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19 votes
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Chinese scientists cure diabetes using stem cells in world first
16 votes -
I had chemo and my hair came back curly
9 votes -
Uncovering the forgotten female astronomers of Yerkes Observatory
15 votes -
US FDA approves cure for sickle cell disease, the first treatment to use gene-editing tool CRISPR
49 votes -
Scientists grow whole model of human embryo, without sperm or egg
19 votes -
Why diversity is essential to the National Bone Marrow Donor pool
24 votes -
Is there any online store where can I buy cheap STEM books in bundles ?
I am really on a tight budget and I need books for my studies, paper books of course.
12 votes -
Swedish appeals court ups surgeon's sentence for 'harm' during experimental windpipe transplants
7 votes -
Cambridge-Caltech team of scientists claim to have created synthetic human embryos from stem cells at conference; work not yet published
29 votes -
Fifth person confirmed to be cured of HIV
13 votes -
The more gender equality, the fewer women in STEM
14 votes -
Swedish court has given disgraced Italian surgeon Paolo Macchiarini a suspended sentence for causing bodily harm during an experimental stem-cell windpipe transplant
3 votes -
Scientists grew stem cell 'mini brains'. Then, the brains sort-of developed eyes
12 votes -
New coloring book salutes women pioneers in STEM
3 votes -
How the pandemic could choke gender equity for female researchers in Denmark – advocacy group calls for funders and institutions to launch grant and fellowship schemes
3 votes -
Is it really just sexism? An alternative argument for why women leave STEM
22 votes -
How to create events to help girls prepare for STEM careers
13 votes -
How to design events to inspire girls about STEM careers
9 votes -
Remove Richard Stallman
51 votes -
Spectacular mitosis in mesenchymal stem cells
6 votes -
Mythbuster Jr is pretty entertaining
Mythbusters is back, but in a tweaked format. Adam Savage fronts with a team of six young people. Jamie, Kari, Tory, and Grant are absent, only appearing in video flashbacks to the previous show....
Mythbusters is back, but in a tweaked format.
Adam Savage fronts with a team of six young people. Jamie, Kari, Tory, and Grant are absent, only appearing in video flashbacks to the previous show.
Mythbusters with kids could have been horrific, but they've managed to make this entertaining and informative. They've increased the amount of STEM stuff. We see people doing a bit of math while planning something out. The kids are smart, and the show allows them to be smart while also being children. Adam is a great fit, being a big kid himself but also filling the role of a pseudo parent and giving friendly advice (often around safety, such as the tag strap used to manoeuvre huge steel plates).
The old show had a some problems. They'd have too many pre-break "what's coming next" and post-break "here's what happened before", and they'd chop up the myths being tested into tiny little bits. They still do that, but not nearly as much.
It's a fun, entertaining watch, and it's safe for families to watch together.
13 votes -
What would you include in a women-in-tech event for students?
Everyone loves the idea of “Yes, let’s teach girls and young women about technology careers!” However, too often I see people put their attention on “What do I want to say?” rather than “What does...
Everyone loves the idea of “Yes, let’s teach girls and young women about technology careers!” However, too often I see people put their attention on “What do I want to say?” rather than “What does it actually help them to hear?"
Let's say you are planning to hold a school event to encourage more girls to get into STEM careers. What, explicitly, would you include on the agenda? How would the agenda differ based on age or grade level? What metrics would you use to judge whether the event was a success?
I’d like to hear from people who have personally been involved in such events, as organizers, sponsors, and attendees. If you attended: What should have been included, that you later wished someone told you?
I’m writing a feature article in which I aim to provide a checklist of “what to include” for those who plan these sort of events. So please let me know how to refer to you in the article.
16 votes -
Sixteen-year-old STEM shooting suspect said he wanted to target classmates over bullying
7 votes -
The birth-tissue profiteers - How well-meaning donations end up fueling an unproven, virtually unregulated $2 billion stem cell industry
8 votes -
Science-themed board games are an increasingly popular way to learn about everything from atom building to colonising space
9 votes -
Modern STEM toys don't do a good job of educating because they're just toys, not tools
11 votes -
Human egg precursor generated in a dish
5 votes -
Will creativity become valued more highly than STEM skills in the near-term future?
I'm doubling down here folks :) My prior post was called-out for being click-baity and rightfully so. The title was especially poor. I'll try to do better moving forward. I'm starting a discussion...
I'm doubling down here folks :) My prior post was called-out for being click-baity and rightfully so. The title was especially poor. I'll try to do better moving forward.
I'm starting a discussion here because my hope is that we can talk about the ideas within the article, rather than the article itself.
Here was the original post for those interested: https://tildes.net/~humanities/3y1/mark_cuban_says_the_ability_to_think_creatively_will_be_critical_in_10_years_and_elon_musk_agrees
I posted the article because at it's core are several interesting observations/propositions from two billionaires, Mark Cuban and Elon Musk, that presumably know a lot about business, and in Musk's case, a lot about STEM, and have a history of making winning bets on the future.
The article supposes that:
- Many (most?) STEM jobs will become automated
- This will happen very quickly; more quickly than we anticipate
- Creative skills will soon become more highly valued than STEM skills
There was a time when parents told their kids to "become a lawyer or a doctor" but after enough time we end up with too many people going into the same profession and there is more competition for those jobs as the market becomes flooded. I know anecdotally that's happened for lawyers (not sure about doctors).
I can see this happening with STEM as well.
Should parents encourage kids to pursue STEM but pair this with equal study in the humanities? Is STEM the next target of automation? Will creative skills be more highly valued? Will engineers find themselves in the bread line?
18 votes