From a Grain of Rice to a Carbon Atom

The Genetic Science Learning Center (which I’ve mentioned before) has a wonderful slider-bar animation that shows the differences in scale from what we perceive (a grain of rice or a coffee bean) down to the scale of cells, molecules and finally a carbon atom. The smallest objects that the unaided human eye can see are … Continue reading “From a Grain of Rice to a Carbon Atom”

A Fish Anatomy Lesson

First off, three cheers for Viet Hoa, the Vietnamese food market on Cleveland Ave in Memphis. I’ve been searching for a source of fresh, uneviscerated, marine fish in this mid-continental city for quite a while, and I’ve finally found them. The market was the source of the subjects of an excellent anatomy lesson, and a … Continue reading “A Fish Anatomy Lesson”

Atomic mass versus atomic weight

I have been told by reliable sources that the difference between atomic mass and atomic weight is that the atomic mass is the mass of a single atom (number of protons plus the number of neutrons), while the atomic weight is the averaged masses of all the different isotopes you would find in a natural … Continue reading “Atomic mass versus atomic weight”

Linux Laptops

We had a couple laptops recently donated to the Makerspace (thanks Ms. A) and I’ve installed Ubuntu’s Linux (20.04 LTS) to see if I could get them to be useful for my students. I particularly wanted to see how hard they’d be to set up for programming (especially given the issues I’ve had with python). … Continue reading “Linux Laptops”

Introduction to Pi’s (Raspberry Pi)

The family of Raspberry Pi’s are just really small computers. You can plug a monitor, keyboard, and mouse into one and it will not look too different from your desktop. They are small and cheap, but what makes them really useful is that they have little slots (called GPIO’s) that you can stick wires into … Continue reading “Introduction to Pi’s (Raspberry Pi)”

Molar Mass of Molecules

Calculate the molar mass of a molecule: The notation for the chemical formula is a little funky: you put the element symbol and then the number of atoms separated by a colon; each element/number of atoms pair are separated by commas, so sodium chloride (NaCl) would be “Na:1,Cl:1“. This will have to do until I … Continue reading “Molar Mass of Molecules”

The Farm School Blog

The interest in our efforts to establish a Farm School program has been tremendous. Parents have enthusiastically chipped in time and resources to get things started, and we’ve been able to recruit Dr. Sansone to manage the practical side of things on the farm. Indeed, things are going so well that I’ve started a new … Continue reading “The Farm School Blog”