A great new book for young female scientists! This book is about Zoey Lyndon, a fourth grader who loves all things SCIENCE and is the new girl in town. She is black girl magic in this book, and this is a book you will LOVE reading.
Stranger Things
dirt enthusiast
Three Goblin Art
will byers stan first human second
Alisa U Zemlji Chuda
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH
tumblr dot com

blake kathryn

roma★
Show & Tell
Xuebing Du
Monterey Bay Aquarium
h
almost home
macklin celebrini has autism

Janaina Medeiros

Origami Around
we're not kids anymore.

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@growing-the-s
A great new book for young female scientists! This book is about Zoey Lyndon, a fourth grader who loves all things SCIENCE and is the new girl in town. She is black girl magic in this book, and this is a book you will LOVE reading.
Chapter 10.1 Fundamentals of Organic Chemistry - Part 3: Uses of organic molecules //Science Scribbles A-Level / IB Chemistry collection
(Part 1 | Part 2 | Other syllabus topics)
Hey everyone! I decided to draw a little infographic that visualizes the structure of the different classes of organic molecules, along with an example of their application!
This is also available to be printed on different products on my Redbubble account :D
🦋The Human Heart🦋
Chapter 10.1 Fundamentals of Organic Chemistry - Part 2: Classes and functional groups //Science Scribbles A-Level / IB Chemistry collection
(Other syllabus topics)
Hey guys! Here is part two of the first section of Organic Chemistry. Since these are very important but very hard to memorize, I’ve decided to try out something new - by creating a challenge!
Write these things over and over again until you know all of them without looking - then take a photo and tag it #orgchemchallenge! The first 20 people to do so will get a drawing from me, based on your URL + a promotion on this blog! I’ll keep an eye on the tag ;)
Chapter 10.1 Fundamentals of Organic Chemistry - Part 3: Uses of organic molecules //Science Scribbles A-Level / IB Chemistry collection
(Part 1 | Part 2 | Other syllabus topics)
Hey everyone! I decided to draw a little infographic that visualizes the structure of the different classes of organic molecules, along with an example of their application!
This is also available to be printed on different products on my Redbubble account :D
Chapter 1.6 - Limiting reagent // Science Scribbles A-Level / IB HL Chemistry collection
This was a lot harder to present using just drawings…hoping to redraw it one day!
That being said, I’m really really missing school (taking a gap year right now). Looking forward to uni in a year, whereever I end up! :)
By the way, I would be extremely grateful if you can inform me of any mistakes in my drawings, I don’t want to mislead people! Also thanks for the nice tags :)
Chapter 2.1 The Nuclear Atom - Part 2: Variations of an element // Science Scribbles A-Level / IB Chemistry collection
(Other syllabus topics)
Chapter 10.1 Fundamentals of Organic Chemistry - Part 1: Homologous series // Science Scribbles A-Level / IB Chemistry collection
(Other syllabus topics)
Hey guys! Sorry for the long wait, but here’s organic chemistry :D I’m going to focus on this chapter for now, since a lot of you requested it.
Also a bit personal: A couple days ago I received an offer from the University of Cambridge to study Education with Physical Natural Sciences! I’m really happy about the offer, but I’m having trouble figuring out how to pay the tuition. Any advice for scholarships / scholarship application will be dearly appreciated ^^
Genius in a beaker
When was Heisenberg born?
Oh, that’s very uncertain.
This one is funny 😂😂😂
Math can be found anywhere!
Strange Geometry
relatable math feeling #3
the joy you feel when you realize a squircle is the name of a legitimate, recognized mathematical shape
Probably you’ve heard Karlie’s speech about her coding scholarship. “I think it’s crucial that young women learn to code as early as possible, to ensure that we have a voice and a stake in what the world looks like”, she said at the famous promotional video.
Coding is an amazing skill for making some of your thoughts real. It’s the ultimate way for solving problems, implement algorithms and so on. As you may know, coding works as another way of communication, and so you need a language. But which one? Choosing the adequate one is sometimes difficult, always relevant. Wikipedia has a page itself describing the differences between C, C++, Python, Java, Pearl… Forums are a good source of information too.
For making easier the introduction to languages (maybe you don’t like how C++ works, Java syntaxis), I thought that a list of webs where you can code online could be useful.
Specifically for Web Development
My fave. I started when I was fifteen or sixteen learning on my own, and I was absolutely in love with Brackets. But here I found other software online:
Codepen: Minimal design, fast, with liveview that is automatically updated when you click them.
JsBin: This one allows you to code in the same page where it’s embedded into. Super recommended.
CSSDeck: Offers HTML, CSS, and JavaScript preprocessors, and is also connected with GitHub. In addition, you can record your process so it can be reviewed by others later.
Liveweave Updates the layout without reloading the page, and you can actually change the size of each individual cell, as well as downloading your code. It’s very similar to the others, and includes an interesting feature for autoformating and cleaning up the code. Many forums recommend it.
Miscellany
Ideone: Compiler and IDE that supports 40+ languages: Ada, assembler, C++, COBOL, Java, JavaScript, Pascal, Perl, PHP, Python, Ruby, SQL, and many more. Code can be download in the proper format to your computer system, and shared as well at a wide range of social networks. Super recommended.
CodeAnywhere: Super cool. Multiplatform (web, Android, iOS), 75 languages, customized playground, code beautify… It has different prices deppending on your needs. I recommend the $7 per user/mo., but they have a free version too.
Viper-7: PHP only.
Reply.it: Lots of languages, like JavaScript, Python, Ruby… visually, simple and with examples. It has a special service called “Teachers”, for making easier the taching of code.
Runcode: Compiling fragments of text in the language of your choice.
Pythonanywhere: A fully developed environment exclusively for Python.
We would be very happy to receive your opinions, and complete the list with many more sources. There are plenty of courses online about learning to code, so give a try!
Cholesterol synthesis in pencil
Did you know? MIT computer scientist Margaret Hamilton wrote critical flight software that helped Apollo 11 land on the moon on this day in 1969.
Read her story.