User:Benjamin youngberg/sandbox
Article Evaluation - Animal Rights
[edit]The idea that all animals have the right to dictate entities pursuing them to a good life or to however they wish to live their life
Some argue only humans have duties so only humans have rights
use of animals for resources by humans makes for less suffering in world of the wild
Article Selection
[edit]-Internet Privacy
-Climate Engineering
-just war theory
-End-of-life Care
-mental health
Assignment 5
[edit]Social Media
[edit]A study viewed by Harvard University found that 48% of teenage people who are on a device for five hours a day have a minimum of one suicidal risk factor opposed to a different focus group of 33% on a device for two hours a day.[1]
Assignment 6
[edit]Climate Engineering
[edit]Moving Forward
[edit]Universities across the map are all aware of climate issues arising in the modern era due to human impact. Developing new technology for a low-carbon way of life is very crucial to the survival of our ecosystem on this planet. The noticeable change from being called "global warming" to the more serious term "climate change" gives different interpretations amongst the scientific world as to how it should be handled and if it is occurring naturally or artificially through human impact.
Along with rising temperatures in all regions of the world, there will be different negative aspects relating to health and diseases that could come into play and affect lives on earth much quicker than anticipated[2].
Ozone layers are depleting, heat is rising, and lives are changing faster and faster everyday with skeptical belief worldwide as to how the situation will overcome its obstacles very apparent in destructive choices by civilization. New tools of technology plan to better systems around the world to reverse or help guide a better future for generations to come. Solar energy helping save energy, and wind turbines helping preserve energy are two of the first of many influential inventions to help the greater cause.
Assignment 7
[edit]JMendez7230 peer review
Network Security
description of the significance of multiple types of security network possible to work with
tells promptly which cites were of value and which cites were filler for content
goes on to describe what changes are significant and crucial to the progress of the article ~~~~ Benjamin Youngberg
Assignment 9 completed
[edit]Selecting different handouts and possibilities that wikipedia offers gave me a good representation of how to build the layout of my article for proper representation. Initially my article seemed rather simple with a hard to follow layout that I have been working on to fix. Now I have a better idea on how to adjust the paragraphs and headings to appear more sophisticated and reliable.
Assignment 10
[edit]Article moved over to climate engineering page 7/5/2019
Reflective essay
[edit]Overall my contributions to the page may not be accepted by the official wikipedia users, but I do feel that the knowledge I have presented is valuable and of use for readers to capture ideas and abide by. The application of suggestions made in my writing highlight the positive effects of climate engineering not noticed by popular media constantly making a topic of climate change so negative. I could have done more to provide factual evidence from previous years instead of just charts or individual opinion but mostly I can say this piece of work is done sincerely and with genuine concern for knowledge reflecting my interest in climate change and making the world a better place.
This is a user sandbox of Benjamin youngberg. You can use it for testing or practicing edits. This is not the sandbox where you should draft your assigned article for a dashboard.wikiedu.org course. To find the right sandbox for your assignment, visit your Dashboard course page and follow the Sandbox Draft link for your assigned article in the My Articles section. |
- ^ "Social Media and Teen Anxiety". Harvard Graduate School of Education. Retrieved 2019-06-16.
- ^ "From sea to rising sea: Climate change in America". www.seas.harvard.edu. 2017-06-13. Retrieved 2019-06-20.