Tag Archives: science

Why I want to create Educational Videos

I’m fascinated by science and technology, which is why I’ve been attending the University of Waterloo for Nanotechnology Engineering for the last two years. However, my real passion lays in creation and collaboration. Those magical moments where ideas and concepts click in to place, either in a project, a classroom, or alone with a book (or these days, the web). I want to help create those sorts of moments for people. I want to teach, but more than facts I want to help people uncover the way things fit together. In my experience, this type of teaching takes hard work and creativity. I find ideas are more often understood when they’re jiggled and stretched before they’re laid out flat. When they’re expressed through imagery and narrative. When the students are taught how to connect the dots themselves. I find all of this fascinating, and I want to get better at it, I think it’s something that matters. And the nano part was a logical choice for me, since when I first learned about it, it seemed more like magic then reality, and because many of the pieces have locked together for me in my last couple years of study.

*Note: This was a part of my application to YouTube’s Next Up Edu Guru Program*

Science Museum in St. Paul’s, Minnesota

A thought

It’s sort of funny how we think of colors associated with invisible things.

I just read a chinese proverb about an ‘invisible red thread’ that connects people.

Does indicate that we often think of invisible things as simply hidden? Not inherently having the quality of invisibleness, but merely masking the true color of the object?

And yet we have things like glass and plastics which can be clear, or transparent, despite not being invisible persay. What about really clean, glare free glass, do we ever consider that invisible? I mean, I’m sure it’s marketed that way, but do we think of it having the property of invisibility, or merely blending in, or letting light through.

The actual criteria for invisibility would be interesting to look at, if there are any. Does something that bends light around itself count? If so, it could still theoretically be colored, and possibly viewed from some angles that reveal that color.

mildlyannoyedrabbit:

Spooky Action at a Distance

Retrocausality  is any of several hypothetical phenomena or processes that reverse causality, allowing an effect to occur before its cause.

Retrocausality has been proposed as a mechanism to explain what Albert Einstein called “spooky action at a distance” occurring as a result of quantum entanglement