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To the Young Scientist: Reflections on Doing and Living Science (Venture Book)
 
 
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To the Young Scientist: Reflections on Doing and Living Science (Venture Book) (Library Binding)

by Alfred B. Bortz (Author)
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Editorial Reviews
From School Library Journal
Grade 7-10. Bortz asks readers to consider this book as a research project, posing the questions: "What does it mean to do science and to live a scientific life?" and "What must I do to prepare myself to live such a life?" He then profiles a variety of scientists working in different disciplines: astronomer Carolyn Shoemaker and astrogeologist Eugene Shoemaker; analytical chemists Frank Asaro and Helen Michel; cluster chemist Richard Smalley; Paula Gregory, Richard Morgan, and Michael Blaese of the National Center for Human Genome Research; anthropologist Patricia Wattenmaker; and engineers Roberta Nichols and Indira Nair. Bortz offers a nice balance between personal information (including how these people got interested in science and their educational backgrounds) and the significance of their research. The use of direct quotes enhances the presentations. A boxed sidebar indicates each individual's current field of work; business title and mailing address; place and date of birth; significant accomplishments; previous work; and words of wisdom. Trite limericks open each chapter. A useful addition to collective-biography and career-guidance collections.?Carolyn Angus, The Claremont Graduate School, CA
Copyright 1997 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Booklist
Gr. 6-12. Addressing students considering a science career, an experienced author and teacher explains how he came to his chosen field, then, refusing to acknowledge the gender gap in science, asks five men and six women, all trained professionals, for their stories. However, except for fact boxes summarizing each interviewee's education and achievements and the muddy black-and-white photos that are a Watts trademark, there is almost no conventional biographical information, but rather a glimpse of how vast and varied are the circumstances, interests, chances, and choices that lead people to their work--and sometimes to epochal discoveries. Bortz's subjects make a reassuringly varied lot: some are not well known outside their fields, but the likes of Carolyn Shoemaker, our century's foremost comet hunter, and Nobelist Richard Smalley enjoy wider reputations. In edited extracts, some of these scientists speak of their own feelings and attitudes, others focus on their research; all, however, urge young readers to go where their interests lead them, learn how to ask the right questions, and be relentless in searching out answers. The packaging isn't glamorous, but the contents are must reading for teenagers who "love, live and breathe science." John Peters

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Product Details

Fred Bortz "Dr. Fred"'s latest blog posts
       
 
Fred Bortz "Dr. Fred" sent the following posts to customers who purchased To the Young Scientist: Reflections on Doing and Living Science (Venture Book)
 
1:32 PM PDT, September 20, 2007
If you're reading this page, you probably already know that my books open young minds to exciting ideas and adventures in science.  But did you know that a day with "Dr. Fred" can inspire young people to think about the difference science and technology can make in their lives?

From the time I greet my audience with a hearty, "Hel-lo-o-o-o-o-o-o-o-o, Earthlings!" until the time I untie my trademark tie-it-yourself bow tie and head for home, I am busy changing the way students think about reading and the how they see their place in the universe.

Dull nonfiction becomes exciting true stories, and ordinary students become future explorers of other worlds.  Who could ask for more?

I welcome invitations from anywhere in the U.S. or Canada.
 
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8:33 AM PDT, July 21, 2007, updated at 8:36 AM PDT, July 21, 2007
With sixteen previously published books to my name, you'd think I'd get used to the feeling of having a new book published, but Astrobiology in Lerner's "Cool Science" series
is special. You might even say it is "out of this world," since it deals with the science of life beyond Earth.

I have begun adding some web pages about it, and I will be featuring it in a new talk for community groups and school visits called "The Truth About Space Aliens."

I'm always pleased to see Amazon.com reviews appear, too. So please let people know what you think, especially if it sends you "over the moon"!

Scientifically yours,
"Dr. Fred" Bortz 
 
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1:41 PM PDT, June 29, 2007
I love Physics!

You have to love a subject to earn a Ph.D. in it, but after many years of working on projects that took me far afield from my college major, I had begun to forget how much I love that subject matter.

But then Facts On File offered me the chance to write Physics: Decade by Decade (Twentieth-Century Science). The book tells the story of how Physics developed in the twentieth century. I learned more about the field researching it than I did in all my years of formal education.

My favorite parts of the book are the "Scientist of the Decade" sidebars. I'm adapting those for a college colloquium talk. At my Physics: Decade by Decade web pages, you can learn more about the book and the colloquium, read excerpts, and discover updates, including a list of 21st century winners of the Nobel Prize for Physics and the dates of deaths of scientists who are named in the book who died after the book went to press.

This book is intended for high school, college, and public library reference collections, but I included a strong narrative for people who like to pick up a good science history.

No matter how you choose to use it, I hope you will enjoy it.  Who knows, you may fall in love with Physics, too!
 
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