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Elaine Chao furiously defended her husband Mitch McConnell in a shouting match with immigration protesters who confronted them as they left an event at Georgetown University

The Department of Transportation Secretary and the Senate Majority Leader were approached by students as they made their way to their car outside the Copley Formal Lounge on the university campus in Washington, DC on Tuesday

'Why are you separating families, huh? Why are you separating families?' one of the group asked the couple as they made their way to their car, referencing migrant parents detained away from their children at the US-Mexico border

'Why don't you leave my husband alone? Why don't you leave my husband alone?' Chao responded

Video courtesy Twitter user @Roberto62543651  One of the protesters also played an audio recording, published by ProPublica, in which children taken from their parents can be heard crying

As the demonstrators continued to question why McConnell was separating families, Chao shouted: 'He is not!'Raising her voice, she added: 'You leave him alone! You leave my husband alone!' Share this article Share 50 shares Chao and McConnell are whisked away in a black SUV while security guards keep the protesters away from the couple

'How does he sleep at night?' one of the protesters is heard shouting as the couple's car drives off

A 32-second clip of the encounter was shared online by a student called Roberto on Twitter on Tuesday has since attracted more than two million views

Roberto, a senior at Georgetown University, said he was returning from his internship at United We Dream when a friend texted him to say that McConnell and Chao were on campus

'My parents are Mexican immigrants and I was infuriated that a man who blocked the Dream Act and a Trump cabinet official were invited to my campus,' he wrote on Twitter

It prompted him and his friends to quickly head to the event, he said.He added: 'We asked why they were separating families and Elaine L

Chao started yelling at us to leave her husband alone.'My question is why they won't leave out families, friends and communities alone? As my friend said, 'how do you sleep at night?' 'And to be honest, I cannot fathom how these movers of racism, discrimination and hate sleep at night

'Cabinet officials like Elaine Chao might not like to hear it but she and her husband bear responsibility and we won't stop telling that truth everywhere they go

'It's time for Congress to defund the deportation force.'House Republicans are set to vote on Wednesday on a hard-fought immigration compromise between conservative and moderate GOP flanks, but the bill has lost any real chance for passage despite a public outcry over the crisis at the border

  The party's lawmakers are considering Plan B - passing legislation by week's end curbing the Trump administration's contentious separating of migrant families

   The children have been separated from their parents after illegal crossings, sparking public outrage over the spectacle of crying kids being held in makeshift camps

On Tuesday, a judge in California ordered border authorities to reunite separated families within 30 days

If the children are younger than five, they must be reunified within 14 days.U.S. District Judge Dana Sabraw in San Diego issued the order in a lawsuit by the American Civil Liberties Union

 The lawsuit involves a seven-year-old girl who was separated from her Congolese mother and a 14-year-old boy who was separated from his Brazilian mother

Sabraw also issued a nationwide injunction on future family separations, unless the parent is deemed unfit

More than 2,000 children have been separated from their parents in recent weeks and placed in government-contracted shelters

 President Donald Trump issued an executive order reversing his own family separation policy last week and said parents and children will instead be detained together, but around 2,300 children remain removed from relatives

On Monday, Trump expressed frustration at U.S. immigration laws and reiterated that people should be turned away at the border

 Democrats have accused him of wanting to circumvent the U.S. constitution's guarantee of due process for those accused of crimes

'We want a system where, when people come in illegally, they have to go out. And a nice simple system that works,' Trump said

Trump also lashed out at a Democratic congresswoman who had urged Americans to confront members of his inner circle in public places

Maxine Waters had told a crowd in her home state of California on Sunday that a Virginia restaurant's refusal to serve White House press secretary Sarah Sanders should be a model for resisting Trump

'If you see anybody from that cabinet in a restaurant, in a department store, at a gasoline station, you get out and you create a crowd,' Waters said

'And you push back on them. And you tell them they're not welcome anymore, anywhere

We've got to get the children connected to their parents.'Trump fired back, calling Waters 'an extraordinarily low IQ person

For more infomation >> McConnell's wife confronts angry crowd outside Georgetown University - 247 news - Duration: 5:49.

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University of Bristol open days - Duration: 1:02.

For more infomation >> University of Bristol open days - Duration: 1:02.

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Michigan State University Board of Trustees to meet Wednesday, June 27, 2018 - Duration: 0:23.

For more infomation >> Michigan State University Board of Trustees to meet Wednesday, June 27, 2018 - Duration: 0:23.

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Explore Mass Ave: University Stationery & The People's Republik - Duration: 5:01.

For more infomation >> Explore Mass Ave: University Stationery & The People's Republik - Duration: 5:01.

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Montana State University ranks #1 in state for graduate employability - Duration: 0:43.

For more infomation >> Montana State University ranks #1 in state for graduate employability - Duration: 0:43.

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LIGS University - Todd Wieland - Duration: 6:43.

For more infomation >> LIGS University - Todd Wieland - Duration: 6:43.

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Педофілія - це природна сексуальна орієнтація - Mirjam Heine - University of Würzburg - Duration: 13:31.

For more infomation >> Педофілія - це природна сексуальна орієнтація - Mirjam Heine - University of Würzburg - Duration: 13:31.

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Alex Cavalcante from McGill University talks about PLCC teacher supporting Project in China - Duration: 4:27.

my name is Alexandre Cavalcante and I'm a PhD student at

McGill University. So my specialization is actually mathematics and science

education and that's one of the reasons why I joined this project between

MITAS and TeachFuture.

So basically what we

want to do is bring together the research that we do at McGill and in

academic environments to the business environment so how to apply these ideas

to make a marketable product. how to make teachers improve their teaching

practices here in China but most importantly how to bring new ideas of

how to teach mathematics and science to the schools because one of the biggest

issues that we find is that it's hard to translate the research that we do in to

actually change in the schools. Because sometimes teachers they don't have

enough time or they don't have an opportunity to do professional

development and also researchers not necessarily, they don't necessarily think

about how to actually implement these new ideas because they are working on

the theoretical level not theoretical ideas.

So basically our partnership

consists, consists of two projects the first one is trial of PLCC which is a

professional learning community of coaches. So in research there's a term

called PLC which is professional learning community it's something very

widespread among researchers which means basically that teachers should learn

from their own peers on how to improve their teaching practices. So instead of

having a consultant or company coming all the time to teach the teachers to

train the teachers how to implement these practices,

teachers in their schools, they should be able to improve their own teaching style,

improve their teaching culture. So basically what we want to do is

implement this idea of professional learning community in the Chinese public

system and private schools as well.

So basically what we're gonna do it is

we're gonna train teachers with regards to the teaching practices and also we're

gonna train them on how to coach another teacher

so that they can, they can

develop that community and also improve future teachers.

So they won't be dependent on consultants or researchers coming all

the time.

And, of course we're gonna do that with the focus on mathematics and

science because science and mathematics they can,

these two subjects they have

specific aspects that are important to train and they're important to be aware

of. The second project is actually about creating opportunities for students and

teachers to implement what is called ambitious science teaching which is a

new approach to teaching science and also mathematics in a way. So what we're

gonna do is create a few projects implementing this idea of project-based

learning and through those projects we want to bring the idea of ambitious

science and how to teach science for the future which is in a way similar to the

values and the mission of the company TeachFuture.

Basically the idea of

ambitious science teaching is that instead of teaching for the content

instead of teaching for the learning of scientific formula or scientific

concepts we teach students on how to think as a scientist, how to develop the

skills and the competences of a scientist, so investigation

evidence-based explanations and also how to engage in the debate

the intellectual discussion.

So throughout this second semester, we're going to be developing

these two projects and I hope that we can implement these ideas that are being

developed among researchers in the actual classroom, in the actual teaching

practices here in China. Thank you

For more infomation >> Alex Cavalcante from McGill University talks about PLCC teacher supporting Project in China - Duration: 4:27.

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The Stockton University Research in Psychology Conference - Michael Smyer, Ph.D. - Duration: 37:13.

Our other panelists this afternoon is Dr. Mick Smyer

Mick actually taught for a

little while at Penn State and Rachel was one of Mick's students at Penn State

and Cheryl Kaus our retiring Dean of Social and Behavioral Sciences was also

one of Mick's students and Cheryl will hopefully be with us at some point today

she had to go home because her furnace was broken

normally in April you wouldn't worry much about that but climate change seems

to have changed that and she'll be back with us in a bit

Dr. Smyer after being at well before going to Penn State he earned his

undergraduate degree in psychology at Yale University and then he went on to

get a degree in Clinical and Social Psychology at Duke University after Penn State

he became the Vice President I just lost what I have he became the

Vice President of Research at Boston College not University Boston College big

difference he was there for a number of years head of research at that

university then he became the Provost at Bucknell University and he spent about

seven or eight years as Provost it sometimes seemed like 10 years he was

telling us earlier but it wasn't so bad he stepped down as Provost back into his

Psychology position and now he's changed kind of his encore careers studying how

climate change intersects with older adults but specifically how older adults

can be champions of sustainability and climate action

so first I want to thank

Dave and and his colleagues for having me here I'm reminded of a story of

Lyndon Johnson many years ago when he was President he had a dinner at the

White House and he was sitting at one end of the table and he had Bill Moyers

one of his assistants sitting at the other end and Bill was a Minister and he

asked Moyers to say grace before the meal Moyers started praying and Johnson

said speak up I can't hear you Moyer's looked up and said

I'm not talking to you as Dave said I work on a project called Gray In Green

Climate Action For An Aging World and the premise behind Gray In Green is very

simple there are two global patterns that are going on it's time to look at

the intersection of those two the first is we're an aging country in an aging

world about 60 million older adults in the US 60 and over right now projected

to be a hundred million by mid-century worldwide a billion right now sixty and

over two billion by mid-century three billion by the end of the century so

we're an aging country in an aging world aging as a growth field but we're also a

world that's struggling with climate change I don't need to tell this

audience a lot of the facts and figures 97% of climate scientists know that

climate change is real it's happening and if anything its effects are

accelerating much more quickly than our climate models had predicted but

interestingly enough most climate scientists haven't thought about the

connection between these two patterns for the last three years I've been

working on this project Gray In Green and when I talked to climate scientists I

pitched them about the importance of the intersection of population aging and

climate change and I get a one-word answer you know what that word is huh

now the first time I did that I thought oh this is not going well and then I

realized huh is science talk for that's not crazy I just never thought about it

because what I'm asking people to do is to think about older people not solely

as victims of climate change as Rachel focused on in her presentation

two-thirds of the mortality in Hurricane Sandy were people 65 and over but I'm

thinking about the other part of the older adults that is older adults not

only not solely as victims of climate change but as potential leaders of

climate action and that's the focus of my efforts in Gray In Green so what I

want to do today is to ask a simple question when it comes to climate change

how do we break our silence on climate change how do we break our habitat of

silence on climate change now to answer that question I turn to an important

Applied Behavioral Scientist Warren Buffett The Omen from Omaha who said

chains of habit are too light to be felt and to their until they're too

heavy to be broken if you remember nothing else from this part of the talk

just remember the word habit because we've gotten into some climate habits

and I'm going to show you some of the habits we have right here in your area

with some data these data come from a website called The Climate Advocacy Lab

anybody look at the Climate Advocacy Lab anybody know that website great it's a

great website free it provides a lot of information on climate issues and one of

the source of information is the Yale Program on Climate Change Communication

and what the Yale folks have done is they they have an app on the Climate

Advocacy Lab so that you can enter your zip code or your congressional district

and you can download public opinion data on a variety of climate issues down to

your congressional district or your county or your zip code so I said how

about Atlanta County New Jersey where Stockton is what do folks here think

about climate change you with me so far does it make sense

so what do we find we find that 73% of folks in this county let's see if I can

do this seventy-three percent of folks in this

county there we go seventy-three percent of folks in

Atlantic County know that climate change is happening this compares to 75 percent

in New Jersey so you're a little behind but not far and a little ahead of the

rest of the United States so almost 3/4 of the folks who live here

in Atlantic County know that something's going on and a little over half say yes

it's caused mostly by human activities but only half

know that most scientists think global warming is happening so about half of

the folks who live in this county don't know that 97 or 98 percent of climate

scientists attribute global warming to human activity

turns out that's a gateway belief once people know that degree of scientific

consensus they start to think differently themselves about climate

change on the other hand great level of trust of scientists in this community

Stockton's faculty are doing something right

now on the other hand when we ask what

what percentage discuss global warming at least occasionally it's only a third

discuss with their family members or friends global warming it's only a third

that compares to the United States figure about 35% so as a nation we know

something's going on but we don't talk about it does that sound familiar and it

turns out older adults rates are similar to these rates I asked the Yale

folks to analyze their data by generation they've never thought about

it they by the way were the first audience that I pitched my project to

they were the first ones who said huh and then they said but wait you know we

could analyze the data by generation and they've done that showing that the

boomers are as concerned but also as silent as the Silent Generation and the

Millennials on this topic so that's the habit avoidance Charles Duhigg has

talked summarized social science research on the development of habit and what he

suggests is that we have a cue that leads to a routine that leads to a

reward when it comes to climate issues here's how it works

the cue is let's talk about climate science or you see something on TV it

says the glaciers are melting we have droughts we have floods and what

do we do our routine is too big to worry about what

can one person do I'm not gonna think about it and the reward is my anxiety

decreases if I block it out I don't have to worry about it does that sound

familiar I'm a psychologist I can help you with

denial now psychology says any kind of habit

loop this is a figure from Angela Duckworth and her colleagues says well

we can do several things one we can change the appraisal cognitively or we

can change the situation and over the next few minutes what I'm going to show

you is what we've been doing with Gray In Green how do we help people

reappraise and act on the knowledge that they already have if almost 3/4's of your

fellow citizens in this county know that climate change is happening and over

half know it's human-caused but less than 1/3 are talking about it that's a great

opportunity you can move them from anxiety to action to habit on

climate change and the key from according to the National Academy of

Sciences is very simple the key is to make your message social short and

positive kind of like me social short and positive social in terms of focusing

on people or places that you care about short in terms of time frame don't talk

about your carbon footprint 10,000 years from now because we're not wired to

think that way and then positive focus on something that you can do social

short and positive now in Gray In Green we make an assumption that we're each on

a climate journey and we feel better when we know where we are in that

journey and what our next step is for example my journey started in 2005 why

2005 because I was born and raised in New Orleans and what happened in 2005

Hurricane Katrina right and I wasn't living in New Orleans at the time but it

doesn't matter if you were born and raised in New Orleans when Katrina hit

it was a punch to the gut it was a real heartbreak to see my

hometown flooding now if you think of Louisiana I don't know you probably

don't think of Louisiana but when you do this maybe the image that comes to mind

the boot right on a map you could identify that as Louisiana right that's

what I used to think my home state look like that's what I like to think my home

state looks like but in fact this is what Louisiana looks like and it looks

this way because the wetlands have been decimated through a combination of

natural and human causes there's a thing called the Mississippi River Gulf Outlet

MRGO and MRGO was a shortcut to get the shipping to the Gulf more quickly

turns out one of the byproducts one of the unintended consequences was that a

decimated wetlands and what do wetlands do they protect they weaken hurricanes

when they come ashore and protect the Gulf Coast

so my climate journey started in 2005 when Katrina hit and then it accelerated

a little over two years ago with the arrival of the best-lookin grandkids in

the world let's say that Gus and Bailey my twin grandsons who are now 2 and

wouldn't stand still for a picture like this and then accelerated again about

three months ago with the arrival of their cousin Teddy so what are these

kids have to do a climate change well for me now it's very simple I can

envision very easily what their climate will be like when they are as my

daughter says my age in 65 years so now it's no longer hypothetical I know that

the world I'm leaving to Bailey Gus and Teddy is not the world that I grew up in

and it gives me a great motivation to work now I'm lucky I work at Bucknell and

I've been able to for several years go to New Orleans on Katrina rebuilding

trips this is a group of Bucknell students I'm holding a piece of king

cake because it's Mardi Gras season we're doing

Katrina rebuild in the Lower Ninth Ward of New Orleans I'm lucky I was able to

act on my anxiety and do something positive but enough about me let's talk

about you going to ask you to do a short experiment if you have something to

write with this would be good if not you can just do this mentally you ready this

is the wake up part I'm going to make four simple requests of you you ready

for the first first picture a place any place in the world that has a special

meaning to you whoops picture a place any place in the world that has a

special meaning to you got that place in mind picture a place second picture that

place effected by extreme weather or climate change picture that place

effected by extreme weather or climate change you have that threat in mind

third picture that place in 40 to 50 years not how you think it'll be but how

you'd like it to be what your aspiration is for that place picture that place how

you'd like it to look in 40 to 50 years okay fourth and final request picture

something you can do now to work towards that vision you have 40 to 50 years from

now picture something you can do now to work towards that vision you have 40 to

50 years from now how many people here have a place they care about the rest of you

don't have a place well let me ask you a different way how many people don't have

a place you care about okay I've done this with hundreds of people I've only

had one person who said there's no place I care about and he's kind of a

curmudgeon so let's call him Art I said Art what do you mean he said well I

don't care about any place except where my kids are so we were your kids he said

San Francisco and Washington I said so you got two places

everybody's got a place they care about everybody knows what the threat is I've

done this with hundreds of people and everybody knows what they'd like it to

look like how many people said to themselves

I'd like it to look like just what it looks like now I'd like it to stay the

same yeah okay how many people said I'd like it to look like what it used to

look like 40 or 50 10 or 20 years ago okay that's really good usually older

people are the ones who say 10 or 20 years ago because we're living climate

memory but those are the two big answers either stay the same or go back rewind

the film a little bit but how about that fourth question something you can do now

to work towards that vision that you have how many people were stumped by

that question didn't know what to do with that okay I'm a clinical

psychologist if I just left you anxious that's good for business but not good

for climate action so remember I said that the key to climate communication is

social short and positive and the requests I just made of you are social

short but not quite positive yet social we focused on people in places you care

about short in terms of time frame I asked you to think about 40 to 50 years

but my experience with is that that last question what can you do about it

depending upon the audience somewhere between 50 to 80 percent of people are

stumped and that's where the next phase of Gray In Green comes in if I just

left you with that it wouldn't be good for climate action

so we developed a card sorting process called your climate journey and this is

when I do this in a workshop the whole thing takes about an hour and what I do

is I hand people a deck of cards climate cards and the first four cards

are the title card your climate journey but then we have three category cards

things I already do things I could do and no way things I either cannot or

will not do and I ask people to sort 30 climate actions into those three

categories things I already do things I could do and no way either I cannot or

will not do that now if I were to do this with you

individually it might take 10 15 minutes at the most I did it with Rachel over

coffee it took us less than that but she was

drinking caffeinated coffee but with those categories we do three things one

is we ask people to first focus on the no way pile and I make a promise to

people I'm not going to badger you I'm not

going to say do those things but I just asked them to compare with their

neighbors no way piles does anybody have exactly the same no way piles and it

turns out rarely do people have exactly the same things that are in there no way

piles why is that important psychologists would call this individual

differences I just say we're each on an individualized climate journey and

what's in my no way pile may be different from my spouses or my friends

or my co-workers then I turn to the things I already do pile and I have

people do two things first I have them count up the number of things they're

already doing there is a line of psychological research that suggests

that I look at my behavior and I figure out what my values are by counting up

the number of things I'm doing I find out gee I must care about this for

example there are 30 cards in the pile the number of things that people do in

workshops that I've done all over the country range from 3 to 23 it's pretty

interesting I haven't had anybody do more than 23 23 is a lot but by the time

that people have counted it up they realize but I must care about this I'm

doing a lot and then I have them turn over the cards I thought because we want

to track our carbon impact because of the impact of co2 on greenhouse gases so

on the back of each card is the carbon impact of each of those steps and I ask

people to find the one thing that they're doing that has the biggest

carbon impact and it's pretty interesting because pretty soon the

tables and the workshops get competitive and they want to get triple credit for

having hybrid cars if there are three at the

table they want three credits not just the one credit but the point is there's

a lot of peer interaction and peer education about the impact of different

activities by the time they're through with the things I already do pile but

then we get to the the middle pile the things I could do pile then I ask them

to do one thing pick one thing and move it from could do to will do as an 81

year old woman said to me recently you want me to move that from could do to

will do of course she then went on to say I'm

not going to do it she was a pip but with that one thing that they say

they will do then we move on to making them SMART our people familiar with

SMART goals specific measurable achievable relevant and time-bound

that's what we do in Gray In Green we try to give people the capacity develop

a SMART goal around their next step on their climate journey and the way we do

that is by a combination of behavioral economics and psychology we have a

climate commitment form in which we ask people to identify first of all what's

their next step for example if you said I had somebody tell me I'm going to

plant a tree I said great write that down into the on the form and then I

asked her what's the schedule went by when are you gonna plant that this was

last spring she said I'm going to plant it in the next two months I said why two

months she said because my grandkids are coming and I want them to plant it with

me great so she's got a goal she's got a timetable but before that I asked her

who are you gonna tell who's your buddy who's your accountability buddy she said

she was going to tell her husband could be a friend could be a spouse could be a

co-worker it turns out they're just telling one other person increases the

odds that you will carry out that activity just making that public

commitment and then the last part of the contract is kind of a fun part I asked

them to picture a person or an organization whose mission values and

goals they do not agree with got the picture and then how much money write

that down and then how much money they give to that person or organization

if they don't carry out the goal on the timetable that they've just set for

themselves yeah that nervous laughter is usually what we get for example I did a

workshop in State College Pennsylvania the home of the Pennsylvania State

University and one of the participants said he would give $50.00 to the Ohio

State University if he didn't carry out his goal on the timetable that he that

he set now it turns out when we do this 80 percent of the people who say I can

follow up with them actually carry through and complete their goal and

those of you who do intervention research know that an 80 percent success

rate is extremely high for this kind of simple intervention so that's the idea

behind Gray In Green social short and positive leveraging the growing resource

of older adults not solely as victims of climate change but as potential leaders

of climate action why focus on older adults because we have time and we have

talent and we have a sense of concern for future generations we also have

developed three other steps beyond the workshop itself first we have a train

the trainer's approach where I can train people in a webinar in a little under an

hour to actually run the workshops in their own circles of influence for

example right now we're doing some work with churches in Massachusetts I trained

one or two people from the church and they can run it in their own

congregation secondly we have a kids version of the of the card deck the only

problem with the kids version is that people steal them especially

grandparents they're very shifty so I have some but I will only show them to

you under my supervision we're we develop these for use in classrooms but

also with families it leads to really interesting discussions within a family

is this a family could do item is this something we already do as a family is

this in our no way pile as a family really interesting discussions

and this gets back to the habit of not talking about climate change by doing

the card deck you already have the conversation already set and finally

there's a website called Landtalk.org have people anybody here ever hear of

landtalk.org great it's a it's a website developed by a faculty member at

Stanford and one at Berkeley a biologist and an engineer and the premise behind

it is very simple trying to get people to upload interviews in which people

talk about their memory of places that they care about remember that first

question I asked you picture a place you care about landtalk.org gives you an

opportunity to record your climate memories of those places and the idea is

to get people to populate their website so that we we begin to have an archive

of places that people care about and what their climate concerns are about

them so this the premise behind Gray in Green is very simple our time is short

our time is short individually Laura Carstensen Psychologist at Stanford says

that somewhere in your early early to mid 50s your sense of time changes and

you begin to think about time left to live so for older adults that sense of

time urgency is actually something that we can leverage and use secondly the

climate crisis time is short if anything our models have been too conservative

climate change is happening it's real the Defense Department calls climate

change a strategic threat multiplier and if it's good enough for DOD it's good

enough for me so in the end older adults are a resource not only to be concerned

about as victims of climate change but also as potential leaders of climate

action so one of our themes is that their concern about future generations

can be leveraged to move them from anxiety to action to have it on climate

change so a healthy planet is your legacy it's my legacy it's our legacy

but it's time to pass it on so thank you for your attention and I'm open for

questions or comments the question is there are things we can do individually

but so much of our concern is caused by corporations or big organizations

what can we do to move them they worry about the bottom line so there are I

think there are two or three different strategies one is to apply the metrics

of business to the business of climate change there's a project called Risky

Business I don't know if you're familiar with that Risky Business was a project

is a project that was launched by a bipartisan group of business types Hank

Paulson former Secretary of the Treasury Michael Bloomberg

Tom Steyer so already you see it's got a range of political views all of them

coming from the business community and they did a very simple and smart thing

they said let's apply the business discipline of risk assessment and apply

that to climate change and it's impacts in two areas health impacts and economic

impacts by region of the US by region of the country they've put out a series and

they continue to put out a series of reports on the economic impact of

climate change by region both in terms of healthcare impact and economic impact

so one step is to use the resources already developed to make the business

case that responding to climate change makes good economic sense the other is

to use the power of investments or divestments for example a number of

universities are having conversations about divesting from fossil fuel or

unsustainable corporations and organizations so those are two of the

steps that you know you can use as an individual and of course the third is

to vote for individuals in the local regional state and federal offices who

acknowledge and understand that climate change is real is happening and we need

to respond to it Citizens Climate Lobby for example focuses on one issue carbon

tax but there are other issues there's now a bipartisan climate lobby that has

been developed in Washington one for one it has to have one Republican and one

Democrat as it expands so it's totally bipartisan so there's a growing

acknowledgement on The Hill but I think we have the power

as individual voters to say I'm going to vote that interest as well as the

economic interest your question about research and getting it out the other

thing I do in a workshop is if we were doing this in a workshop I'd also have

you sketch your answer it turns out that that's another way to get you deeply

engaged very quickly I developed this approach at the design school at

Stanford so it's a combination of psychology and human centered design it

turns out about two-thirds of our brain is wired to process either directly or

indirectly visual information but we lean heavily on the verbal right but by

sketching no matter how well you draw I quickly engage you now you asked a

question research funding operators are standing by now and viewers like you can

certainly contribute I have a couple of grants in my next prime what I'm working

on now is scaling this effort working with a couple of national organizations

who are very interested in taking the materials and the approach and

disseminating it through their large networks and we're trying to get

foundation and corporate funding to do that because I'm pretty I'm convinced

the approach gets people very quickly into the project and now I'm just

trying to scale the effort because me going around doing workshops doesn't

scale quickly enough how long have I been working on the project for about

three years I started with just a general idea I'm going to look at the

intersection of population aging and climate change and join the hundreds of

people who are doing that and once I talked to all six of them I decided that

gee okay but look here's the I'll just end with this it's climate change to me

is a lot like psychotherapy today what do I mean by that I'm a clinical

psychologist by training one of the things we know about psychotherapy is

that insight does not lead to behavior change you have to do more than just

having insight we have insight on climate the people right here in your

county three-fourths of them know climate change is real over half know

it's human caused and yet they're not changing the habit of

talking and moving on it so we have to it seems to me that yes we need ongoing

climate science I'm all for that but it seems to me the Behavioral Sciences

really need to step up and get engaged in moving people from anxiety to action

to habit and that's really important for psychologists and other behavioral

and social sciences to bring our expertise into this arena so again Dave

thanks for having me and thanks for your attention this afternoon

so today's the birthday of one of our faculty members who passed away way too young a

few years ago Nancy Ashton it's her birthday today I finally took

over her course on environmental psychology when I turned 60 and she was

gone and so many of the ways that I think about Environmental Psychology and

Sustainability is exactly what Mick just pointed out it's like our

interaction with our natural environment is not all that different from our models of

abnormal psychology where there's a mismatch between what our natural

environment needs and how we are behaving and you can actually take all

the different main great paradigms of the field of psychology and you can use

them to consider how to get people to change their behaviors with respect to

the natural environment Mick actually they finally came out with a new version

of the textbook for aging and mental health and it's just circumstance that

climate change was the last part of the last chapter we covered this week as the

book gets closed out Rachel is also an expert in terms of mental health and

mental illness we don't just use Mick's book in some of our classes but Rachel's

written a book entitled Surrounded By Madness about her family experience with

a mother with mental illness and an adoptive daughter and so they

both know an awful lot about the things that us in psychology are much more

familiar with mental health and mental illness and yet it it's their paradigms

that so much work with our understanding of the environment we in Psychology and

Gerontology wanted to thank Cheryl for her years as our Dean here at Stockton I

mentioned earlier that she was trained at Penn State in Human Development and

Family Studies under Mick and other colleagues at Penn State Dr Prochnow

was a fellow student of Cheryl's and Cheryl's been a really strong advocate

for all of our programs and Social and Behavioral Sciences but we're especially

grateful for her advocacy in Psych and Gerontology and for our Center on Aging

with her background in that field she's decided actually to retire very

soon before she came to us I guess after after Penn State she went directly to

SUNY Oswego one of the coldest places on the planet even though I know she likes

it warm you know that's one of those places where they have to have

underground tunnels to get between buildings or they put up ropes on the

path so that you don't get blown into the lake from the heavy the heavy winds

there but between Penn State and here at Stockton her time at Oswego she

I think she's quite proud of developing a program there at Oswego in Family and

Human Development and Family Studies you know taking after her mentors at Penn

State so on behalf of all of our colleagues in Psych and Gero thank you to

Cheryl for your hard work on our behalf she's she won't even come to the front

of the room so I'm not going to try hey Mick do you have something you want to

share with Cheryl I think he does we actually have a couple gifts for you

Cherly you mind coming up and dr. Gata Shelder are you somewheres nearby

I'm right here there you are

I'm great Cheryl I have a gift for you that I think I'm unique in the audience

and being able to give you I have a bound copy of your dissertation

I'm cleaning out my house yeah so am I congratulations

I'm Christine Gata Shelder current coordinator of the Gerontology Minor and

all of the faculty and the Gerontology Minor would like to give you a little

goodie so you can go shopping I've had the honor of getting to know Dean Kaus

over the years as an adjunct faculty member a visiting assistant professor of

psychology and then tenure track and I'd like to let everyone know something that

you may not know that in the spirit of lifespan development Dean Kaus to me and

many others has been a great mentor she has nurtured many of us to be where we

are today across the lifespan so for me I was the little adjunct that could

twelve years being an adjunct she nurtured and supported me being a full-time faculty

member for which I am very very grateful so from the Gerontology Minor faculty we

will miss you

so thank you all for coming and could you please give our

speakers another round of applause

For more infomation >> The Stockton University Research in Psychology Conference - Michael Smyer, Ph.D. - Duration: 37:13.

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University of Denver Campus Dig - Duration: 2:03.

- We have picked two spots within the parking lot that we're excited about.

- The main thing that we're doing is, we're teaching these students how to do archaeology.

- It's fantastic, because we get to learn about a lot of stuff like this in the classroom,

but it's really something that you have to learn hands-on.

- We knew that there were houses here, and we knew that this neighborhood was subdivided

in the late 1800's.

- Well we moved here when I was two, and we moved away when I was 12.

- With the new plans for the development of the university, we were brought in by Facilities

to talk about what they might reasonably expect to find out here.

- I wanna find the crown jewels of 2019 South Race, but I suspect we're gonna find broken

jars, and we're gonna find leftover, typical stuff that you would put in your cellar and

abandon when the house is sold and it's gonna be demolished.

- We're somewhere in the garage.

And I would say we're close to the south side.

- Something that's really special about historical archeology specifically, because if you have

a question, there might be someone that you can actually ask about it.

Unlike prehistoric, where you just kind of have to guess.

- We're gonna be able to talk about the mission of the university, and to teach people a little

bit more about what archaeology is.

And archaeology isn't dinosaurs, and it doesn't have to be King Tut.

It can be your own past of your own town.

- We thought it would be kind of fun to see what they were finding.

'Cause I didn't imagine they could find very much.

- We are doing history in a way that's not written down in the history books.

And we're doing history by looking at people's, the material record of people's lives.

For more infomation >> University of Denver Campus Dig - Duration: 2:03.

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Michigan State University won't have new president until at least June 2019 - Duration: 2:59.

For more infomation >> Michigan State University won't have new president until at least June 2019 - Duration: 2:59.

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How university is different - Duration: 3:48.

Hi, my name is Craig and welcome to this short video. Within this video we will

discuss the ways in which University may be different to other forms of education

you have been involved in.

Moving from Further Education to university can be

quite daunting. It may be the first time you've lived away from home,

but whichever your circumstances there's no need to worry because there's lots of

supportive and friendly staff to help you at university including Study Skills.

The main difference between further education and higher education is the

type of learning. From university students there is much more emphasis on

you taking individual control of your own learning experiences. Independent

learning is what sets university apart from other forms of education.

Another difference between further education and higher education is the amount of

control you have over your own learning. You will be able to develop your own

ideas and explore different topics within certain fields.

You will be required

to study within your own time, both inside and outside of lectures and

seminars, to expand your independent learning skills by organising and

planning your own schedule. Much of the work you will do will be outside of the

classroom. This is a direct comparison to having a full week of classes at sixth form or college.

The learning environments at university may also be much different

to what you are used to. The university learning environment is much more varied,

for example the University of Chester has different lecture theatres,

classrooms, and learning pods available to develop your knowledge and skills.

With the importance of independent learning at University, the place you may

become much more familiar with as a learning environment is the University

Library. While at university you will have the opportunity to meet lots of new

people from different backgrounds and also cultures who have a common interest

in the same discipline as you. This will enable you to expand your further

knowledge by meeting and interacting with new people

with new perspectives. The university also provides many platforms to

socialise and share ideas with your fellow students. The Student Union offers

a large variety of activities, societies, and opportunities to get involved with

new people at university. The city of Chester also has lots of opportunities

to offer. Chester has many shops and places to socialise while you study it also has

much ancient history which you may be interested in. Chester also has a famous

racecourse as well as the river to relax by.

This will provide you with lots of

activities and opportunities to join in and expand your experience here at the

University of Chester.

Study Skills can help you develop your skills while

stepping up to higher education as well as lots of other academic and maths based

skills. We have lots of support on our Moodle pages, you can come along to our

skills seminars, make use of our FeedForward service, or you can book a

one-to-one appointment with Maths or Study Skills Advisor.

Thank you for watching this short video.

We hope you've enjoyed watching these short videos and

that you found them helpful while preparing to start your journey as a

student at the University of Chester. Study Skills are here to support your

learning development throughout your time at University, so please do pay us a

visit when you arrive and we look forward to seeing you soon.

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