Snacks 82 — Swine Flu and William Schaffner DO!

May 4th, 2009 by Scott Merrick

Hola,

Episode 82 of S4theB! shares some information whose source centers around the recurring celebrity of our Episode number 17 subject. At that time (OMG, December 5, 2005! Have we been at this that long?), Dr. William Schaffner was also in the news, driven there by media looking for answers to the then outbreak of bird flu. What? Don’t remember Bird Flu! Okay, that does it! We have to have a DO (that means, of course, “Do Over”). I’m re-sharing the interview from episode 17 for two reasons, 1)because chances are you didn’t get to that podcast back in December, 2005. And 2)because Dr. S. says some things in it that really truly apply to the situations right here, right now.

I’m also posting some links here, which can lead you to many of the recent online articles and video appearances that tap Dr. Schaffner’s expertise in the topic that so thoroughly saturates our airwaves, cables, and iPods these days: Swine Flu.

A quick survey of some article titles may help tickle your curiosity:

Links:
Regular flu shots this fall, maybe swine jab too
AP Release by Lauran Neergaard, May 2, 2009

Stay safe from swine flu with 3 simple steps
USA Today Health & Behavior section, April 30

Current flu outbreak has some similarity to deadly 1918 strain
Stamford Times article by Susanne Rust, May 4

VMC leadership urges calm in the swine flu storm
Vanderbilt Medical Center’s REPORTER

Flu-fighting masks may help, but don’t bet on it
msnbc.com online article April 30

In the process of sorting through the results for the above links, I had a brainstorm: Why not create a custom feed on my personalized Google News page for William Schaffner? I did that, and so can you, if you’re of a mind. You can see mine, complete with each of its 628 search returns (as of the moment of this recording) by clicking here.

Then I went all viddy wit’ it, switching my google search to Video mode. How many resulting links? 49. Here’s a screen grab from the searchschaffnervideopage_sm.JPG, and here’s a link to a nifty Veoh.com amalgam of video clips featuring Dr. Schaffner sharing his good doctorly advice.

Finally, I took to the large video services, finding lots of returns on searches for “swine flu Schaffner” in digital print at

And, really finally finally, I searched just for swine flu at msnbc.com, ending up with an interesting list that contained a fascinating brief video coverage of Dr. Carl Brumback, a 95 year-old retiree who “was in charge of Palm Beach County’s response” to the 1976 swine flu outbreak. Dr. Brumback also comments about the 1918 outbreak, which he has lived long enough to recall! This video is here for your viewing enjoyment!

Visit msnbc.com for Breaking News, World News, and News about the Economy

People in Business at tennessean.com noted on May 3 that William Schaffner received the James D. Bruce Award for Distinguished Contributions in Preventive Medicine from the American College of Physicians. Schaffner is chair of Vanderbilt University Medical Center’s department of preventive medicine.

Music for this podcast is straight from the Podsafe Music Network and features “Pearls Before Swine” from Oregonian rockers Drunken Prayer and “Swine and Dogs” from the folkies Quebb (pronounced “Kwebb”) out of Southern California. Clever, eh? And lest we forget the contributions Dave Kiefer of Cagey House Music made to the ambient background track for S4theB! 17, here’s a link to his website!

Download episode number 82 of Snacks4theBrain! right here, or visit the downloads page to browse for it and see just what else you may have missed over the past four years!

Until next time!

Posted in Health Care, Biology, Epidemiology, Science, Professional Development, Middle School, High School, Education, News | No Comments »

Snacks 69 — Jennifer Ufnar and Research Tools for Science Teachers!

March 18th, 2008 by Scott Merrick

Jennifer Ufnar
The 69th episode of S4theB! features a brief interview with Vanderbilt Center for Science Outreach Program Manager Jennifer Ufnar, a talented, energetic environmental microbiologist who oversees grant-writing projects at the CSO and helps manage all kinds of things for this tight-knit, dedicated staff. Dr. Ufnar is chatting today about the Summer Science Institute offered this coming July at the Vanderbilt CSO. From the CSO website at scienceoutreach.org:

The Research Tools for Secondary Science Educators workshop invites secondary science teachers into Vanderbilt science laboratories for four one-week sessions. These interconnected workshops, funded by Tennessee’s Improving Teacher Quality program, will focus on science and technology content and tools for the classroom. Each of the first three weeks will focus on a different scientific discipline, one each on physics, chemistry, biology, with the fourth week covering technology tools. Each of the first three workshops are open to 25 teachers, while the technology workshop will be open to only 15 teachers.

In episode 69, Dr. Ufnar charmingly outlines some interesting details about the four weeks. They are intriguingly interwoven with leading edge content and each one promises invaluable learning, as well as a teacher stipend, for gosh sakes! Heck, I usually have to pay to take workshops! These experiences pay the attendees!

One of those workshops is mine, and you can get a glimmer of how that’ll go by my description in the podcast, and also by visiting my own little wiki-based site at ScottWeb2.0. It’ll be fun, and it’s limited to only 15 teachers, so drop on into the CSO website, download an application and get signed up! If you are thinking about hosting my week long workshop at your own school or district, contact me at scottgardnermerrick@gmail.com. There’s still time, but hurry!

Music this show is from two of my very good friends, alt-rocker Ross Falzone and Americana-folk newcomer Rocky Alvey. Some fab hammered dulcimer work from Snacks favorite Jamie Janover underscores some of the show’s narrative, courtesy of Magnatune.com. Support creativity outside the traditional box: Go visit these sites and buy independent creations!

Upload Snacks4theBrain! episode 69 here, or simply click the “Links” link up top and listen in your browser via the Podcast Pickle Player!

See you at the Research Tools Summer Institute!

Cheerio!

Dr. Ufnar’s picture courtesy of the University of Mississippi’s faculty profile page at
http://www.usm.edu/biology/faculty/Faculty_Profile_Jennifer_A_Ufnar.htm

Posted in Environment, Outreach, Research, Lasers, Chemistry, Biology, Science, School, Middle School, News, High School, Education, Teaching, Professional Development, Snack | No Comments »

Snacks 64–Captain Charles Moore!

November 13th, 2007 by Scott Merrick

October 29th, students at the School for Science and Math at Vanderbilt had the privilege of videoconferencing with Captain Charles Moore and hearing him share his first-hand experience with the horror that is our world’s vast (and only recently discovered) unplanned pit of poisons.

Captain Moore is a sailboat captain. He was recently featured on National Public Radio’s “All Things Considered,” as the captain of a research vessel investigating what has come to be called the “Garbage Patch” of the Pacific Ocean. This huge area, about the size of the state of Texas, is crowded with debris from our wasteful civilization, one which, according to Cap’n Moore, is pretty much doomed to strangle its own oceans by its profit-motivated culture, in which our most prevalent products are meant to be used once and thrown away. These find their way to just below the surface of the ocean, where they accumulate, float in suspension, and threaten the habitats of increasingly large numbers of living species.

It is noted that debris outweighs living plankton in the area by a factor of 6. mindfully.org goes on to note that “The levels of plastic particulates in the Pacific have at least tripled in the last 10 years and a tenfold increase in the next decade is not unreasonable. Then, 60 times more plastic than plankton will float on its surface.” According to the Institute for Figuring’s website, “a study by the United Nations Environmental Program estimates that in this region there are 46,000 floating pieces of plastic for every square mile of ocean and the trash now circulates to a depth of 30 meters.

SSM Students Dissection Students Dissecting a Bird Bolus

Wow. If that’s not thought-food for these high school freshmen (who had just spent the morning disecting seabird boluses–is that the plural of bolus?–to discover how much plastic waste they had ingested recently), then I don’t know what is. I hope it’s also a healthy brainsnack for you!

SSM Students Dissecting

Music for this show is from Manitoba’s “Wyrd Sisters,” from the podsafe music network, and “Now is Now,” an acoustic folk-rock trio based out of the state of Maine.

As an extra added bonus, this episode features a Tech Tip Tidbit!that suggests that snacking on YouTube video might be harmful to your computer!?

Download S4theB! 64 right here, or click “Links” above to use the Podcast Pickle Player!

Posted in Science, Environment, Water Quality, Learning, Teaching, News, High School, Education, Snack | No Comments »

Snacks 62–The Harpeth River!

October 11th, 2007 by Scott Merrick

Rocktalk by Pat HolidayOn Monday, October 1st, the freshman class at the School for Science and Math at Vanderbilt visited the Harpeth River, at a beautiful stretch of its snakelike path through Davidson County and Middle Tennessee. The yellow Metro Nashville Public School bus pulled into picnic shelter number 11 at the beautiful Edwin Warner Park, located just a few miles from the School’s lab at the Vanderbilt University Medical Center’s Light Hall.

The students were out for a field trip with the intention of gathering data to assess the health of the stream. They were learning to use all manner of field instruments–digital levels, digital pH probes, GPS devices, and scientific magnifier lenses–and how to record and interpret the readings and observations from those instruments in meaningful ways. They also used their hands and their feet, “kick seining,” stirring up the stream to capture macroinvertebrates and capturing downstream-bound critters in a fine mesh sein, or net. The collected debris from these efforts was transferred into glass petrie dishes, where careful observation would identify the inhabitants of this watery evirons–would they be only the sort of creatures that could survive in polluted environments, or would they find more sensitive, delicate species that would indicate the river is satisfactorily healthy? Well, final interpretation of findings would have to wait until later, when all the data would be compiled back at the lab. For this episode of S4theB! you’re out here on the river with the students, listening in on the process.

The voices you hear will be those of students, their talented teachers, and the occasional crow, along with that of Pat Holiday, retired USGS ranger and geologist (and also Brittainy’s grandfather!). You’ll also be treated to two very nice bites of wonderful music, “The River,” and “Fire Dance,” from Jesse Manno. You can pick up these songs or the entire album, “Sea Spirits,” for a song at Magnatune.com! Alrighty, stalwart listeners, listen up right here or click “Links” up top to use the Podcast Pickle player at the site!!!

And BONUS!!! here’s a slideshow of pictures from the river visit:

Posted in Math, School, School for Science and Math, Outreach, Environment, Research, Water Quality, Learning, Teaching, Brain, News, Level, High School, Professional Development, Education, Snack | No Comments »

Snacks 61–Larry Zwiebel!

September 24th, 2007 by Scott Merrick

This episode features some absolutely captivating audio with a social responsibility aspect, a cutting-edge science aspect, and a sortofa gross aspect. You’ll like it!

On Monday, September 17th, Dr. Larry Zwiebel, Professor of Biological Sciences at Vanderbilt University Medical Center, met with our freshman class in their lab and spoke to them about, to quote from the School for Science and Math’s website, “the most dangerous animal on the planet, a parasite of humans,” and explained how his work may one day help control “the most prevalent life-threatening disease on Earth.”

This is a long listen, longer than most Snacks, but I think you’ll agree with me that it’s something you can learn from, and why the heck are we here anyway? I’m going to lead into this fascinating stuff with a song by independent recording artist David Spencer, a gifted purveyor of what I’m coming to call “Intellapop.” Far from derogatory, as I often use the term “pop,” this is, like, alternative pop, or right in the vein of one of my old faves, Dan Fogelburg (whatever happened to…?). David is a kind, centered, immensely talented young man I recently featured at my personal blog, scottmerrick.net, and he is a stellar guitar teacher. My son may be his most devoted student! His music can be purchased at davidspencermusic.com and also via iTunes. I’ll close the show with the title cut to his new cd, “Love Like a Symphony.” You owe it to yourself to stay on for that ;)

Download S4theB! 61 here, or click the Links link and use the podcast pickle Podcast Pickle Player to play right here!

Posted in School for Science and Math, School, Science, Math, mosquito, Learning, News, High School, Education, Teaching, Snack | No Comments »

Snacks 60–The School for Science and Math at Vanderbilt

August 27th, 2007 by Scott Merrick

Helipad Comm. Director James ThompsonWoooooooooooooooooooo! Episode 60! Being as everybody’s so much in a “back to school” mode, let’s take an episode and dedicate it to audio celebrating the opening of The School for Science and Math at Vanderbilt, an audacious project that the fine folks at the Vanderbilt Center for Science Outreach have been planning for over a year and which they have just implemented!

Long-story-short: Henceforth, 25 Metro Nashville Public School students from each grade level, grades 9 through 12, will attend classes one day a week on the Vanderbilt University campus, gaining first hand knowledge at the Vanderbilt University Medical Center while learning about how rewarding a career in research and exploration can be. Chosen via an application process aggressively offered to students in a school system of 73,000 students K12, these 100 top Metro science and math students will be exposed to the best of the best. Taught by a small cadre of talented, young, enthusiastic PhD level instructors, visited by internationally renowned scientists, guided through hands-on work in a real research laboratory (the classes will meet this year in the lab formerly utilized by Nobel prize-winning cancer researcher Dr. Sydney Brenner), these students will exercise 21st century skills to explore 21st century problems, gaining expertise along the way that will position them for collegiate experiences we can only begin to imagine, followed by professional adventures we, to be honest, cannot.

I was lucky enough to be a “fly on the wall” for the very first day of work put in by the School’s freshman class, the class of 2011. These freshmen have signed on for a four year commitment, supported by the Metro Nashville Public Schools administration and our own Center for Science Outreach staff. How thoroughly are they supported? Listen to MNPS Director Pedro Garcia at an August 2 orientation session for the students, their parents, and the world.

James Thompson at the Vanderbilt Life-Flight Helipad2
We also serve up some quick snapshots of the first morning at the School for Science and Math at Vanderbilt. The first thing I got to follow was the trip to the Vanderbilt Life-Flight heli-pad, 14 stories up from ground level at the top of Vanderbilt Hospital. Communications Supervisor James Thompson, the students’ gracious and attentive host, shared all kinds of information with the students. This was a breath-taking experience for all of us, 14 stories up, no railing on the deck. I will be adding video here soon, so come on back to visit.

Music at the start of the episode is from my own CD, Scott Merrick’s Songs for Alaska Featuring the Last Frontier Band. You can find that and purchase the whole shebang at CDbaby.com or buy it online whole or by individual songs at iTunes. To open the episode, the lovely Dana Ward sings “A Fiddle and a Bow,” a traditional folk tune she accompanies herself with on dulcimer. I’m the mandolin player, and Lynn Gudmundsen wields the violin.

I’ll be featuring more soon from the School for Science and Math at Vanderbilt, in fact, you can count on it as a new recurring theme for Snacks for the brain. I’m gonna let ya go today, playing you out with a funny song by independent songwriter Tom Smith, shared at the podsafe music network at music.podshow.com. Smith wants you to watch out for the “Wiki Police,” and since I just finished a workshop on Web 2.0 applications for my teachers at University School of Nashville, wikis being amongst the primary tools for our work, I get a good solid chuckle out of this song. I hope you do too, and if you don’t know what a wiki is do what I did when I first heard the term: Look it up on wikipedia!!!

Cheers, peace, and safe skies until next time, when we’ll join you for episode number 61 of Snacks4thebrain!

NEW! Check out the video from The School’s week 2 freshman class session, when the Mystery Scientist came by to offer two amazing demonstrations–the students spent much of the rest of the day discussing just what they’d seen, all part of developing the inquiry skills they’ll need the rest of the year!


Find more videos like this on Classroom 2.0

Download Snacks4theBrain! episode 60 here, or click “Links” on this page and use the Podcast Pickle Player to listen right ding-danged now!Classof2011 at Helipad

Posted in School for Science and Math, School, Science, Math, Learning, Teaching, News, High School, Education, Snack | No Comments »

Snacks 59–David Warlick at “Web 2.0 for Us”

August 13th, 2007 by Scott Merrick

David Warlick with Web 2.0

Hey, ya’ll,

This episode features a chat I was lucky enough to facilitate this past month, July 2007, between participants of a workshop I offered for teachers at my school (University School of Nashville) and educational change advocate David Warlick. David blogs an immensely popular site called 2cents worth and hosts an educational podcast called connect-learning. The workshop participants used a blog and a wiki to archive their learning about the use of Web 2.0 technologies in the service of our children’s learning. These are packed with information so I highly encourage you to check them out and use anything you find for your own classroom. Also feel free to comment below if you should have any questions or require further info!

David has some impressively interesting things to share. I particularly like his first quality of Web 2.0 education: “Information should be participatory and inclusive.” Think about that for a minute, and if you’re anything near my own age, think about how your own schooling may or may not stand up to that principle. And what about his second quality, the one that offers a place for teachers in this brave new world, that “Education is leader-directed,” or his third, that it’s “people-connecting.” Listen to what David Warlick has to say about all of those qualities and then draw your own opionions. Again, feel free to comment at the end of this post.

I’ve brought a little music to this show in the form of a melody I worked out on a McNally Strumstick, a little three stringed instrument that was given to my son recently. It’s called “Allaboutme” and it underscores the podcast’s introduction. I also share a little mandolin ditty of mine called “Emma and Miranda are in China,” and I end the show with a song from a new compilation CD from Magnatune.com. The album’s called The Art of Persuasion, and it’s overbrimming with romantically seductive ear candy that is only available at magnatune.com. WE ARE NOT EVIL…

The sound quality of the interaction is not the best, but it’s what I call GE (Good Enough–thanks Steve Bergen at the Harlem Storefront School in New York), recorded as it was from the speakers on my Dell Inspiron laptop running Skype video and captured on my little FlipVideo device–see that at theflip.com.

Download S4theB! episode 59 right heahhhhh, or click “Links” above and listen to it on the Podcast Pickle Player!

Until next time, Seee yaaaaaaaaa…

Posted in Professional Development, Teaching, Learning, Web2.0, Education, NECC2007, News, Middle School, High School, Snack | No Comments »

Snacks 58–NECC2007!

July 17th, 2007 by Scott Merrick

Scott at NECCHowdy and happy summertime, ya’ll.

As you may have learned by now, S4theB! can get a little erratic in the summertime, the victim of its producer’s schedule gone Attention Deficit as the structure offered by the academic school year’s busy calendar evaporates with the last bell of the last day of the school year.

NEVER FEAR! I have been traveling a bit, down to the National Educational Computing Conference (NECC), hosted by the International Society for Technology in Education (ISTE), in Atlanta, Georgia. Thank the powers-that-be for acronyms, since I don’t have to type those long names anymore!

My time in Atlanta was so productive it’s taken me this long to sort out what I wanted to share from the recordings and pictures I brought back, and I’ve come up with three short snippets of three of my most favorite talks:

1) Peggy Sheehy describes part of her work with her teenagers at Suffern Middle School in New York. If you don’t know about Second Life, check out its website (after listening to the podcast!). Then google it this way, [”Second Life” education], and that will help you begin to understand the potentials this Multi-User Virtual Environment (MUVE)–and others like it–offer to engage the otherwise possibly unengageable student. There are some videos I took of Peggy’s presentation with more stunning curriculum description available at my own Second Life blog.

2) Kathy Schrock (previously interviewed on an early S4theB!) spoke with upwards of a thousand, maybe 2 or 3 thousands (I don’t have the capacity of the full-to capacity ballroom in which she shared her presentation) of educators about just what Web 2.0 is and what it will be. Her presentation slides (many featuring her Second Life Kathy Dryburgh avatar standing in front of an inworld podium with a presentation slide behind her–verrrry interesting) and all the resources she shared are at her website.

and 3) Harvard Graduate School of Education’s Chris Dede asks a question (you’ll have to listen to hear it!) that might keep you thinking well into next week (whatever week it is that you’re listening to this!).

The single song in the podcast this week (notwithstanding my closing “Snacks4theBrain!” “unjingle”) is from the amazingly talented Bill deRoth, a stellar denizen of the Podsafe Music Network. Go listen to more: Support him buy buying a few songs, or his wonderful album, “Liquid Light.”

If you want to learn more about my time at NECC2007 (”the conference that never ends…”), visit my personal blog and my personal Second Life blog. Also, I’ll be spending quality time with a dozen of my favorite people, my colleagues at University School of Nashville, the week of July 23-27, exploring Web 2.0 tools for education in ways they’ve seldom been explored before. Keep up with that at the workshop’s bliki (a blog with an embedded wiki!).

Listen up, right here!

Posted in Teaching, Learning, Web2.0, Professional Development, Education, News, NECC2007, Snack | No Comments »

Snacks 57–Billy Hudson!

June 14th, 2007 by Scott Merrick

Hey there, ya’ll, and welcome to episode number 57 of Snacks4theBrain! This is a very special episode for me, as its number coincides with the precise number of years I have been on the planet, and I accomplished that number just a few weeks ago, on May 25th. That aside, I am extraordinarily pleased to share with you the 20 minutes or so I spent with the Director of the Vanderbilt Center for Matrix Biology, Dr. Billy Hudson.

Dr. Hudson is a very busy man. That’s why I was so embarrassed when Amanda called me from my “non-office” (I don’t have a desk there, much less an office–I usually use the tiny conference room for any work I do physically at the CSO office) to tell me he was there for the interview. Me? I was sitting in his office at B-3102 Vanderbilt Medical Center North wondering why he wasn’t there. Remind me to tell you about finding his office in the first place sometime!

Anyway, I power-walked through the labyrinthine corridors to the CSO offices in Light Hall only to find that another meeting had been scheduled in the conference room. Punting (a skill at which I’m fairly adept), I suggested coffee in the VUMC Cafeteria. I’ve interviewed folks at Panera, Fido, and in other places but never there, so I’m hoping the audio is as good as the interview felt.

Over my French Roast coffee and Dr. H’s decaff, we chatted for a bit about his research, his career beginnings, and his outreach project, “Aspirnauts,” through which he is working with 4-11th graders in his “very, very” rural hometown in Arkansas.

After our chat concluded, I asked him what kind of music he likes; and it turns out he doesn’t get much time to listen to music, but his wife being a classical musician, that’s some of his favorite style. He grew up listening to country music, so I split the difference, the show opens with a nice classical piece from Magnatune.com and closes with a country song–well, a folk song I think Dr. Hudson will like, a bit of shameless self-promotion for my CD, available for sale at CDBaby and at iTunes (search Scott Merrick).

Cheers ’til next time! Oh, I will be in Atlanta in two weeks for the annual ISTE National Educational Computing Conference. Can you guess the content for Snacks58? Hehehehehee. Listen up here, or click Links and use the PodcastPicklePlayer!

Posted in Teaching, Learning, School, Math, Professional Development, Education, News, Brain, Middle School, High School, Snack | No Comments »

Snacks 56 — AIDSO IVC!

May 22nd, 2007 by Scott Merrick

Hey, ya’ll. Snacks 56 features audio captured from a marvelous interactive videoconference delivered by Vanderbilt AIDS Outreach volunteers Brenna Simons and Kyra Richter-Oswald. Students in New Jersey and Massachusetts were prepped with a pre-test quiz beforehand, then the presenters opened up discussion on the content of the test by performing a dramatic simulation of how infection spreads, often invisibly, through the sharing of fluids. Listen up to the little sample of audio, then feel free to visit the Center for Science Outreach’s website for more information on the Virtual Scientists program.

There’s podsafe music from the Podsafe Music Network, a tune from Austrian electronica artist Dreamweaver, and one from Magnatune, tasty pop from Artemis‘ album, Orbits, a song called “Fountain of Life.”

And there’s a tech tip from Dr. T. at Completelyfreesoftware.com via Worldstart.com. It’s all about how CDs are burned!

Enjoy your snack by downloading right here or visiting the Links page for the Podcast Pickle Player. Hear ya later!

Posted in Teaching, Learning, School, Science, Education, High School, News, HIV/AIDS, Middle School, Snack | No Comments »

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