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1A1a Explain that scientists differ greatly in what phenomena they study and how they go about their work.

1A1a Explain that scientists differ greatly in what phenomena they study and how they go about their work

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Page 1: 1A1a Explain that scientists differ greatly in what phenomena they study and how they go about their work

1A1a Explain that scientists differ greatly in what phenomena they study and how

they go about their work.

Page 2: 1A1a Explain that scientists differ greatly in what phenomena they study and how they go about their work

Scientist - a person who uses observation, experimentation and theory to learn about a subject

Biologists, physicists, chemists, geologists and astronomers are all Scientists.

Page 3: 1A1a Explain that scientists differ greatly in what phenomena they study and how they go about their work

Isaac Newton1642-1727

Mathematician & Physicist

England

Page 4: 1A1a Explain that scientists differ greatly in what phenomena they study and how they go about their work

Rosalind Franklin1920 - 1958

Molecular BiologistDNA Research

England

Page 5: 1A1a Explain that scientists differ greatly in what phenomena they study and how they go about their work
Page 6: 1A1a Explain that scientists differ greatly in what phenomena they study and how they go about their work

Watson & Crick

James Watson & Francis Crick Co-Discovered

DNA/Geneticists 1953

England

Page 7: 1A1a Explain that scientists differ greatly in what phenomena they study and how they go about their work

Rachel CarsonScientist & Ecologist

1907 – 1964United States of

America

Page 8: 1A1a Explain that scientists differ greatly in what phenomena they study and how they go about their work
Page 9: 1A1a Explain that scientists differ greatly in what phenomena they study and how they go about their work

Leonardo Da Vinci1452 – 1519Anatomy & Astronomy

Italy

Page 10: 1A1a Explain that scientists differ greatly in what phenomena they study and how they go about their work

His illustrations, diagrams and observations are still considered as some of the greatest in the history of anatomy.

Page 11: 1A1a Explain that scientists differ greatly in what phenomena they study and how they go about their work

Benjamin Carson

1951 - PresentPediatric

NeurosurgeonUnited States of

America

Page 12: 1A1a Explain that scientists differ greatly in what phenomena they study and how they go about their work
Page 13: 1A1a Explain that scientists differ greatly in what phenomena they study and how they go about their work

George Washington

Carver1864 – 1943Agricultural

Scientist/InventorUnited States of America

Page 14: 1A1a Explain that scientists differ greatly in what phenomena they study and how they go about their work
Page 15: 1A1a Explain that scientists differ greatly in what phenomena they study and how they go about their work

Daniel Hale

Williams1856 – 1931

Physician First Successful

Open Heart Surgery

United States of America

Page 16: 1A1a Explain that scientists differ greatly in what phenomena they study and how they go about their work

Percy Lavon Julian

1899 – 1975Chemist/Medicine

United States of America

Page 17: 1A1a Explain that scientists differ greatly in what phenomena they study and how they go about their work

Marie CurieChemist

Discovered Radium & Polonium

1867-1934France

Page 18: 1A1a Explain that scientists differ greatly in what phenomena they study and how they go about their work

Jane Goodall1934 – PresentPrimatologist &

EnvironmentalistUnited States of America/Africa

Page 19: 1A1a Explain that scientists differ greatly in what phenomena they study and how they go about their work
Page 20: 1A1a Explain that scientists differ greatly in what phenomena they study and how they go about their work
Page 21: 1A1a Explain that scientists differ greatly in what phenomena they study and how they go about their work

Maydianne AndradeEvolutionary

BiologistJamaica & Canada

Page 22: 1A1a Explain that scientists differ greatly in what phenomena they study and how they go about their work
Page 23: 1A1a Explain that scientists differ greatly in what phenomena they study and how they go about their work

is an Associate Professor at

University of Toronto at Scarborough in Canada

Maydianne Andrade

Page 24: 1A1a Explain that scientists differ greatly in what phenomena they study and how they go about their work

Power Point presentation made by Ms. Smith

http://www.mos.org/leonardo/http://www.achievement.org/autodoc/printmember/car1int-1http://www.bbc.co.uk/history/historic_figures/newton_isaac.shtmlhttp://www.canadianarachnology.org/members/56.htmhttp://www.scienceupdate.com/spotlights/africanamerican.phphttp://www.cryptomundo.com/cryptozoo-news/good-all-bf/http://www.achievement.orghttp://www.blackinventor.com/pages/percyjulian.htmlhttp://www.gibbsmagazine.com/DrWilliams.htmhttp://www.rachelcarson.org/Biography.aspxhttp://www.nndb.com/people/843/000031750/http://tabacco.blog-city.com/jane_goodall_chimpanzee_lady_interview_on_scientific_folly_i_1.htm

http://money.cnn.com/magazines/fortune/fortune_archive/1992/08/10/76724/index.htmhttp://kachine.blogspot.com/2007/01/history-of-anatomy-leonardo-da-vinci.htmlhttp://www.chem.ucsb.edu/~kalju/chem110L/public/tutorial/intro.htmlhttp://www.accessexcellence.org/RC/AB/BC/Rosalind_Franklin.php

Page 25: 1A1a Explain that scientists differ greatly in what phenomena they study and how they go about their work

Benjamin Carson

1951 - PresentPediatric

NeurosurgeonUnited States of

America

Page 26: 1A1a Explain that scientists differ greatly in what phenomena they study and how they go about their work

Carson's father, a part-time preacher and factory worker, walked out when Ben was 8, leaving his mother, Sonya, to support Ben and his older brother, Curtis.

We lived in the inner city, single parent home, dire poverty, my mother only had a third grade education. I was perhaps the worst student you've ever seen. I thought I was really stupid. All my classmates and teachers agreed, and my nickname was "Dummy."

I did get into fights, I would

injure people. I tried to hit

my mother in the head with

a hammer. I would just

become irrational because

I would get so angry. It all

culminated one day when --

Page 27: 1A1a Explain that scientists differ greatly in what phenomena they study and how they go about their work

Another youngster angered me,

and I had a large camping knife

and I tried to stab him in the abdomen,

and fortunately he had on a large metal

belt buckle under his clothing and the

knife blade struck with such force that it

broke and he fled in terror. But, I was

more terrified as I recognized that I

was trying to kill somebody over nothing.

Fortunately I continued to hold onto that dream and, you know, when I was in the fifth grade, my mother put us on this reading program and said we had to read two books a piece from the Detroit Public Library and submit to her written book reports, which she couldn't read, but we didn't know that, and she'd put a little check mark on them and act like she was reading them.

Page 28: 1A1a Explain that scientists differ greatly in what phenomena they study and how they go about their work

As one of the world's leading pediatric neurosurgeons, Carson has developed and performed several surgical procedures for children suffering from brain tumors and chronic seizures.

''Reading was the transforming thing for me, '' he recalls. ''I read about inventors and engineers and men like Booker T. Washington and Abraham Lincoln who took themselves from nowhere, through reading, to become great men.'

I hated it for the first several weeks, but then all of a sudden, I started to enjoy it because we had no money, but between the covers of those books, I could go anyplace, I could be anybody, I could do anything. And, I began to learn how to use my imagination more because it doesn't really require a lot of imagination to watch television, but it does to read.

Page 29: 1A1a Explain that scientists differ greatly in what phenomena they study and how they go about their work