How to Implement STEM Effectively
A viable approach to increasing STEM starts with empathy
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When
Elrey Borge "Jepp" Jeppesen began mapping terrain hazards, runway
layouts and route landmarks as one of the pioneer barnstorming pilots of
the 1920s and '30s, he stored his notes in his own personal navigation
device - a little black notebook.
He might not have envisioned a day when aeronautical charts would be available at the click of a button, updated instantly with the help of global positioning systems and wireless communications and accessed on pop-up cockpit displays.
But then, few people thought airplanes would ever fly.
For
years restricted by limited computer data storage and poor graphic
display, mapping has been transformed recently by innovations in
digital imagery and platforms.
In today's digital world, geospatial mapping can be combined with social media to help first responders in a natural disaster find the people and places in the greatest need, guide urban and rural planners in designing the best expansion of new utility services, or offer historians new insights into yesteryear's world-changing events.
The
uses for digital mapping seem to be reaching into all kinds of corners.
Consider these ideas being bandied about just in the last few months:
Meanwhile,
pilots of full-size aircraft are still putting together
wish-lists of tomorrow just as pilots in Jepp Jeppesen's day coveted the information in his
little black book.
Chief
among them is a way to integrate all the apps and platform gadgets for
routes, flight plans, weather and the like -- as AVweb blogger Paul
Bertorelli recently put it, an "all-in-one appliance." Cockpits are only so big, after all.
- AJ Plunkett is a veteran reporter and editor based in Virginia with more than 27 years of experience. As a reporter, she's gone from covering the oil industry and Navy in South Texas, to military and defense industries of Hampton Roads, to the budget battles fought in the halls of the Pentagon and Congress. She has followed stories to Saudi Arabia and Somalia, as well as across the United States.
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A viable approach to increasing STEM starts with empathy
Learning about innovation from the DIY solutions of hobbled citizens