297 Matching Annotations
  1. Apr 2022
  2. Nov 2021
  3. mail-attachment.googleusercontent.com mail-attachment.googleusercontent.com
    1. or example, Reio et al. (2006) put fortha 3-factor model of curiosity that includes cognitive curiosity, physical thrill seeking, andsocial thrill seeking. Litman and Jimerson (2004) created a measure of curiosity based onfeelings of deprivation which seems to build on Loewenstein’s (1994) information gapperspective of curiosity. Building on earlier work Litman (2005) ‘‘ ...proposes a newtheoretical model of curiosity that incorporates the neuroscience of ‘wanting’ and ‘lik-ing’...’’ (p. 793)

      Measure curiosity

    2. Used effectively, technology can play a role in stimulating curiosityand interest and in facilitating and sustaining purposeful engagement. Moreover, tech-nology can play a role in triggering and addressing personal, situational, and contextualfactors that support autonomy and competence and engender active, deep learning. It canalso overwhelm and distract by providing more information than can be organized andprocessed to determine relevance

      Role of social media and tech

    1. Overall, the challenge for researchers investigating children’s learning in museums is to account for a multitude of confounding, competing and mutually-influencing factors (e.g. motivation and beliefs, design of the exhibition, social interaction; Falk and Dierking 2000). In order to answer this challenge, Reisman (2008) has argued for the use of design-based research (DBR), including both qualitative and quantitative research methodologies in a complementary way. Although this approach has been primarily used in formal education for creating complex interventions in classroom settings (e.g. Brown 1992), it is beginning to be used in science museums for examining the process of learning. Because DBR often combines qualitative and quantitative measures to study learning, it allows observing the system holistically while maintaining awareness of the changes in the learning process, interactions and resulting outcomes (Reisman 2008).

      Why DBR

  4. Jun 2021
  5. Mar 2021
  6. Nov 2020
  7. learn-eu-central-1-prod-fleet01-xythos.content.blackboardcdn.com learn-eu-central-1-prod-fleet01-xythos.content.blackboardcdn.com
    1. them

      A final overview of the report.

      As a policy report it was expected to include 'recommendations' and 'calls to action' more than actual implementation but the report included repetitive calls to the same action addressing different outcomes.

      Key words were: Vulnerable groups, Nature-based innovation, science-policy interfaces, Voluntary collaborative initiatives, systematic use of multi-stakeholder partnerships, ational, subnational and local governments, natural and cultural heritage,citizen-centric environmental sensitivity

    2. slum and informal-settlement dwellers,

      In 2016, 48% of Egypt's population are living in slum conditions, three of the 30 mega slums around the world are found in Egypt (Imbaba and Ezbet El-Haggana 2.2 million, city of the dead 1.8 million). There are about 10.2 million slum dwellers in greater Cairo out of 22.5 million (Cairo's population).

    1. greywater

      Greywater is gently used water from your bathroom sinks, showers, tubs, and washing machines. It is not water that has come into contact with feces, either from the toilet or from washing diapers. Greywater may contain traces of dirt, food, grease, hair, and certain household cleaning products.

    2. Sites

      For new building this is relatively easy to plan for. In existing building this will need tons of cooperation and changes that involve more stakeholders and thus might face more resistance.

    3. Thefivebasicgreenbuildingconceptscoveredinthisguideare

      I felt that there is a higher emphasis on environmental aspects. This should include cultural and heritage protection and representation. Securing healthy livelihoods. Being self-sufficent in food. Enabling some sort of economic output such as the sell of excess energy or the selling of compost and recycling practices.

    4. initialdesign

      Design for sustainability: this seeks to reduce negative impacts on the environment, and the health and comfort of building occupants, thereby improving building performance.

  8. learn-eu-central-1-prod-fleet01-xythos.content.blackboardcdn.com learn-eu-central-1-prod-fleet01-xythos.content.blackboardcdn.com
    1. economic development, the degree of industrialization, public habits, and local climate.

      The tradeoff between livelihood development and consumption expansion and waste output

    2. procurement, contract management, profes-sional and often unionized labor management, and ongoing expertise in capital and operating budgeting and finance.

      What is the role of academia, research and the private sector?

    1. eutrophication

      Eutrophication, dystrophication or hypertrophication, is when a body of water becomes overly enriched with minerals and nutrients which induce excessive growth of algae. This process may result in oxygen depletion of the water body after the bacterial degradation of the algae.

    2. 50% of the fossil energy, industrial minerals and metallic ores as of 2005

      Unequal social distribution of consumption rates which will reflect in carbon and water footprint injustice

    1. small, incremental and cumulative improve-ments in efficiency over long periods can deliver enormous benefits

      It is also better to build a culture of saving and responsible consumption and production from the beginning

    2. energy subsidies.

      Eliminating fossil fuel subsidies would greatly reduce global carbon emissions and would reduce the health risks of air pollution and make green alternatives more economically viable

    3. Non-hydropower renewables are expected to increase their share of the total electric sector supply mix from roughly 1 percent to 4 percent over that timeframe.

      Wind, Biomass, geothermal ...

    4. proliferation

      to grow or produce by multiplication of parts, as in budding or cell division, or by procreation. to increase in number or spread rapidly and often excessively.

    5. ongoing reductions in the amount of energy required to produce a unit of goods and services in industrialized economies.

      Thus saving costs and making it economically challenging to adopt expensive green alternatives

    6. all sectors of society, including individual consumers and local communities, non-governmental organizations, private businesses and industry, the science and technology communities, gov-ernments, intergovernmental institutions and donor organizations

      Stakeholders within Energy

    7. pollution and improving public health

      Cairo is the most polluted city in the world, according to the Eco Experts' report. On average, residents of Cairo breathe in air suffused with 11.7 times the WHO recommended safe level of PM2.5 and 14.2 times the safe level of PM10.

    8. fuel diversification

      The diversification of a country's energy sources is called its energy mix. Diversification allows for a society to absorb a shock in one energy input such as coal by increasing the use of another such as nuclear or solar energy for example.

      Egypt's energy mix: Oil and natural gas are the primary fuels used to meet Egypt's energy needs, accounting for 95% of the country's total energy consumption in 2016

      https://www.eia.gov/international/content/analysis/countries_long/Egypt/images/energy_consumption.png

    9. emissions from developing countries

      China, India, USA and Russia were the top 4 emitters of CO2 in the world in 2018. It is true that in developing countries emissions are increasing but it is part of their economic development and is not even close to what China and the US are doing since they are more likely to adopt the green technologies available.

  9. Oct 2020
    1. plants

      grasslands store more carbon than forests because they are impacted less by droughts and wildfires

      Hypergiant Industries claims that the harvesting technology packed into its Eos Bioreactor is so efficient it is 400 times more effective at capturing carbon than trees taking up the same footprint. It attributes this to its machine learning software that oversees the whole process, managing light, temperatures, and pH levels for maximum output. https://newatlas.com/environment/algae-fueled-bioreactor-carbon-sequestration/

    1. ConclusionResponding

      I was waiting for a list of potential benefits due to climate change and global warming. Anyway here are a couple of assumed benefits: fewer winter deaths; lower energy costs; better agricultural yields; probably fewer droughts; maybe richer biodiversity

      And this article give a wonderful counter perspective https://www.spectator.co.uk/article/why-climate-change-is-good-for-the-world#:~:text=The%20chief%20benefits%20of%20global,fewer%20droughts%3B%20maybe%20richer%20biodiversity.

    2. Warming, Climate Changes

      Affected sectors by Climate Change in Egypt: ? Water resources ? Agriculture ? Public health ? Housing and settlements ? Coastal zones ? Biodiversity and coral reefs ? Fisheries ? Telecommunications ? Tourism

      Highest priority issues for Egypt: ? Water resources scarcity ? Sea level rise ? Agriculture crop deficiency

      There are studies that suggest that with the increase in global temperatures there will be increased evaporation in the Nile River and thus less water supply and ultimately water scarcity.

      A 0.5 m Sea Level Rise (SLR) that can occur in about 50 to 60 years would lead to: ◦ Permanent submersion of 1,800 km2 of cropland in low lands in the Nile Delta ◦ Increase soil salinity in the remaining lands ◦ Economic losses estimated at over US$ 35 billion (Land area, 195,000 jobs) ◦ Jeopardizing the food security balance ◦ Relocation of more than 2 million people in Nile Delta and Valley ◦ Severe damage on the large investments in summer resorts along the North West Coast of Egypt. ◦ Propensity of industrial hazards and accidents ◦ Disruption to the industry’s supply and distribution chain and access to key production inputs and feedstock.

      Significant variation in Nile stream flow, which was predicted by an increase of 30% or a decrease that can reach 70% (highest convergence) in the annual Nile flow which lead to: ◦ Serious implications in terms of increased flood risks or droughts ◦ Cultivated lands shrinking associated with decrease in food production ◦ Increase in number of jobs lost and water conflicts

      https://cairoclimatetalks.net/sites/default/files/Impacts%20of%20Climate%20Change%20on%20Egypt%20and%20the_0.pdf

    3. climate

      Just 100 of all the hundreds of thousands of companies in the world have been responsible for 71% of the global GHG emissions that cause global warming since 1998, according to The Carbon Majors Database, a report recently published by the Carbon Disclosure Project (CDP). Change corporate policies and the public will follow

    4. disease

      How climate change and covid are interconnected.

      Covid is a zoonotic (plural zoonoses) disease is an infectious disease caused by a pathogen (an infectious agent, such as a bacterium, virus, parasite or prion) that has jumped from a non-human animal (usually a vertebrate) to a human.

      Our climate is changing. As the planet heats up, infectious diseases that were once confined to warmer latitudes are slowly expanding their range. In particular, zoonotic diseases – diseases that spread from non-human animals to humans – are taking advantage of the greater range made available by climate change. One group of zoonoses, vector-borne pathogens, pose an increasing risk to human health.

    5. 2-5 years as the particles settle out of the atmosphere

      The main reason why GHGs are tricky is that their affect stays longer with the atmosphere and the earth carbon cycle is disrupted as it can not absorb with the same rate of the carbon production from human activities

    6. present-day values

      Mitigation practices will have to include reversing techniques, if there is a such thing. I heard about regenerative agriculture and it's power to sequestrate carbon. Maybe that might reverse thing around

    7. 50 times the amount of power produced by all the power plants of the world combined!

      So does that mean that there is an amplifying effect because of the GHGs trapping phenomena? I mean what is the reason behind the multiplying effect?

    8. was the first to calculate the warming power of excess carbon dioxide (CO2)

      While low in concentration, methane accounts for approximately 9% of greenhouse gas in the atmosphere. Methane has a high heat trapping capacity, making it more effective at trapping heat than CO2 or water vapor.

    9. reenhouse gases comprise only a tiny fraction of Earth’s atmosphere

      Nitrogen accounts for 78% of the atmosphere, oxygen 21% and argon 0.9%. Gases like carbon dioxide, nitrous oxides, methane, and ozone are trace gases that account for about a tenth of one percent of the atmosphere.

    10. How do we know that greenhouse gases lead to warming?

      "Climate change is a phenomenon we can observe through the millions of years of earth existence. There are a number of drivers that cause these natural fluctuations in the system. Quite common are changes the earth axis and orbit in relation to the sun. A good example is the Milankovitch cycle see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Milankovitch_cycles . These kind of changes for example caused the ice ages. Important is the role of so called feedbacks. A very important feedback is the carbon cycle because it amplifies the effect of changes in the radiation balance of the earth surface. Carbon dioxide is here the most important player because it is a greenhouse gas. Greenhouse gasses trap part of the long wave radiation in the atmosphere. In an event of a change in the earth axis for a number of reasons the CO2 concentration is decreasing which will allow more long wave radiation to leave the atmosphere which will accelerate the cooling already caused. Today we would be on the way to a new ice age if we would not have changed the earth system by most prominently emitting CO2 from fossil fuel burning. So we trap more and more long wave radiation in the atmosphere which warms the planet. This is a 100% human effect on the climate. However, it is important to remember that climate is the long term (decadal) pattern of weather so it is very difficult to blame single events like a mild winter to climate change even so there is evidence for an increase in extreme events. See the IPCC special report on this." Martin Wattenbach

    11. limit the magnitude of climate change and adapt to its impacts.

      Mitigation vs adaptation

      The difference between climate change mitigation strategies and climate change adaptation is that mitigation is aimed at tackling the causes and minimising the possible impacts of climate change, whereas adaptation looks at how to reduce the negative effects it has and how to take advantage of any opportunities that arise.

    12. Climate

      Climate vs weather

      Whereas weather refers to short-term changes in the atmosphere, climate describes what the weather is like over a long period of time in a specific area.

      Weather tells you what to wear each day. Climate tells you what types of clothes to have in your closet.

  10. learn-eu-central-1-prod-fleet01-xythos.content.blackboardcdn.com learn-eu-central-1-prod-fleet01-xythos.content.blackboardcdn.com
    1. high-incomecountries,where average life expectancyat birth is 78 years and the average under-5 mortality rate is 6 per 1,000.

      Socio-economic relation with the quality of life

    2. LongevityBEG_i

      The word "longevity" is sometimes used as a synonym for "life expectancy" in demography. However, the term longevity is sometimes meant to refer only to especially long-lived members of a population, whereas life expectancy is always defined statistically as the average number of years remaining at a given age.

    3. rural roads

      This is usually a common issue within developing countries. And as it requires huge infrastructure changes, technology should come in and alleviate that burden. (Drones for example in shipping)

    4. cacao, coffee, or cotton,and suffer from declining prices in theworld markets

      So they can be economically growing due to exports but as they are using most of the land for exports (to richer regions), their ability to feed themselves nationally is degrading.

    5. Note that three-quarters ofthe world’s hungry people live in ruralareas and the majority of the hungry arewomen.

      Social inequalities in hunger. (Vulnerable segments are always the worse to suffer)

    6. GNP

      Gross National Product (GNP) is Gross Domestic Product (GDP) plus net factor income from abroad. GNP measures the monetary value of all the finished goods and services produced by the country's factors of production irrespective of their location.

    1. Lack of universal, tax-financed social protection measures, inaccurate targeting, com-plex registration systems and insufficient information i

      Causes of inefficiency in social protection

    2. Who enjoys social protection coverage—and who does not? What are the barriers to the effective coverage of the social groups selected? How can social protec-tion programmes be designed and implemented so as to be sensitive to the needs of disadvantaged groups?

      Most important questions in this document

    3. floors

      The Social Protection Floor is a socio-economic development policy concept and a crisis management tool. Since the context of each country differs in terms of institutional capacity, political ideologies, financial resources, economic structure and cultural values, each floor is defined by individual countries.

      Compare this to having a well defined international poverty line of US$1.90. How is the floor variable but the poverty line constant? I mean from a hypothetical economic perspective, if 1.90$ can provide basic needs are people still accounted as poor?

      In Egypt an estimated 3.8 percent of Egyptians lived on less than the international poverty line of US$1.90. A much higher share of the population lived on less than US$3.20 per day, a poverty line used by the World Bank as a benchmark for lower middle income countries. In 2017-18, the poverty rate at US$3.20 was estimated to be 28.9 percent, up from 18.1 percent in 2015.

      A great approach was the national poverty estimates, calculated using a new poverty line set each survey year. These poverty lines can be considered to be relative poverty lines with the real value of the lines changing over time to reflect the most recent consumption patterns of the population.

      Very important document: https://databank.worldbank.org/data/download/poverty/987B9C90-CB9F-4D93-AE8C-750588BF00QA/AM2020/Global_POVEQ_EGY.pdf

    4. age, gender, race, ethnicity, disability or migrant status, some people lack opportunities, resources and a voice, and are routinely denied respect for their rights.

      Discrimination basis. How being different might mean not being equal.

    5. including robust griev-ance mechanisms,

      A grievance mechanism is a formal, legal or non-legal (or 'judicial/non-judicial') complaint process that can be used by individuals, workers, communities and/or civil society organisations that are being negatively affected by certain business activities and operations.

    6. These include geographic isolation, inadequate infrastructure, lack of information in local languages and discrimination. Intercultural dialogue and the participation of indigenous peoples and ethnic minorities in the design and imple-mentation of social protection measures can help overcome these barriers.

      Challenges of indigenous peoples and ethnic minorities

    7. a significant proportion of indigenous peoples receive conditional cash transfers, primarily in Latin America. These have had some positive effects on school enrolment and even on the educational attainment of indigenous and minority chil-dren.

      This benefits the whole community. When more diversity is included in the classroom and workforce, new ideas arise and the community becomes better in being empathetic, understanding and acceptable.

    8. contributory pension schemes

      A contributory pension plan requires the employees to pay into the plan from their salary (the employees' pay stub would show the money was taken out of their pay to go into the pension plan). In a non-contributory pension plan only the employer contributes.

    9. the youth unemployment rate is twice as high as the total unemployment rate

      As drastic as this sounds it is also correlated with population expansion making it tougher and harder for youth to get proper jobs (Huge increase in no of employable youth and a slight increase in jobs offered). A shift to entrepreneurship, vocational development and freelancing can severely reduce this number.

    10. oot causes of poverty

      War and Conflict is one of the most drastic root causes of poverty. In Syria, around 70% of the entire population now lives below the poverty line — this in a country where extreme poverty was once very rare.

      The World Bank estimates that climate change has the power to push more than 100 million people into poverty over the next ten years. As it is, climate events like drought, flooding, and severe storms disproportionately impact communities already living in poverty. Why? Because many of the world’s poorest populations rely on farming or hunting and gathering to eat and earn a living.

      https://reliefweb.int/report/world/top-9-causes-global-poverty