LINGUA LATINA PER SE ILLUSTRATA DISCUSSION DOWNLOAD
Guides and music will be provided on the OLLI download page. A recorder method book and additional chamber music will be determined by the playing experience of the group members. For those who do not already have recorders at home, inexpensive versions are widely available. Participants will need to have a recorder (soprano, alto, tenor, or bass). Each session will include the challenge and joy of making music together. Guest performers as well as listening examples will showcase the expressive possibilities of recorder playing. In the sessions, we will organize with warm-ups, whole group practice, break-out groups for duets and trios, and eventually, opportunities to play for one another. Topics will include expressive performance through focus on tone, rhythm, articulation, phrasing and ensemble skills. The Recorder Ensemble will build on the playing progress of the individual and the group. Bring your recorder, some favorite music to share (if you wish), and join the group! Expect an introduction to basic skills, and a mix of large and small ensemble practice and playing during our sessions. The facilitator along with the participants will select music to match our skills. Our group will focus on expressive music performance while covering basic techniques. Would you like to play music in a Recorder Ensemble? All levels welcome, including beginners. Scientific literacy is one of her passions and she has become aware that many people fear genetically modified organisms because they do not understand what they are, how they are developed, what their uses are, and their tremendous potential for improving the living conditions of humans worldwide. Since her retirement in 2008, she has developed a keen interest in genetic engineering and its roles in agriculture and the treatments of diseases, so she continues to read and study those topics, among others. For 16 years she taught biology courses at Parkland College, among them environmental biology, evolution, and biology for majors. Mary Severinghaus has a master’s degree in biology from the University of Illinois.
LINGUA LATINA PER SE ILLUSTRATA DISCUSSION FULL
Full disclosure: During her career she has been responsible for generating many GMOs (not to worry, mostly harmless bacteria for research purposes). Her research has been on molecular biology and genomics of microorganisms. At the U of I, she has been a Postdoctoral Fellow in Biochemistry, and Research Professor and Senior Scientist in Microbiology and the Institute for Genomic Research. in Biological Sciences from the University of Buenos Aires, Argentina. A list of readings for each week will be given to students prior to the week they are discussed.Ĭlaudia Reich holds a Ph.D.
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Readings will be posted on the OLLI study group download page. Selected readings will be suggested, mostly from Scientific American and other readily available sources.
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Familiarity with computers to the extent of using email and finding information via a browser will be useful (though not required), as will access to a printer if participants wish to have hard copies of readings. No special knowledge or prerequisites are needed. We will discuss some of the facts and myths about GMOs, using reliable information to assess their importance and relevance, and to decide what our educated responses as consumers should be. Strong controversy surrounds GMOs, especially regarding their use in producing foodstuffs. But in recent decades, advances in the fields of genetics and molecular biology have allowed for precise and targeted control of genetic changes in organisms: witness the birth of GMOs (genetically modified organisms).
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This human-imposed selection has until recently been limited to naturally occurring variations. Since the dawn of civilization, humans have been altering the genetic makeups of plants and animals using breeding techniques to select for desired traits. MONDAYįacilitators: Claudia Reich and Mary Severinghaus Study groups begin the week of Novemand conclude the week of December 15, 2014. That mix of fresh voices and ongoing explorations is one of the hallmarks of the study group program – and one of the keys to their popularity and success! ALL OLLI Study Groups welcome returning and new participants.