Nothing like math you can eat. |
Science is one of those subjects that you either loved or hated when you were growing up. Your teachers either injected you with the love of the subject or drained the life out of you. I remember my high school science classes vividly. I loved my biology classes (I and II) because of the subject matter (the biology I teacher was pregnant and missed half the year), enjoyed my physics class because I had the coolest teacher ever (Here's to you Mr. Ragland) and hated my chemistry class because my teacher couldn't bring the subject matter to life (all I remember from it was that there's something called Avogadro's number which went with something called a mole,not the animal, I enjoyed learning about moles in biology). But the seed was planted, maybe even long before then (I remember doing my 3rd grade science fair project on "making" dinosaur bones). And I continued learning science after high school, as I went on to receive a bachelors degree with a major in Geology from the College of William and Mary. There I did my senior thesis paper on the taxonomy and taphonomy of two fossil cetaceans (whales) I had the privilege to dig up in King and Queen County, Virginia. Then I also had the privilege of working in the Paleobiology department of the Smithsonian's Natural History Museum in Washington, DC. After that, I kind of got out of science for a while. Although I tried using my geology degree for some time, to no avail Finally, I became a science teacher myself and needed to relearn a lot of the information in order to disseminate it to my students. I did so with great vigor and enthusiasm in the hopes of becoming the best science teacher I could become. I only hope that my students find me to be more interesting than I did my chemistry teacher.
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