The Scout Report
October 23, 2015 -- Volume 21, Number 41
A Publication of Internet Scout
Computer Sciences Department, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Research and Education
Science NetLinks: Afterschool ResourcesWe're History
Practical Prof
Whales: Free Lesson Plans
Fogarty International Center: Bioethics Resources for Teachers and Students
Teach.com: Teacher Blog
Crash Course Kids
JSTOR Daily
General Interest
Digital Stories: Wellcome CollectionWBUR's Digital Bookshelf
Google Cultural Institute
A global guide to the first world war - interactive documentary
Cato Institute: Social Security
Transgender Oral History Project
Gigaom
Mapping the Stacks: A Guide to Black Chicago's Hidden Archives
Network Tools
Turn Off the LightsAtavist
In the News
What Back the Future II Got Right (And Wrong)Copyright 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/2015/1023
Feedback is always welcome: scout@scout.wisc.edu
Research and Education
http://sciencenetlinks.com/afterschool-resources/
Educators
who
facilitate
after
school
programs
will
find
a
wealth
of
resources
for
late
elementary
and
middle
schoolers
on
this
American
Association
for
the
Advancement
of
Science
(AAAS)
web
page.
Readers
may
like
to
simply
work
their
way
down
the
list
of
activities,
scouting
those
options
that
strike
them
as
most
compelling
and
educational.
Activities
include
creating
a
miniature
geyser
with
Alka-Seltzer
tablets,
an
online
anatomy
activity,
and
a
reenactment
of
the
"dances"
of
honeybees,
among
many
others.
Each
activity
comes
equipped
with
a
facilitator
page,
plus
online
and
printable
pages
for
students.
Often,
there
are
also
related
resources
from
the
AAAS
page
as
well
as
related
activities
to
which
students
may
link.
[CNH]
http://werehistory.org/
We're
History
draws
from
academics,
journalists,
and
amateur
historians
to
present
the
multifarious
narratives
of
America,
in
all
its
contradictions
and
complexity.
Posts
and
articles
on
the
site
fall
into
one
of
five
informative
categories:
History
Behind
the
News;
Culture,
Military
&
Maritime;
Politics
&
Economics;
and
This
Day
in
History.
One
particularly
fascinating
entry
by
Benjamin
T.
Arrington,
a
park
ranger
with
a
Ph.D.
in
history
from
the
University
of
Nebraska-Lincoln,
tells
the
story
of
the
day
in
1912
when
an
assassination
attempt
was
made
on
Teddy
Roosevelt.
Roosevelt
immediately
took
the
stage
to
offer
a
90-minute
speech,
the
bullet
still
lodged
in
his
rib.
To
find
this,
or
any
other
article,
readers
may
like
to
use
the
search
function
on
the
top
right-hand
side
of
the
page.
[CNH]
http://www.practicaldoc.ca/teaching/practical-prof/
Designed
for
rural
doctors
who
teach
medical
students
and
residents,
this
site
from
Practical
Doc
can
be
used
by
any
reader
with
an
interest
in
the
ins
and
outs
of
medical
practice
as
it
is
taught
today.
Here
readers
will
find
sections
on
Preparing
to
Teach,
Teaching
Nuts
&
Bolts,
Observation
&
Feedback,
Assessment,
and
Learners
in
Difficulty.
Many
of
these
resources
can
be
used
by
professionals
in
any
field.
For
instance,
under
the
Observations
&
Feedback
page,
readers
will
find
excellent
tips,
such
as
making
feedback
descriptive,
specific,
balanced,
well
timed,
limited,
and
possible
to
implement.
There
is
also
a
four-minute
film
that
outlines
these
principles
for
training
doctors,
or
anyone
who
provides
feedback
as
part
of
their
role
in
an
organization.
[CNH]
http://www.discoveryeducation.com/teachers/free-lesson-plans/whales.cfm
This
lesson
plan
from
Discovery
Education
explores
the
underwater
world
of
whales.
Designed
for
grades
six
through
eight,
the
plan
is
divided
into
sections,
including
Objectives,
Materials,
Procedures,
Adaptations,
Discussion
Questions,
Evaluation,
Extensions,
Suggested
Readings,
Links,
Vocabulary,
and
Academic
Standards.
The
meat
of
the
lesson
includes
reviewing
where
whales
live,
what
they
eat,
the
difference
between
baleen
and
toothed
whales,
and
an
activity
in
which
teams
research
a
number
of
whales
and
then
present
to
one
another
about
what
they
have
found.
It
is
structured
to
extend
over
two
class
periods,
is
printable,
and
gives
educators
the
guidance
they
need
to
create
engaging
and
edifying
class
time
about
this
important
topic.
[CNH]
http://www.fic.nih.gov/RESEARCHTOPICS/BIOETHICS/Pages/teachers-students.aspx#curricula
Assembled
by
the
Fogerty
International
Center
at
the
National
Institutes
of
Health,
this
page
of
resources
designed
for
teachers
of
bioethics
can
be
useful
to
educators
of
both
high
school
and
college
students.
Here
readers
will
find
links
to
resource
around
the
web,
including
curricula,
courses
from
Vilnius
University
in
Lithuania,
and
a
number
of
compelling
case
studies.
There
are
also
links
to
several
bioethics
career
sites,
such
as
the
one
maintained
by
the
University
of
Virginia's
Undergraduate
Bioethics
Program.
Finally,
the
page
links
to
a
number
of
bioethics
courses,
some
of
which
may
be
taken
freely,
and
others
of
which
may
require
registering
for
an
account
with
the
National
Institute
of
Health
or
other
organizations.
[CNH]
http://teach.com/blog
The Teacher Blog from Teach.com offers community, education, insights, and tips to educators from around the country. Here educators can search categories such as Comics in Education, Education Current Events, Education Policy, Education Technology, Featured Teacher, and many more. Recent entries have explored the importance of classroom design, tips for encouraging a growth mindset in students, a series of articles about teaching abroad, and mental health training for educators. With hundreds of informative entries dating back to December of 2011, when the blog began, many educators will find the perspectives shared here helpful and encouraging. [CNH]
https://www.youtube.com/user/crashcoursekids
Crash
Course
Kids
is
a
YouTube
video
series
designed
to
make
science
accessible
and
exciting
for
late
elementary
school
students.
The
site
opens
with
a
36-second
introductory
video
that
outlines
the
philosophy
of
the
endeavor.
From
there,
readers
may
like
to
select
Playlists,
where
they
can
find
videos
grouped
by
categories,
such
as
Space
Science,
Earth
Science,
Engineering,
Life
Science,
and
Physical
Science.
Videos
are
uploaded
every
Tuesday
and
Thursday,
so
there
is
plenty
of
fresh
content
on
the
site.
Recent
additions
have
covered
such
topics
as
the
constellations,
engineering
games,
severe
weather,
the
wonders
of
dirt,
and
even
the
nature
of
dinosaur
urine.
For
educators
looking
for
a
way
to
bring
science
to
life
for
4th
and
5th
graders,
this
excellent
YouTube
channel
will
provide
welcome
resources.
[CNH]
http://daily.jstor.org/
JSTOR
has
been
an
essential
resource
for
students
and
scholars
at
colleges
and
university
libraries
for
nearly
two
decades,
but
the
subscription
price
for
this
digital
collection
puts
it
out
of
reach
for
many
individuals.
Launched
in
October
2014,
JSTOR
Daily
brings
some
of
that
wealth
of
research
and
primary
sources
in
the
database
to
the
general
public
at
no
charge.
Through
weekly
feature
articles
and
daily
blog
posts,
this
online
magazine
mines
the
database
for
material
that
provides
context
and
detail
to
current
events
and
issues.
The
front
page
offers
a
small
sampling
of
the
most
recent
blog
posts
and
long
reads,
while
the
archives
can
be
explored
through
five
topical
headings:
Arts
&
Culture,
Business
&
Economics,
Politics
&
History,
Science
&
Technology,
and
Education
&
Society.
Users
can
also
sign
up
to
have
the
Weekly
Digest
delivered
to
their
inbox.
For
readers
interested
in
delving
deeper
into
those
stories
crossing
their
Facebook
and
Twitter
feeds,
JSTOR
Daily
is
a
fascinating
must.
[EB]
General Interest
http://digitalstories.wellcomecollection.org/
The
Wellcome
Collection,
a
free
museum
in
London,
"explores
the
connections
between
medicine,
life,
and
art
in
the
past,
present
and
future."
This
site
brings
the
curiosities
and
complexities
of
the
Wellcome
to
life
for
web
users.
Readers
may
like
to
begin
by
selecting
the
Mindcraft
exhibit,
where
they
will
explore
"a
century
of
madness,
murder
and
mental
healing"
centered
on
the
influence
of
Franz
Anton
Mesmer,
the
occultist
healer
who
claimed
he
had
discovered
a
universal
energy
that
could
cure
disease.
Once
readers
have
seeped
themselves
in
the
images,
text,
and
video
of
Mindcraft,
they
may
like
to
move
on
to
The
Collectors,
an
online
exhibition
of
various
collector's,
such
as
John
Graunt,
the
19th
century
haberdasher
who,
in
collecting
statistics
on
the
plague
that
was
ravaging
London,
may
have
been
the
first
epidemiologist.
[CNH]
http://apps.wbur.org/books/
This
site,
assembled
by
the
Boston
Public
Radio
station,
WBUR,
gathers
all
of
the
station's
book
coverage
in
a
single,
navigable
location.
Here
readers
will
find
scores
of
recently
published
books
to
scout,
along
with
reviews,
interviews
with
authors,
transcripts
of
book-related
programs,
and
links
to
sites
where
readers
may
purchase
the
novels,
memoirs,
biographies,
and
other
books
on
display.
Readers
may
sort
the
site
by
chronology,
author,
and
title.
They
may
also
filter
by
program
on
which
the
book
was
featured
(such
as
The
ARTery,
Here
&
Now,
and
On
Point)
or
by
category
(such
as
Staff
And
Guest
Favorites,
Fiction,
Nonfiction,
Biography,
Children's
Books,
Humor,
History,
and
many
others).
For
readers
looking
for
their
next
literary
adventure,
this
site
can
provide
a
welcome
guide
to
what
has
arrived
on
the
market.
[CNH]
https://www.google.com/culturalinstitute/project/art-project
Founded
in
2011,
the
Google
Cultural
Institute
is
a
nonprofit
initiative
that
"partners
with
cultural
organizations
to
bring
the
world's
cultural
heritage
online,"
with
the
express
purpose
of
making
beautiful
and
important
works
of
art
available
to
anyone,
anywhere.
Readers
may
scout
the
site
by
selecting
Collections,
Artists,
and
Artworks.
Interestingly,
they
may
also
explore
the
User
Galleries,
which
feature
the
assembled
images
of
other
Google
Cultural
Institute
users,
which
can
range
from
the
assembled
treasures
of
museum
directors
to
the
random
collections
of
anonymous
aficionados.
Readers
may
even
like
to
assemble
their
own
galleries,
by
selecting
My
Galleries
and
then
dragging
items
into
it
one-by-one
to
build
a
collection
of
their
own.
The
only
requirement
is
that
users
have
a
free
Google
account.[CNH]
http://www.theguardian.com/world/ng-interactive/2014/jul/23/a-global-guide-to-the-first-world-war-interactive-documentary
In
this
phenomenal
interactive
from
the
British
newspaper,
the
Guardian,
ten
historians
from
ten
different
countries
offer
a
brief
history
of
the
First
World
War.
Appropriately,
the
documentary
may
be
viewed
in
English,
French,
German,
Italian,
Spanish,
Arabic,
or
Hindi.
To
begin,
readers
may
select
Enter
and
Play.
Seven
video
chapters
are
then
available,
each
between
three
and
six
minutes
in
length,
chronicling
themes
such
as
Origins,
Trenches,
Empires,
Fronts,
Slaughter,
Endings,
and
Aftermath.
In
addition,
selecting
the
Interactive
option
for
each
chapter,
which
looks
like
a
pointing
finger,
allows
readers
to
explore
an
interactive
map
of
the
nations
and
empires
who
were
engaged.
For
anyone
with
an
interest
in
the
Great
War,
this
page
will
offer
unusual
insight
into
the
nature
and
consequences
of
this
epic
conflict.
[CNH]
http://www.cato.org/research/social-security
For
readers
looking
for
erudite
libertarian
and
fiscally
conservative
arguments
on
the
nature
of
social
security,
this
special
section
from
the
Cato
Institute
provides
well-informed
critiques
of
the
current
system,
as
well
as
suggestions
for
how
to
trim
budgets,
roll
back
entitlements,
and
shrink
government.
Edited
by
Senior
Cato
Fellows,
Jose
Pinera
and
Michael
D.
Tanner,
recent
articles
have
included
an
exegesis
of
the
pros
and
cons
of
a
guaranteed
national
income
and
some
sobering
pronouncements
on
Social
Security's
80th
anniversary.
Readers
may
also
like
to
explore
the
subtopics
on
the
page,
including
Bad
Ideas
for
Reform,
Cato's
6.2
Percent
Solution,
International,
Social
Security
Reform,
Non-financial
reasons
for
reform,
and
others.
[CNH]
http://transoralhistory.com/
The
Transgender
Oral
History
Project
is
"a
community-driven
effort
to
collect
and
share
a
diverse
range
of
stories
from
within
the
transgender
and
gender
variant
communities."
Interested
readers
may
like
to
begin
by
exploring
the
Story
Bank,
a
series
of
short
video
interviews
with
individuals
and
groups
speaking
about
issues
important
to
the
transgender
community,
as
well
as
their
own
personal
experiences
as
either
transgendered
people
or
allies.
The
Story
Bank
can
be
scouted
with
a
search
box
at
the
top
of
the
page
or
sorted
by
categories
such
as
Date
Published
(Newest
to
Oldest
or
Oldest
to
Newest),
Title
(Ascending
or
Descending),
or
Random.
Also
on
the
site,
readers
will
find
the
downloadable
i
Live:
A
Youth
Toolkit.
This
informative
resource
can
help
parents
and
educators
who
are
working
with
transgendered
youth
as
they
navigate
four
topics,
including
Media
Literacy,
Health
Care,
Employment,
and
Creating
Acceptance.
[CNH]
https://gigaom.com/
For
readers
who
are
searching
for
ways
to
keep
up
with
the
continually
expanding
world
of
tech,
Gigaom
can
be
a
welcome
source
for
reliable
information.
In
fact,
more
than
six
million
readers
turn
to
the
news
site
every
month
for
information
about
everything
from
fitness
trackers
to
virtual
technology
breakthroughs.
Readers
may
Scout
the
site
by
various
well-organized
sections,
including
Cloud,
Data,
Media,
Mobile,
Science
&
Energy,
and
Social
&
Web.
There
is
also
an
entire
section
devoted
to
Apple
products.
In
addition
to
the
articles,
Gigaom
produces
podcasts,
including
The
Structure
Show
(for
the
business
of
tech),
the
Chrome
Show
(for
all
things
Google
Chrome-related),
and
the
Internet
of
Things
show
(for
all
things
related
to
the
network
connectivity
of
physical
objects
and
the
World
Wide
Web).
[CNH]
http://mts.lib.uchicago.edu/
Mapping
the
Stacks
(MTS)
is
a
collaboration
between
University
of
Chicago
faculty
and
Ph.D.
students,
professional
archivists
and
librarians,
primarily
from
the
University
of
Chicago
Library's
Special
Collections
Research
Center,
and
archives,
libraries,
and
community-based
organizations
in
the
Chicago
area
that
hold
rich,
but
unprocessed
collections
related
to
African-American
history.
Founded
by
Professor
Jacqueline
Goldsby
of
the
University
of
Chicago's
Department
of
English
in
2003,
Mapping
the
Stacks
provides
the
people
power
to
process
African
American
primary
source
records,
including
visual
materials,
periodicals,
papers,
recorded
oral
histories,
and
ephemera
according
to
established
archival
standards.
About
30
completed
finding
aids
are
currently
accessible
on
the
website,
along
with
a
primer
on
what
finding
aids
are
and
how
they
can
be
used,
and
a
short
glossary
of
archival
terms.
While
production
of
an
archival
finding
aid
for
a
collection
does
not
digitize
all
the
artifacts
in
that
collection,
finding
aids
contain
descriptions
of
both
the
materials
in
the
collection
and
the
people
and
organizations
who
created
the
records.
Finding
aids
also
indicate
the
extent
of
a
collection
-
how
much
material
there
is.
This
means
that
the
work
that
MTS
has
chosen
to
do,
get
more
finding
aids
online,
helps
researchers
discover
hidden
collections
that
document
Black
Chicago's
history.
[DS]
Network Tools
https://www.turnoffthelights.com/
Have you ever wished you could dim all the bright spots on your computer while watching a YouTube or Vimeo video? Turn Off the Lights, a free browser extension available for Internet Explorer, Mozilla Firefox, Google Chrome, Opera, Safari, Maxthon, and Yandex Browser, allows users to do just that. To download, visit the site and select Download Now. The program will automatically download to whatever browser is open. From there, a gray lamp icon will appear in your browser menu whenever a video is detected. Simply click the icon to make the screen around the video fade. [CNH]
https://atavist.com/
Atavist
advertises
itself
as
"a
simple
web
tool
for
powerful
storytelling."
For
those
readers
who
love
to
write
-
and
write
online
-
it
may
be
just
the
service
they
have
been
searching
for,
as
it
allows
authors
to
upload
photos,
video,
and
audio
to
create
an
immersive
experience.
The
best
way
to
form
a
sense
of
what
can
be
done
with
Atavist
is
to
select
the
menu
on
the
top
right
hand
side
of
the
screen
and
then
go
to
Examples
to
peruse
creative
articles
that
integrate
a
variety
of
multimedia
possibilities.
Interested
readers
will
then
want
to
create
an
account
using
Facebook
or
their
email
address.
From
there,
the
instructions
walk
through
the
steps
of
creating
a
New
Project,
including
writing
text
and
using
the
convenient
drag
and
drop
functions
for
various
media.
Many
readers
will
want
to
take
the
Tour,
which
can
be
located
on
the
top
of
the
screen
after
selecting
New
Project.[CNH]
In the News
Back to the Future II: What did it get right and wrong?
http://www.bbc.com/news/technology-34569759
5 Ways 'Back to the Future II' Predicted 2015
http://www.usnews.com/news/slideshows/5-ways-back-to-the-future-ii-predicted-2015
'Back to the Future' Writer predicts next 30 years
http://www.usatoday.com/story/life/movies/2015/10/22/back-future-yet-again/74240982/
Review the Future
http://reviewthefuture.com/
Futurism
http://futurism.com/
Finding the Science Behind Science Fiction through Paired Readings
http://www.readwritethink.org/classroom-resources/lesson-plans/finding-science-behind-science-927.html?tab=4#tabs
In
the
1989
sic
fi
classic,
Back
to
the
Future
II,
protagonists
Doc
Brown
and
Marty
McFly
travel
in
a
flying
time
machine
to
the
wildly
futuristic
date
of
October
21,
2015,
a
period
defined
by
airborne
cars,
wraparound
virtual
reality,
and,
of
course,
hoverboards.
This
week
the
world
celebrated
'Back
to
the
Future
Day,'
and
media
sites
pondered
what
the
writers
of
the
film
got
right,
and
where
they
went
awry.
Among
the
prescient
predictions,
journalists
counted
such
innovations
as
wearable
tech,
drones,
hoverboards
(in
limited
distribution),
addiction
to
social
media,
and
video
chat.
Sadly,
we
have
yet
to
see
flying
cars,
barcode
license
plates,
and
robotic
gas
stations,
though
the
latter
has
been
recently
tested
in
the
Netherlands.
As
Science
Fiction
goes,
then,
Back
to
the
Future
II
gets
high
marks
for
predictive
validity.
[CNH]
The first and second links, from BBC News and US News, respectively, take readers to articles outlining Back to the Future II's hits and misses. Next, Back to the Future screenwriter Bob Gale predicts what the world will look like in the year 2045. Meanwhile, the fourth site, Review the Future, offers podcasts explicating the impacts of technology on culture, and the fifth link takes readers to Futurism, a "curated feed of the top daily scientific breakthroughs and technological innovations." Finally, the last site on the list navigates to a lesson plan that pairs science fiction readings with hard science readings for an exciting blend of fact and fiction.
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