"ROUGH SCIENCE may be the most fun anyone ever had learning science." St. Louis Post Dispatch
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Disc 2 contains the following episodes:
104. FEEL THE HEAT - The challenges don't come much tougher than this as the team of scientists tackles the task of lowering the temperature on their sweltering tropical island. The chemistry of cooling ironically seems to involve heating things up first. With just three days to complete the task, as well as producing working thermometers and sunscreen, patience is soon simmering.
105. SUN AND SEA - The challenge of building an underwater light to examine the marine life around their island finds the team grappling with natural power sources. The scientists find the energy of the sea and sun needs a little help from human elbow grease to generate electricity to charge up a battery.
106. THE SCIENCE OF CELEBRATION - The science of sound and rockets helps Kate Humble and the team devise ways of going out with a bang in the last set of challenges on their Caribbean island. Tasked with creating a concert and spectacle to light up the Caribbean night sky, the scientists find they are struggling to find harmony, while their fireworks are more heat than light. Can they turn it around?
The other two DVD discs in the series are:
DISC 1
101. All Mapped Out
102. Bugs and Barometers
103. Time and Transmitter
DISC 3
107. Mediterranean Mystery
108. Simmering Shutterbugs
109. Power Supplies
110. Sustenance on Sayonara
All shot on the island of Capraia in the Mediterranean
Grade Level: 5-12, College, Adult
US Release Date: 2002
Copyright Date: 2002
DVD ISBN: 1-59458-095-2
Reviews "This entertaining series...succeeds in making science fun and accessible." The Independent
"The episodes are remarkable; they realistically show the false starts and problems scientists encounter...Because so many students watch 'reality television' in their spare time, ROUGH SCIENCE will be a high-interest supplement to the curriculum. It would be a great review or extension resource, and it would also be a perfect lead-in to design projects where groups of students are assigned similar tasks. The series demonstrates the application of basic principles in biology, chemistry, Earth science, and physics, so teachers will find many applications in middle and secondary programs." Richard Smith, High School Teacher, NSTA Recommends
"Thanks to a genuine sense of purpose and a refreshing lack of condescension, ['Rough Science'] works beautifully." The Scotsman, Edinburgh
"ROUGH SCIENCE may be the most fun anyone ever had learning science." St. Louis Post Dispatch
"An intelligent variation of the 'Castaway' theme." The (London) Times
"I wish they'd had 'Rough Science' when I was in school." Newcastle Journal
"ROUGH SCIENCE dares to be genial and collegial, operating on the assumption that intellectual stimulation is not an exclusionary game... ROUGH SCIENCE resembles a 'Survivor' for smart people." Seattle Post Intelligencer
"This show helps viewers learn that we all solve problems." Webster-Kirkwood Times, Kirkwood, Mo.
"The premise of the show is that . . . knowledge will . . . rub off on the viewers while they are being entertained." City Journal, St. Louis
"We...are very pleased with our students' responses to the different episodes...The students are encouraged to see that there is real application to some of the abstract ideas in physics...[Rough Science] is an excellent series, a great educational tool." Steve Hatfield, Math and Science Department, Brenau University
"[Rough Science] is a breath of fresh air...entertaining and educational. And perhaps the best advertisement for science as a career for curious people...Rough Science shows science 'in the raw' and setting it in a remote island location strips the scientists of the lab coats, test tubes and urge to speak in tongues. The program gets to the root of why science is interesting, and that's not something that we civilians get to see too often. Highly recommended." Peter Rukavina, President of Reinvented, Inc., Computer Programmer and Graphic Designer
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