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Field-Based Learning
10 matches"What DOES poison oak look like?"
The front cover of the current issue of The Economist documents the power of modern science, celebrating the finding of the Higgs boson as "a giant leap for science." But the back cover of the same issue documents the abject failure of natural history education in America. More
You Map It; You Own It

To my eye, these weren't just any old three seamounts. I know these seamounts well. Actually, I discovered them. More
Learning to Learn from Data
Scientists learn from data. Learning to learn from data is obviously an essential aspect of the education of a future scientist.
These days, however, many other kinds of people also learn from data--including business people, investors, education leaders, and people who care about pollution, disease, or the quality of their local schools. My daily newspaper is rich in data-based graphs and maps--and so is the newsletter from my local library. These days, learning to learn from data is a necessary part of everyone's education.
However, learning to learn from data is not a typical part of everyone's education. This post explores what might be required to construct a thorough learning progression for learning from Earth Science data, beginning where a good elementary school leaves off and carrying on through to what an upper level college course or adult job might demand. More
Collapsing mountains and embodied cognition
Earlier this year, I wrote in this very space:
I believed what I wrote, one hundred percent--in an intellectual sense, that is.
Then I went to Alaska, to the Kenai Penninsula and the Aleutians--and now I really believe it. More
J. Harlen Bretz, Spatial Thinker
At the recent Spatial Cognition 2010 conference, I found myself in an similar position, telling the familiar story of the geological history of the Pacific Northwest from the point of view of spatial cognition. More
