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Comments: 3 Last by Genomic Repairman on Jan 07, 2011, 10:10am
I thought I'd start a blog series where I plug a particular product. It's probably something I've come across which I think is cool and useful in my own work. I'm going to try to do this (i.e., remember) once a month, and here is January's edition.
Rite in the Rain's All-Weather Notebooks. I stumbled upon these puppies at the 2010 ASA-CSSA-SSSA trisocietal meeting. It was in the "swag bag" you get upon registering, and was really the only thing worthwhile. If you do field work, you'll know how hard it is to take notes when the weather sucks (when it's raining or even when it's damp). These notebooks go a long way in reducing that angst. While I prefer to write in pencil (yah I know, patent people have a fit when you do stuff like that ... hopefully I can get an electronic notebook system established where I can scan all my field notes into a more "permanent" format) they have some
cool pens as well (albeit slightly expensi . . .
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Sweet, looking forward to those posts. I feel like I should be doing the same thing, but I keep finding myself hitting the "print" button. . . .Read More
I'd be hopeful to see a bigger, general push towards organic farming. But, the realities of scale and market urinate incessantly upon that hope. For a large supplier that ships out millions of eggs. . .Read More
I understand your point about critical thinking and I also believe that it is not stressed enough in higher education. However, I have had students (first year graduate) who lacked the building . . .Read More
Great post lots to think over. I agree critical thinking is not encouraged. I have had straight A college students in my lab/class that when asked to apply the knowledge they learned in lecture to . . .Read More
I didn't have the numbers, so I looked some up. I was thinking in terms of *number of institutions* not *number of students*. I think the principle would hold for number of students, but quite poss. . .Read More