Living Mathematics and Science to the Full

Archive for July, 2013

IMSO 2013 host city: Alfonso near Tagatay, Philippines


Taal volcano-Tagatay Manila-1

The City of Tagaytay is a component city in the province of Cavite, in the Philippines. It is one of the country’s most popular tourist destinations because of outstanding scenery and cooler climate provided by its high altitude. Alfonso, Cavite in the Philippines which is a short way from Tagaytay. Alfonso played a very important role in Philippine history, It is the birth place of the Philippine overthrow of the Spanish Colonist government.

Why parents need to check homework


Durban – It’s a schlepp and often a fight that ends in tears, but parents who check their children’s homework every day are making a difference in their young ones’ education, research by the Human Sciences Research Council has found.

But the research also found that nearly half of parents were not making the effort – and it showed on pupils’ report cards.

The research emphasised the importance of parents as a learning resource, and the strong link between how well children did at school and how well their parents were educated.

Encouragingly, it said that between 2002 and 2011 the number of South African parents who had university degrees rose from 11 percent to 19 percent.

HSRC researchers Andrea Juan and Mariette Visser used data from the 2002 and 2011 Trends in International Mathematics and Science Study (Timss) to track changes in pupils’ home environments.

“The home environment should be an extension of the school learning environment,” the researchers said.

Having certain items in the home, such as children’s own books, a computer and a study desk, created an atmosphere that promoted skills and motivation.

The more resources pupils had – which meant the better their household socio-economic status – the higher their scores on the Timss assessment.

“In trying to improve education in South Africa, we also need to improve adult basic education,” said Vijay Reddy, the head of the education and development unit at the HSRC.

“The literature all over the world shows the biggest predictor of academic achievement is parental education.”

However, there were many instances in which the children of impoverished and poorly educated parents broke the cycle, said Reddy.

These parents were not able to provide their children with an internet connection, or even their own room for study.

However, they still taught their children the value of education by having their children read to them for a dedicated period every day, and diligently doing their homework with them.

It was for this reason that Juan and Visser turned their attention to parents as a learning and education resource.

More than 80 percent of pupils said their parents spoke to them about homework more than once a week.

But only 54 percent checked every day that it was actually completed.

Thirty-three percent of parents did not ensure that their children set aside time for their homework every day.

Thirty-nine percent did not ask every day what their children were learning at school. – The Mercury

Source:  http://www.iol.co.za/lifestyle/family/parenting/parents-need-to-do-their-homework-1.1554348#.UfgVeBbqNqs

Vitamins – could they harm us?


London – Vitamin pills are big business – from chewable ones for children and tablets especially tailored for women going through the menopause to essential oils for dodgy joints and high-dose vitamin C to pep up your immune system, there’s a supplement for everyone.

But can vitamins actually be bad for your health?

It seems that your daily pill can do more harm than good.

The revelation that fish oil capsules have been linked to high levels of prostate cancer was a shock for the millions who take fish oils or omega-3 fatty acids every day in the quest to ease joint pain, improve heart health and fight mental decline.

A study of more than 2 000 men found that those with the highest levels of omega-3 in their blood were 71 percent more likely to develop the most lethal form of prostate cancer, and 44 percent more likely to develop low-grade prostate cancer.

And it’s not just omega-3 that is under scrutiny. According to Dr Alan Kristal, who led the study at the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Centre in Seattle, there is surprisingly little evidence that any vitamin or mineral pills prevent disease – unless people are suffering from a nutrient deficiency.

“As we do more and more of these studies, we find high doses of supplements have no effect or increase the risk of the disease you are trying to prevent,” he says. Yet millions of busy Britons take vitamins to compensate for a poor diet.

The message last week from experts was not to panic. For most people, taking multivitamin and mineral supplements at the recommended dose is safe.

So amid all this confusing and sometimes contradictory advice, which supplements work and, more importantly, which ones are safe?

 

MULTIVITAMINS

While they might be the most wide-ranging supplement in the UK – providing 100 percent of our daily allowance of everything from vitamin B to copper – there is little evidence that they do any good.

In 2010, French researchers followed 8 000 volunteers who had taken either a multivitamin or a dummy placebo pill for six years.

They found that those who popped the vitamin pill were just as likely to suffer heart disease or cancer as those taking the placebo.

That work followed a 2008 major review of 67 studies – involving 230 000 people – which found no evidence that multivitamins prolonged life.

Some studies have even suggested that high doses could do more harm than good.

In 2011, the Iowa Women’s Health Study looked at the health of more than 38 000 older women and found that women who regularly took multivitamins were 2.4 percent more likely to die over the 19 years of the study.

Their research also showed that use of vitamin B6 increased the risk of death during the study by 4.1 percent, folic acid by 5.9 percent, iron by 3.9 percent, magnesium by 3.6 percent, zinc by three percent and copper by 18 percent.

However, the study didn’t take into account the fact that many people start taking heavy doses of vitamins only when they develop serious diseases such as cancer.

But Dr Kristal says: “Dozens of studies of multivitamins show that they do absolutely nothing at the recommended doses.”

So if your diet contains plenty of fresh food and your five-a-day, it’s unlikely a multivitamin pill is essential.

 

VITAMIN C

Doctors have known since the 1750s, when British sailors were first issued with limes, that vitamin C is essential for health. It helps to heal wounds, strengthens the body’s connective tissues and keeps cells healthy.

But despite the many health claims made about vitamin C, there is little evidence that it does much good as a supplement.

While it does appear to shorten the duration of colds, there is little real proof that it staves off illness, Dr Kristal says.

And the high doses recommended by some supporters of alternative medicine may do more harm than good.

In February, an 11-year study of more than 23 000 men found that those who took high doses of the supplement – typically 1,000 mg – were twice as likely to develop kidney stones compared to men who took no pills.

A 2002 study showed that 1g doses of vitamin C and vitamin E almost trebled the risk of premature death among postmenopausal women in any year.

The Department of Health says adults need 40 mg a day but doses up to 1 000 mg a day are unlikely to cause harm. Anyone worried about their intake should decide whether they are exceeding their safe daily dose.

For example, the effervescent vitamin drink Berocca contains 476 mg. One tablet of a supplement like this, combined with a diet of fresh fruit, could tip you over the safe dosage.

 

VITAMIN E

Found in nuts, germs, wheat and oils, vitamin E is vital for healthy cells. According to the Department of Health, most adults need between 3 mg and 4 mg a day.

Studies have shown that foods rich in vitamin E may protect against heart disease. But there is little evidence that vitamin E pills do the same – and some that say they may do harm.

In 2011, US researchers at Cleveland Clinic found that men who took a “high strength” 268 mg vitamin E pill each day during the seven year study were 17 percent more likely to develop prostate cancer than men who did not take the supplement.

And, in 2005, a seven-year study of 4 000 people found it increased the risk of heart failure by 13 percent.

While the Department of Health says taking 540mg or less a day is unlikely to do harm, the prostate cancer study published by Dr Kristal also looked at the effect of daily 400mg vitamin E doses.

Dr Kristal says: ‘It increased the risk of prostate cancer by 17 percent. We don’t know why. But one thing to remember is that, unlike vitamin C, it is soluble in fat and so levels build up in the body over time.’

Experts say that one egg or 28g of almonds a day should provide all the vitamin E you need – making it unlikely that any of us need a supplement.

 

CALCIUM

Calcium is often taken by middle-aged and older people to protect their bones. There is also evidence that it can prevent the recurrence of bowel polyps – growths that may develop into cancer.

However, calcium supplements could increase the risk of heart disease in men, according to a study in February from the US National Cancer Institute.

A study of 388 000 people found that men who took more than 1 000mg, or 1g, a day in supplements were at greater risk of heart problems – and had a 20 percent higher risk of death.

Women were not at greater risk, the Journal of the American Medical Association found. Scientists believe that high calcium levels harden the arteries, increasing the risk of cardiovascular disease.

The Food Standards Agency recommends adults have 700mg of calcium a day. One yoghurt and a 300ml glass of milk would meet your daily calcium limit, so it’s unlikely you would need a supplement.

 

SELENIUM

Selenium is a trace mineral found in seafood, meat and grains. It is essential in small doses and selenium deficiency is linked to mental decline, impaired immune systems and premature death.

But although it is commonly recommended to help prevent heart disease, too much can be harmful. The Department of Health says men need 0.075 mg a day, and women 0.06mg, in their diet. But after looking at data from 20 000 adults, Warwick Medical School researchers found that it did little to lower the incidence of heart disease in people with a good diet.

High doses were linked to type 2 diabetes, the authors reported in the Cochrane Library journal.

 

BETA CAROTENE

Beta carotene is a pigment that gives yellow and orange plants colour. The body converts beta carotene to vitamin A, which we need for good vision, healthy skin and a strong immune system.

Beta carotene is a natural antioxidant and is usually taken to prevent cancer. But there is no evidence it works, and plenty to show that high doses can be harmful.

In 1994, researchers found that smokers who regularly took a large 20mg dose of beta carotene a day were eight percent more likely to die from lung cancer than people who did not take the supplement.

As well as all this, beta carotene can also give white skin an orange tint, and can trigger upset stomachs, joint pain and dizziness. – Daily Mail

Source: http://www.iol.co.za/lifestyle/will-that-vitamin-pill-harm-you-1.1552756#.UfF2JhbqNqs

Science Expo Logbook Handing In Dates


Science Experiment Logbook Handing In dates:

Note the booklet can be handed in before these dates; these dates are the cut off dates for the handing in of the booklet.

 

FRIDAY 19 July 2013 Logbook with draft question

FRIDAY 26 July 2013 Logbook with draft hypothesis

FRIDAY 2 August 2013 Logbook with draft of procedure

THURSDAY 8 August 2013 Logbook with draft of results

THURSDAY 15 August 2013 Final copy of science poster and logbooks due

Web Pages you can use to get Science Fair ideas


 

www.education.com/science-fair

 

www.sciencebuddies.org/sciencefairprojects/project_ideas.shtml

www.all-science-fair-projects.com

 

www.sciencebob.com/sciencefair/ideas.php

 

www.discoveryeducation.com/sciencefaircentral/

 

www.ipl.org/div/projectguide/

 

www.sciencefairadventure.com/

 

www.sciencekids.co.nz/projects.html

 

www.factmonster.com/spot/sciproject2.html

 

www.education.com/science-fair/

 

www.sciencefair-projects.org/

 

www.education.com/science-fair/middle-school/

 

www.sciencefairprojects.org/

 

www.all-science-fair-projects.com

 

www.hometrainingtools.com/science-fair-projects

 

http://www.hometrainingtools.com/junior-high-projects/a/1307/

 

www.sciencefaircenter.com/

 

http://www.super-science-fair-projects.com/best-science-fair-projects.html

http://www.kidzworld.com/article/1762-school-science-fair-project-examples-and-ideas

 

http://1000sciencefairprojects.com/?gclid=CNqGorrTtLgCFSGWtAodOhoAlg

 

http://www.education.com/science-fair/sixth-grade/

 

www.all-science-fiar-projects.com

 

www.sciencefair.com/science-fair

 

www.sciencefiar-projects.org

 

www.sciencefair.math.lit.edu/projects/

 

www.tryscience.org

10 Amazing things South Africans have done


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Pratley’s putty: Did you know that Pratley’s glue had a part in the 1969 moon landing? Turns out South African George Pratley invented Pratley’s Putty while trying to create a glue that would hold components in an electrical box. The substance was used to hold bits of the Apollo XI mission’s Eagle landing craft together.

The Computed Axial Tomography Scan or CAT scan: A Cape Town physicist Allan Cormack and his associate Godfrey Hounsfield won a Nobel Prize for medicine in 1979 for their mathematical technique in which an X-ray source and electronic detectors are rotated about the body and the resulting data then provides a cross-section map of the body.

Retinal Cryoprob: Selig Percy Amoils,created a new method of catarac surgery at the Baragwanath hospital in Soweto. His achievement was widely recognised and in 1975 he received a Queen’s Award for Technological Innovation.

Speed Gun: There is no denying we’re a sports mad nation. Which could explain how Henri Johnson came to invent the speedball. First launched in 1992, the device measures speeding objects such as cricket and tennis balls, accurately reporting distance, speed and angle.

Smartlock safety syringes:Conceptualised by a group of designers at the Vaal University of Technology, it is a three-piece single use syringe that provides protection against needle-stick contamination.

Oil from coal: Sasol is the world’s first, and largest, oil-from-coal refinery, providing 40% of South Africa’s fuel.

Dolosse: It’s interesting to note those oddly shaped concrete blocks you usually spot along coastal areas such as the Waterfront, were first developed here in South Africa. Eric Merrifield designed the structures to break up wave action and protect harbour walls and they can weigh as much as 20 tonne each.

The First Heart Transplant: Probably the most well-known of all local achievements. Dr Chris Barnard made history in Cape Town in1967 when he performed the operation on Louis Washkansky.

Kreepy Krauly: It keeps most pool owners happy, but freaks out little children – and it was invented right here in Springs, South Africa. Ferdinand Chauvier was trying to figure out a way to take the hassle out of pool cleaning resulting in the was one being in 1974.

Q20: A KwaZulu-Natal resident invented the product to displace water from the distributor caps of his VW Beetle, notorious for stalling in wet weather. Initially he did not know what to call it, but since it had 20 answers to 20 questions Q20 seemed the obvious choice.

NOW ITS TIME FOR ANOTHER – don’t you think?

Handing of Life & Living Books


To all Grade 6 and 7’s

Last term I asked you to hand in your Life and Living Books after your Examination. Only a few of you did so and this is going to cause many people to loose marks, which will be difficult to explain to your parents.

NOTE: THE FINAL DAY FOR HANDING IN YOUR LIFE AND LIVING BOOKS IS TUESDAY 16 JULY 2013.

To all those celebrating Ramadan


blue-moon-wolf-full21'Supermoon'_Full_Moon_Rises_Tonight-b3008a77db8f71110da984840c394f1aHappy-Ramadan-mubarak-greeting-card-animation-wishes-muslim-Bharatmoms

What to do when another amazing painting arrives home


When that first macaroni picture frame or toilet roll pen holder comes home you just about burst with pride at your child’s amazing creativity. A few terms later as you consider renovating the house to fit the cereal box nativity scene in, you start wondering about where to keep all the art work.

The first time I heard a mother mention that she threw her daughter’s art in the bin once she’d gone to bed and made sure it was near the bottom so it wasn’t seen, I cried for this poor child with her cruel mother. Two children later and I am that mother – and grateful for the idea she planted too.

So, what to do, what to do…

With the big things, a friend suggested that we display them for a week or two and then make a big fanfare of taking a photograph and then dismantling the item to post it to Father Christmas or Great Aunt Hilda who is sick and lives in Outer Mongolia.
This works well. A hint here though – say you’re going to post it from work and dispose of it there. Your child will work out what happened when they’re about 7 or 8, but will by then also understand why. Also, make sure that Great Aunt Hilda won’t be coming for a visit any time soon – or make her an accomplice in your mean lying to your child.

Then there are the paintings and pictures and milk bottle top art. A punch and a lever arch file are very valuable here. Choose the best from each term and frame it to give as a gift to granny or to hang in mom or dad’s office, or have a special art work wall at home where you can hang framed pictures. They’re a lovely keepsake, and nice but inexpensive frames are available from most stationers. Put a date on the rest of them and file them in order in the lever arch file. My children still love looking through their file of art.

However, teachers get sneaky. Just as you think you have everything resolved, home come the pictures on cardboard or on that old blue and white striped computer paper that is enormous. Cardboard refuses to be punched and the others need folding. The cardboard ones are nice to laminate and give to family as presents for hand made place mats, but sadly the over sized pictures are snuck into the bin late at night when the house is silent. But what about the puffy paper plate lady birds? A photo and snuck into the bin works well too. I hoped to do the photo trick on the sour dough sculptures that have been so lovingly painted, but the birds nest, giraffe and hedgehog are all still on my son’s shelves gathering weevils.

Every picture or piece of art that comes into our home is given its week or two of pride on the fridge and the effort that has gone into the drawing or painting or colour mixing or cutting or pasting is suitably praised.  The photos we’ve taken are all in the memory album along with the various baby teeth, locks of hair from the first hair cut.  When I’m in the old age home I’m going to have beautiful memories to keep me company.

Source: http://www.parent24.com/School_7-12/development_behaviour/Wonderful-another-painting-20130621

For those interested in Zimbabwe


Harare – Baba Jukwa’s name is whispered in buses, bars and on street corners by Zimbabweans eager for the inside scoop on President Robert Mugabe’s ruling party. One avid follower even climbs a tree in a rural village for a signal to call a friend for the latest tidbits from the mysterious yet stupendously popular blogger.

Baba Jukwa, or Jukwa’s father in the local Shona language, is a Zanu-PF party insider, or “mole,” who says on his popular Facebook page that he is disheartened by the “corrupt and evil machinations” of President Robert Mugabe’s fractious party.

From its launch in March the Baba Jukwa pagenow has a larger following than both the president and prime minister with at least 200 000 followers.

The shadowy blog points to what it claims are exposes by well-connected insiders of Mugabe’s health secrets, murder, assassination and corruption plots, and intended intimidation and vote-rigging ahead of upcoming elections scheduled for the end of July.

Zimbabweans who follow Baba Jukwa now say they have unfettered access to what they have always wanted to know but never dared ask for fear of being arrested. Under the nation’s sweeping security laws, it is an offence to undermine the authority of the president and national security operatives.

There is even a Baba Jukwa claim on the page that there is a bounty on his head, although it is believed there are several authors because the writing style of the posts changes from day to day.

After state-run media, loyal to 89-year-old Mugabe, said the president made a trip to Singapore for an eye check-up, the Baba Jukwa page stated: “When we welcomed him at the airport yesterday early in the morning our old man, ladies and gentlemen, looked weaned and very weak. It was clear that the chemotherapy process he went through in Far East Asia was still having effect on him.”

It said Mugabe was suffering from a severe recurrence of prostate cancer.

With the catchphrase “tapanduka zvamuchose,” a Shona term that he has “gone rogue,” Baba Jukwa gives details of secret venues and times of undercover meetings.

Scared of toilet

Zanu-PF  insiders have reported they are afraid to leave important meetings to go to the bathroom in case they are suspected of firing off smart phone texts to Baba Jukwa. The site has reported getting tip-offs from the midst of meetings of Mugabe’s politburo, its highest policy making body, and other confidential gatherings.

Zimbabwe has an estimated 12 million mobile subscribers with 60% estimated to have direct access to the internet through their cell phones, according to commercial company reports from the three main mobile networks.

McDonald Lewanika, director of Crisis Coalition, an alliance of democracy and human rights groups said the Facebook site has provided ordinary Zimbabweans with a platform to access information on secretive state security operations. Lewanika said Baba Jukwa remains anonymous because of the dangers associated with what he is doing.

“It is a bad sign for the country that there’s no free flow of information,” Lewanika told The Associated Press.

The faceless Baba Jukwa vows to end Mugabe’s rule by exposing the alleged involvement of his top officials, secret agents, police and military in the violence that led to disputed elections in 2008 and corruption and internal plotting ever since.

Baba Jukwa says Mugabe won’t be able to withstand a gruelling election campaign.

Mugabe’s Zanu-PF party spokesperson Rugare Gumbo said that his party does not know the identity of Baba Jukwa and other possible contributors.

The posts are factually incorrect, he said. However, some have proven to be correct as events unfold. The distribution of private and secret telephone numbers of security agents and forecasts of political developments have been corroborated in later public statements by Mugabe’s Zanu-PF party.

“Whoever he is, he fabricates lies and is not doing any good to the morality of our society,” Gumbo said.

Baba Jukwa’s posts claim Mugabe’s Zanu-PF is incensed by the site and is making desperate efforts to establish his identity and has put a $300 000 bounty on him or them being unmasked. That claim could not be verified.

Harbinger of truth

“They are wasting their time as I am extremely careful and working from within the country and will never go anywhere as long as these evil old people exist I will continue fighting. My blood will water freedom and democracy for Zimbabweans if I die for this cause” he said, in a recent Facebook posting.

“Asijiki,” a word in the local language for “we do not retreat” is the sign off Baba Jukwa uses at the end of all the posts.

Baba Jukwa has been dubbed by his followers “Zimbabwe’s own Julian Assange”, but he describes himself in the local Shona language as “mupupuri wezvokwadi” which means “the harbinger of truth.”

A former minister from Mugabe’s party was killed in a car wreck 19 June after a post had warned several times of an assassination plot against him. The page claimed Edward Chindori-Chininga was suspected of being a Baba Jukwa contributor who leaked inside information on infighting in Mugabe’s party.

“I told you there will be body bags coming this year … The war has begun,” Baba Jukwa posted on his wall.

The posts have detailed the correct private phone numbers of police, intelligence chiefs and under-cover intelligence officers and urged readers to call them.

Saviour Kasukuwere, the nation’s black empowerment minister, publicly admitted to receiving least 50 insulting calls a day, and some even went to his children and ageing mother.

He said the calls were taking a toll on his family but added “it’s a price we have to pay for our country,” he said.

Baba Jukwa has promised to revealed his identity in time.

“I assure you will know me in a new Zimbabwe where our government will be transparent,” he said.

 

– AP

Source: http://www.news24.com/Africa/Zimbabwe/Zims-mole-blog-dishes-dirt-on-Zanu-PF-20130710