Science/2015/0823/Foul-smelling-corpse-flower-blossoms-in-Denver
Corpse Flower: Facts About the Smelly Plant
http://www.livescience.com/51947-corpse-flower-facts-about-the-smelly-plant.html
Why Insects Are Drawn to Corpse Flower's Stench
http://news.nationalgeographic.com/2015/07/150728-stinky-corpse-flower-university-of-california-blooms/
Amorphophallus titanum History & Statistics
http://www.virtualherbarium.org/amorph/amorphophallus-history.html
'Tabitha the Titan' begins making seeds
http://news.ucdavis.edu/special_reports/titan/default.lasso
How do we smell?
http://ed.ted.com/lessons/how-do-we-smell-rose-eveleth
When
the
five-foot
three-inch
tall
Corpse
Flower
at
the
Denver
Botanical
Gardens
finally
bloomed
this
week,
it
drew
over
22,000
visitors
in
two
days
and
made
headlines
around
the
country.
Why
all
the
fuss?
First,
the
plant
is
rare.
Even
in
its
native
Sumatra,
botanists
find
specimens
hard
to
come
by.
Second,
the
Amorphophallus
titanum
takes
about
a
decade
to
blossom,
and
then
the
bloom
only
lasts
a
matter
of
days.
Future
blossoms
are
unpredictable,
sometimes
arriving
after
a
year
or
two,
but
often
taking
another
seven
to
ten
years
before
gracing
gardens
with
their
towering
countenance.
Finally,
of
course,
there
is
the
indecorous
odor,
both
infamous
and
alluring,
designed
to
lure
carrion-eating
beetles
and
flesh
flies
for
the
purposes
of
pollination,
and
now
a
favorite
feature
among
elementary
school
students
and
their
often
horrified
parents.
[CNH]
The
first
link,
from
the
Christian
Science
Monitor,
offers
coverage
of
this
week's
Corpse
Flower
bloom
at
the
Denver
Botanical
Gardens.
Next,
Live
Science's
Alina
Bradford
offers
some
titillating
facts
about
one
of
the
world's
largest
flowering
structures.
The
third
link
takes
readers
to
a
National
Geographic
article
from
January
of
this
year
that
chronicles
the
bloom
of
another
Corpse
Flower,
this
one
at
the
University
of
California
Botanical
Garden.
Meanwhile,
the
fourth
link
navigates
to
the
Virtual
Herbarium
of
the
Fairchild
Tropical
Botanic
Garden,
where
readers
may
peruse
an
in-depth
treatment
of
the
history
and
statistics
of
the
Amorphophallus
titanum.
The
fifth
link,
from
UC
Davis
News
and
Information,
chronicles
the
cycles
of
'Tabitha
the
Titan,'
a
Corpse
Flower
at
UC
Davis's
gardens
that
bloomed
a
month
ago
and
is
now
in
the
process
of
making
seeds.
Finally,
the
last
link
takes
readers
to
a
fascinating
exposition
of
the
human
nose,
in
which
Rose
Eveleth
"charts
the
smelly
journey
through
your
olfactory
epithelium"
for
TedEd.
Here
readers
will
find
a
short
video,
a
quiz,
links
to
interesting
studies,
and
a
guided
discussion
-
all
designed
for
educators
looking
to
introduce
students
to
the
wonders
of
olfactory
science.
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Internet Scout Team | ||
---|---|---|
Craig Hase | [CNH] | Editor |
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