Yes! Though this was an interesting conversation too! I half expected this episode to involve Emily introducing animals to their taxidermied counterparts.
I saw something that came kinda close when Starry Hilder tried to save a young deer and put the animal in her living room next to the stove... only the room was full of deer mounts come to think of it , I wish Emily would make a few videos with the Hilders ruclips.net/video/GxI2nA70RWU/видео.html
I love to hear Emily talk about her field. It's really great to have such awesome ladies who are so passionate about their work being the faces of science/education channels.
Gotta agree that art is in science and science is in art. I am an amateur potter and a chemist, the two compliment each other when it come to glazes, clay mixtures, and things like that
+jrandall15ec wanna cook meth?? I am an engineer and I can design the high tech apparatus with features like...control with an android app from anywhere in the world and stuff like that. I already have an schematic. If interested I'll email you.
"Gotta agree that art is in science and science is in art." The list of suggested videos in the sidebar, for me anyway, are half since related and half from the corning museum of glass.
As soon as I saw Emily, my first thought was "Today's guest animal is...Homo sapiens? And I recognize and admire this particular individual!" I agree with the idea that it's important to show that science can be really fun while still being serious. Recently I finished an 18 week research project and at times I felt like I was 'supposed' to stay calm and serious but on the inside I was screaming "There's this machine that you load with DNA and it injects it into a worm to make transgenic offspring?!" or "These bacteria are expressing an animal gene and they're growing quite happily. This is amazing!". I'd learned about these techniques but being able to do science with your own hands is so much more exciting, and it felt socially 'wrong' to get excited about this.
Omg two of my favorite science channels collaborating makes me beyond happy! I really think you guys help inspspire people to become more excited about science and its awesome! Keep up the good work!
I may not be the first to say the, but I appreciate both of you and your respective contributions to science education and the enjoyment of the natural world. Thank you!
Awesome discussion!! Really helped me with my own problems in studying science at the college level. Glad you guys are out there to remind me why I love science in all its forms!
The Necromancer and the Shaman meet, hurrah!:) Lovely to see your perspectives. As an archeaologist and general creative person I can really relate to the enormous role creativity has in comnig to scientific conclusions and how to translate that into something inspriring for a wide public.It takes some art to coclude a gripping story or interesting image from blurry spots in the ground and human waste.
it`s great to see you two do videos together!!! would you consider doing more colab videos? like maybe jessi presents the live version of an animal- behaviors and such- and emily presents the physiology of a specimen, and you two could discuss how those aspects affect each other.
I wish I had these videos when I was in highschool. I loved science since I was a kid. I grew up on Magic School Bus Discovery channel and Animal Planet when it was a brand new channel, yes I'm that old lol. Despite loving science I have struggled understanding the team technical side of it, since Jr high. I still don't understand it, but I still love it. So these videos, Brain scoop and animal wonders really help! Thank you both so much for helping me love science!!!
I especially appreciate the discussion about finding your niche in science and then networking to find others who can contribute other skills that you may not have. Not only is this the way most science actually does get done, but collaboration itself is just so fantastic - the people aspect can be as exciting as the science. I love having my mentor down the hall to consult on Latin nomenclature and the botanist upstairs who can verify an ID, not to mention colleagues half a world away in South Africa who'll help me with ecological questions! And even though I'm young and still learning so much, every day I get people coming to ask me for help, too. It's incredible to be part of an exciting system and to know that you have access to so much knowledge, and are a valuable contributing member, yourself.
The two grooviest girls on RUclips together in another video?!! It's been way too long. I was having a good day, but this is almost too much goodness; its overwhelming. Thanks for being such amazing human beings Jessi and Emily Graslie, keep it up!
I loved the ending with Emily visiting Kemosabe!! You should have let her visit with more of the sociable animals. Not only would it have been entertaining (the Kemosabe visit was adorable & make me laugh!), but who knows what interesting facts may have popped into Emily's mind that she could have shared with us when visiting the animals!
I think you guys are the most adorable people in this planet, seriously! And you two have made me, even being a design major, to want to pursue a science knowledge! Even if the fields in my country are limit, I at least want to LEARN about it all! So thank you, and hopefully, I can actually make it! :D
I've been reading Letters to a Young Scientist too! As soon as I heard Emily talking about the creativity within science, I knew that she either needed to read the book or had read the book!
aaand you just convinced me to pursue my dream of getting a degree in physics I wasn't so sure about it at first cause everyone keeps saying scientist isn't a job and if you get a science degree it means the only real job is a doctor or a pharmacist I was so worried about that . about what I would do when I graduate and how i will get a job but now I'm sure of what I want honestly you, Emily , hank and John inspire me so much i want to be like you guys some day!
Joy S who said that?? omg. science can get you into so many jobs. and to be a doctor you mostly need biology anyway haha. with physics you can be a physicists or you could do engineering. there are so many types of engineering now. if you're into electricity stuff there's a lot of job opurtunities for that too. just be careful you don't get a job that a robot could steal in the near future
Salvatore Shiggerino Ooh shenanigans, let's do this. The original commenter did say (anything + EG) > anything (and not say, 'anything else') which could be reduced to (x+y)>x so following that logic, you'd probably want to say something like (ebola + EG) > ebola, or maybe even (puppies + EG) > puppies. Mathematically speaking, a thing plus another thing will always be greater than just the thing itself. Unless we're talking about infinity. Then it'll still just be infinity.
"Mathematically speaking, a thing plus another thing will always be greater than just the thing itself." So, (-5) + 4 > 4? What is this, Common Core? It would be true if "thing" was restricted to positive numbers, or in the case of the original comment, good things. But you have to state that.
I agree with basically everything said here! Science is equal parts art and analysis, creativity and structured logic. And it's incredibly fun! I only wish the thing I'm most interested in had a name so I could major in it, but it's too broad. The one thing that absolutely amazes me and excites me is emergence. It's the way large and/or complex things and behaviors can come from simply combining smaller, simpler parts together...and it's effectively the foundation of the universe. I love neurology not because of the brain as a whole, but because of how smaller parts of the brain, with their own functions, combine to form a person--and how even smaller neurons combine to form those lobes and cortices. I love genetics not because of any entire genome, but because of how individual base pairs, following simple hydrogen bonding rules, can lead to self-replicating and evolving instructions complex enough to create all the life on planet Earth. I love evolution not because of its result, but because it's just a combination of three simple rules (reproduction, mutation, and reproductive competition) which, when paired together, will ALWAYS lead to an evolutionary path. I love programming because I can take small pieces of code and put them together so that an application or website, completely interactive, emerges from those parts. I love electronics because of the way simple physical laws like capacitance, insulation, and conductivity can create thinking machines that perform logical analysis and, some day, emotional judgments not unlike our own. I love physics because, at its root, it is the single basis for all emergence: everything in the universe, everything ever studied, everything ever observed, is all emergent from the basic laws of physics and quantum mechanics. And it's not just science, either. I love creative writing because when you combine individual words together (and sometimes, even smaller non-word sounds), you can create an emergent idea in someone's head. I love poetry for the same reason, only in addition to the ideas, a musicality and rhythm also emerge here, from the same basic pieces of language. I love music because there are only so many notes a human ear can discern, but the combination of those notes and harmonies can lead to innumerable songs that fill us with emotion and inspiration--all because they emerged from the smaller pieces. I wish I could be a professional emergence researcher. An emergentologist, if you will (note: that word is an emergent result of linguistic pieces!). But it's so broad and spans so many fields that it's "not a thing". Which makes me sad. But then I think about emergence itself, and I get so nerdily happy again. I love it all!
John-Alan Pascoe Oooh, I didn't know "complex systems" was a technical term! It does seem to be exactly what I love! If only I were a better mathematician than computer scientist >_
IceMetalPunk Somewhere out there someone is going: "If only a were a better computer scientist than mathematician". "All" you need to do is find them ;)
John-Alan Pascoe My next post on CraigsList will be this: "Are you a mathematician studying complex systems theory? Do you need a website for your research? CALL ME, PLEASE, I NEED YOU."
Great point for science communicating. Making it a narrative is the best single piece of advice for how to make science engaging to non science-minded people!
I completely agree! For many people science loses it's magic in high school. That's why people like are so important. We scientists also have a responsibility to communicate the wanders of our various arts to everyone and anyone.
Thanks for this video lovely ladies! I adore both of your RUclips channels and it's videos like this that really inspire me and make me realise that my choice to study science was/is 100% the right one for me.
This is a super great episode, though I appreciate that this speaks to trying to encourage people towards science who might discount it. I will never fail to become slightly exasperated by the whole, Maths and fear of maths is what scares people away from Science. I understand that it happens, really. But as the 'someone who's good at math' (at least according to myself) it is super frustrating to never really felt encouraged by others. If you are a more traditional candidate who happens to like Maths it doesn't mean some of this message shouldn't feel more addressed to you... I know Emily broached on it when talking about data collection not being dry but just *feelings*
TheEnemyOfYourEnemy I feel like the instances of sexism are so numerous and varied. In addition to girls being told they should be afraid of / hate math I've noticed that girls who are good at STEM stuff tend to not receive as much validation and encouragement from adults as boys who are interested in STEM. I could go on and on about various other ways sexism plays into fewer women being in STEM but I'll stop there. Did I understand your comment right? I hope so.
Ever curious: Michelle when are girls told to be afraid of/hate math? i have never heard that before. i know there have been studies in the past showing men as a whole tend to be slightly better at math, or thinking more rationally/analytically, but where are people telling girls to be afraid of math, or to hate it? do you mean teachers are doing this?
Told is maybe the wrong word. Perhaps these links will illuminate what I hinted at: thesocietypages.org/socimages/2013/03/07/the-truth-about-gender-and-math/ ruclips.net/video/rZn_lJoN6PI/видео.html
TheEnemyOfYourEnemy I appreciate math as well, but let's face it: almost no one has books about integration by parts which they read not for reference, but just for fun.
(4:26) "...turning scientific research into stories that people can incorporate into their everyday." Yes, please. I love the stores that Emily tells on her channel.
(5:00) "...going into high school, then science gets dry..." What I hated about high school science is that all I was ever taught were the conclusions. I remember drawing models of atoms without having any idea how those models were developed. I remember teachers going on and on about ATP, but I have no idea how they discovered any of it. The only topics in science I liked were the ones which included an explanations of the discovery process, like Friar Mendel and his peas.
Your comment about not giving bread to ducks reminds me of a small "zoo" in my area. They give you a bag full of "treats" for the animals. The ground all over the park is covered in bread( other stuff in the bags but mostly bread)
+Dave Greeley other than the giraffe, its $1 for carrots. but literally everything else you can feed. Tigers, bears, parrots, baboons,horses, buffalo, camels. Also the peafowl that roam the place.
This is why my son and I love watching Neil Degrasse Tyson videos together. He's so obviouslly excited about his field that it's addicting. He leaves you wanting to know more. We watch one video, than look up something else that he spoke about and want to learn more of. He makes it fun.
People are naturally excited about science. It's not like you have to breed that into them. It's who teaches and how they teach that will KEEP the public interested and excited. Science is the best.
9:50 More advances were made by a bunch of scientists(or similar) from different departments talking over a coffee/cig than were done by a single genius scientist. 2 brains are always better than 1
okay i need help there this stray cat that keeps comming near our house and our land lord dosnt like the cat i live in the caribbean were there are very little animal shelters its a kitten and i cant keep it what should i do
Do you remember that Emily gave Cheeks a banana? Well, the cute little bunny couldn't eat it all in one bite, so, the other part of the banana fell, having said that, the sound that you hear is when the banana collides with the ground in an acceleration of 9,81 m/s^2. Hope that this answer satisfies your expectations. Never stop asking!
HolaMeaghan Figured she had more of a reason to be in Montana than just a colab. Was just making a dumb funny about it, since it's not like they're both normally near each other (unlike most other colabs where the youtubers are in New York or CA).
What Emily said about making science a narrative made me think of this TEDx talk: www.ted.com/talks/tyler_dewitt_hey_science_teachers_make_it_fun?language=en
no seriously i was just watching 6 animal myths and thought I wonder if these two know each other and I look over and there is a video thumbnail with you both in it!!!
I KNEW THERE WAS SOMETHING SIMILAR BETWEEN YOU TWO! eMiLy NOTICE ME SENPAI!!!!!!! You two are similar in so many ways! I have been watching thebrainscoop for a long time and as soon as i saw your channel it reminded me of emily.
Honestly now I just want a whole episode of Emily meeting every animal at Animal Wonders
so much yes.
Yes! Though this was an interesting conversation too! I half expected this episode to involve Emily introducing animals to their taxidermied counterparts.
Richard Casey That seems mildly cruel...
IceMetalPunk Gross-o-meter incoming?
I saw something that came kinda close when Starry Hilder tried to save a young deer and put the animal in her living room next to the stove... only the room was full of deer mounts come to think of it , I wish Emily would make a few videos with the Hilders ruclips.net/video/GxI2nA70RWU/видео.html
I love to hear Emily talk about her field. It's really great to have such awesome ladies who are so passionate about their work being the faces of science/education channels.
Gotta agree that art is in science and science is in art. I am an amateur potter and a chemist, the two compliment each other when it come to glazes, clay mixtures, and things like that
+jrandall15ec wanna cook meth?? I am an engineer and I can design the high tech apparatus with features like...control with an android app from anywhere in the world and stuff like that. I already have an schematic. If interested I'll email you.
"Gotta agree that art is in science and science is in art." The list of suggested videos in the sidebar, for me anyway, are half since related and half from the corning museum of glass.
nature inspires my art :)
Two of my favourite youtubers and two of my biggest inspirations together on the same channel the last day of my biology undergrad? Awesome!
Yay! My two favorite people are in the same place! I've already met Emily in Chicago, now I must meet Jessi!
+Audrey Plouffe
I swear I read "now I must meet Jesus!"
+11doso11 Lol, I gotta do that too, but maybe not quite yet.
+Audrey Plouffe I'm sure you'll meet someone called Jesús soon ;)
First Time I have seen anyone other than Jessi who is so passionate and excited about what they do
As soon as I saw Emily, my first thought was "Today's guest animal is...Homo sapiens? And I recognize and admire this particular individual!"
I agree with the idea that it's important to show that science can be really fun while still being serious. Recently I finished an 18 week research project and at times I felt like I was 'supposed' to stay calm and serious but on the inside I was screaming "There's this machine that you load with DNA and it injects it into a worm to make transgenic offspring?!" or "These bacteria are expressing an animal gene and they're growing quite happily. This is amazing!". I'd learned about these techniques but being able to do science with your own hands is so much more exciting, and it felt socially 'wrong' to get excited about this.
Of course ducks don't bake bread, they just buy it at the store.
Then they get some grapes at the lemonade stand.
Then he waddled away.
Waddle waddle.
Oh my gosh, this was just the best video! You're both so excited and ahhhh I'm so excited now too!! Also perfect way to end the video, "Om nom nom"
You should do more videos together, I could listen to you two discuss science for hours!
Two of my favorite sciency youtube people together in one video!
Omg two of my favorite science channels collaborating makes me beyond happy! I really think you guys help inspspire people to become more excited about science and its awesome! Keep up the good work!
I may not be the first to say the, but I appreciate both of you and your respective contributions to science education and the enjoyment of the natural world. Thank you!
Two of my favorite RUclipsrs in the same video. Nothing can be better than that.
Awesome discussion!! Really helped me with my own problems in studying science at the college level. Glad you guys are out there to remind me why I love science in all its forms!
The Necromancer and the Shaman meet, hurrah!:)
Lovely to see your perspectives. As an archeaologist and general creative person I can really relate to the enormous role creativity has in comnig to scientific conclusions and how to translate that into something inspriring for a wide public.It takes some art to coclude a gripping story or interesting image from blurry spots in the ground and human waste.
Yay, two of my favorite people! You're both absolutely right, science can be so much fun. Everyday I'm thankful that I love science so much.
Thank you both so much... this is incredible xxx
Oh god... So so happy about this video :D thank you!!!
I just realised where I'd seen your logo back-and-centre, at 0:56 before. It's the Nazca Lines Monkey figure. Now that's cool!
OMG you're right! I never noticed. That is awesome, thanks for pointing it out.
Emily was the first thing I thought about when i saw my first Animal Wonder video. (well that and the word Montana) It was great to see the collab .
it`s great to see you two do videos together!!! would you consider doing more colab videos? like maybe jessi presents the live version of an animal- behaviors and such- and emily presents the physiology of a specimen, and you two could discuss how those aspects affect each other.
Two great people from two great channels! This was really fun to watch!
I wish I had these videos when I was in highschool. I loved science since I was a kid. I grew up on Magic School Bus Discovery channel and Animal Planet when it was a brand new channel, yes I'm that old lol. Despite loving science I have struggled understanding the team technical side of it, since Jr high. I still don't understand it, but I still love it. So these videos, Brain scoop and animal wonders really help! Thank you both so much for helping me love science!!!
Two amazing women talking about how science excites them and how we can make it more accessible? BEST THING EVER.
I especially appreciate the discussion about finding your niche in science and then networking to find others who can contribute other skills that you may not have. Not only is this the way most science actually does get done, but collaboration itself is just so fantastic - the people aspect can be as exciting as the science. I love having my mentor down the hall to consult on Latin nomenclature and the botanist upstairs who can verify an ID, not to mention colleagues half a world away in South Africa who'll help me with ecological questions! And even though I'm young and still learning so much, every day I get people coming to ask me for help, too. It's incredible to be part of an exciting system and to know that you have access to so much knowledge, and are a valuable contributing member, yourself.
I was hoping for a video like this for ages!
The two grooviest girls on RUclips together in another video?!! It's been way too long. I was having a good day, but this is almost too much goodness; its overwhelming. Thanks for being such amazing human beings Jessi and Emily Graslie, keep it up!
I loved the ending with Emily visiting Kemosabe!! You should have let her visit with more of the sociable animals. Not only would it have been entertaining (the Kemosabe visit was adorable & make me laugh!), but who knows what interesting facts may have popped into Emily's mind that she could have shared with us when visiting the animals!
I think you guys are the most adorable people in this planet, seriously! And you two have made me, even being a design major, to want to pursue a science knowledge!
Even if the fields in my country are limit, I at least want to LEARN about it all! So thank you, and hopefully, I can actually make it! :D
Two of my favorite youtubers in one vid!
I could not believe it when I saw the thumbnail for this video omg!! two of my favourite youtube educators in one video??!
I've been reading Letters to a Young Scientist too! As soon as I heard Emily talking about the creativity within science, I knew that she either needed to read the book or had read the book!
Wow two of the people that inspired me to go to vet tech school in the same video :) thanks emily & jessi!
How did I miss this? Two of my favourite RUclipsrs together in one video!
aaand you just convinced me to pursue my dream of getting a degree in physics I wasn't so sure about it at first cause everyone keeps saying scientist isn't a job and if you get a science degree it means the only real job is a doctor or a pharmacist I was so worried about that . about what I would do when I graduate and how i will get a job but now I'm sure of what I want honestly you, Emily , hank and John inspire me so much i want to be like you guys some day!
Joy S who said that?? omg. science can get you into so many jobs. and to be a doctor you mostly need biology anyway haha. with physics you can be a physicists or you could do engineering. there are so many types of engineering now. if you're into electricity stuff there's a lot of job opurtunities for that too. just be careful you don't get a job that a robot could steal in the near future
Loving the video girls. Keep rocking our world with your sciencey coolness!
That was a good collaboration cause I appreciate the differing perspectives
(Anything + Emily Graslie) > Anything
insomniacfolder I'd argue that's not universally true.
Salvatore Shiggerino I'd argue that that argument would be boring and insignificant.
darkfire090
Would you say (Ebola + Emily Graslie) > Puppies? Surely not!
Salvatore Shiggerino Ooh shenanigans, let's do this.
The original commenter did say (anything + EG) > anything (and not say, 'anything else') which could be reduced to (x+y)>x so following that logic, you'd probably want to say something like (ebola + EG) > ebola, or maybe even (puppies + EG) > puppies.
Mathematically speaking, a thing plus another thing will always be greater than just the thing itself. Unless we're talking about infinity. Then it'll still just be infinity.
"Mathematically speaking, a thing plus another thing will always be greater than just the thing itself."
So, (-5) + 4 > 4? What is this, Common Core?
It would be true if "thing" was restricted to positive numbers, or in the case of the original comment, good things. But you have to state that.
great to see two wonderful and inspiring women so excited about science!!!
Yes! You two are awesome!!! Loved the video :D
An excellent video with these two brilliant women!
Yay, two of my favorite science RUclipsrs together! :D
//in other news...
!!! Emily's wearing a shirt that I also own. It's like ... a connection!!
Not science it's "Sparkly Science".😉
Thanks! I love science, art, animals, math,..... they're great!
I agree with basically everything said here! Science is equal parts art and analysis, creativity and structured logic. And it's incredibly fun! I only wish the thing I'm most interested in had a name so I could major in it, but it's too broad. The one thing that absolutely amazes me and excites me is emergence. It's the way large and/or complex things and behaviors can come from simply combining smaller, simpler parts together...and it's effectively the foundation of the universe. I love neurology not because of the brain as a whole, but because of how smaller parts of the brain, with their own functions, combine to form a person--and how even smaller neurons combine to form those lobes and cortices. I love genetics not because of any entire genome, but because of how individual base pairs, following simple hydrogen bonding rules, can lead to self-replicating and evolving instructions complex enough to create all the life on planet Earth. I love evolution not because of its result, but because it's just a combination of three simple rules (reproduction, mutation, and reproductive competition) which, when paired together, will ALWAYS lead to an evolutionary path. I love programming because I can take small pieces of code and put them together so that an application or website, completely interactive, emerges from those parts. I love electronics because of the way simple physical laws like capacitance, insulation, and conductivity can create thinking machines that perform logical analysis and, some day, emotional judgments not unlike our own. I love physics because, at its root, it is the single basis for all emergence: everything in the universe, everything ever studied, everything ever observed, is all emergent from the basic laws of physics and quantum mechanics.
And it's not just science, either. I love creative writing because when you combine individual words together (and sometimes, even smaller non-word sounds), you can create an emergent idea in someone's head. I love poetry for the same reason, only in addition to the ideas, a musicality and rhythm also emerge here, from the same basic pieces of language. I love music because there are only so many notes a human ear can discern, but the combination of those notes and harmonies can lead to innumerable songs that fill us with emotion and inspiration--all because they emerged from the smaller pieces.
I wish I could be a professional emergence researcher. An emergentologist, if you will (note: that word is an emergent result of linguistic pieces!). But it's so broad and spans so many fields that it's "not a thing". Which makes me sad.
But then I think about emergence itself, and I get so nerdily happy again. I love it all!
IceMetalPunk Sounds like complexity theory or complex systems theory to me. I agree it's a super awesome thing.
John-Alan Pascoe
Oooh, I didn't know "complex systems" was a technical term! It does seem to be exactly what I love! If only I were a better mathematician than computer scientist >_
IceMetalPunk
Somewhere out there someone is going: "If only a were a better computer scientist than mathematician". "All" you need to do is find them ;)
John-Alan Pascoe
My next post on CraigsList will be this: "Are you a mathematician studying complex systems theory? Do you need a website for your research? CALL ME, PLEASE, I NEED YOU."
k.
What a wonderful duo
Great point for science communicating. Making it a narrative is the best single piece of advice for how to make science engaging to non science-minded people!
I completely agree! For many people science loses it's magic in high school. That's why people like are so important.
We scientists also have a responsibility to communicate the wanders of our various arts to everyone and anyone.
jessi look so excited to have that conversation
This was so great!
Love watching people that are madly in love with wildlife.... They're cool.
this makes me so happy!!!
Two of my greatest inspirations together, aww.
Thanks for this video lovely ladies! I adore both of your RUclips channels and it's videos like this that really inspire me and make me realise that my choice to study science was/is 100% the right one for me.
This is a super great episode, though I appreciate that this speaks to trying to encourage people towards science who might discount it. I will never fail to become slightly exasperated by the whole, Maths and fear of maths is what scares people away from Science. I understand that it happens, really. But as the 'someone who's good at math' (at least according to myself) it is super frustrating to never really felt encouraged by others. If you are a more traditional candidate who happens to like Maths it doesn't mean some of this message shouldn't feel more addressed to you... I know Emily broached on it when talking about data collection not being dry but just *feelings*
TheEnemyOfYourEnemy I feel like the instances of sexism are so numerous and varied. In addition to girls being told they should be afraid of / hate math I've noticed that girls who are good at STEM stuff tend to not receive as much validation and encouragement from adults as boys who are interested in STEM. I could go on and on about various other ways sexism plays into fewer women being in STEM but I'll stop there. Did I understand your comment right? I hope so.
Ever curious: Michelle when are girls told to be afraid of/hate math? i have never heard that before. i know there have been studies in the past showing men as a whole tend to be slightly better at math, or thinking more rationally/analytically, but where are people telling girls to be afraid of math, or to hate it? do you mean teachers are doing this?
Told is maybe the wrong word. Perhaps these links will illuminate what I hinted at:
thesocietypages.org/socimages/2013/03/07/the-truth-about-gender-and-math/
ruclips.net/video/rZn_lJoN6PI/видео.html
Mockturtlesoup1 Also, www.cfa.harvard.edu/~srugheimer/Women_in_STEM_Resources.html
TheEnemyOfYourEnemy I appreciate math as well, but let's face it: almost no one has books about integration by parts which they read not for reference, but just for fun.
(4:26) "...turning scientific research into stories that people can incorporate into their everyday." Yes, please. I love the stores that Emily tells on her channel.
at the end Emily meets the alien Jess has locked up hilarious
(5:00) "...going into high school, then science gets dry..." What I hated about high school science is that all I was ever taught were the conclusions. I remember drawing models of atoms without having any idea how those models were developed. I remember teachers going on and on about ATP, but I have no idea how they discovered any of it. The only topics in science I liked were the ones which included an explanations of the discovery process, like Friar Mendel and his peas.
Yay! My two fave science girls in one video!
You should have filmed Emily meeting all the animals!
Thank you women for being an inspiration for our female youth!
Two of my three favorite redheads on RUclips! Great discussion.
Your comment about not giving bread to ducks reminds me of a small "zoo" in my area. They give you a bag full of "treats" for the animals. The ground all over the park is covered in bread( other stuff in the bags but mostly bread)
+Dave Greeley other than the giraffe, its $1 for carrots. but literally everything else you can feed. Tigers, bears, parrots, baboons,horses, buffalo, camels. Also the peafowl that roam the place.
great collab ! thnx :)
Well DONE!!
You guys are making me want to become a scientist!
*Scientist* _(noun)_: a person whose job is to be curious.
+
This is why my son and I love watching Neil Degrasse Tyson videos together. He's so obviouslly excited about his field that it's addicting. He leaves you wanting to know more. We watch one video, than look up something else that he spoke about and want to learn more of. He makes it fun.
I see Emily, I click!
People are naturally excited about science. It's not like you have to breed that into them. It's who teaches and how they teach that will KEEP the public interested and excited. Science is the best.
9:50 More advances were made by a bunch of scientists(or similar) from different departments talking over a coffee/cig than were done by a single genius scientist.
2 brains are always better than 1
okay i need help there this stray cat that keeps comming near our house and our land lord dosnt like the cat i live in the caribbean were there are very little animal shelters its a kitten and i cant keep it what should i do
Way so fun, two so cool people , well done, I wondering if your wonderful gust got home without buying herself a rabbit, PRICELESS...
What was that thing making sounds at the end?
Do you remember that Emily gave Cheeks a banana? Well, the cute little bunny couldn't eat it all in one bite, so, the other part of the banana fell, having said that, the sound that you hear is when the banana collides with the ground in an acceleration of 9,81 m/s^2. Hope that this answer satisfies your expectations. Never stop asking!
Yes!
Chicago to Montana, just a short commute to do a small colab video, heheh.
thisisatonofbs Emily came from Montana, so I'm imagining other things went on...
thisisatonofbs She did a lecture at the University of Montana, plus a few other things.
HolaMeaghan
Figured she had more of a reason to be in Montana than just a colab. Was just making a dumb funny about it, since it's not like they're both normally near each other (unlike most other colabs where the youtubers are in New York or CA).
I want them to do another video together!
EMILY!!!!!!!!!!!
Emily for Priestess of Arkay! :D
Shrodinger's Coalition! Super powers activate!
Voice volume seems to be to low in this episode. Otherwise great, as I have come to expect. ;)
What Emily said about making science a narrative made me think of this TEDx talk: www.ted.com/talks/tyler_dewitt_hey_science_teachers_make_it_fun?language=en
The Forest and the Sea, by Marston Bates!!! Everyone should read! (And I don't read).
Hi Emily!
Wait what two of my fav people in the same video ??? what where how???? oh who cares its AWESOME!!!
no seriously i was just watching 6 animal myths and thought I wonder if these two know each other and I look over and there is a video thumbnail with you both in it!!!
I love this. Video
Love the bunny!
Hank introduced me to you. I am anxious to explore your content. Any girl that will pick up a salamander is OK in my book.
Yay Emily!
hi im new with this channel
I think I would have reacted just like Emily if I were to feed Kemosabe.
HI JESSIE😄
Jessie, would you be a zoologist or a biologist?
That Jacket is lit 🔥
gorgeousness overload!!
I KNEW THERE WAS SOMETHING SIMILAR BETWEEN YOU TWO! eMiLy NOTICE ME SENPAI!!!!!!! You two are similar in so many ways! I have been watching thebrainscoop for a long time and as soon as i saw your channel it reminded me of emily.
That was the cutest sciency collab ever
EMILY YAY
My duck helps me bake bread everyday.
Hi Emily