All News - Page 927 of 1738 - Good News Network
Home Blog Page 927

Watch This Man Save a Dog From Rising Elevator With Seconds to Spare

ben-duke-rescues-dog-youtube

Ben Duke only had seconds to react when he found a terrified terrier with its leash caught in an elevator.

Duke, who is the General Manager at the Roadside Inn in Greenville, South Carolina exited a storage closet to find Boo Boo the dog in real trouble.

Boo Boo’s owner had stepped onto the elevator thinking that his dog was close behind – but he was not close enough.

VIDEOCrowd Cheers as Girl Saves Unsuspecting Fan from Fast Fly Ball

As the elevator started to go, security footage captured Ben’s quick reflexes as he scoops the pooch up and tears the leash away from its collar with his bare hands.

The owner, who had been sweating bullets as he came back downstairs started crying tears of gratitude when he saw Boo Boo was safe.

(WATCH the video below)

 

Click To Share This Nerve-Wracking Video With Your Friends

How This Unassuming Twitter Photo Saved the Life of a Man and His Dog

#DroneShot #HurricaneMatthew #HopeMills #Fayetteville

A photo posted by Director ???????????????? (@imsofirst) on

 

This videographer was just taking his drone for a spin over the flooding and damage from Hurricane Matthew – he wasn’t expecting to save any lives.

But after he posted a photo of a suburban neighborhood in Hope Mills, North Carolina almost entirely underwater on Twitter, he received an incredible message.

Aspiring photographer Quavas Hart was contacted by a man in Austin, Texas saying that the flooded house in the photo was where his twin brother Chris Williams was trapped inside with his elderly dog Lana.

WATCH4-Person Human Chain Saves Woman From Raging Floodwaters

Chris had already tried to call 911 twenty or thirty times with no success because of the overwhelming amount of rescue help needed after the storm.

Hart was about to prep his boat for rescue when he noticed a Federal Emergency Management Agency boat nearby. He used his drone to get their attention before saying that they should follow the robot to where a man was trapped in his home.

The million to one chance that Hart would publish the specific photo of Chris’s house is a miracle that the three will never forget.

RELATEDMan Makes 108 Pounds of BBQ For Displaced Baton Rouge Flood Victims

As Craig wrote on the GoFundMe page for his brother, “He later told me he didn’t realize how being trapped had affected him until he reached shore and felt that relief I guess only soldiers feel when they get back from a mission with all their friends alive.”

(WATCH the rescue below starting at 3:18)

 

Spread The Good News: Click To Share

Man Uses Clever Way of Checking Up on His Grandma After the Hurricane

claire-olson-youtube

This 87-year-old grandma wasn’t expecting a pizza delivery boy to show up at her door– nor was she expecting him to also be delivering a message from her grandson.

Claire Olsen’s phone lines were disconnected following the wake of Hurricane Matthew, making it impossible for her to contact friends and family to let them know she was okay. Her worried grandson in Omaha, Nebraska, however, got tired of waiting and sent someone to check on her.

After calling the local Papa John’s in Palm Coast, Florida, he ordered a pepperoni pizza to be delivered to his grandmother’s house with instructions to call his phone number once they arrived.

MOREMan Makes 108 Pounds of BBQ For Displaced Baton Rouge Flood Victims

When Lance Tyler dialed the number in front of Claire’s house, her grandson answered in a panic, still worried about the senior. Though Claire was initially confused about the unsolicited pie, her face lit up at the sound of her relative’s voice.

Lance may have received an extremely hefty tip for his good deed, but he said the whole experience was far more inspiring than any gratuity.

(WATCH the video below)

 

Pie It Forward: Click To Share

Watch These Instructors Teach Kids in Hospice How to Dance

dancing-youth-dancin-power

The younger patients of children’s hospitals might have a hard time keeping their spirits up during treatment, but this organization is showing that all it takes is a little dancing.

Dancin Power is a nonprofit organization that gives free dance lessons to children in hospice care. Since their debut in 2006, instructors have been inspiring sick kids to find joy and healing through dance.

The teachers are trained to customize their lessons for whatever disabilities the children may have. Whether they’re wheelchair-bound, or need to stay in sterilized environments, Dancin Power volunteers are ready to accommodate any hinderance.

RELATEDDad Builds Halloween Costumes Around Wheelchairs as a Nonprofit

The dancing doesn’t just give the youth joy during their illness – it also gives them a chance to exercise and have fun.

“Every day we learn so much from our kids, they are so resilient and strong even when facing challenging times,” Dancin Power said on their Facebook. “We are grateful to be a positive part of their lives during those hard times. We hope that you too can find strength and resilience when facing hard times!”

(WATCH the video below)

 

Shimmy This Story Over To Your Friends: Click To Share – Photo by Dancin Power

Airbnb Hosts Are Opening Their Doors to Hurricane Evacuees

free-airbnb-hurricane-matthew-airbnb

Though thousands of families in the southeastern United States are fleeing their homes because of Hurricane Matthew’s devastation, thousands more homes are opening their doors to let them in.

Thanks to Airbnb’s Disaster Response Program, hosts nearby the danger zone have been emailed requests to nullify their fees for hurricane evacuees – and many are rising to the occasion.

The program started in October 2012 following the destruction of Hurricane Sandy on the East coast because of one host in Brooklyn offering his home up for free. Over 1,000 other New Yorkers followed his example and welcomed victims and families into their own homes.

Through collaboration with the Federal Emergency Management Agency, Airbnb has been educating hosts on proper response and procedure following natural disasters.

RELATED‘Airbnb’ for Refugees Matches Migrants To Europeans Volunteering Homes

The program also helps on-site disaster relief volunteers find housing near their target areas.

“Throughout my career, I’ve seen the terrible devastation that disasters can inflict, but I’ve also seen the powerful ways that communities come together to respond and recover,” says Kellie Bentz, Airbnb’s Head of Global Disaster Relief. “At Airbnb we have a real opportunity to use our disaster response program to help these communities in a time of need. We look forward to collaborating more with agencies like FEMA around the world.”

Spread The Good News: Click To Share

Hilton Offers Paid Parental Leave For Housekeepers And Cooks, Too

hilton-hotel-hilton

Hilton Worldwide’s industry-leading parental leave policies now cover both hourly and salaried Team Members at Hilton’s owned and managed properties, as well as the company’s corporate offices. The new policies represent the best parental leave benefits offered by any major global hospitality company in the United States and Puerto Rico.

The benefits available to Team Members at owned and managed hotels and corporate offices with one year of service or greater include:

  • All new parents – including fathers and adoptive parents – receive two weeks of fully paid parental leave.
  • New mothers who give birth receive an additional eight weeks of maternity leave, for a total of 10 weeks of fully paid leave.

Hilton remains committed to creating an environment that supports balance between work and family for its Team Members across all areas of the company. Hilton’s hourly Team Members in the U.S., who account for approximately 75 percent of the company’s U.S. workforce, will be covered under these new parental leave policies.

RELATED$70K Minimum Wage: CEO Takes Huge Pay Cut to Raise Pay For Loyal Workers

The newly-implemented parental leave policies are just one example of Hilton’s commitment to offering benefits that provide greater personal and professional flexibility to Team Members. In 2015, Hilton announced a new GED Assistance program to help Team Members in the U.S. earn their high school equivalency. In addition, the company introduced 10-day advanced scheduling for hourly Team Members and continued to expand remote workforce opportunities.

“When our Team Members feel great about where they work, it is reflected in the exceptional experience that they provide to our guests,” said Matt Schuyler, Chief Human Resources Officer, Hilton Worldwide. “We are proud to continue driving significant change in our industry by introducing parental leave policies that reflect our strong support for all Hilton Team Members and their families.”

(Source: Hilton)

Multiply The Good: Click To SharePhoto by Hilton

Free Short Stories Offered at Train Station Vending Machines

short-story-vending-machines-youtube

Though smart phones have taken over the attention spans of most of the population, the people of France have shown that they prefer a bit of light reading instead.

Over 32 short story vending machines have started spreading around the European country, attracting tourists and locals alike.

Installed in train stations from Grenoble to Paris, the little metal machines have ‘1’, ‘3’, and ‘5’, minute buttons for how many minutes it would take to read the given story. Once selected, a long thick strip of paper is printed out the front featuring a story for the reader. There are over 5,000 stories that are anonymously submitted and downloaded into the machines, including romance, horror, comedy, and mystery – and they’re all for free.

Short Edition, the publishing company responsible for the machines, aren’t surprised by their brain child’s success.

WATCHAfghan Teacher Pedals Books to Remote Villages on Bicycle

“The written word isn’t dead,” Christophe Sibieude, the co-founder of Short Édition, told the New Yorker earlier this year. “Smartphones have blurred the limits between our professional life and our distractions. The paper format provides a break from omnipresent screens. People may not have reacted so strongly to our vending machines six years ago, when smartphones hadn’t become essential to all parts of our lives yet.”

(WATCH the video below)

 

Let Your Friends Read This Sweet Story: Click To Share

Diabetic Boy Saves Pennies for 4 Years, Finally Gets Beloved Service Dog

aiden-heath-jenni-heath

4 years ago, Aiden Heath discovered that he had type 1 diabetes – and that he could get a service dog to help him manage it.

Even though certified service dogs usually cost up to $15,000, Aiden’s mom Jenni told him to start saving his pennies and he would be there in no time.

4 years later in April 2016, the 8-year-old boy had saved $6,000 in change. His inspiring story, however got him national coverage. Before he knew it, strangers had crowdfunded another $20,000 for his dream dog.

That’s when they adopted Angel, a chocolate Labrador who had passed all of her service tests.

MOREBeloved Town Dog Has Made 4-Mile Trek Every Day For 10 Years Just to Visit Neighbors

With Angel by Aiden’s side, she will be able to smell his blood sugar drop thirty minutes before a meter would ever register the change – she is also the best friend a boy could ask for.

“Aiden looked at me and said, ‘This is a dream,’” Jenni told WABC. “We have been so amazed by the outpouring of support,” Jenni Heath said. “He is feeling the love. … There are no words.”

(WATCH the video below)

 

Click To Share This Pawesome Story With Your Friends – Photo by Jenni Heath

Dads Now Have Equal Access to Baby Facilities in Federal Buildings

barack-obama-and-baby-white-house

Thanks to a new bill signed by United States President Barack Obama on October 7th, all male and female restrooms in government buildings must have baby-changing facilities.

Since it was proposed in April by Rep. David Cicilline (D-R.I.) in April, the bill received enthusiastic bipartisan support.

MOREFather’s Letter to Macy’s CEO Leads to Diaper Changing Table in Men’s Room

“Government needs to do more to ensure that public buildings are family-friendly. No mom or dad should ever have to worry about finding a safe, sanitary place to change their baby ― least of all in a federal building that’s paid for by taxpayers,” Cicilline stated on his website.

Even though the legislation is yet to extend to public restrooms, it is still a big step forward for parents of both genders.

Don’t Be A Party Pooper: Click To Share With Your Friends – Photo by the White House

Critically Endangered Black Rhinos Welcome Two Newborn Calves

White Rhino - Facebook

United Kingdom conservationists are jumping for joy over the births of two critically endangered newborn black rhinos.

The mothers of the calves, Grumeti and Zawadi, were both bred in captivity at the Aspinall Foundation’s Port Lympne wildlife park. In 2012, they were moved from the center in Kent, England, to Mount Kilimanjoro in Tanzania where they mated with another offspring of the park named Jamie.

Grumeti’s baby has been fondly dubbed Mobo while Zawadi’s child is awaiting its own proper name.

Damian Aspinall, chairman of The Aspinall Foundation said: “Mobo’s birth illustrates perfectly our passionate belief in the true role of modern conservation as being committed to the survival of threatened species in their natural territories. We believe this is preferable, wherever possible, to  simply keeping them caged in an existence which does little for prospects of long term survival.”

WATCHRare Rhino Population Increases by 1% With One Sweet Birth

Altogether, The Aspinall Foundation has successfully released eight black rhino back into the wild, as well as more than 60 gorillas and scores of other smaller primates including lemurs, langur and gibbons. Further releases are planned as part of The Aspinall Foundations vision to re-stock the wild with endangered species.

Click To Share The Good News With Your Friend

13-Year-old Receives Google Science Prize for Ingenious Medical Solution

13-year-old-google-prize-winner-released

This 13-year-old just revolutionized an age-old problem in medicine using a remarkably simple method.

Anushka Naiknaware from Beaverton, Oregon became one of the top eight finalists of an international Google-run science competition after she invented bandages that notify doctors when they needed to be changed.

Using graphene nanoparticles and ink, the bandages start to display fractal patterns when they detect that moisture levels have dropped. Bandages need to be dampened in order to properly heal wounds, but changing bandages too often can be harmful to an injury. This way, medical officials no longer have to rely on guesswork.

RELATEDTeenage Girl Turns Plastic Trash Into Million-Dollar Biofuel

Since she won the Lego Education Builder award for engineering, the 7th grader from Stoller Middle School was given a $15,000 scholarship, a free vacation to the Lego World Headquarters in Denmark with her parents, and a mentorship with Lego executives for entrepreneurship.

Anushka, who became the youngest recipient of the prize, plans on getting her invention patented and approved by the Food and Drug Administration so it can be put to use in hospitals worldwide.

Spread The Good News: Click To Share – Photo by the Naiknaware family

Rerelease of Rare Salvadore Dalí Cookbook is as Bizarre as it is Tasty

salvador-dali-cookbook-amazon

If you’re a fan of art, surrealism, cooking, or all three, then this bizarrely picturesque cookbook is for you.

Since Salvador Dalí’s Le Diners de Gala was published in 1973, only 400 copies are thought to remain after the first and final printing. Now Taschen, a German publishing company, is re-releasing the cookbook in hardcover to the masses.

“Les Diners de Gala is uniquely devoted to the pleasures of taste…” Dalí once said of his book. “If you are a disciple of one of those calorie-counters who turn the joys of eating into a form of punishment, close this book at once; it is too lively, too aggressive, and far too impertinent for you.”

RELATEDVan Gogh Painting Recreated As Actual Bedroom to Rent on Airbnb

The 136 peculiar recipes that are compiled and illustrated into the manual are all based off of actual feasts that Salvador and his wife Gala would serve at parties. From toffee with pine cones, to crayfish mountains, the book is a masterpiece of dishes that stimulate the artistic eyes as well as the taste buds.

crayfish-salvador-dali-amazon

Don’t Melt From Excitement: Click To Share With Your Friends

Students Serenade Choir Teacher for the Last Minutes of Her Life

 

Mariana Walker didn’t have much time following her fight with cancer – but at least that time was made sweeter by her choir students.

Ms. Walker had been a choir teacher at Alvin Junior High School in Alvin, Texas for 17 years. Her students, after hearing about her release from hospice care, wanted to do something special as a thank you for her constant enthusiasm and encouragement.

The teens gathered outside of her house and sang a heartwarming rendition of “Ocean” by Hillsong United.

12 minutes after the kids left, Ms. Walker passed away.

RELATEDDying Man’s Last Wish Fulfilled 45 Minutes Before He Passes Away

“Mrs. Walker marched to a different beat,” Cindi Lee Cooper-Fields, who filmed the video, told ABC News. “She was artistic. She never wanted to be a teacher and taught for 17 years at Alvin Junior High School. Everybody deserved to have a teacher or a friend like this. She went out in style. She did it big she did it her way.”

Multiply The Good: Click To Share

Shimmering Leaves in Paris are Actually Tiny Wind Turbines

tree-turbines-new-wind

We already know how trees create oxygen, but what about creating energy as well?

A sustainability company known as New Wind is installing tree-shaped wind turbines all around the Place de la Concorde in Paris, France.

The biomimetic structures may not generate as much energy as conventionally-sized turbines, however the more attractive natural aesthetic will be able to harness the smaller currents throughout the city while also blending with urban environments.

RELATEDMan Creates ‘Shoes That Grow’ So Poor Kids Don’t Outgrow Them

The tiny spinning blades inside the “leaves” accumulate microelectricity from even the slightest breezes. Because of its sensitive design, each wind tree could generate anywhere from 15 street lamps worth of wattage to the power necessary for over 10,000 miles in an electric car

Biomimetic architecture is a practice that draws inspiration from nature’s effortless methods of survival. The engineer behind L’Arbre À Vent, Jérôme Michaud-Larivière, got the idea for his green project when he saw the leaves on the city trees moving even when there wasn’t any wind.

MOREColombians Are Building Houses Made of Wasted Plastic—Shaped Into Huge Lego Bricks

Since each tree will only cost about $29,000, Jérôme’s design is definitely a cheaper alternative to typical renewability projects.

(WATCH the video below)

 

Don’t Leaf This Story Alone: Click To Share – Photo by New Wind

Congress in Unanimous Vote Passes Bill of Rights for Sexual Assault Victims

congressional-chambers

In a sparkling show of bipartisanship, the House of Representatives and Congress passed the Sexual Assault Survivors’ Bill of Rights on Friday, October 7th.

The legislation emphasizes survivors’ free access to rape kits, which are key pieces of evidence necessary for a proper court case.

Because prosecution can be expensive and time-consuming procedures, survivors often put off taking charges to court until proper affairs and resources are in order.

RELATEDObama Quietly Signs Ban on Products Made by Children and Slaves

Yet thousands of survivors are charged money for the preservation of their rape kits or have found their rape kits destroyed by the state without their consent. Victims also report never being told their test results even after being examined.

Thanks to the new bill, however, patients will never again be charged fees for a rape kit’s preservation and will have the unalienable right of vetoing the state’s decision to destroy the evidence. Survivors will also be guaranteed notification of test results following examination.

MOREFormer Child Brides Win Case in Court: Zimbabwe Bans Child Marriage

“The uneven patchwork of laws across the country and the lack of substantive rights for sexual-assault survivors prevent them from having full access to the justice system,” California representative Mimi Walters said on the House floor. “Survivors of sexual assault have faced unspeakable trauma, and they should not face unnecessary barriers to justice.”

Spread The Good News: Click To Share

Watch Mama Dog Giving Rides to Orphaned Baby Opossums

dog-and-possums-facebook

These 7 baby opossums were in dire straits, but thanks to a loving pup named Pretinha and her owner Stephanie Maldonado, these tiny marsupials have found a new life.

Stephanie was called to her uncle’s house when his dog attacked and killed a mother possum in his backyard.

The critter’s now-orphaned babies – who hadn’t even opened their eyes yet – must have been only a few days old when they were found strewn about the grass.

Stephanie took the helpless creatures home where she nursed them back to health – with the help of Pretinha, of course.

WATCHBaby Deer Refused To Leave Side of Man Who Rescued It

Since baby marsupials usually stay in their mother’s pouch for the first few weeks after birth, Stephanie wasn’t sure that they could survive without the motherly attention they needed.

Pretinha, however, rose to the maternal role beautifully.

The canine regularly snuggles with her adoptive children, licks them clean after a day’s romp, and even gives them piggy-back rides when they go out for walks.

Even though Pretinha makes a fabulous mother, Stephanie hopes to release the opossums back into the wild once they’re healthy and older.

(WATCH the video below)

 

Click To Share This Pawesome Story With Your Friends

This is Not a Drill: Rolling Stones Release New Snippet From Upcoming Album

blue-lonesome-youtube

It’s been 11 years since we’ve been able to listen to fresh Rolling Stones tunes, but now in two months, that will change.

The iconic British rock and roll group released a minute long sneak-peek of the first single off of their upcoming album Blue & Lonesome.

It’s the first studio album that the band has released since Bigger Bang was published in September 2005.

MORERolling Stones Play First Concert In Cuba, and it’s Free For The People

The new LP will be available to fans on December 2nd, but in the meantime, take a listen to the bluesy and beautiful snippet of “Just Your Fool”.

(LISTEN to the video below)

 

Have Some Sympathy For Your Friends: Click To Share

She Shattered Glass Ceiling At 36,000 Feet, Becoming Airline Captain at 26

kate-mcwilliams-youtube

A British woman recently given a significant promotion in the world of aviation has shown that the glass ceiling doesn’t reach 39,000 feet.

26-year-old Kate McWilliams has recently become one of the youngest commercial airline captains in the world and the youngest female captain – ever.

“Personally, I don’t think my age matters,” Kate told the Guardian. “I’ve been through the same training and passed the same command course as every other captain, so I’ve proven myself capable regardless of my age. I do now get asked how old I am on an almost daily basis, which didn’t used to happen when I was a first officer.”

“It clearly demonstrates to other young women that it is possible to succeed as a pilot in commercial aviation,” Julie Westhrop of the International Society of Women Airline Pilots

The WBPA states that out of the 130,000 pilots worldwide, only 4,000 are women. That’s only 3.1%. Furthermore, only a speculated 450 are captains.

Smaller figures for female employment in aeronautics elicits a greater appreciation for Kate’s achievements, but their numbers should also encourage change in the industry.

CHECK OUT: First Native American Woman Federal Judge

EasyJet has noted this, and announced plans to encourage women in aviation.

“Currently 5% of the over 2,600 pilots employed by easyJet are female and women make up 5-6% of easyJet’s new entrant pilots. We plan to double the proportion of female new entrants to 12% over the next two years.”

Kate’s job is to captain commercial airlines – but in getting herself where she is now, she has a new purpose; namely, to serve as one of the few role models for young aspiring female pilots.

(WATCH the video below)

 

Fly This Story Over To Your Friends: Click To Share

Smartphone Microscope Will Let Kids Easily Explore Microbiology

microbes-cc-niaid

A new 3-D printed, easily assembled smartphone microscope developed at Stanford University turns microbiology into game time. The device allows kids to play games or make more serious observations with miniature light-seeking microbes called Euglena.

“Many subject areas like engineering or programming have neat toys that get kids into it, but microbiology does not have that to the same degree,” said Ingmar Riedel-Kruse, an assistant professor of bioengineering. “The initial idea for this project was to play games with living cells on your phone. And then it developed much beyond that to enable self-driven inquiry, measurement and building your own instrument.”

Riedel-Kruse named his device the LudusScope after the Latin word “Ludus,” which means “play,” “game” or “elementary school.” He and first author Honesty Kim, a graduate student in Riedel-Kruse’s lab, are set to publish details of the LudusScope in PLOS ONE on Oct. 5.

MOREThis Cheap, Portable Solar Panel Will Be the iPad of Renewables

The LudusScope consists of a platform for the microscope slide where the Euglena swim freely, surrounded by four LEDs. Kids can influence the swimming direction of these light-responsive microbes with a joystick that activates the LEDs.

Above the platform, a smartphone holder positions the phone’s camera over a microscope eyepiece, providing a view of the cells below.

On the phone, children can run a variety of software that overlay on top of the image of the cells. One looks like the 1980s video game Pac-Man, with a maze containing small white dots. Kids can select one cell to track, then use the LED lights to control which direction the cell swims in an attempt to guide it around the maze and collect the dots. Another game looks like a soccer stadium. Kids earn points by guiding the Euglena through the goal posts.

RELATEDDevice Can Repel Sharks By Creating an Electric Field Around Wearer

Other non-game applications provide microscope scale-bars, real-time displays of swimming speed or zoomed-in views of individual cells. These let kids collect data on Euglena behavior, swimming speed and natural biological variability. Riedel-Kruse encourages teachers to have students model the behaviors they see using a simple programming application called Scratch, which many kids already learn in school.

Each of the elements, from the plastic microscope to the chamber that holds the Euglena, is something youngsters can build themselves from simple, easily available parts.

The project began as part of a Stanford bioengineering class Riedel-Kruse taught, with much more complex parts. But he wondered if the elements could be simplified for younger learners.

CHECK OUT: Scientists Use Ultrasound to ‘Jump Start’ Coma Patient’s Brain

“We wondered if we could make it so easy to replicate that even middle-schoolers could build it,” he said.

In its current iteration, a teacher who wanted to use the device in class could start with the open-source 3D printing patterns and software included as part of the paper. An increasing number of schools have 3D printers, but those that don’t can send the plans to a professional printer. That produces pieces to construct the stage that holds a microscopic slide and a holder for the microscope eyepiece and smartphone.

For the joystick controller, students would need to wire a small circuit out of common electronics parts to receive signals from the joystick and transmit them to the LEDs.

MOREParaplegics Regaining Muscle Control Thanks to Virtual Reality Therapy

Euglena are already commonly used in classrooms and they can be purchased through biological supply companies. For the game, Euglena swim within a chamber made by adhering strips of double-sided tape to the slide and to the cover slip.

The act of building, observing, interacting and modeling the cells fits easily within the new science learning guidelines emphasized by the Next Generation Science Standards being adopted by many schools, Riedel-Kruse said.

The real experts on what makes for a fun game are the kids who Riedel-Kruse hopes might one day use the LudusScope. To test it out, his team took the scope to a walk-by science event and also invited students and teachers to the lab.

Science teachers and high-school students who had a chance to interact with the LudusScope saw potential for education, although Riedel-Kruse said they valued the game aspect less than other properties of the LudusScope.

RELATEDSuperMeat Promises Real Meat With No Harm To Any Animals

“I thought the interactive cell stimulation and the resulting games was the coolest thing but the teachers and students didn’t necessarily agree,” Riedel-Kruse said. “What they were more excited about is the more basic things like the ability to build your own instrument, that multiple people can see the screen at the same time and that you can select and track individual cells.”

Riedel-Kruse is continuing to update the LudusScope with input from teachers and students. He has received a seed grant to collaborate with an educational game company to carry out more user studies and to develop a science kit. He expects that kit could be available for purchase in over a year.

(Source: Stanford University)

Spread The Cool News: Click To SharePhoto by NIAID, CC license 

These 6 Sustainability Projects Show the Future Isn’t Looking So Dismal

Melbourne Australia trees CC DoNotLick

It is rare to hear environmental scientists sounding positive about the future. But that’s exactly what is happening now with an international group of researchers. Over the past two years, they have been gathering examples of positive initiatives of various kinds from communities around the world—leading them to believe the future will be significantly better and more sustainable.

The researchers have analyzed 100 of the more than 500 projects that have been submitted for review to their website, Good Anthropocene. As a result, they have identified some of the overarching trends in community initiatives that they believe will play a role in lifting the planet and its people.

CHECK OUT: Ex-NASA Engineer to Plant One Billion Trees a Year Using Drones

The researchers pulled out six main overarching themes from the projects that were submitted. They are:

Agroecology – these projects generally adopt social-ecological approaches to enhancing food-producing landscapes. One example is the Satoyama Initiative in Japan where urban residents are working with rural people to revive underused rural lands through farm stays and volunteer work along with offering financial support.

Green Urbanism – these are projects that focus on improving the liveability of urban areas. New York City’s Highline Park, where native species have been planted on abandoned railway lines to create urban spaces where art, education and recreation intersect and are accessible to all.

RELATED: Costa Rica Has Been Powered Only By Renewable Energy For 122 Days

Future Knowledge – these are projects which foster new knowledge and education which can be used to transform societies. One example is Greenmatter, a program in South Africa to provide graduate-level skills for biodiversity conservation.

Urban Transformation – these projects work to create new types of social-ecological interactions around urban space. One example is the Sukhomajri village in the Himalaya’s where the community became well-known in the 1980s for coming together to stop Sukhna Lake from silting up as well as for harvesting rainwater, and in the process transforming their village.

Fair Futures – these projects aim to create opportunities for more equitable decision making. One example is City of the Future Lüneburg 2030+ – a project that aims to envision the future city of Lüneburg, Germany in a way that it turns into more sustainable, livable and fair place. The project has been jointly developed by the sustainability oriented University of Leuphana, the local government of the Hanseatic City of Lüneburg, local NGOs and business as well as citizens.

POPULARCalifornia Breaks Solar Record, Generates Enough Electricity for 6 Million Homes

Sustainable Futures – these are social movements to build more just and sustainable futures. One example is the US based Farm Hack project that was founded in 2010 by farmers and organizers who use the internet to share new ideas about food production and innovative tools to increase the resilience of sustainable agriculture and rural economies. One example is a bicycle powered root washer.

“I’m excited about this project because it represents a big shift for environmental scientists to start looking at things positively,” says Elena Bennett, who teaches at McGill’s School of the Environment and is the lead author on a paper on the subject published today. “As scientists, we tend to be very focussed on all the problems, so to look at examples of the sustainable solutions that people are coming up with – and to move towards asking, ‘what do the solutions have in common’ is a big change.”

MORENew York City Plants One Million Trees, Reaches Goal 2 Years Early

Bennett adds, “This is also a move away from the typical academic perspective of looking at things in a top-down way, where we the scientists determine all the definitions. We have encouraged people who are involved in the projects to define what makes a project ‘good’, partly because we didn’t want to be driven only by our Northern European or North American sensibilities. We wanted to see a variety of ideas about what people want from the future.”

The researchers invite those involved with sustainability projects to go to the Seeds of a Good Anthropocene website and contribute to the database of positive change.

(Source: McGill University)

Keep Things Green: Click To Share Photo by DoNotLick, CC