Placeholder Image

Subtitles section Play video

  • - [David] Hello readers.

  • This is Professor Mario Molina,

  • a scientist who won the Nobel Prize for Chemistry.

  • Now I'm gonna use the example of Professor Molina

  • to teach us about connections,

  • or drawing connections between scientific information

  • in a text, in a piece of writing,

  • because reading scientific papers often involves

  • learning about a bunch of new information all at once

  • and then learning how all of that new information connects.

  • How is information connected?

  • Before we dive into Doctor Molina's life and research,

  • let's use a simple example.

  • A bowl of noodles, say.

  • Let's put a little sauce on those noodles,

  • maybe a little bit of pesto.

  • Just a little bit of green, little bit of basil.

  • Here's a basil leaf.

  • So, using this bowl of pasta as an example.

  • In a piece of nonfiction,

  • we can learn why something happened.

  • We can learn why the pasta was made,

  • you know, maybe I was hungry.

  • We can learn how something happened.

  • So in the case of the pasta,

  • I cooked it in boiling water and then drained it

  • and put some sauce on top and put it in a bowl.

  • We can learn how one event impacted other events.

  • Let's say I had a very late lunch at like 4:00 p.m.

  • that consisted of this pasta

  • and then by 7:00 p.m.,

  • when it was time for me to have dinner,

  • I didn't have as much of an appetite

  • 'cause I'd spoiled my appetite with this

  • big ol' bowl of pasta at 4:00 p.m.

  • And we can also learn how events cause other events.

  • So, say I'd had my late lunch of pasta

  • and I wasn't ready for dinner at 7:00 p.m.,

  • so I decided to push dinner back a couple of hours.

  • That's, you know, I'm an adult.

  • I eat when I want.

  • Now, I know this example is a little silly,

  • but I wanted to talk about something relatively simple,

  • like a bowl of noodles,

  • before we dive into Doctor Molina and his research,

  • which is about pretty complicated scientific concepts.

  • So, these are just four of the ways

  • that information can be connected.

  • It's not, these aren't the only four ways,

  • these aren't the ways to think about information,

  • but these are some of them

  • and this is a helpful way to think about

  • making connections when you're reading.

  • So, this is taken from a passage on the website

  • about Mario Molina's research.

  • I'm gonna read this passage and as I do,

  • I'm going to try and find connections

  • between pieces of information in the text.

  • I'm going to try and pull out of the passage

  • the stuff that the author wants me to know

  • and the stuff that the author wants me to put together.

  • "As a professor, Mario Molina tackled a question

  • "that no other scientist had before.

  • "It was, how do chlorofluorocarbons,"

  • what a long word, "chlorofluorocarbons, CFCs,

  • "affect the atmosphere?"

  • Now this is interesting

  • because these are parentheses

  • and the parentheses are telling us that CFC

  • is a shorter way to refer to chlorofluorocarbon,

  • which we assume is,

  • I'm gonna assume is some kind of chemical

  • and how do they affect the atmosphere.

  • So what is the impact of these CFCs on the atmosphere?

  • And specifically, sentences like these

  • that are built up like this, right?

  • So it's, the passage is setting up the idea

  • that no other scientist had ever asked this question

  • or hadn't successfully managed to deal with it,

  • tackled it, right?

  • What is the impact of these CFCs on the atmosphere?

  • And if you don't know a word like atmosphere,

  • now is a really good time to look it up.

  • Right, the atmosphere is the layer of air and gases

  • that surrounds the rocky part of our planet.

  • So we can just say, the air,

  • just sort of as a rough definition.

  • So how do CFCs affect the air?

  • And so, now we've been cued to look for

  • some sort of cause effect relationship.

  • Now we've been cued for some sort of relationship

  • between CFCs and the atmosphere.

  • They affect it somehow.

  • They do something to it.

  • Let's keep reading.

  • "CFCs are chemicals," great,

  • "once used to cool refrigerators."

  • Okay, so this is starting to answer my next question,

  • like what are CFCs?

  • "They were also used in things like hair spray."

  • So, hair spray and refrigerators.

  • Now, I don't use a lotta hair spray,

  • but I do have a refrigerator in my home,

  • which leads me to think that CFCs used to be pretty common.

  • That's what these two sentences together tell me.

  • I also keyed in on the word, once, here,

  • which suggests to me that they used to cool refrigerators

  • and used to be used in things like hair spray,

  • but I don't think that they are anymore.

  • Probably because of Molina's research.

  • "At this time in the 1970s,

  • "the public believed that CFCs were safe to use."

  • All right, so now I know when this research is taking place

  • is in the 1970s.

  • This also kind of explains the hair spray thing.

  • If you've ever seen a movie from the '70s,

  • people had much much much bigger hair

  • than they do today.

  • So we know that in the '70s,

  • the public, like everybody, believed that CFCs were safe.

  • "However," ooh, love a however,

  • "Molina discovered something else."

  • Something else other than what?

  • Well, because of where this transition is,

  • it's in the next paragraph

  • and it's kind of reflecting back on the previous sentence,

  • I think we can say that something else

  • is that CFCs were maybe not so safe to use,

  • something else was true.

  • "After release, CFCs rise up into the Earth's atmosphere.

  • "There, solar radiation breaks them down

  • "into something called chlorine.

  • "Chlorine destroys the ozone layer,

  • "which shields Earth from the sun's harmful rays."

  • All right, so that's a lot of information all at once

  • and that's a lot of relationships

  • of information all at once.

  • So we've got our little can of hair spray.

  • There it goes. (spraying sounds)

  • And after it's used, it rises up into the atmosphere

  • where rays from the sun hit it

  • and that breaks it down into chlorine

  • and chlorine destroys the ozone layer,

  • which protects us from the harmful rays of the sun.

  • So, let's go back to our pasta bowl

  • and instead of pasta,

  • let's scribble that out and replace it

  • with the destruction of the ozone layer in the '70s.

  • So why did it happen?

  • The answer to that is CFCs got into the atmosphere.

  • I'm just gonna write CFCs, ATMO.

  • How did something happen?

  • Well, when the CFCs get hit by solar radiation,

  • they turn into chlorine

  • and the chlorine eats the ozone layer.

  • And what is the impact of the ozone layer being destroyed?

  • More exposure to solar radiation.

  • And what caused this to happen?

  • The use of CFCs in hair spray and refrigerators.

  • So when you're trying to make connections

  • in a scientific text,

  • ask yourself these questions.

  • Why did something happen, how did it happen,

  • what are the impacts from that thing happening,

  • and does it cause anything else to happen?

  • Taking the information from a text

  • and then kinda plunking it into these questions

  • or these thoughts, is a great way to figure out

  • how information relates to other information

  • within that passage and how it relates to stuff

  • you may already know about.

  • So we say, "Thank you, Doctor Molina,

  • "for saving the ozone layer."

  • You can learn anything, David out.

- [David] Hello readers.

Subtitles and vocabulary

Click the word to look it up Click the word to find further inforamtion about it