I've seen one or another version of this before, and I'm never quite sure what the point is. But it is interesting in parts:
Is this meant to be sobering, or scary?
Now on ScienceBlogs: Oldest Human-Made Object in Space
Evolution, Life Sciences, Science Education, Human Evolution, and Stuff
Learn more about Charles Darwin and his work.
Looking for stuff about birds?
Lean more about lions
An archaeological expedition to the Congo
The contents of Greg Laden's Blog are copyrighted by Greg Laden.
Click on "About" for the big picture, and "Archives" for the details.
« Robots Plan To Take Over Moon | Main | Spitzer Makes Remarkable Bounceback »
Category: Politics
Posted on: March 14, 2008 4:15 PM, by Greg Laden
I've seen one or another version of this before, and I'm never quite sure what the point is. But it is interesting in parts:
Is this meant to be sobering, or scary?
TrackBack URL for this entry: http://scienceblogs.com/mt/pings/66815
denialism blog 02.14.2012
respectful insolence 02.14.2012
uncertain principles 02.13.2012
confessions of a science librarian 02.13.2012
starts with a bang! 02.13.2012
Comments
I'm less concerned about how it's meant and more concerned about whether it's accurate.
Posted by: Ben Zvan | March 14, 2008 11:32 PM
Karl Fisch originally put the presentation together for high school teachers to make them think about the fact that the world they're preparing their students for is not the same world they grew up in. He does have sources listed on his blog:
http://thefischbowl.blogspot.com/2006/08/did-you-know.html
I'd guessed it was a motivational piece taken out of context, although I'd expected corporate instead of educational. It could use a little of that context back. Maybe a couple of questions at the end about what kinds of skills translate from this world into the next and how we teach them.
Posted by: Stephanie Z | March 14, 2008 11:57 PM
Ben
Agreed that accuracy is important but don't devalue meaning!
Posted by: Elizabeth | March 15, 2008 10:06 AM