Monday, June 2, 2014

Dr. DinnerBone

I am the googleologist of 8th period science. I asked many people questions about what they want to learn about science. All of them gave very good questions. So I researched everything I could and found many interesting things. I really enjoyed researching all of these new things in science. 

My doctor job

My job was to ask 5 students some crazy questions like how old is dirt or are men or women more likely to get strike by lightning.
Thanks bye bye oh yeah and by the way this is Dr. White !!!!!!

Friday, May 30, 2014

Dr. Ray

I interviewed 10 people and asked them to ask me one question each. And then I looked each one up and got there answer.   
Have you ever had a strange question no one could answer? Well, my job was to answer those strange unusual questions for other people. For example, my friend had asked why do cats always land on their feet, I had no clue what to say so I had to do my research and it turns out that a cats back is different than most animals. They also have no collar bone so it makes it easier for them to more around, but if a cat falls from a two level building then it may injure the cat severely. -Dr. Seuss

Dr. Ali

I interview a girl in class to see what she was interested in about science and she said she wanted to know about germs. I found out to germs are formed under the surface.

Thursday, May 29, 2014

My googleolgist project

For the googleologist project, I had to ask many people in my class questions about what they wanted to know or didn't fully understand about science. I then picked the five best ones and researched on google to try to find the answers to their questions. Once I did, I put them all together on. A powerpoint, and presented it to the class!
                                                                            -Dr. Phil


Examples included "How many trees can a pencil make?" and "Why don't the dinosaurs still exist?"



 

Friday, May 23, 2014

Astronomer Education Requirements

There's several requirements to becoming a certified astronomer.The main ones being in education. First you must go to college for four (or maybe five) years to get a bachelor's degree in sciences of astronomy (duhhh). Then, you have to get good grades and take a standardized test in your senior year, but what really makes you an astronomer is your research experience in that field: internships for different scientific institutions, apprenticeships for different elite groups of scientific researchers, etc. Also be alert to opportunities like the Research Experiences for undergraduate programs, where you work at another university for a summer, or the summer student programs at the National Astronomy Observatories. And, here comes grad school: taking more classes at first, and then shift into doing more research, and writing a doctoral thesis. You'll probably get some experience in front of a classroom by being a teaching assistant. That's what is required to become a certified astronomer.