Wednesday, May 20, 2015

Are you smarter than an eighth grader and Tasmania Slide Show and Victor Sharpe




Invert Your Desire for Honor 

Rabbi Yisrael Salanter used to say, "Even though we personally should do what we can to flee from honor, we still have an obligation to treat other people with great honor and respect."

Love Yehuda Lave

Ofra Haza with Jerusalem of Gold

http://www.hebrew-language.com/hebrew-songs/song28.htm

Famous Shoshana Damari  in an independence day tape

https://www.youtube.com/watShoshana Damarich?v=B0R-9NUs7Wg

Trumpeldor Cemetery Tel Aviv last week  Ofra Hazer and Shoshana Delmari are buried here
 https://youtu.be/5Gf87hLWch8



Woman has 10 organs removed to treat 'one in a million' cancer

Jenny Ramage, 32, from Bristol, had her colon, spleen, gall bladder, ovaries, fallopian tubes, appendix, belly button, removed entirely as well as part of her liver, kidney and diaphragm.

Read the full story:

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/health/article-3004013/Woman-colon-spleen-gall-bladder-ovaries-fallopian-tubes-appendix-belly-button-liver-kidney-diaphragm-removed-mother-surgeries-treat-one-million-cancer-misdiagnosed-IBS-period-pains.html


Nicholas Kristof: Are you smarter than an 8th grader?

By Nicholas Kristof
Posted:   05/04/2015 12:01:00 AM CDT

I am afraid you're eligible to read this column only if you can answer this question faced by eighth graders around the world:

What is the sum of the three consecutive whole numbers with 2n as the middle number?

A. 6n+3

B. 6n

C. 6n-1

D. 6n-3

More than three-quarters of South Korean kids answered correctly (it is B). Only 37 percent of American kids were correct, lagging their peers from Iran, Indonesia and Ghana.

We know Johnny can't read; it appears that Johnny is even worse at counting.

The Educational Testing Service released a global report finding that young adults from the United States rank poorly in reading but are even worse in math - the worst of all countries tested. This is the generation that will be in the labor force for the next half-century, struggling to compete with citizens of other countries.

It's not just that U.S. results are dragged down by poverty. Even U.S. millennials with graduate degrees score near the bottom of international ranks in numeracy.

We interrupt this column for another problem:

How many degrees does a minute hand of a clock turn through from 6:20 a.m. to 8 a.m. on the same day?

A. 680 degrees

B. 600 degrees

C. 540 degrees

D. 420 degrees

Only 22 percent of American eighth-graders correctly answered B, below Palestinians, Turks and Armenians.

In a recent column, I offered a paean to the humanities



But it's also true, as a professor notes in a letter to the editor, that science majors do take humanities courses. In contrast, humanities majors often desperately avoid any semblance of math or science (except for classes like "Physics for Poets").

Numeracy isn't a sign of geekiness, but a basic requirement for intelligent discussions of public policy. Without it, politicians routinely get away with using statistics, as Mark Twain supposedly observed, the way a drunk uses a lamppost: for support rather than illumination.

(I believe U.S. high schools and colleges overemphasize calculus and don't sufficiently teach statistics. Statistical literacy should be part of every citizen's tool kit.)

Public debates often dance around basic statistical concepts, like standard deviation, because too few Americans understand them. And people assume far too much of "averages."

After all, American adults have, on average, one ovary and one testicle. But try finding such an "average person."

Another pop quiz:

A piece of wood was 40 centimeters long. It was cut into 3 pieces. The lengths in centimeters are 2x -5, x +7 and x +6. What is the length of the longest piece?

Only 7 percent of American eighth graders got that one right (the answer is 15 centimeters). In contrast, 53 percent of Singaporean eighth graders answered correctly.

I know many readers will grumblingly protest that they're just not good at math! True, there are math prodigies who are different from you and me. When the great mathematician Carl Gauss was a young boy, his teacher is said to have asked his class to calculate the sum of all the numbers from 1 to 100. Gauss supposedly supplied the answer almost instantly: 5,050.

The teacher, flabbergasted, asked how he knew. Gauss explained that he had added 1 and 100, 2 and 99, and realized that there would be 50 such pairs each summing 101. So 50 times 101 equals 5,050.

So I agree: Let's resent the Gausses of the world for being annoyingly smart. But let's not use that as an excuse to hide from the rigor of numbers. Countries like Singapore manage to impart extraordinary math skills in ordinary children because they work at it.

Numeracy isn't just about numbers, of course. It's also about logic. Let me leave you with a logical puzzle - a family favorite, one that I first heard as a little kid - that isn't mathematical at all. Yet people with math training seem better at thinking it through and solving it:

You're in a dungeon with two doors. One leads to escape, the other to execution. There are only two other people in the room, one of whom always tells the truth, while the other always lies. You don't know which is which, but they know that the other always lies or tells the truth. You can ask one of them one question, but, of course, you don't know whether you'll be speaking to the truth-teller or the liar. So what single question can you ask one of them that will enable you to figure out which door is which and make your escape?

It's not a trick question. When you hear the answer, you'll see it's straightforward. I've posted the answer on my blog, nytimes.com/ontheground, but you won't need the help, will you?

Nicholas Kristof writes a column for the New York Times, 620 Eighth Ave., New York, NY 10018. He's at Facebook.com/Kristof and Twitter.com/NickKristof


Stay Quiet and You'll Be Okay" by Mark Steyn | RUTHFULLY YOURS
http://www.ruthfullyyours.com/2015/05/10/stay-quiet-and-youll-be-okay-by-mark-steyn/

Friends:

This is another superlative article by the ever prescient Mark Steyn.

He points to the nauseating dhimmitude behavior expressed by so many in the media, including even Fox News, towards Pamela Geller's exposure of the double standards displayed towards free speech, especially when it comes to criticism of Islam and the weapons it uses against the West and Judeo-Christian civilization: jihad and sharia law.

I have written about the growing poisonous and pernicious influence within western society of what can be called the unholy trinity of political correctness, multiculturalism and diversity.

This debilitating belief is rotting the very fabric of society and western culture. It is the enemy within the gates working in concert with the external enemy: Islamic triumphalism.

Do please read Mark Steyn's long but important article.

Thank you,

Victor Sharpe

Author of the trilogy, Politicide: The attempted murder of the Jewish state.

www.lulu.com and www.amazon.com

 

 













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