Category Archives: Human Behavior

‘The Bachelor’: Peter Weber Has Something To Say To His Haters – Showbiz Cheat Sheet

After six weeks and countless exhausting hours spent on The Bachelor Season 24, one thing is clear fans should have heeded Peter Webers warning ahead of the premiere.

I made mistakes for sure. Theres no doubt about that, Weber told Us Weekly in early January. Im human. So I dont want to look at it as regret. I learned from it.

Host Chris Harrison also echoed the remarks in regards to the 28-year-olds behavior, hinting Weber may not always live up to the persona who appeared on Hannah Browns season of The Bachelorette.

Nobodys perfect and Peter is just like everybody else, Harrison said, per Good Morning America. He has his issues and he has things that will come up. I think there will be times where youre thinking, I dont love this side of him.'

Now, an overwhelming number of fans are crowning Weber as one of the worst bachelor leads of all time, calling him out every week through different mediums online, from social media to publications alike. However, Weber isnt here for all the hate, once again reminding the fandom he is still human.

For now, the main criticism surrounds Webers indecisiveness on The Bachelor. The Delta pilot was completely thrown off when reuniting with Brown in the premiere. He even briefly considered ditching the 30 women who came on the show for his ex.

Later, Weber eliminated Alayah Benavidez after being influenced by other contestants. In the next episode, Alayah returned to clear her name and Weber invited her back to the house. He also proceeded to throw Alayah into the lions den when giving her the group date rose without considering how it would affect the other women. Then once cast members exploded on Weber and Alayah he let her go again.

Meanwhile, Kelley Flanagan confronted Weber on his actions. She told the bachelor he rewards the drama in the house, becoming the voice of some Bachelor Nation fans at home.

Peter is hands down the one of the worst male leads ever, a fan wrote on Twitter. Kelley was right. He really does only reward bad behavior and drama.

When speaking with E! News on Feb. 7, Weber addressed his critics who are disappointed in his behavior on The Bachelor this season.

Im definitely getting some tough skin now, Weber said. I understand that theres a lot of drama right now and things are kind of crazy, but I do think its a littleits too bad a lot of the criticism and a lot of hate thats kind of been kind of coming out. I just think theres no place for that and theres too much of that right now.

Weber then noted The Bachelor team is just doing our best. And in the end, the 28-year-old hopes everyone will focus on spreading love and positivity versus spewing hate.

Again, were just were all human, Weber said. And I know theres a lot of opinions about a lot of the women on the show, a lot of opinions about me.

The bachelor also reminded viewers that they dont know what its like to be in his shoes.

You think you know whats coming and how youre going to handle it, and theres just no way, Weber said. You cant ever imagine dating that many people in that kind of environment.

He continued: Its a beautiful, amazing environment, but its also very tough, theres a lot of pressure and you have to make decisions in a really short amount of time and you have to let go of relationships that you maybe dont know if you want to let go of yet, and its tough.

Regardless, Weber remained unapologetic for his season of The Bachelor. He did what he could and is happy with the result.

You just you try your best, and thats all I did, Weber said. And, you know, Im happy about that.

Read more: The Bachelor: Peter Weber Debunked 3 Theories About How the Finale Ends and Honestly, Were Disappointed

Read the original here:
'The Bachelor': Peter Weber Has Something To Say To His Haters - Showbiz Cheat Sheet

The love formula that says 5:1 = forever – Rappler

Deep at the core of Valentine traffic is a tighter jam the chaos of emotions surrounding love relationships. What could help us make sense out of these feelings we are captured by? Is there a Waze version for love to get us to where we want to be without exploding into road rage or getting into alleys that make us lose sight of where we want to go with our significant other? (READ: 4 money mistakes couples shouldn't make on Valentine's Day)

Making sense is what science is particularly and singularly good at compared to other approaches, but generally, we are still iffy to mention science in the same sentence as love. To many, they do not belong together either because they think sense and love are opposites or they are total strangers to each other. Too many wild cards in love, we say. No lab can hold couples through their multi-splendored journeys, you say. (READ: These stories will make you believe that love is real)

It also does not help that many scientists define love the way they would describe any molecular structure. In Bill Brysons book The Mother Tongue: English and How it Got that Way, he cited a 1977 conference in the US that defined love as the cognitive-affective state characterized by intrusive and obsessive fantasizing concerning reciprocity of amorant feelings by the object of the amorance. The conference made it sound like love was a very unpleasant disease caused by some germ called amorant that could make anyone feel relieved to just stay single.

But chaos also reigns in the uncertainties in your own health and finances. Yet, you most likely feel very differently about how science and math help in those aspects of your life. This is because we know and accept that medical science has given us reliable measures of health against which we check our own, and finance advisors also say there are measurable things to watch out for to ensure that you do not jeopardize your financial security. So what if you can index the highs and lows of your love relationship like the stock market?

I can hear voices from readers now saying, What does that even mean? It means plotting the rise and fall of your behavior and your physiology when you are with your significant other on various situations including conflict. (READ: When love is truly blind)

Then probably the next question will most likely be, Why would you do that? Well, if you can actually see how you behave and how your body reacts along a spectrum from negative to positive, then you will most likely see what your relationship consists of in those terms. And even more importantly, if you base it on the studies of Dr. John Gottman, you will be able to predict with about 90% accuracy whether your relationship will continue or break up.

Dr. John Gottman has been doing love research for over many decades now, with most of those years in partnership with his wife, Dr. Julie Gottman. Their work is held up by data from 40,000 couples who are not just heterosexual couples, but all other partnerships, and is populated by couples across age groups to their 90s. He gave a very interesting TED Talk that you and your partner would probably like to watch Valentine's or any other day to affirm what people who have been through journeys of love know as truth that love is a workpiece that has dials that you can turn that can make or break your journey. From data across tens of thousands of couples across decades, Gottman thinks they have found the formula.

But wait, before you think that formula means it is foolproof, remember that in any science involving human beings, it is never a 100% if-and-then. This is not about the trajectory of a ball that Newtons equation can predict with precision that you can bet your last remaining money on. In any science that predicts human behavior, the science would always have to satisfy statistical requirements so that it is above that level where it could have happened by sheer chance or coincidence.

Gottmans formula gives you a recipe that can guide you to steer your behavior so that your relationships will have a much better chance (over 90%!) of success. On the flipside, as a natural byproduct, it also gives you a poison recipe where you can see what kinds of behaviors can break your love into pieces.

The formula is 5:1, and they key is NOT balance. In the spectrum of emotions that can go from positive (joy, interest, amusement, gratitude) to negative (anger, fear, disappointment, disgust), your positive emotions should overwhelm your negative ones by about 5 times more. I guess that is how much of an antidote is required to not just neutralize the poison of negative emotions, but more so to transform it so that the magic, as Gottman says, stays.

And what are the ingredients of this antidote? From his scientific work, he says they are trust, calm, and commitment. And that is where the work comes to be. These ingredients are not manufactured by your instincts. They all crafted with a big part of them coming from your own thinking and resolve.

With trust, Gottman described it as not simply a blank check for anyone to do anything but a mutual trust that each of you want the best for each other, and the mathematics for this worked out in the study. He pointed out that their data strongly supports that mutual trust leads to intimacy, as this is driven by an interest in each others journey. It was also interesting that their data found that affairs are borne more out of loneliness (borne out of a feeling that your partner is not interested in your story) than the desire for sex.

With commitment, Gottman described it not just as a paper vow the way we sometimes hear people cite legal and religious ceremonial vows. He refers to commitment as thoughtful affirmations of what you have both gone through together as a couple and that this is the journey of your life. Their studies have shown that making these affirmations that what your connected lives have brought you to realize as a couple, that you are indeed each others anchor amid the changing seas in your lives is a wielder of the magic of forever.

Calm was really measured in the Gottman studies by physiological marks like heart rate, blood pressure, and skin conductance, which are tell-tale signs of how flooded you are with your own emotions that you cannot hear and bear to the presence of your beloved. Gottman found that keeping calm really made the difference especially in tense situations.

If love is what you have and want to keep, then, science says to trust and commit. And keep calm so you can see forever rising. Happy Valentines. Rappler.com

Read more:
The love formula that says 5:1 = forever - Rappler

SFU celebrates International Day of Women and Girls in Science – SFU News – Simon Fraser University News

To celebrate women in science, SFU showcases some of our researchers and their reasons for choosing a career in science and technology.

A professor in the School of Interactive Arts and Technology, Alissa Antle isan innovator and scholar whose research pushes the boundaries of computation to augment the ways we think and learn.

A designer and builder of interactive technologies, she explores how these innovations can improve, augment and support childrens cognitive and emotional development.

Many of her projects involve tangible technology. For example, Phonoblocks is a set of 3D letters and a tablet interface that work together to help dyslexic children learn to read. Youtopia helps children learn about sustainability as they work together using a digital tabletop to design their own land-use plan. And with Mind-Full, a tablet app, children learn to self-regulate anxiety.

Her interactive systems have been used for collaborative learning about Aboriginal heritage, sustainability and social justice; for improving learning outcomes for dyslexic children; and for teaching self-regulation to disadvantaged children.

In 2015, she was inducted into the Royal Society of Canadas College of New Scholars, Artists and Scientists, acknowledging her as one of Canadas intellectual leaders.

Antle didnt start out to become a university professor.

Growing up, I was always interested in how things work, understanding people and creatively solving problems, she says. I didnt know I would be an engineer, and later a scientist and a professor. I just kept making choices that aligned with my curiosity and values. I never had a vision of my end-game; it emerged as a result of choices I made over time.

Antles unique perspective gives her an advantage in her field, but her accomplishments havent always come easily.

In research and technology development I think as a woman, a parent, and a gay person, I may focus on different problems and have a different perspective on solutions than normative societal views. I think this is my superpower, but it hasnt always been easy.

Read full story here.

After three summers camping in torrential rain in Clayoquot Sound, B.C., Ruth Joy wondered if there was a better way to conduct her research.

Recently named one of The Tyees big thinkers of 2019, Joy, a statistical ecologist and lecturer in SFUs new School of Environmental Science, studies seabirds and marine mammals. She started her career as a biologist, camping in a rusty van in the Chilcotin grasslands to collect data that could help conserve species and their habitats. After braving the elements for years, she decided to get out of the rain, follow the data and build evidence-based models. She returned to school, earning a PhD in statistics so that she could provide numerical arguments for protecting marine and terrestrial species.

Numbers dont lie, says Joy. Statistics is a really useful tool, especially when working with oceanographic systems. In order to gain a deeper understanding, we need quantitative skills.

Last summer, Joy and her research team received $1 million to support a marine-science initiative in coastal waters.

She credits great SFU mentors, a little good fortune, and flexibility for her success. She recommends taking the time to explore different careers, because environmental science is more than you think. Like Joy, whose jobs ranged from surveying birds by snowmobile to drug testing, to studying porpoises, pinnipeds, and pelagic cormorants, you never know where your path may lead.

SFU computing science professor Parmit Chilana, a founding member of Women in Computing Science (WiCS) at SFU during her undergraduate degree, now serves as a faculty mentor to the group.

WiCS continues to run outreach events that encourage female students to join computer science. The group also gives students support and an enhanced sense of belonging.

Chilana, who says she always planned to become a professor, researches human-computer interaction (HCI), which puts the end-user in the spotlight to ensure new technologies are human-centered and useful.

As an HCI researcher, Im excited about how we can build new tools that help people learn or improve their work in some way, says Chilana. And, more importantly, how we can get these tools in the hands of end-users, and have real-world impact.

Chilanas work has attracted several international awards and honors, and she has recently seen one of her research projects become the basis for a start-up.

I think this is the best time to pursue a career in computer science, perhaps more than ever before. The field can really benefit from different perspectives, especially those of women and minorities who have been underrepresented in computer science for a very long time.

Read the full story here.

As a child, Esther Verheyen was interested in insects and other aspects of the natural world. Today, as a professor in the Department of Molecular Biology and Biochemistry, Verheyen spends much of her day in the lab studying the fruit fly, Drosophila.

Fruit flies share many common genes with humans and provide an excellent example of how cells grow to form organs and tissues. Verheyen is particularly intrigued by mutations that hijack the developmental process and result in diseases like cancer.

She credits her academic parents for supporting her interest in science and encouraging her to dream big. And now, as a parent, she gives her son and daughter the same advice: Find something you feel passionate about, no matter how long it takes.

She also tells them they may have several different careers in the course of their lives, which is an exciting prospect for those with diverse interests.

Verheyen, who had strong role models throughout her career, now mentors female trainees in her lab.

A career as a professor can be stressful, but we are fortunate to be able to pursue our passions and have flexibility in our work schedules, which can allow us to accommodate family needs.

Verheyen is active on social media, eager to disseminate science to a lay audience and to add to the voice of female scientists.

I think it is critical that scientists communicate their research to a wide audience, she says. I enjoy giving public talks that give a broad group of people insight into what we can learn from research and how it might affect them.

You can follow Verheyen on Twitter at @EstherVerheyen.

Nadine Provenal, an assistant professor in the Faculty of Health Sciences, is interested in understanding the biological foundations of stress-related disorders.

Stress exposure early in life is an important risk factor for behavioural and psychiatric diseases, but little is known about how an individuals health can be affected years after the initial exposure. Provenals research examines how social stress gets under the skin and can change children's brain and behaviour development.

In her latest study, she found that prenatal stress not only impacted a mothers health, but also her developing fetus. Excessive stress experienced by a mother during pregnancy can be passed on to her child via marks on their genes, which could explain why some children are more vulnerable to stress later in their development.

Understanding how our cells are capable of doing so many different things with only one set of genes fascinated me, she says, crediting her passion for science to an undergraduate course in molecular biology.

I was also interested in human behavior and child psychology, she recalls. So I decided to merge my interests to study how our environment could alter our genes and be responsible for changes in childrens behaviour and mental health.

For young women interested in science and research, Provenal emphasizes the importance of perseverance and having a great mentor.

Never give up. Push your ideas even if they might, at first, not be well-received by your peers, she advises. It is with dedication that most great discoveries emerge.

Read more here:
SFU celebrates International Day of Women and Girls in Science - SFU News - Simon Fraser University News

Haunted by a will | – theberkshireedge.com

I recently read a 2015 novel called Orhans Inheritance by Californian Aline Ohanesian. Its such a fine first book that Ohanesian won the PEN/Bellwether Prize for Socially Engaged Fiction that year. When a Turkish grandfather in Anatolia dies and leaves the family home to a woman nobody knows, his grandson Orhan is dispatched to find her and winds up in an Armenian-run nursing home in California. Unable to set the book aside, I found myself dragged backward into 1914 and historic wounds I knew little about. After waves of massacres of Armenians from 1894 to 1896 and again in 1909, the Ottoman Turkish government murdered or removed its entire Armenian population, beginning with intellectuals and members of its liberation movement under cover of the chaos of World War I. The final estimated death toll is 1.5 million people. To this day, Turkey refuses to call it genocide. At the time, the government branded Armenians as subversives, shrugged, and said, terrible things happen in wars, as if a million and a half people were just collateral damage. It led me to a months-long investigation of how these sorts of inhumane and illegal horrors keep happening.

A Display in Armenian Library and Museum of America in Watertown. Photo courtesy Armenian Library and Museum of America

Before Americans retreated from assuming unsupervised play in the fresh air was a norm for children, we could pass bullying, factional struggle and the falling apart and reforming of friendly groups several times a day in any street or backyard. Because human behavior tends to remain recognizable in all times and places, we continue to bump into them in school yards, playgrounds, and prototypically even in our preschools as well as in offices and other adult institutions. Three thousand years ago, the Middle East was inhabited by ancestors of people continuing to struggle with each other today. Among them were Armenians, who lived mainly on the Anatolian plain in the shadow of Mount Ararat, and claim to be descendants of Noah. They had their own kingdom among the Greeks and the Persians before the birth of Christ.

In 1 A.D., Armenia came under full Roman control, and began leaning toward Western philosophical, religious and political ideas. It became the first nation to adopt Christianity as its state religion. In the fifth century, Armenians resented re-imposition of Zoroastrianism, endured a major military defeat by the Persians immortals and elephants, followed that with their own lengthy guerilla wars of independence, and finally signed the Treaty of Nvarsak in 484 A.D. to guarantee all Armenians religious freedom.

Catalog From the Metropolitan Museum of Arts Armenia: Art, Religion and Trade in the Middle Ages exhibit. Image courtesy Metropolitan Museum of Art

The Middle Ages were volatile for everyone in the region. Muslims conquered Persia, including its Armenians, and Byzantines took much of the remaining territory of Armenia, but Emperor Heraclius and the rulers who followed there were of Armenian descent. The state they administered was often called the Armenian Dynasty, and produced a Golden Age that had a great influence on the Byzantine Empire. It was overlapped by the Kingdom of Cilician Armenia. Cilicia sometimes supported Europes Crusades against Islam, and sometimes didnt. While successful enough to be courted by surrounding powers, Cilicia was internally torn between pro-Catholic and anti-Catholic factions that weakened it so that the Mamalukes of Egypt eventually destroyed it. In the 1600s, there was one mass deportation accompanied by a scorched earth policy during a war between Persians and Ottomans that left at least 150,000 Armenians dead and their towns and farms laid waste, beginning a dubious pattern of making Armenians the previously mentioned collateral damage.

This khachkar (a carved, memorial stele bearing a cross) was carved at Goshavnk in 1291 by the artist Poghos. Photo courtesy Wikipedia

An exhibition at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, on view from Sept. 22, 2018, through Jan. 13, 2019, was called Armenia: Art, Religion and Trade in the Middle Ages. It featured room after room of glorious illuminated manuscripts, sculptures, maps, paintings, site photographs of distinctive Armenian architecture, and khachkars (stelae of crosses carved in stone). Although its distinct Christianity continued to face eastward, Armenia had a strong presence along the Silk Road, so Eastern and Western images tended to meld in the show. One saw the art of a confident, adaptable, cosmopolitan people.

Wherever we look, past and present, competition is a constant among human beings. Like individuals, countries want to stretch and develop, yet its not to the advantage of autocratic governments to encourage ambition and education among their people. By the 1900s, life in the dictatorial Ottoman Turkish Empire became tenuous for Armenians because generations of them had studied, traveled, joined the professions and the arts, and grown to be owners of successful businesses. By the late 1800s, they had even become ubiquitous in the government at Constantinople. Their successes embarrassed Muslim fellow citizens, compounding resentment based on the viewpoint of Islam that Armenians were infidels. Jealousy and fear of the other led to the terrible troubles that occurred in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

Exterior of Armenian Library and Museum of America in Watertown. It holds the largest collection of Armenian artifacts and information outside of Armenia. Photo courtesy Armenian Library and Museum of America

Today, many Armenians continue to flee socio-economic problems from Russia to the Middle East, still going into diaspora all over the world. Their largest population in the U.S. is in California, but its well known that among the many Armenians in the Northeast (its estimated that there are between 50,000 and 70,000 Armenians in the Boston area alone, and New York boasts thousands more.), theres a large and prominent population in Watertown, Massachusetts. Watertown is proud of its Armenian Library and Museum of America, a handsome, four-story building that was once a bank, which houses the largest collection of Armenian artifacts outside of Armenia.

An elegant, inspirational Armenian Heritage Park was opened in downtown Boston in 2012. The inscription on the monument reads:

Abstract sculpture at the Armenian Heritage Park at the Rose Fitzgerald Kennedy Greenway in Boston commemorates the welcoming of Armenian refugees to Boston after the Armenian Genocide from 1915-23 and beyond. It is taken apart and reconfigured each spring to symbolize the dispersion and coming together of immigrants from different shores. There are 24-26 different configurations. Photo courtesy Trip Advisor

Boston and the Commonwealth of Massachusetts have offered hope and refuge for immigrants seeking to begin new lives. This park is a gift to the people of the Commonwealth and the City of Boston from the Armenian-American community of Massachusetts. This sculpture is offered in honor of the one and one half million victims of the Armenian Genocide of 1915-1923. May it stand in remembrance of all genocides that have followed, and celebrate the diversity of the communities that have re-formed in the safety of these shores.

Once again, a fascinating book has made me aware of another corner of my own ignorance; and this time it has introduced me to the centuries long backstories of friends and neighbors. The continuing inclination of people to abuse each other is confounding. Yet Im reminded of the miracle of America, however flawed, which stumbled into being a refuge from the worlds consistent cruelties not out of altruism, but by virtue of needing immigrants to fill and develop a vast land. Whats most amazing is that despite modern struggles, it persists.

View original post here:
Haunted by a will | - theberkshireedge.com

An Old and Contested Solution to Boost Reading Scores: Phonics – The New York Times

WASHINGTON Bit! Ayana Smith called out as she paced the alphabet rug in front of her kindergarten students at Garrison Elementary School.

Buh! Ih! Tuh! the class responded in unison, making karate chop motions as they enunciated the sound of each letter. In a 10-minute lesson, the students chopped up and correctly spelled a string of words:

Top. Tuh! Ah! Puh!

Wig. Wuh! Ih! Guh!

Ship. Shuh! Ih! Puh!

Ms. Smiths sounding-out exercises might seem like a common-sense way to teach reading. But for decades, many teachers have embraced a different approach, convinced that exposing students to the likes of Dr. Seuss and Maya Angelou is more important than drilling them on phonics.

Lagging student performance and newly relevant research, though, have prompted some educators to reconsider the ABCs of reading instruction. Their effort gained new urgency after national test scores last year showed that only a third of American students were proficient in reading, with widening gaps between good readers and bad ones.

Now members of this vocal minority, proponents of what they call the science of reading, congregate on social media and swap lesson plans intended to avoid creating curriculum casualties students who have not been effectively taught to read and who will continue to struggle into adulthood, unable to comprehend medical forms, news stories or job listings.

The bible for these educators is a body of research produced by linguists, psychologists and cognitive scientists. Their findings have pushed some states and school districts to make big changes in how teachers are trained and students are taught.

The science of reading stands in contrast to the balanced literacy theory that many teachers are exposed to in schools of education. That theory holds that students can learn to read through exposure to a wide range of books that appeal to them, without too much emphasis on technically complex texts or sounding out words.

Eye-tracking studies and brain scans now show that the opposite is true, according to many scientists. Learning to read, they say, is the work of deliberately practicing how to quickly connect the letters on the page to the sounds we hear each day.

The evidence is about as close to conclusive as research on complex human behavior can get, writes Mark Seidenberg, a cognitive neuroscientist and reading expert at the University of Wisconsin, Madison.

Phonics has gone in and out of style for decades, and the current conflict over how to teach reading is only the latest in a tug-of-war that dates to the 19th century. A major push for phonics instruction under President George W. Bush, through a federal program called Reading First, did not produce widespread achievement gains, raising questions about whether the current efforts can succeed.

Phonics boosters say they now know more about what works, and that phonics alone isnt the answer. Alongside bigger doses of sounding out, they want struggling students to grapple with more advanced books, so they wont get stuck in a cycle of low expectations and boredom. Some schools are devoting more time to social studies and science, subjects that help build vocabulary and knowledge in ways that can make students stronger readers.

States have passed laws requiring that schools use phonics-centric curriculums and screen students more aggressively for reading problems or even hold back those who struggle most. In January, Education Secretary Betsy DeVos castigated colleges of education for teaching what she described as junk science about reading.

But the education establishment is pushing back, worried that too many lessons like Ms. Smiths could be stultifying a poor substitute for a teacher reading aloud from a book of Shel Silverstein poems, or guiding children through lushly illustrated stories by Ezra Jack Keats. They blame low student performance on such factors as inexperienced teachers, school funding inequities and homes that lack books or time for parents to read to their children.

The guardians of balanced literacy acknowledge that phonics has a place. But they trust their own classroom experience over brain scans or laboratory experiments, and say they have seen many children overcome reading problems without sound-it-out drills. They value children picking books that interest them and worry that pushing students into harder texts could turn them off reading entirely.

Karen K. Wixson, an author of a recent report warning that too much phonics can harm children, called the new push incredibly, scarily nave.

In Ms. Smiths classroom in Washington, Madisyn Hall-Jones, 5, demonstrated her progress by reading aloud a short story about picking apples that she had written and illustrated herself.

Its not rote, the schools principal, Brigham Kiplinger, said of the phonics-driven curriculum. Its joyful.

Washington is one of only two jurisdictions, along with Mississippi, to increase average reading scores on National Assessment of Educational Progress tests between 2017 and 2019. Both did so despite high-poverty student populations, and both are requiring more phonics.

For us, this is social justice work, Mr. Kiplinger said. The majority of students at Garrison Elementary come from low-income families. If parents express concerns about the new curriculum, he invites them to visit a classroom like Ms. Smiths and see the difference.

Parents in suburban St. Louis are looking for similar results. More than a third of kindergarten to third-grade students in the highly regarded Lindbergh school district tested as at risk for dyslexia last spring, after Missouri instituted mandatory screening. Angry district residents sent an open letter to the school board in November, demanding that the district embrace the science of reading.

The district said it had added a new phonics sequence in the early elementary grades and retrained some teachers. But it stands by its broader balanced literacy approach, which it said gives teachers the autonomy to tailor instruction to students at all levels.

Thats not enough for parents like Diane Dragan. An attorney who has three children with dyslexia, Ms. Dragan noted that well-off parents in her area regularly pay thousands of dollars to have their children taught intensive phonics at private tutoring centers.

The irony to me is that the public-school teacher who teaches balanced literacy during the day moonlights to do science-based tutoring for kids who fail to learn to read, Ms. Dragan said.

In Mississippi, all prospective elementary schoolteachers are now required to pass a test in the foundations of reading, including phonics. The state has also dispatched literacy coaches to struggling schools.

More controversially, it passed a law in 2013 requiring third graders to be held back if they score poorly on an end-of-year reading exam; last year, about 10 percent of them were retained, for reading difficulties or other reasons.

Some reading experts have called Mississippis recent gains into question, arguing that by retaining so many of the lowest-scoring third graders, the state had stigmatized students and manufactured a higher-performing pool of test takers. But Shannon D. Whitehead, the principal of McNeal Elementary School in Canton, Miss., supported the states decision to get tough.

Her school put in place a phonics sequence that continues through fifth grade, and started assigning more challenging literature, including Langston Hughes poems. It hosts early-morning, after-school and Saturday tutoring sessions for students at risk of failing state tests. Scores have improved modestly.

As painful as it can be to tell a child they have to repeat a year, Dr. Whitehead said, in order for us to ensure that our students are able to compete globally, we have to have an accountability system.

One of the most popular reading curriculums in the country used in about 20 percent of schools, including the Lindbergh district near St. Louis was developed by Lucy Calkins, a professor at Teachers College, Columbia University. She is widely admired for her emphasis on helping students develop a love of reading and writing.

But her curriculum, which follows the balanced literacy model, has come under increasing fire from critics who say it devotes too little time to phonics practice and gives teachers and students too much choice over what books to read, allowing them to avoid more challenging texts. Earlier this month, the public schools in Oakland, Calif., told staff members that the district would move away from Professor Calkinss materials after the citys N.A.A.C.P. chapter and parent activists demanded the use of research-proven strategies.

In an interview, Professor Calkins decried what she called a feeling of animosity and mistrust between the camps in the reading wars. She acknowledged that many teachers needed more training on how to teach phonics effectively, and said she was working with schools in her network to provide that.

But she pushed back against a key argument of many phonics activists that there is no downside to all of the children in a classroom getting the type of repetitive practice in letter-sound relationships that struggling readers need.

Theres not a chance were going to want to hold an entire class to the pace of the 5 percent that have dyslexia, she said. Other children need opportunities for comprehension, for writing instruction and for analytic thinking.

Wiley Blevins, a phonics expert who considers himself to be in the center of the reading wars, acknowledged that phonics instruction is often implemented badly. Texts created to help students practice sound-letter combinations can be boring and even nonsensical, he said.

Ideally, students in early elementary school would spend about half of their reading and writing time on phonics, he said, using quality materials. If this happened consistently, by third grade, most students would not need explicit phonics anymore.

Even some leading researchers in the science of reading, including Professor Seidenberg, acknowledge that studies do not yet point toward specific curriculum materials that will be most effective at teaching phonics.

The science that you need to know it is good, he said. The science on how to teach it effectively is not.

Ms. Smith, the Washington kindergarten teacher, has embraced her schools new focus on phonics, which she said had engaged both low-achieving and high-achieving students.

She reads to her class each day from beloved childrens literature, like the Elephant and Piggie series by Mo Willems. But it is the simple phonics texts, she said, that have done the most to build the students confidence, because over time, they are able to accurately read them aloud to their classmates.

They will get to the end of the sentence and see a period, she said, and their face will light up.

See more here:
An Old and Contested Solution to Boost Reading Scores: Phonics - The New York Times

Study shows how a tiny and strange marine animal produces unlimited eggs and sperm over its lifetime – National Human Genome Research Institute

A little-known ocean-dwelling creature most commonly found growing on dead hermit crab shells may sound like an unlikely study subject for researchers, but this animal has a rare ability it can make eggs and sperm for the duration of its lifetime. This animal, called Hydractinia, does so because it produces germ cells, which are precursors to eggs and sperm, nonstop throughout its life. Studying this unique ability could provide insight into the development of human reproductive system and the formation of reproductive-based conditions and diseases in humans.

By sequencing and studying the genomes of simpler organisms that are easier to manipulate in the lab, we have been able to tease out important insights regarding the biology underlying germ cell fate determination knowledge that may ultimately help us better understand the processes underlying reproductive disorders in humans, Dr. Andy Baxevanis, director of the National Human Genome Research Institutes (NHGRI) Computational Genomics Unit and co-author of the paper. NHGRI is part of the National Institutes of Health.

In a study published in the journal Science, collaborators at NHGRI, the National University of Ireland, Galway, and the Whitney Laboratory for Marine Bioscience at the University of Florida, Augustine, reported that activation of the gene Tfap2 in adult stem cells in Hydractinia can turn those cells into germ cells in a cycle that can repeat endlessly.

In comparison, humans and most other mammals generate a specific number of germ cells only once in their lifetime. Therefore, for such species, eggs and sperm from the predetermined number of germ cells may be formed over a long period of time, but their amount is restricted. An international team of researchers have been studying Hydractinias genome to understand how it comes by this special reproductive ability.

Hydractinia lives in colonies and is closely related to jellyfish and corals. Although Hydractinia is dissimilar to humans physiologically, its genome contains a surprisingly large number of genes that are like human disease genes, making it a useful animal model for studying questions related to human biology and health.

Hydractinia colonies possess feeding polyps and sexual polyps as a part of their anatomy. The specialized sexual polyps produce eggs and sperm, making them functionally similar to gonads in species like humans.

During human embryonic development, a small pool of germ cells that will eventually become gametes is set aside, and all sperm or eggs that humans produce during their lives are the descendants of those original few germ cells. Loss of these germ cells for any reason results in sterility, as humans do not have the ability to replenish their original pool of germ cells.

In a separate study, Dr. Baxevanis at NHGRI and Dr. Christine Schnitzler at the Whitney Lab have completed the first-ever sequencing of the Hydractinia genome. In this study, researchers used this information to scrutinize the organisms genome for clues as to why there are such marked differences in reproductive capacity between one of our most distant animal relatives and ourselves.

Having this kind of high-quality, whole-genome sequence data in hand allowed us to quickly narrow down the search for the specific gene or genes that tell Hydractinias stem cells to become germ cells, said Dr. Baxevanis.

The researchers compared the behavior of genes in the feeding and sexual structures of Hydractinia. They found that the Tfap2 gene was much more active in the sexual polyps than in the feeding polyps in both males and females. This was a clue that the gene might be important in generating germ cells.

The scientists next confirmed that Tfap2 was indeed the switch that controls the process of perpetual germ cell production. The researchers used the CRISPR-Cas9 gene-editing technique to remove Tfap2 from Hydractinia and measured the resulting effects on germ cell production. They found that removing Tfap2 from Hydractinia stops germ cells from forming, bolstering the theory that Tfap2 controls the process.

The researchers also wanted to know if Tfap2 was influencing specific cells to turn into germ cells. Their analysis revealed that Tfap2 only causes adult stem cells in Hydractinia to turn into germ cells.

Interestingly, the Tfap2 gene also regulates germ cell production in humans, in addition to its involvement in myriad other processes. However, in humans, the germ cells are separated from non-germ cells early in development. Still, despite the vast evolutionary distance between Hydractinia and humans, both share a key gene that changes stem cells into germ cells.

This press release describes a basic research finding. Basic research increases our understanding of human behavior and biology, which is foundational to advancing new and better ways to prevent, diagnose and treat disease. Science is an unpredictable and incremental process each research advance builds on past discoveries, often in unexpected ways. Most clinical advances would not be possible without the knowledge of fundamental basic research.

Go here to see the original:
Study shows how a tiny and strange marine animal produces unlimited eggs and sperm over its lifetime - National Human Genome Research Institute

Here’s why we should hope self-driving tech is ready soon – Axios

This week during several automated driving demonstrations in Arizona I was reminded why we should all hope self-driving technology is ready soon.

Why it matters: Self-driving cars don't get drunk, tired, distracted or do things that are just plain stupid behaviors I saw in spades on the roads in and around Phoenix and Tuscon.

Details: Not five minutes into a Waymo One ride (with a backup safety driver) in Chandler, a driver blasted through a red light and T-boned another car just ahead of me.

Road rage is a different problem, for which there might not be a solution until all cars are driven by robots.

Driving the news: A disgruntled former Waymo safety driver was arrested this week and charged with aggravated assault and reckless driving for allegedly trying to cause a crash with Waymo vehicles.

One reassuring incident: A bicyclist told me in a Tweet message about a near-miss he had with an unoccupied driverless Waymo vehicle. He thought the vehicle making a left turn was going to strike him as he rode through the intersection.

The bottom line: 36,560 people died in highway accidents in 2018. The vast majority of those accidents were caused by human behavior.

See the rest here:
Here's why we should hope self-driving tech is ready soon - Axios

A viral coyote-badger video demonstrates the incredible complexity of nature – High Country News

Somewhere in the Southern Santa Cruz Mountains of California, a coyote playfully bows to an American badger just before both duck into a culvert under a highway, the coyote casually trotting along with the badger waddling close behind. When the Peninsula Open Space Trust and Pathways For Wildlife shared a remote video of the crossing online in early February, it went viral. The video is part of a project to help wild animals move around safely in high-traffic, dangerous areas, something critical to maintaining populations genetic health. I greatly admire this work. However, what makes this particular crossing exceptional, to me, as a behavioral ecologist, are the deeper implications of the video itself.

The first thing that excites me is that it allows the charisma of this partnership to reach a broad audience. Scientists have observed coyotes and badgers working together before; one study even demonstrated that both species have an easier time catching prey when they hunt together. But the more the general public sees the playful, social side of two extremely persecuted carnivores, the better. I will never stop sharing videos of coyotes playing with dog toys or domestic animal companions, or scaling crab-apple trees for a snack.

The second thing that excites me is what the video means for animal research, management and behavioral ecology. There isnt a consistentnatural rulethat coyotes and badgers get along; in fact, the two species sometimes kill and eat one another. This demonstrates the flexibility in natural processes. Humans (many scientists included) are often guilty of thinking animal behavior must follow hard and fast rules: Stimulus A elicits Behavior B, always. I see this a lot when people ask me about canine behavior or crow calls; a wagging tail doesnt always indicate a happy dog, for instance, and certain crow calls mean very different things in different circumstances, much the way the intention behind a humans use of the word hey varies with tone, inflection and context.

A badger and coyote hunt prairie dogs together at Wind Cave National Park, South Dakota.

Charlie Summers

Experiments and rules that eliminate context often end up framing animal behavior and ecological associations as coded, robotic and inflexible. People tend to think of animal actions as simply instinct, denying the role of thinking, plasticity and decision-making in other creatures lives.

Scientifically, we are finally emerging from a dark period of studying nature simply as a stimulus-and-instinct-driven movie that humans can observe the kind of thinking used to justify government-funded culls and mass indiscriminate killing of native species. Recent research demonstrates the cognitive and cultural capabilities of non-human animals, as well as the importance of their proclivities and personalities, and more data keep piling up. Some individual animals, for example, have the right combination of bold, exploratory traits to do well in human-dominated landscapes, while more cautious ones may flourish in relatively rural and wild landscapes. In fact, researchers have observed population-level genetic changes in city-dwellers compared to their country cousins of the same species, in everything from coyotes to anoles and black widow spiders.

Different animals also hold different social statuses within an ecosystem. Much like what can happen within a human community, the death of a specific individual may have a large impact on social structure. Ive watched whole regions of crows restructure their social dynamics and movements due to the death of a single key individual, and Ive seen how age and experience shape individuals and the behavior they pass on to others. Wildlife managers must take all of this into account rather than relying on the traditional, numbers-only management style that treats all individuals of a species as if they have equal weight in an ecosystem.

In the viral video, I see an elegant demonstration of how complex and flexible nature is. How intelligent these two animals are not simply two animal-robots reacting solely to stimuli. How the body language and ease between them suggests that they know each other as individuals, and that those individuals matter.

While its scientifically prudent to acknowledge only the data that exist in peer-reviewed studies, we humans must broaden our lens and see the metaphorical forest before we get lost in the trees. We must hold each other, management agencies and policymakers accountable for the broader picture that the evidence is highlighting and use it to better relate to the world we live in, and the organisms that exist alongside us.

Stay up to date on the West with our free newsletter

Thank you for signing up for our Newsletter.

The key struggle is getting these ideas into the zeitgeist of modern human culture, a mission that social media has greatly enhanced. So here I am, a behavioral ecologist who is grateful that a single 12-second viral video of a coyote and badger sauntering through a culvert together can help more people observe and consider what I and many in my scientific generation see: A thinking, complex, dynamic, individual nature that demands our respect and mindfulness as we move through this world.

Jennifer Campbell-Smith has a Ph.D. in behavioral ecology from Binghamton University. She currently resides in Denver, Colorado, where she is working to get high school students involved in urban wildlife research. You can find her on Twitter @drcampbellsmith.EmailHigh Country Newsat[emailprotected]or submit aletter to the editor.

See the original post:
A viral coyote-badger video demonstrates the incredible complexity of nature - High Country News

PHS Honors Essay Project: The True Nature of Humans – theportlandbeacon.com

The true nature of humans is self-interested. Humans are born selfish and without a nurturing upbringing, will continue to be selfish their entire lives. Henceforth a deeper understanding of human actions is produced when the true nature of humans is accepted.

Humans are born self-interested. Children rely on their parents for everything. As they develop, they are taught right from wrong by their parents and society as a whole. In the story of Lord of the Flies, William Golding spins a tale of what happens when there is no authoritative figure or civil society to tell children right from wrong. In the story, the character Roger is one of the antagonists. He is one of the older boys on the island and among the group of hunters. While the boys are frolicking on the idyllic beach, Roger throws stones at a younger child and purposely misses. Golding explains the situation as Here was the taboo of the old life. Round the squatting child was the protection of parents and school and policemen and the law. Rogers arm was conditioned by a civilization that knew nothing of him and was in ruins, (87). The orderly civilization the boys have left behind coerced Roger from his sociopathic tendencies. Later in the novel, Roger is free of civil limitations and his actions are rash, destructive, and violent, eventually ending in murder. Rogers actions in the novel Lord of the Flies exemplifies that humans are born, at the very least self-interested, at the most, evil.

An infants self-interested nature often persists into childhood, but the parents tend to curb their behavior at this time. During this early period, children learn how to be acceptable in society. They learn the laws, learn in school, and learn right from wrong, what to do and not to do. In the article, Psychopathy to Altruism: Neurobiology of the Selfish - Selfless Spectrum, the author discusses the upbringing of children, ... promoting positive behavior via the brain reward system... to mitigate violent, destructive behavior. (Sonne). This article explains how parents reward their children for behavior they see as positive and refuse to reward behavior they see as negative. However, this method is not necessarily teaching children right from wrong, but rather teaching children what behavior will get them a reward and what will not. Children adhere to these rules simply because they know if they do, they will be rewarded. Children act, in societys view, good not because it is their true nature but because they want to be rewarded. An example of this is when a young person does something unhealthy or criminal, like smoking or stealing, society tends to give them the excuse that they had a bad childhood. The definition of a bad childhood is one that lacked the proper nurture, in which a child was not strictly taught right from wrong. Golding expertly illustrates this value of nurture in his novel. At the beginning of the novel, while the boys are romping along the beach, some of the older boys, including one named Maurice, kick sand into some of the younger childrens faces. Maurice immediately feels guilty. His former life would have punished him for hurting someone else. But on the island, no one does. Had Maurice grown up on the island without a civil upbringing, he would not have felt guilty for kicking sand in someones eyes. He would not have known it was wrong and would not have stopped. The other boys would have acted the same way. Therefore, if a child is not groomed to societys molds, they act as their true nature desires, self-interestedly.

In almost every situation, it is easier to be selfish. When children discover the selfish choice and they are not deterred, they will discover an easier course for themselves. The child will find that the selfish decision is easier and choose to make selfish decisions more often. Young children dont have a moral compass to tell them if a decision they are making is harmful and hurting others. It is a parents job to inspire a moral compass in their child.

One may argue that no human is born evil. However, Goldings Lord of the Flies disproves this claim with the character of Roger. Roger is a sociopath who uses the circumstances on the island to satisfy his violent impulses. As stated in the novel, Roger was conditioned during his upbringing to not harm another human because it is immoral. Nevertheless, on the island, he hurt many of his fellow boys and even murders one of them. If all children were truly born good, Roger would not have committed any of his horrid deeds. But even with his civilized upbringing, he does. Therefore, children are not born good but are instead born selfish.

If people are truly inherently altruistic, then how could they live with the state of the dying earth and the state of humanity itself. If humans are truly good, then such things would not be happening or would have been stopped by previous generations. But it is, people are starving and dying and the planet itself may soon be uninhabitable for humans. Because people are too self-centered to see the big picture. A possible solution to this extensive problem would be laws backing the protection of the environment but no comprehensive legislation has passed. The article Democratic, Accountable States Are Impossible Without Behavioral Humans proves how humans selfish nature is preventing society from bettering and improving. Accountable, democratic government is impossible assuming that selfinterested individuals... are the only available citizen, (Putterman). People dont aid climate change fighting or species saving efforts because its not directly affecting them. Humans are too often focused on the here and now. This is explained in the book Living in the Anthropocene: Earth in the Age of Human, the book argues, The human negligence of the earth: how extinctions of fauna are caused by our own selfish desire, (Sajal). Tens of thousands of species worldwide are endangered and people arent providing proper aid even though humans are responsible for their demise. A reason for this is provided in the article A Game of Cards, which explains that fear is what drives humans to be so selfish. Existence of fear and mans inability to cope with fear bring about the worst in him. (Cousins). Humans fear what may happen to themselves or their interests if they are vulnerable or self-sacrificing. So they keep their heads down and ignore the issues occurring all around them. The state of the planet is proof that humans are selfish, self-centered, and self-interested.

Humans are inherently self-interested. The underlying nature of humans is selfish and self-centered, once accepted, peoples motivation for their actions becomes clear and defined. Human behavior is explained through their inherently selfish nature.

Works Cited

Cousins, Norman A Game of Cards. npr.org, National Public Radio, 4 April 2005,

https://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=4544547

Golding, William, et al. William Goldings Lord of the Flies: Text, Notes and

Criticism.

PUTTERMAN, Louis. DEMOCRATIC, ACCOUNTABLE STATES ARE

IMPOSSIBLE WITHOUT BEHAVIORAL HUMANS. Wiley Online Library, John

Wiley & Sons, Ltd (10.1111), 8 Feb. 2018,

https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1111/apce.12198

Sajal, Roy. Living in the Anthropocene: Earth in the Age of Humans. Environment

and History, 1 Jan. 1970,

https://researchdirect.westernsydney.edu.au/islandora/object/uws:46110

Sonne, James, et al. Psychopathy to Altruism: Neurobiology of the Selfish

Selfless Spectrum. Frontiers, Frontiers, 5 Apr. 2018,

http://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fpsyg.2018.00575/full.

This is one of 24 essays that will be written by PHS Honors English students in collaboration with The Portland Beacon over the next six months. Ms. Chandra Polasek, PHS Honors English and Drama teacher, will provide the essays on a regular basis to The Beacon. All essays are original work of the students.

Read the original:
PHS Honors Essay Project: The True Nature of Humans - theportlandbeacon.com

A rare disease among children is discovered in a 66-million-year-old dinosaur tumor – WITI FOX 6 Milwaukee

A rare disease that still affects humans today has been found in the fossilized remains of a duck-billed dinosaur that roamed the Earth at least 66 million years ago.

Researchers at Tel Aviv University noticed unusual cavities in two tail segments of the hadrosaur, which were unearthed at the Dinosaur Provincial Park in southern Alberta, Canada.

They compared the vertebrae with the skeletons of two humans who were known to have a benign tumor calledLCH (Langerhans cell histiocytosis),a rare and sometimes painful disease that affects children, mainly boys.

Diagnosing diseases in skeletal remains and fossils is complicated as in some cases different diseases leave similar marks on bones. LCH, however, has a distinctive appearance that fit to the lesions found in the hadrosaur, said Dr. Hila May, head of the Biohistory and Evolutionary Medicine Laboratory, at TAUs Sackler Faculty of Medicine.

The researchers used advanced, high-resolution CT scans to analyze the dinosaur tail fossils.

New technologies,such as the micro CT scanning, enabled us to examine the structure of the lesion and reconstruct the overgrowth as well as the blood vessels that fed it, May told CNN.

The micro and macro analyses confirmed that it was, in fact, LCH. This is the first time this disease has been identified in a dinosaur, May said.

In humans, LCH is sometimes described as a rare form of cancer but May said that there are different opinions among experts as to whether it is definitively a cancer or not because in some cases its passes spontaneously.

Most of the LCH-related tumors, which can be very painful, suddenly appear in the bones of children aged 2-10 years. Thankfully, these tumors disappear without intervention in many cases, she said.

Hadrosaurs would have stood about 10 meters high and weighed several tons. They roamed in large herds 66 to 80 million years ago, the study, which published this week in the journalScientific Reportssaid.

Like us, dinosaurs got sick but evidence of disease and infection in the fossil record a field known as paleopathology has been scant.

However, there is evidence that tyrannosaurids, like the T-Rex, suffered from gout and that iguanodons may have had osteoarthritis. Cancer has proved more difficult for paleopathologists to diagnose but there is evidence that dinosaurs would have suffered from the disease, the study said.

Studying disease in fossils, independent of the species, is a complicated task. And it is even more complicated when dealing with those of animals that are extinct as we do not have a living reference, May explained.

The authors said the finding could help further evolutionary medicine a new field of research that investigates the development and behavior of diseases over time.

Given that many of the diseases we suffer from come from animals, such as coronovirus, HIV and tuberculosis, May said understanding how they manifest themselves in different species and survive evolution can help find new and effective ways to treat them.

When we know that a disease is independent of species or time, it means the mechanism that encourages its development is not specific to human behavior and environment, rather [its] a basic problem in an organisms physiology, May said.

Read the original:
A rare disease among children is discovered in a 66-million-year-old dinosaur tumor - WITI FOX 6 Milwaukee