Friday, May 28, 2010

Parents of Graduated Students - of course you can keep coming!

Oh gosh!  A parent just asked if she could continue to attend the parent support group, even if her student has graduated.  I should have clarified that.  Of course!  This group is not closed in any way.  In fact, all of the strategies and speaker information is applicable for adults as well.  Heck,  these strategies work well on spouses also! 

 

Holley Arbeit

Speech-Language Pathologist

Kern High School District

Stockdale High School

Room 606

2800 Buena Vista Road

Bakersfield, CA 93311

 

O:    661.665.2800

Fax: 661.665.0914

Intradistrict: 62068



(The writer of this blog is going to keep coming! My daughter will be a college sophomore in August and my son will be in sixth grade. - Jane Burch

burchworks0@gmail.com)

Email Distribution List - Request for updates, please....

Dear all,

 

To those of you who attended, I want to thank you for your participation in the parent support group this year.  Your insights and willingness to share your experiences are invaluable to all.  Hopefully, the speakers this year provided new information that proves helpful to building a strong community of support for your student(s). 

 

If you do not wish to be on the distribution list for future mailings, please send me a quick email and I will remove your address. 

 

I hope you and your family have a restful summer.  See you in September,

 

Holley Arbeit

Speech-Language Pathologist

Kern High School District

Stockdale High School

Room 606

2800 Buena Vista Road

Bakersfield, CA 93311

 

O:    661.665.2800

Fax: 661.665.0914

Intradistrict: 62068

An Ode to Great Double X-Chromosomed Scientists

Although women have been researching and inventing for as long as men have been grunting and hunting, recognition for their accomplishments has been sparse. We think we owe them a few retroactive shout-outs.
Flopsy, Mopsy, and Flammulina Velutipes

Beatrix Potter may be known mainly as the mother of adorable anthropomorphized animals, but the British author and illustrator also used her skills for some decidedly less cuddly work. Around the turn of the 19th century, scientists had no way of photographing images under a microscope, so Potter found herself churning out watercolor paintings of fungi in labs. Pretty soon, she'd become a well-respected mycologist and was one of the first scientists to study lichens. At the time, women were barred from attending scientific meetings, so Potter's uncle had to present her papers for her. Eventually, she had to settle for a more "appropriate" profession, and thus Peter Rabbit was born.
"No Nobel" Burnell

As a graduate student in Cambridge in the late 1960s, Jocelyn Bell Burnell builtr a radio telescope with her thesis advisor, Antony Hewish. While taking readings, she noticed a regularly repeating radio signal from a segment of space. Confused, she and Hewish labeled the phenomenon "LGM" for "little green men". Later, the scientific community renamed them "pulsars," for "one of the biggest astronomy discoveries in modern history". In 1974, Hewish received the Nobel Prize. The ever-observant Burnell, however, wasn't even mentioned during his acceptance speech.
Computational Error

Even though men used to have a hard time sharing their labs with ladies, they seemed more than happy to let women crunch the numbers. In 1946, after John Mauchly and Presper Eckert finished building the world's first electronic digital computer, known as the ENIAC, they solicited the aid of six women to program and run the thing. Kay McNulty, Betty Jennings, Betty Snyder, Marlyn Wescoff, Fran Bilas, and Ruth Lichterman subsequently became the world's first computer programmers. Sadly, their work was considered "clerical", and their station "sub-professional". In 1997, however, those words were amended, and all six women were inducted into the Women in Technology International Hall of Fame.

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The article above, written by Hank Green, appeared in the Scatterbrained section of the September - October 2007 issue of mental_floss magazine. It is reprinted here with permission.

Don't forget to feed your brain by subscribing to the magazine and visiting mental_floss extremely entertaining website and blog today for more!


http://www.neatorama.com/2010/05/28/an-ode-to-great-double-x-chromosomed-scientists/