Preparing for Disasters with Mr. Radar is a video animation produced in English and Thai language in order to promote learning among children in Thailand on ...
In this session of the April 7-9, 2011 conference "Science and Technology Studies: The Next Twenty," Pierre-Benoit...
In this session of the April 7-9, 2011 conference "Science and Technology Studies: The Next Twenty," Pierre-Benoit Joly (Paris-Est and IFRIS) and David Stark...
This video is on the Galana- Kulalu food security project-10,000 acre model farm. It's objective is to optimize...
This video is on the Galana- Kulalu food security project-10,000 acre model farm. It's objective is to optimize productivity of the ranches in the area throu...
"Each one of us has a unique European story - for some, this is a Europe of progress, unity and prosperity; for...
"Each one of us has a unique European story - for some, this is a Europe of progress, unity and prosperity; for others, a Europe of decline, division and los...
Entrepreneurship together with refugees is a win-win strategy. Innovation is a charming world, especially for those...
Entrepreneurship together with refugees is a win-win strategy. Innovation is a charming world, especially for those who have no place in the conventional one...
Is this the smartest man in the USA, or just a farmer with common sense? Please check out the documentary film "Food...
Is this the smartest man in the USA, or just a farmer with common sense? Please check out the documentary film "Food Inc.", and read Fast Food Nation. You de...
This talk was given at a local TEDx event, produced independently of the TED Conferences. 14-year-old Hannah Hudson...
This talk was given at a local TEDx event, produced independently of the TED Conferences. 14-year-old Hannah Hudson is New Zealand's Future Problem Solving c...
What ever happened to letting "boys be boys?" Take these two cases: In one, a seven-year-old boy was sent home for...
What ever happened to letting "boys be boys?" Take these two cases: In one, a seven-year-old boy was sent home for nibbling a Pop Tart into a gun. In another, a teacher was so alarmed by a picture drawn by a student (of a sword fight), that the boy's parents were summoned in for a conference. In short, boys in America's schools are routinely punished for being active, competitive, and restless. In other words, boys can no longer be boys. Christina Hoff Sommers, a scholar at the American Enterprise Institute, explains how we can change this.