File:Mr Wizard - Don Herbert.png

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Photo by Fran Byrne via Frank Beacham, Eyes of a Generation


Don "Mr. Wizard" Herbert


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SJS / GreenPolicy360 Siterunner:

The importance of science cannot be over emphasized as a foundation for our GreenPolicy site, policies and practices.

We have set site standards which can be reviewed here and here. We have high scientific standards and focus on facts at GreenPolicy360 and our associated network of media sites.

Many years ago your Siterunner was an educational book editor in New York City and later responsible for New Mexico public education as an official of the state Board of Education. Again, I supported the setting of high scientific standards in curriculum, teaching and testing. I looked to the lessons personally learned over many years of education, reading, and the advice of mentors who guided my own education that continues to enable me to pass along a light of awareness through education.

Don Herbert, known as "Mr. Wizard in decades of work on television, was one of the first authors I edited and learned from as he, as a master teacher, inspired two generations.

Bill Nye, "the Science Guy", also was inspired to act and pass a torch of enlightened science. He is 'my type of guy' who brings his considerable skills and enthusiasm to inspire, motivate, and bring the joy of scientific knowledge to young people.

We, at GreenPolicy360, consider Don and Bill to among the greats in education who help guide striving students to reach their highest potential.


Here's to the teachers who empower success and visions of how things are and how our actions can make a difference.

We truly need the best now, teachers who inspire how we shape our common future...


Bill Nye The Planet's on Fire.jpg


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Big Picture Science

Planet Citizens, Planet Scientists


Bill Nye Explains Climate Change with Emoji
BillNye sci2.png


Great Teachers, Bill & Don


GreenPolicy360 Siterunner

Years ago in NYC, I was fortunate as a book editor to develop and edit the science writer Don Herbert, better known as "Mr. Wizard"... So many educational concepts he taught, both on his TV shows and in his books -- always emphasizing 'hands-on science and 'teaching by doing'. I was lucky to learn so much about science by developing and publishing science books with Don.


Smithsonian acquires archives of Mr. Wizard


Bill Nye, "the Science Guy", carries on a wonderful tradition and was a great fan of Mr. Wizard. He's credited Don as his career inspiration and in today's generation Bill clearly continues in the tradition of Don.


Bill Nye explains.jpg


The End is Nye

Via the Decider

Opening Shot: “Look at that. Our beautiful blue planet,” says Bill Nye as we look at a shot of the earth. “It looks so peaceful, but all isn’t what it seems.”

Our Take: Bill Nye has been beating the drum of climate-change disaster for some time now, but The End Is Nye brings his scientifically-based expressions of frustrations and warnings about our future to spectacular life. Instead of him just telling people what might happen if we don’t make big changes, we see what happens. And it sure as hell isn’t pretty.

Parting Shot: Nye looks at the model of the earth in the museum and says, “We all share the same air, we all share the days ahead. And I see a future with clear skies.”


How thin is earth's atmosphere.jpg


Your GreenPolicy360 siterunner also attempts to carry on the tradition of Don in reaching out to kids with science, hands-on, real-life science that they can understand in their everyday lives and come to fully appreciate.

Above in a twitter post, 'How thin is our atmosphere?'. Here I attempt to communicate the limits of the atmosphere, a [https://www.greenpolicy360.net/w/Category:ThinBlueLayer Thin Blue Layer, using a car and Mr. Wizard teaching techniques.

With the analogy of taking a drive up into the sky I talk about a familiar world for kids, a car in which we are driving on an average street, on the way to school maybe.

What would happen if, all of a sudden, we turned "straight up into the sky". Our experiment is meant, especially for kids, to illustrate how thin Earth's atmosphere really is... Asking them how far do they think it is 'before our blue sky ends?' is the beginning of the real-world lesson. At 60 miles an hour, it's usually a shock when they learn it's about a 12-15 minute drive up, before we 'reach the edge.' It's a quick ride before we reach the limits of our life enabling atmosphere and enter "outer space"...

The responsibility we face, once we realize in day-to-day terms the very 'thin layer of blue' (www.thinbluelayer.com) that envelops us in its limited height, depth, and volume, is to recognize the atmospheric science of climate change and act to protect and preserve our life-giving atmosphere.


The lessons are handed on, hands-on science, generation-to-generation...

Bill Nye and Don Herbert are both examples of science lessons like this at work.


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More "hands-on science" teaching at work

Here's the Physics Girl at home, demonstrating vortices and nature at work.

The science begins at home and then, as citizen scientists, we begin to see the big picture.

We begin to act as planet citizens, planet scientists... making a positive difference everyday.


PhysicsGirl 2.png


 

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Bill Nye speaks on Earth Day 2017 at the March for Science in Washington DC


Bill Nye, the Science Guy, speaks at the March for Science-Washington DC 2017.png

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