Brett Walker Informal STEM Practice
Monday, August 4, 2014
Class 13~ Grand Finale
This week I am finally finished with the internship and am working on practicing my presentation speech. I am also currently weighing my options for the next step in life. I have been offered a job for one year as the assistant to the Director of the Paleontological Research Institution. That would start in about one month and go for about one year. My original plan was to take Calculus II at Palm Beach State College while Calc I is still fresh in my mind. (Thanks Deanna! (She was my tutor.)) See how well I still understand parenthesis everyone? I was also going to apply to the University of Hawaii for graduate school for next Spring, the due date for that application is August 15th so I really have a lot to do and decide upon. I've made a pro's and con's list for taking the job. I am open to hearing any thoughts or suggestions about things I should add to the list.
Tuesday, July 29, 2014
Class 12~ The End
"This is the end...Of our elaborate plans, the end." -The Doors
This is my final day at PRI and it is bittersweet. The project is all wrapped up and now it's time to go home! As I was taking my last tour around, look who I saw streaking in the Museum of the Earth today! Just kidding, she wasn't a streaker, not even a stroller, she was a studier of course. It was none other than Dr. Betty Dunckel. She was with one of her friends daughters, who told me that she wants to be a paleontologist when she grows up! How cool! Well, I guess I will see all of you very soon. Bye for now!
This is my final day at PRI and it is bittersweet. The project is all wrapped up and now it's time to go home! As I was taking my last tour around, look who I saw streaking in the Museum of the Earth today! Just kidding, she wasn't a streaker, not even a stroller, she was a studier of course. It was none other than Dr. Betty Dunckel. She was with one of her friends daughters, who told me that she wants to be a paleontologist when she grows up! How cool! Well, I guess I will see all of you very soon. Bye for now!
Monday, July 21, 2014
Class 11 ~ The Treasure in Your Terrain
So this week I got to give the final runs of the program I have been creating. It has three stations: rocks, minerals, and fossils. The specimens are pretty epic. My mentor Dr. Buckler came to watch me teach today. As always, she was a big help- herding the campers, answering their questions, and even taking lots of pictures. I can't wait to see them! We are meeting up tomorrow or the next day to look at the pictures and go over the feedback she has for me regarding the program.
In other news this week, I went to the Grassroots Festival of Music and Dance and saw an abundance of funky, incredible things. Why yes, that does include the 2x world champion hoop dancer, Moontee Sinquah.
Below is a video of him and his sons singing and dancing too.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Qi9WjSOOPhc
In other news this week, I went to the Grassroots Festival of Music and Dance and saw an abundance of funky, incredible things. Why yes, that does include the 2x world champion hoop dancer, Moontee Sinquah.
Below is a video of him and his sons singing and dancing too.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Qi9WjSOOPhc
Tuesday, July 15, 2014
Class 10~ Lava, Snakes, and Children
This week has been great! I got to see lava, teach several programs, and hold a boa constrictor! I even got First Aid and CPR certified!
Here is a picture with Dr. Warren Allmon, the Director of the Paleontological Research Institution, and Bella, the six-foot boa.
Here are some pictures from some of the programs I taught:
This program taught the children about the treasures in their terrain and about their own backyards history. Below are a few of the geologic timescale cards that they ordered along a 115' rope that represented Earth's history.
Here is a picture with Dr. Warren Allmon, the Director of the Paleontological Research Institution, and Bella, the six-foot boa.
Here are some pictures from some of the programs I taught:
This program taught the children about the treasures in their terrain and about their own backyards history. Below are a few of the geologic timescale cards that they ordered along a 115' rope that represented Earth's history.
Thats me in the spacesuit standing next to a crucible containing 1150 degree Celcicus lava. I got to stir it up like a pot of gumbo. My face and legs looked sunburned after the two minutes I was up there standing next to it.
Monday, June 30, 2014
Class 8~ Dr. Evans the Living Legend
This past week
we all had the week off, but as you can tell from my very brief posting last
week, the break week has been one of my busiest yet because it was the week
before summer camp started. I have met a few times now with the famous Dr.
Howard Evans, anatomist extraordinaire and beloved professor of countless
Cornell veterinarians (and Dr. Bruce MacFadden). Teaching is embedded in this
man’s soul as he continually inspires people of all ages with his incredible stories, joyous presence, and show-and-tell
wonders from across the animal kingdom. The Director of Programs at the Nature
Center and I met at Dr. Howie’s home and we loaded up a truck full of treasures
that he is generously donating the Paleontological Research Institution. After
that, we followed him to his office in the Vet School at Cornell. To say the
least, it was one of the most interesting days of my life to get to spend a few
hours with Dr. Evans. His brilliant mind thinks SO creatively and his practical
solutions radiate pure genius. Pair that trait with his humble, unassuming, and
kind personality and folks you have a seriously rare, one-of-a-kind individual.
Did I mention he’s hilarious? And yes, everyone, I have the pictures I promised
you all.
If you do not
like seeing dead animals, including humans, please do yourself a favor and read
no further. If you get queasy at the sight of blood, internal organs, or the
skeletal system, I will respectfully advise you to read somebody else’s blog.
Below are a few pictures and videos of his collection. Each one of his specimens has a story that is bizarre, ludicrous, and true.
Below are a few pictures and videos of his collection. Each one of his specimens has a story that is bizarre, ludicrous, and true.
He looks mad, but I assure you he was just in the middle of his sentence. He is is very joyful guy.
His shed and museum we were loading up.
In one of his labs.
We walked in and there was a lady flushing out a large dog's lungs and heart with a lab hose. She held up the dripping lungs about a foot away from my face, spread them apart, and goes "See that? There's the heart."
"Yeahp we can hang about seven horses from this room." -Dr. Howie as his eyes look up to the hooks in the ceiling. (He means for dissection obviously.)
.....When we drove in there were two live horses outside in a fence. Maybe he was making them better? Maybe?
Me: "How did you get that rattlesnake?"
Dr. E: "Well I found it out west and mailed it back to my friend at Cornell in a grenade."
Me: "In a grenade??"
Dr. E: "A grenade box, or one that used to hold some kind of bomb, they are very sturdy you know."
Me: "Right...Hah, did you tell your friend to expect a dead rattlesnake in a grenade box soon?"
Dr. E: "No I mailed him alive. Snakes can go a very long time without eating and such. The only thing I was worried about was if the snake would rattle and then someone would open the package and think it's an actual bomb or something ticking. So I took its tail and dipped the rattle in some glycerin so it couldn't make any noise."
Me: "Wow."
Dr. E: "But yes, he was surprised when he got the package. Especially since it turned out that I went to Europe for three years and wasn't going to come back to Cornell for a while."
Me: "Oh my gosh! Hahaha! So your friend raised this rattlesnake for you? For THREE years?"
Dr. E: "Yep, he was quite a bit bigger when I got back. Lived for about 18 years! Then he died and I made this skeleton out of him."
Cyclopic sheep and pig fetuses
He filled this chicken's lung and heart parts with liquid plastic, let it cool, then dissolved the whole thing in hydrochloric acid.
Cock a doodle doo
You might just want to skip this one. In case you cant read the title of this picture series, it says "Cross Sections of a Canine Head."
What, you don't have an armadillo purse?
So many amazing stories!
Why yes, those are two penguin skeletons sitting on his desk that he smuggled in from Antarctica in a garbage bag because he didn't have enough Spanish to tell the guy at the airport with customs that he had a permit to take them. Oh, and that cool lamp stemming from the ceiling? This used to be his surgical room, where he pioneered the art of dissecting and performing surgeries on canines and other animals. Ever taken your dog to the vet? The books he wrote pretty much taught your vet what know. Here he was showing us pictures in the book that were taken right underneath that very lamp.
I made a quick video of the adventure and posted it to YouTube:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3-8sW51zkwQ&feature=youtube_gdata
Check it out and make it a great day today!
And by the way, he DOES remember who Dr. Bruce MacFadden is!
"Oh yeah! Of course, that's the horse guy right? Man, he sure does know a lot about fossilized horses."
Friday, June 27, 2014
Tuesday, June 17, 2014
Class 6~ Office Space
In order to have more room curating and organizing the geology
collections, I was allowed to move into an old office at the Cayuga Nature
Center that was not being used. If you have seen the movie office space, one
thing you can be sure of is that my work environment is thankfully nothing
similar to that. For example, a problem I had yesterday was moving an
elephant’s femur bone by myself to make more room for jars of rocks and
minerals. Just five minutes ago a chipmunk, yes a real live scurrying chipmunk,
decided to join me in my new office and help me design a mineral classification
activity for kids. I was nervous he was going to knock the mounted dog skeleton
over. My mentor Dr. Buckler and I took a trip to downtown Syracuse to meet with
Dr. Peter Plumley, the Exhibits Project Manager at the Museum of Science and
Technology and with Dr. Jeff Karson, a professor in the Department of Earth
Sciences at Syracuse University who is co-chairing the lava project. We
discussed revisions on the grant proposal and set dates to do some lava pours.
My job will be to conduct front-end evaluations on those pours. The assigned
readings this week will sure come in handy! CAN’T WAIT!!!
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