Can A Biology Graduate Really Become a Billion Dollar Copywriter? Discuss

I ought to admit that there was a particular point in my life wherein I didn’t know what career path to take. As a biology graduate, it wasn’t straightforward for me to find a job that is related to my interests: media. The frustration was obtaining deeper as I met a high school friend who was lucky sufficient to get a post in a top advertising company in a main city. After exchanging pleasantries when we bumped into every other, he invited me over for a cup of coffee. By no means did i anticipate that the conversation that would transpire after which would further torture me.

As a copywriter for a leading advertising firm, he started telling me that he had worked with numerous models and celebrities, that he had met this person and that they had spent days for the commercial shoots, that he had dinner with this sports personality after a pictorial he had gone to this location for a photo shoot with this and with that…In other words, he had all the bragging rights which left me feeling, well, so insignificant!

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Stanford Media X Ten Innovation Trends: Robotics, Aging, Clean Tech, Brain, Gaming, Science and More

Copyright (c) 2007 SharpBrains

The objective of Stanford University Media X is to foster collaborations between business and academia. The 5th Annual Media X Conference on Research, Collaboration, Innovation and Productivity, which I was fortunate to attend, served its purpose well. Let me share the 10 Key Trends that every enterprise executive and innovator should be paying attention to:

1) Personal Robotics is poised to explode soon (predicted by Paul Saffo). It typically takes 20 years science fundamental science exists until applications reach inflection point and take the world by storm-and we are about to see that occur. Some indicators: DARPA sponsored first robotics attempts in mid-80s, and now we have applications such as the Roomba vacuum-cleaner, and a fully automated racing car. Prof. Kenneth Salisbury showed how there are robots nowadays with fantastic motor skills-i.e., they can unload a dishwasher!

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Robots: America?s Answer to Dwindling Math Scores

I. Introduction

“You can’t achieve what you can’t conceive.”

-Author unknown

The United States of America may lose its supremacy as a superpower if our children of today can’t grasp the technologies of tomorrow. The trend has already been set. High-level engineering jobs are currently being outsourced to other nations, not only because of cheaper costs, but inadequacies of filling them in the states. Let’s face it; there are not too many Americans who strive to have a doctrine in Electrical Engineering to do research and development. To other countries like Korea, many students see Math as the “universal language” and foresee a technically based doctorate level diploma as a necessity for excelling in their country. To many, this is the only road out of poverty. American children, stereotypically, do not have this fear to motivate them. Many children in this “superior” country just view mathematics as something needed to pass a proficiency test. Its value is discarded. The implementations are unseen. The desire of children to follow this type of career path is decreasing. Obviously, these future implications are disturbing and may some day be detrimental to the foundation of our country. However, I believe nurturing children’s enthusiasm in needing to use math may be the answer. Not surprisingly as stated in Robots for Kids, “Robots rank right up there with dinosaurs when it comes to grabbing the attention of elementary school students…” [1 p. 232]. Hence, I predict an interest, active participation, and proper guidance in robotics will increase nationally recorded math scores.

II. Staggering Math Scores

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