Tag: Education

The Society for Historical Archaeology

by Saboma on Mar.08, 2010

A compilation for you to look over is here. (pdf) Help yourself.

Some of you gentle readers may be asking: “What’s historical archaeology?” Simply put, this field is “the study of the material remains of past societies that also left behind some other form of historical evidence.” With a membership base that ranges from newcomers to seasoned professionals, The Society for Historical Archaeology is a group whose work will be of general interest to those with a yearning to learn more about history and archaeology. After delving into their “About” section, visitors should mosey on over to their “Projects & Research” area. Here a number of organizations and research teams have submitted websites that document their own recent excavations, such as those around Harpers Ferry and West Point. Finally, the site’s “Futures” section contains helpful information on careers in archaeology and a guide to programs in historical and underwater archaeology.

Originally posted 2006-07-14 07:24:00. Republished by Blog Post Promoter

Category: Education, Nature :, 1 Comment 

February 12th: Petition Obama to recognize Darwin’s birthday

by Saboma on Feb.04, 2010

Who knows, he may even like the idea.

A Proclamation

Charles Darwin was the first to propose the scientific theory of evolution by natural selection. On Darwin Day, celebrated on the anniversary of Darwin’s birth on February 12, 1809, we celebrate the life and discoveries of Charles Darwin and express gratitude for the enormous benefits that scientific knowledge, acquired through human curiosity and ingenuity, has contributed to the advancement of humanity.

It is sobering to imagine where the human race would be today without advances in science. Science has helped us to live longer by enabling us to find cures for diseases and alleviating pain and suffering. It has allowed us to travel before unimaginable distances, to interact with and understand people of other cultures and recognize what makes us similar as well as what makes us unique. It has allowed us to understand and maneuver in our world and has provided us insight into the complexities of life.

Charles Darwin recognized the importance and power of scientific discovery, and perhaps no one has influenced our understanding about life on earth as much as he. Darwin was an English naturalist, who on his legendary five-year voyage on the HMS Beagle made important observations about the geological and zoological diversity of the lands he visited, which helped spark his theory of evolution by natural selection. Most of what we understand about the diversity of life and the process by which it has adapted and changed has come from his profound insights, and his contribution to the canons of science cannot be overstated.

On this anniversary of Darwin’s birthday, it is important to recognize the contributions he has made to the advancement of science. It is also important that we continue to educate future generations about evolution by natural selection in our science classrooms. We must not water down the significance of Darwin’s theory, nor the breadth of evidence supporting it, and we must at every turn challenge efforts to undermine science so that we can keep alive in our children and grandchildren the wonder of discovery and the eagerness to obtain knowledge.

Now, Therefore, I, Barack Obama, President of the United States of America, by virtue of the authority vested in me by the Constitution and laws of the United States, do hereby proclaim February 12, 2010, as Darwin Day. I call on all Americans to recognize the importance of Charles Darwin and his theory of evolution by natural selection, to endeavor to preserve scientific discovery and human curiosity as bedrocks of American society, and to commemorate this day with appropriate events and activities.

In Witness Whereof, I have hereunto set my hand this twelfth day of February, two thousand ten, and of the Independence of the United States of America the two hundred and thirty-fourth.

Category: Activism, Celebrations, Education :, , Please leave a comment 

Google To Create Blog Search; Potential Removal From Main Indexing

by Saboma on Jan.25, 2010

news Google To Create Blog Search; Potential Removal From Main IndexingGoogle, search engine of choice for pretty much everyone, has announced that it will begin a separate index for blogs and remove them from the normal index, handling them instead in much the same way as their usenet archives. This will hopefully put an end to the recent difficulties locating primary source material among the mountains of blogs which are clogging the ratings system.”

More

Originally posted 2006-09-26 07:30:00. Republished by Blog Post Promoter

Category: Education, life :, , Please leave a comment 

Two interesting facts about 2010

by Saboma on Jan.20, 2010

February 2010 will have:

  • Four Mondays
  • Four Tuesdays
  • Four Wednesdays
  • Four Thursdays
  • Four Fridays
  • Four Saturdays
  • Four Sundays

It occurs once every 11 years

And if you missed it, both January 10th and 11th, 2010, werethings of thought 150x150 Two interesting facts about 2010 binary numbers with the inclusion of today’s date.

Category: Celebrations, Creativity :, , Please leave a comment 

Music Monday: Word Jazz-Tim Minchin style

by Saboma on Jan.18, 2010

Tim Minchin has to be one of the hottest numbers in the world of live entertainment today. He combines his music in a word jazz style in his stage performances that only Tim can perform. Additionally,  Minchin’s poem, Storm,  has been used in an animated movie created by UK animator Fraser Davidson. It may be released to the public shortly it seems since  the trailer has been uploaded onto YouTube. If you have a few minutes to spare, check it out. Tim Minchin rocks!  Also, Fraser Davidson has a blog that is all about the production of  Storm. Uploaded, it has some of Storm’s character art and early test animations and once the movie is released, I will link to it, once it is released.

MM Music Monday: Word Jazz Tim Minchin style

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Category: Humor, music-monday :, , 1 Comment 

On equality

by Saboma on Jan.14, 2010

In honor of Martin Luther King’s true birthdate, January 14th, 1929 in Atlanta, Georgia although the US has made it a holiday thus making the weekend a three-day weekend to celebrate and honor the late Mr. King.

This article was originally published in Scholastic Newstime.

The crowd was hushed as it listened to the man speak. “I have a dream,” he cried from the steps of the Lincoln Memorial. “One day this nation will rise up, live out the true meaning of its creed…that all men are created equal.”
The man — Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. — was speaking to a crowd of 250,000 black and white Americans. They shared his dream of equality. They had gone to Washington, D.C., to hear this message: It was time all Americans were treated equally. The year was 1963.

Many of the people in the crowd had, like Dr. King, not been treated as equals by other Americans. Some blacks had been forced to use separate all-black schools, restaurants, and stores. They entered hospitals at different entrances, and used separate water fountains. In some parts of the nation blacks were denied the right to vote.

In 1963, blacks were rapidly gaining more equality in their rights. In most places in the U.S., schools, restaurants and stores were integrated. But even in these places, many black Americans could not buy homes where they pleased, or get good jobs.

Laws were needed to change these conditions. People had to be made aware that such a need existed. So the civil rights movement had begun. There were many leaders in the movement. Dr. King was among them. They led marches. They held boycotts. They held sit-ins. They helped register black citizens to vote.

What were the problems the civil rights movement faced? How could they be solved? What will happen in the future? Here are comments made by Dr. King in the years before he was killed in 1968.

ON THE PROBLEM

“Only 7.8 percent of the Negro students in the South are attending integrated schools this year, a hundred years after our emancipation from slavery. At this pace it will take 92 more years to integrate the public schools of the South.” — 1960

“I am mindful that only yesterday in Birmingham, Alabama, our children, crying out for brotherhood, were answered with fire hoses, snarling dogs, and even death. I am mindful that only yesterday in Philadelphia, Mississippi, young people seeking to secure the right to vote were brutalized and murdered.” — 1964, on receiving the Nobel Peace Prize

“We must have our freedom now. We must have the right to vote. We must have equal protection of the law.” — 1965, after march on Alabama state capital

“I could never adjust to the separate waiting rooms, separate eating places, separate rest rooms, partly because the separate was always unequal, and partly because the very idea of separation did something to my sense of dignity and self-respect.” — 1958

“Segregation…not only harms one physically but injures one spiritually…It scars the soul…It is a system which forever stares the segregated in the face, saying ‘You are less than…’ ‘You are not equal to…’”

ON THE SOLUTIONS

“We believe in law and order. We are not advocating violence. We want to love our enemies. If I am stopped, our work will not stop, for what we are doing is right.” — 1956, in Montgomery, Alabama

“Three simple words can describe the nature of the social revolution that is talking place and what Negroes really want. They are the words “all,” “now,” and “here.”

“Green power — that’s the kind of power we need.”

“You can’t win against a political structure where you don’t have the votes. But you can win against an economic power structure when you have the…power to make the difference between a merchant’s profit and loss.” — 1962, after demonstrations in Albany, Georgia

“Equality means dignity. And dignity demands a job and a paycheck that lasts through the week.” — 1963

ON THE FUTURE

“We’ve broken loose from…slavery and we have moved through the wilderness of legal segregation. Now we stand on the border of the promised land of integration.”

“Hate begets hate; violence begets violence; toughness begets a greater toughness. We must meet the forces of hate with the power of love…Our aim must never be to defeat or humiliate the white man, but to win his friendship and understanding.” — 1958

“…We must continue to resist the system of segregation…We must work constructively to improve the standards themselves…This is a great hour for the Negro. The challenge is here…”.

Category: Activism, Celebrations, Politics :, , Please leave a comment 

Is Terrorism a Game or a Business?

by Saboma on Jan.10, 2010

NOT BUYING THE TERRORISM COVER STORY ANYMORE NO MORE CONVENIENT COINCIDENCES
by Gordon Duff, Senior Staff Writer

Terrorism:  Game or Business?After the Christmas bombing fiasco in Detroit, pretty much everyone is talking about new body scanners and more torture and terrorism against decent law abiding airline passengers.  Are we saying a word about the Dutch who lied to us about the terrorist’s passport or the Israelis, yes, let’s admit who they really are, whose airport security companies only seem to protect El Al planes and nothing else?  No more terrorist “walk arounds” or hidden box cutters on planes.  We aren’t buying it anymore.  We have had one coincidence too many.

Do we talk about folks like Michael Chertoff, the creator of our totally broken system of phony counter terrorism when he headed Homeland Security with its spying on everyone BUT terrorists.  Chertoff, is the guy who now is out selling radioactive scanners to fix the problems caused by his own incompetence. He is going to make tens of millions off his own utter incompetence, or what we hope is incompetence.  Does anyone really think we can stay ahead of the human mind with gadgets operated by illiterates, incompetents and, at times, terrorist sympathizers?

Note: I had never heard of the word al-qaeda until Bush took office. I’ve often wondered about it and how it became so worthy of  mention and so quickly.
Category: Bizarre, Creativity, Politics :, , Please leave a comment 

OpenNet Initiative [pdf]

by Saboma on Dec.30, 2009


think outside the box brain 150x150 OpenNet Initiative [pdf]A number of organizations are actively concerned with monitoring the ways in which various governments have attempted to limit or restrict access to the Internet, and the OpenNet Initiative is one such group. Drawing on a collaborative partnership with four academic institutions (including the University of Toronto and Harvard Law School), the group’s aim is “to excavate, expose and analyze filtering and surveillance practices in a credible and non-partisan fashion.” On its homepage, visitors will have access to a number of their research publications, case studies, their blog, and a selection of external links of note. Some of their more recent research papers include their investigation into the extent to which the Republic of Yemen controls the information environment of their citizens as well as similar efforts in Myanmar. Overall, this site will be of great interest to those with an interest in cyberlaw and related fields.

Originally posted 2006-06-09 14:36:00. Republished by Blog Post Promoter

Category: Activism, Education, Relationships :, , Please leave a comment 

Freud: About anxiety

by Saboma on Dec.20, 2009

According to Freud and his followers, our psyche is a battlefield between instinctual urges and drives (the id), the constraints imposed by reality on the gratification of these impulses (the ego), and the norms of society (the superego). This constant infighting generates what Freud called “neurotic anxiety” (fear of losing control) and “moral anxiety” (guilt and shame). But these are not the only types of anxiety.

“Reality anxiety” is the fear of genuine threats and it combines with the other two to yield a morbid and surrealistic inner landscape. These multiple, recurrent, “mini-panics” are potentially intolerable, overwhelming, and destructive, whereby, the need to defend against them is a natural and normal response. There are dozens of defense mechanisms. The most common defense mechanisms:

1. Acting Out
When an inner conflict (most often, frustration) translates into aggression. It involves acting with little or no insight or reflection and in order to attract attention and disrupt other people’s cozy lives.
2. Denial
Perhaps the most primitive and best known defense mechanism. People simply ignore unpleasant facts, they filter out data and content that contravene their self-image, prejudices, and preconceived notions of others and of the world.
3. Devaluation
Attributing negative or inferior traits or qualifiers to self or others. This is done in order to punish the person devalued and to mitigate his or her impact on and importance to the devaluer. When the self is devalued, it is a self-defeating and self-destructive act.
4. Displacement
When we cannot confront the real sources of our frustration, pain, and envy, we tend to pick a fight with someone weaker or irrelevant and, thus, less menacing. Children often do it because they perceive conflicts with parents and caregivers as life-threatening. Instead, they go out and torment the cat or bully someone at school or lash out at their siblings.
5. Dissociation
Our mental existence is continuous. We maintain a seamless flow of memories, consciousness, perception, and representation of both inner and external worlds. When we face horrors and unbearable truths, we sometimes “disengage”. We lose track of space, time, and the continuum of our identity. We become “someone else” with minimal awareness of our surroundings, of incoming information, and of circumstances. In extreme cases, some people develop a permanently rent personality and this is known as “Dissociative Identity Disorder (DID).

Originally posted 2006-06-12 05:04:00. Republished by Blog Post Promoter

Category: Education, Relationships :, , Please leave a comment 

What is class?

by Saboma on Nov.02, 2009

 What is class?Class never runs scared. It is sure-footed and confident in the knowledge that you can meet life head on and handle whatever comes along.

Jacob had it. Esau didn’t. Symbolically, we can look to Jacob’s wrestling match with the angel. Those who have class have wrestled with their own personal angel and won a victory that marks them thereafter.

Class never makes excuses. It takes its lumps and learns from past mistakes.

Class is considerate of others. It knows that good manners are nothing more than a series of small sacrifices.

Class bespeaks an aristocracy that has nothing to do with ancestors or money. The most affluent blueblood can be totally without class while the descendant of a Welsh miner may ooze class from every pore.

Class never tries to build itself up by tearing others down. Class is already up and need not strive to look better by making others look worse.

Class can “walk with kings and keep its virtue and talk with crowds and keep the common touch.” Everyone is comfortable with the person who has class because he is comfortable with himself.

If you have class you don’t need much of anything else. If you don’t have it, no matter what else you have, it doesn’t make much difference.

*Ann Landers Encyclopedia

 What is class?
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