The Scout Report
January 23, 2015 -- Volume 21, Number 3
A Publication of Internet Scout
Computer Sciences Department, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Research and Education
Science in the ClassroomTween Tribune
Poetry Out Loud: Teaching Resources
My Next Move
Great Lakes Fuel Cell Education Partnership
Let's Talk Science
Women's History Matters
Brooklyn Waterfront History
General Interest
NSF Science Now: Video LaboratoryOpen Culture
Grateful Dead Archive Online
Boston Children's Museum Collections
Know More
National Climatic Data Center: Global Analysis - Annual 2014
Death and the Civil War
Veterans' Service Records
Network Tools
SoundCloudOdrive
In the News
Obama Delivers 2015 State of the Union AddressCopyright 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
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Current issue:
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This issue:
https://scout.wisc.edu/report/2015/0123
Feedback is always welcome: scout@scout.wisc.edu
Research and Education
http://www.scienceintheclassroom.org
Science
in
the
Classroom
is
an
excellent
resource
for
high
school
teachers
and
university
professors
who
want
to
integrate
the
latest
breaking
research
into
their
lesson
plans.
The
project
consists
of
a
team
of
editors
from
the
world-renowned
journal
Science,
who
work
with
an
advisory
board
of
scientists
and
science
teachers
to
produce
content
designed
for
the
classroom.
On
the
site,
readers
may
click
on
either
High
School
or
University
to
choose
their
target
audience.
Topics
may
be
divided
into
Physical
or
Biological
sciences
(or
choose
"Any"
to
peruse
all
articles).
Click
on
an
article
to
read
the
editor's
introduction
and
annotations.
Discussion
questions
are
listed
throughout.
In
addition,
each
article
is
accompanied
by
Activities
and
Teaching
Resources,
which
can
be
downloaded
as
PDF
files.
[CNH]
http://www.tweentribune.com/
This
excellent
news
website
from
the
Smithsonian
Institute
covers
science,
history,
the
environment,
and
other
topics.
Kids
will
love
it
for
its
quirky
news
stories.
Parents
and
teachers
will
love
it
because
they
know
they
can
trust
the
content
coming
from
one
of
America's
greatest
institutions
of
knowledge.
Stories
are
sorted
into
age
appropriate
levels
(Grades
K-4,
Grades
5-8,
and
Grades
9-12)
and
are
also
available
in
Spanish.
Recent
articles
have
explained
the
significance
of
two
new
planets
discovered
by
astronomers,
rejoiced
at
the
birth
of
a
baby
orca,
reviewed
the
history
of
Martin
Luther
King,
Jr.,
and
traced
a
classic
Atari
game
from
its
place
in
a
trash
bag
in
New
Mexico
to
its
new
home
at
the
video
game
history
collection
at
the
Smithsonian.
The
website
is
free,
though
readers
must
create
a
simple
account
to
comment
on
articles.
[CNH]
http://www.poetryoutloud.org/teaching-resources/
Poetry
Out
Loud,
which
is
sponsored
by
the
National
Endowment
for
the
Arts
and
the
Poetry
Foundation,
is
a
contest
in
which
students
memorize
and
recite
poems.
They
start
first
in
the
classroom,
then
recite
school-wide,
then
regionally,
then
by
state
and,
finally,
at
the
National
Finals.
The
Teaching
Resources
section
of
the
site
features
tips
for
teaching
Poetry
Out
Loud,
lesson
plans
and
a
suggested
class
schedule,
ideas
about
how
teachers
can
make
their
Poetry
Out
Loud
program
accessible,
and
information
about
Poetry
Out
Loud
and
Common
Core
Standards.
In
addition,
readers
may
download
the
excellent
40-page
Teacher's
Guide,
which
provides
a
program
overview,
rules,
publicity
tips,
and
other
resources.
Information
about
revered
American
poets
and
past
student
winners
of
Poetry
Out
Loud
contests
can
also
be
found
here.
[CNH]
http://www.mynextmove.org/
My
Next
Move
is
an
excellent
resource
for
those
looking
to
start
or
change
careers.
The
site
features
900
career
options,
searchable
by
key
words
or
by
industry.
For
instance,
when
"psychologist"
is
typed
into
the
key
word
search
almost
two
dozen
options
appear,
from
Clinical
Psychologist
to
Mental
Health
Counselor.
Clicking
on
Clinical
Psychologist
links
to
a
page
that
describes
what
clinical
psychologists
do,
what
their
knowledge,
skills,
and
abilities
are,
what
personality
styles
work
best
in
the
field,
what
technologies
they
use,
what
education
is
required,
their
average
salary,
and
what
the
opportunities
will
most
likely
be
in
the
future.
Job-seekers
can
also
find
out
what
their
interests
are
and
how
they
relate
to
career
paths
by
taking
the
O*NET
Interest
Profiler.
The
60-word
assessment
provides
scores
on
six
personality
categories:
realistic,
investigative,
artistic,
social,
enterprising,
and
conventional.
The
user
then
enters
how
much
education
they
would
like
to
receive
and
the
assessment
links
to
possible
careers.
[CNH]
http://www.fuelcelleducation.org/renewable-energy/grades-9-12
The Great Lakes Fuel Cell Education Partnership has raised over $15 million to educate students and workers in fuel cell technologies in Ohio, New York, Michigan, Indiana, Pennsylvania, and Tennessee. This page features lesson plans and activities to spice up fuel cell curriculum for secondary school students. For instance, students can take the Forms of Energy Crossword or the Energy Awareness Quiz. There are also lesson plans that span multiple classes and give detailed instructions for teachers. While some of the resources on the site are a little out of date, there is still plenty here for teachers to make use of in educating students about fuel cell technology. [CNH]
http://www.letstalkscience.ca
According
to
a
Carnegie
Foundation
commission
of
researchers,
the
growth
of
contemporary
economies
is
reliant
on
STEM
(Science,
Technology,
Engineering,
and
Math)
workers.
However,
the
U.S.
has
consistently
fallen
behind
in
math
and
science
education.
This
site
from
Canadian
nonprofit
Let's
Talk
Science
provides
an
overview
of
some
fresh
ideas
about
how
to
get
kids
interested
in
STEM.
Readers
may
want
to
start
with
the
Programs
&
Resources
section,
where
they
will
find
gems
such
as
Curiocity,
IdeaPark,
and
other
web-based
programs
for
educators
who
are
looking
for
fresh
ways
to
spark
interest
in
STEM
subjects
with
their
students.
The
Research
&
Publications
tab
links
to
empirical
data
on
students'
attitudes
toward
science
and
the
effect
of
Let's
Talk
Science
on
those
attitudes.
There
are
also
activities
and
media
resources
available
on
the
site.
[CNH]
http://www.montanawomenshistory.org
Montana
women
won
the
right
to
vote
in
1914,
six
years
before
the
passage
of
the
Nineteenth
Amendment.
This
website
from
the
Montana
Historical
Society
has
been
created
to
honor
that
centennial,
featuring
over
130
articles
from
The
Magazine
of
Western
History,
over
100
blog
entries,
and
a
plethora
of
bibliographies,
oral
histories,
educator
resources,
and
photographs.
The
material
available
here
spans
centuries
as
well
as
topics
and
blog
posts
describe
fascinating
individuals
such
as
American
Indian
journalist,
Minnie
Two
Shoes.
The
Exhibits
&
Multimedia
section
is
well
worth
a
look
as
it
highlights
five
related
online
exhibits
at
the
University
of
Montana,
Missoula,
such
as
"A
History
of
the
UM
Home
Economics
Department."
Visitors
will
also
be
happy
to
note
that
the
Montana
Historical
Society
Press
plans
to
publish
a
book
based
on
the
content
here
sometime
in
the
fall
of
2015.
[CNH]
http://www.brooklynwaterfronthistory.org
Today
Brooklyn
Bridge
Park
exists
as
an
85-acre
oasis
along
Brooklyn's
East
River
Shoreline.
But
it
wasn't
always
so.
In
fact,
over
the
past
two
hundred
years,
this
same
scrap
of
land
has
been
"a
site
of
bustling
commerce,
a
transportation
terminal,
a
refuge
for
immigrants,
an
artist
and
activist
center,
and
much
more."
This
informative
website,
curated
by
Brooklyn
Bridge
Park
and
Brooklyn
Historical
Society,
offers
a
wealth
of
information
about
this
particular
spot
in
New
York
City,
with
wider
implications
for
American
history.
Click
the
photographs
on
the
homepage
to
get
started,
then
select
"read
on"
for
articles
about
Brooklyn's
"ferry
empire,"
the
multiple
fires
that
swept
through
the
waterfront
area
between
1822
and
1952,
or
stories
of
immigration.
Navigating
through
the
interactive
map
via
eight
Tours
(including
Colonial
Brooklyn,
Ecology,
and
Labor
and
Activism)
is
another
great
way
to
explore
this
engaging
and
informative
site.
[CNH]
General Interest
http://science360.gov/series/nsf-science-now/89a1b896-e8a7-4176-816e-08b4415308f8
Hosted by the National Science Foundation's (NSF) Dena Headlee, NSF Science Now is a weekly newscast that covers some of the latest innovations from NSF-funded projects around the country and the world. For instance, a recent episode focused on increased plant productivity, the activity of the brain during reading, manufacturing a more reliable prosthesis, and better predicting earthquakes and tsunamis. At three to five minutes long, each video is fast-paced and entertaining. NSF Science Now is a great way to track what the NSF is sponsoring and how those projects are breaking new ground in everything from astrophysics to zoology. [CNH]
http://www.openculture.com/
Perhaps
the
best
way
to
describe
Open
Culture
is
to
list
what's
available:
1,100
free
online
courses,
700
free
movies,
550
free
audio
books,
700
free
eBooks,
1,000
free
MOOCs,
free
educational
material
for
46
languages,
and
200
free
educational
resources
for
kids.
Founded
in
2006
by
Stanford
University's
Dan
Coleman,
the
site
also
contains
great
lectures
by
Toni
Morrison
and
Bertrand
Russell
(among
others)
and
great
readings
by
notables
such
as
T.S.
Eliot
and
Anne
Sexton.
If
readers
are
looking
for
art
and
images,
the
Met,
the
Getty,
the
British
Library,
and
other
museums
and
galleries
are
featured
here.
In
essence,
Open
Culture
gathers
together
all
of
the
wonderful,
disparate
content
from
around
the
web,
curates
it,
and
presents
it
in
an
easily
navigable
and
enchanting
format.
[CNH]
http://www.gdao.org/
Founded
in
1965
in
Palo
Alto,
California,
The
Grateful
Dead's
music
was
at
the
epicenter
of
the
American
hippie
movement
for
over
30
years.
The
Grateful
Dead
Archive
Online,
primarily
constructed
from
the
University
of
California
Santa
Cruz's
Grateful
Dead
Archive,
comprises
over
45,000
digitized
items,
from
audience-recorded
bootlegs
to
fanzines
to
photographs,
posters,
tickets,
and
T-shirts.
There
are
a
number
of
ways
to
search
the
website.
For
instance,
selecting
Shows
provides
a
map
of
venues.
Click
the
map,
and
then
the
venue
for
a
list
of
images,
recordings,
and
other
items.
The
Milestones
tab
presents
an
interactive
timeline
with
arrows
that
move
the
years
forward
and
backward
over
important
events
in
the
history
of
the
band.
The
Artists
tab
links
to
thousands
of
photographs
and
posters,
organized
by
artist.
Perhaps
best
of
all
for
Deadheads,
the
Media
tab
opens
to
selected
audio
and
video
recordings.
[CNH]
http://www.bostonchildrensmuseum.org/exhibits-programs/collections
The
Boston
Children's
Museum
is
the
second
oldest
children's
museum
in
the
world.
As
the
website
notes,
"For
over
one
hundred
years
it
has
been
engaging
children
in
joyful
discovery
experiences
that
instill
an
appreciation
of
our
world,
develop
foundational
skills,
and
spark
a
lifelong
love
of
learning."
Several
of
the
collections
can
be
viewed
online.
After
reading
the
general
introduction
to
the
approximately
50,000
objects
at
the
museum,
readers
might
like
to
explore
each
of
the
online
collections.
The
Dolls
&
Doll
Houses
Collection
features
a
fascinating
overview
of
the
800
play
dolls
in
the
collection,
some
dating
back
to
the
18th
century,
along
with
a
number
of
photographs.
Snuff
Bottles
and
Boxes
is
another
intriguing
collection,
providing
a
fascinating
history
of
snuff
along
with
photographs
of
select
artifacts.
Other
collections
include
Japan,
Americana,
and
Natural
History,
among
others.
[CNH]
http://knowmore.washingtonpost.com/
Know
More,
from
the
Washington
Post,
is
a
fanciful
and
fascinating
look
at
a
whole
range
of
topics.
Each
entry
is
a
simple
picture,
line
graph,
bar
graph,
collage,
map,
or
other
visual
representation
of
some
complex
phenomenon.
Readers
who
are
not
interested
in
this
particular
iteration
of
information
can
click
"no
more"
to
make
it
disappear.
When
readers
find
themselves
intrigued,
they
may
click
"know
more"
to
navigate
to
a
longer,
and
often
even
more
intriguing
unpacking
of
the
phenomenon
at
play.
For
example,
the
entry,
"All
the
world's
wealth
in
pizza
(1.26
million
sq
km)"
links
to
an
article
by
Tim
Urban
in
which
the
author
breaks
the
world's
wealth
down
into
$100
bills,
then
into
gold
bars,
and
finally
into
pizza.
The
site's
concept
in
intriguing
and
it's
well
worth
exploring.
[CNH]
http://www.ncdc.noaa.gov/sotc/global/2014/13
According to the National Climatic Data Center, which is a branch of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), 2014 was the warmest year globally since record keeping began in 1880. This website presents the report in an easily digestible format, with tables, maps, and bullet pointed lists. Highlights include the global land and ocean temperatures, which were both the highest on record, as well as precipitation counts, which varied by region but were about average overall. Readers may also want to peruse the Top 10 Warmest Years, a table near the beginning of the report that presents interesting, and disturbing, evidence for climate change. [CNH]
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/americanexperience/films/death/
Death and the Civil War, which the New York Times called "revelatory" when it premiered in September 2012, focuses not on the great generals or the political tides of this epic American conflict, but on the sheer fact of so many lost in so short a time span - and how that devastation affected the American people. As the film notes, about 750,000 young men died in the Civil War. Taken as a percentage of population, the equivalent today would be seven million dead. The entire 1 hour and 50 minute film can be watched on the PBS web site. In addition, the site features two bonus videos, a Then & Now section about caring for soldiers wounded in battle, and an excellent teacher's guide. [CNH]
http://www.archives.gov/veterans/
The
U.S.
National
Archives
and
Records
Administration
(NARA)
has
created
this
handy
start
page
to
serve
the
needs
of
veterans,
their
families,
and
researchers
who
are
looking
for
military
records.
Especially
for
vets,
there's
an
information
box
with
instructions
on
how
to
request
military
service
records
online,
by
mail,
or
by
fax.
For
researchers,
there's
a
page
listing
specific
records
that
are
available
online,
organized
by
wars
and
conflicts
from
the
Revolutionary
War
Era
through
Vietnam.
Rather
than
taking
a
searcher
directly
to
content,
clicking
two
of
the
World
War
I
searches
(The
Operation
of
the
So-Called
"Lost
Battalion,"
October
2
to
8,
1918;
American
Unofficial
Collection
of
World
War
I
Photographs,
1917
-
1918)
will
lead
to
the
general
search
box
for
NARA
Online
Public
Access,
which
is
a
bit
daunting.
In
contrast,
the
photographs
are
presented
for
easy
browsing,
and
there
are
a
lot
of
them,
including
over
6,000
Matthew
Brady
Civil
War
photographs,
a
photographic
sketchbook
of
the
Civil
War
by
Alexander
Gardner,
and
a
couple
of
World
War
II
collections
selected
for
the
site,
"African
Americans
During
World
War
II"
and
"Pictures
of
World
War
II".
[DS]
Network Tools
https://soundcloud.com
SoundCloud is a popular audio distribution platform. Musicians can upload their music and music lovers can listen for free. With content creators uploading about 12 hours of audio every minute, there is almost no genre that can't be located through a simple search. SoundCloud is also available as an app for Android (4.2.2+) [CNH]
http://www.odrive.com
Odrive is a Dropbox-style interface that allows users to access online photos, documents, and social media platforms from one convenient location. It also integrates with Dropbox, Facebook, Instagram, Google Drive, Gmail, Microsoft OneDrive, and other applications so that you can have access to all your data without logging in and out of various apps and services. The program is easily downloadable to your computer. [CNH]
In the News
In State of the Union, Obama Sets an Ambitious Agenda
http://www.nytimes.com/2015/01/21/us/state-of-the-union-obama-ambitious-agenda-to-help-middle-class.html?_r=0
Obama: 'The shadow of crisis has passed'
http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/2015/01/20/obama-state-of-the-union-republican-senate-mitch-mcconnell/22040331/
State of the Union 2015 fact check
http://www.politico.com/story/2015/01/2015-state-of-the-union-fact-check-114422.html
Ernst Focuses on GOP Priorities in State of the Union Response
http://www.nbcnews.com/storyline/2015-state-of-the-union/ernst-focuses-gop-priorities-state-union-response-n289951
A Brief History of the State of the Union
http://mentalfloss.com/article/29811/brief-history-state-union
President Obama's State of the Union Address - Remarks As Prepared for Delivery
https://medium.com/@WhiteHouse/president-obamas-state-of-the-union-address-remarks-as-prepared-for-delivery-55f9825449b2
In
his
State
of
the
Union
address
this
week,
President
Obama
gave
an
optimistic
speech
rooted
in
unapologetically
progressive
values.
He
challenged
congress
to
help
him
make
two
years
of
community
college
free
to
all
students,
spoke
of
the
need
to
tax
high
earners,
and
made
a
case
for
affordable
child
care.
The
president
also
threatened
to
veto
any
congressional
measures
that
might
hobble
new
regulations
on
Wall
Street
or
the
American
Affordable
Health
Care
Act,
and
called
on
Republicans
to
"turn
the
page"
and
help
him
move
the
burgeoning
economic
recovery
toward
the
good
of
the
middle
class.
He
also
vaunted
his
successes
abroad,
including
reestablishing
relations
with
Cuba
and
pulling
hundreds
of
thousands
of
troops
out
of
Afghanistan
and
Iraq,
while
calling
for
a
concerted
effort
to
address
continued
difficulties
in
the
Middle
East.
Responses
from
politicians
across
the
web
has
been
swift
and,
unsurprisingly,
divided.
While
Democrats
lauded
Obama
for
his
strong
platform,
Sen.
Joni
Ernst,
of
Iowa,
took
the
opportunity
to
call
attention
to
the
"message"
the
electorate
had
sent
in
November
when
they
voted
in
a
majority
Republican
congress.
Mitt
Romney
has
also
accused
the
president
of
being
"more
interested
in
politics
than
in
leadership."
[CNH]
The first and second links, from the New York Times and USA Today respectively, offer excellent overviews of Tuesday night's event and provide embedded video of the speech. The third link navigates to Politico's excellent fact check of the president's message. Via the fourth link, readers may peruse NBC's coverage of Senator Ernst's State of the Union Response, while the fifth link provides historical background on the State of the Union address, which was first broadcast on television in 1947. Finally, a transcript of Obama's speech is available in full from medium.com.
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