This week you are going to select things to listen to and read about Chemistry and visit several science centres for virtual tours.  You may need to subscribe (free) to receive the podcasts.  There are two tasks this week, both on the left hand side as you scroll down.   Are you ready?  Are you sitting comfortably?  Enjoy some music to begin with, read the lyrics.  Could you be on the threshold of a dream as you look to your future studies and all that opens up for you.  You are wonderful pupils, if you grasp the now.  CLICK on   www.youtube.com/watch?v=HzNmMyEEAbU    OR   www.youtube.com/watch?v=vDVqQzsJg3s   music and lyrics before you and, perhaps, your parents were born. 

THERE ARE TWO TASKS THIS WEEK.  YOU MUST ALSO USE TIME THIS WEEK TO CATCH UP ON WORK MISSED/NOT COMPLETED.  CHECK THROUGH ALL TASKS FOR ALL WEEKS THIS WEEK AND SUBMIT ANY WORK NOT DONE.  THIS WILL REALLY HELP YOU TO HAVE THE MOST OUT OF THIS COURSE SO FAR. 

Task 1:  Choose PODCASTS to LISTEN TO from the links below, READ various scientific texts/books and WATCH the Nobel 2019 Chemistry Prize work on Li ion batteries and VISIT world class museums or science centres, VIRTUALLY.   Links and resources below.

1. podcasts below. 

www.google.co.uk/search?ei=lHyHXrSOHYeDhbIPzayfmAM&q=best+chemistry+podcasts&oq=best+chemistry+podcasts&gs_lcp=CgZwc3ktYWIQAzICCAAyAggAMgYIABAIEB4yBQgAEM0CMgUIABDNAjoECAAQR0oJCBcSBTEyLTQxSggIGBIEMTItMlCOYliOYmDmZmgAcAF4AIABPYgBPZIBATGYAQCgAQGqAQdnd3Mtd2l6&sclient=psy-ab&ved=0ahUKEwi0qMLl7czoAhWHQUEAHU3WBzMQ4dUDCAw&uact=5

www.chemistryworld.com/podcasts

player.fm/featured/chemistry

2. news articles/scientific texts below. 

www.sciencenewsforstudents.org/topic/chemistry

www.popsci.com/read/chemistry-articles

www.chemistryworld.com/

3. 2019 Nobel Prize in Chemistry - Li ion batteries - you have got to watch this. 


4.  Virtual Tours. 

Explore the history of science online with Oxford University's History of Science Museum's virtual tour

https://hsm.ox.ac.uk/past-exhibitions-and-displays

The Museum of Science in Boston also has a great virtual tour

www.mos.org/

Science Museum - London

www.sciencemuseum.org.uk/virtual-tour-science-museum

The Museum of Mines of Mercury is something a little different

artsandculture.google.com/streetview/museo-delle-miniere-di-mercurio-del-monte-amiata/dgE8wPvfSwOufw?sv_lng=11.58600386926052&sv_lat=42.83210606746247&sv_h=140.3895462423443&sv_p=13.539565160097638&sv_pid=glMSbxfvC9SH6VlIu0eihg&sv_z=0.5073522492625235

Task 2:  Write a summary of what you have discovered this week or put it into a PowerPoint for sharing with the rest of the group via VIDEO CONFERENCING on FRIDAY.  

You might be interested in what the papers say...

"End of audiobook snobbery as scientists find reading and listening activates the same parts of the brain."

www.telegraph.co.uk/science/2019/08/19/end-audiobook-snobbery-scientists-find-hearing-listening-activates/

Neuroscientists have discovered that the same cognitive and emotional parts of the brain are stimulated whether a person hears words, or reads them on a page.

A YouGov study carried out in 2016 found that just 10 per cent of Britons believed that listening to an audiobook was the same as having read the physical version, with the majority believing it was a lesser form of culture.

But experts at the University of California, Berkeley, disagree.

Lead author Dr Fatma Deniz, a researcher in neuroscience said: “At a time when more people are absorbing information via audiobooks, podcasts and even audio texts, our study shows that, whether they're listening to or reading the same materials, they are processing semantic information similarly.

“We knew that a few brain regions were activated similarly when you hear a word and read the same word, but I was not expecting such strong similarities in the meaning representation across a large network of brain regions in both these sensory modalities.”

Many literature snobs turn their nose up at audiobooks

Language is a complex process that involves many regions of the brain, and it was previously thought the brain dealt with spoken and written information differently.

For the study, nine volunteers listened to stories from 'The Moth Radio Hour,' a popular podcast broadcast on BBC Radio 4 in which people read out true stories. The study participants were then asked to read the same stories.

Researchers scanned the brains in both the listening and reading conditions to compare brain activity and found they were virtually identical. They also found that words activated specific parts of the brain depending on whether they were visual, tactile, numeric, locational, violent, mental, emotional and or social.

The maps, which covered at least one-third of the cerebral cortex, enabled the researchers to predict with accuracy which words would activate which parts of the brain.

Scientists believe the word maps could have clinical applications, such as comparing language processing for people with stroke, epilepsy, impaired speech, brain damage or dyslexia.

“If, in the future, we find that the dyslexic brain has rich semantic language representation when listening to an audiobook or other recording, that could bring more audio materials into the classroom,” added Dr Deniz.

"It would be very helpful to be able to compare the listening and reading semantic maps for people with auditory processing disorder.”

The research was published in the Journal of Neuroscience.