Wednesday, September 16, 2009

The Fun of Scratch

Do you want a fun way to learn the basics of computer programming?
Scratch is a great application for learning how to program in a very visual and intuitive style. Scratch lets everyone create and share simple graphic based programs. It is easy to make pretty pictures and arcade games. Below are two examples that I have created when working with middle and high school students. Just click the green flags to start the programs. Try to land the spaceship on the key on the moon by using just the arrow keys. Enjoy.

Learn more about this project
Learn more about this project

Thursday, September 10, 2009

Michael Pollan, Health Stats, and Web Search Unfulfilled


I was reading Michael Pollan's article in today's NYT where he made some very provocative claims about the healthcare debate. His main argument is that there is an "elephant in the room" and that most of the blame for the enormous costs of healthcare in the US can be placed on the fact that Americans are far more likely to be obese.

I thought his piece was an interesting "out of the box" look at the issue, and that an interested person should be able to verify his claim by simple searching the web for health statistics. I immediately thought of using wolframalpha.com which is promoted as a "computational knowledge engine" that I had imagined would give a quick, graphic access to widely available statistics. I tried several searches using keywords like, weight, obesity, BMI - all to no avail. So WolframAlpha appears to be useless for comparative health statistics- too bad. Can any major search engine handle the task? A further search using google came up with several not so satisfactory sites. One was a database the WHO Infobase that was difficult and slow. Another was NationMaster site nationmaster.com which gave chart using OECD stats.

This chart showed that US has obesity rates of over 30% with an industrialized country average of 14%. So in essence Americans are twice as likely to be obese, as they spend twice as much on healthcare. Could more (web) data show a stronger correlation? Pollan may be on the right track in his focus on this aspect of the health debate. And here come those corporate interests that he predicted would fight any changes to food industry practices.