My 20% Time: 50 years into the future
Friday, December 5, 2014
This week, I worked more on the PowerPoint for the presentation. At this point, I know what I will be talking about and I know how to present it. However, I feel that there are many holes in my presentation. There will be missing information, or information that I won't be able to present as well as I would like. For this reason, I want to spend more time trying to find more details on the information I will share with the class so I can be better informed about the subject. An example of this problem is HOW the gap between the developed and developing countries will change. I can say that technology that allows more efficient work, better communication, and cleaner environment will help the gap close, but I have no examples or details. I hope to look up articles from Galileo and Google Scholar to find what I am looking for from good sources. I am also practicing what I am saying. If I don't present my project well, it could sound like I came up with it in one day. I will be doing research and working on my presentation skills until the day I speak (next Friday).
Tuesday, December 2, 2014
The Actual Presentation
So it has been a while since I last posted, and I apologize.
However, I have not been idle in this long period of time. I have started the
presentation and thought about specifically what to talk about next Friday.
Through this, I have realized something; it will be really hard to put my
research in a particular order. I want to talk about the future of the world
environment, economy, and technology in developed and developing countries. The
problem is many facts and findings overlap. I am having a hard time deciding
when to talk about what. So far, I know that I will start by introducing the
topic, the specific subtopics, and then show how and where it did my research.
The future is a hard thing to predict, and I want to establish my ethos in the
beginning. In reality, I actually did spend a lot of time trying to find more
trustworthy articles that actually explained the reason for why certain changes
would take place. There were many journalists I found, and it was interesting
that they had different views and opinions on important matters. This would
normally hurt my final conclusion, but it actually is beneficial because I can
now analyze all opinions and the given facts to make my own conclusion instead
of stealing someone else's work.
Tuesday, October 21, 2014
My Presentation
I think I now have enough research to start planning my
presentation. I want to do it in two sections: the developed countries and the
developing countries. Within these two sections I will have subsections that
cover economy, the environment, and technology. I will discuss how these three
components will either change or not change in the near future. After this, I
will discuss the difference between the two types of countries. I will try to
figure out whether the gap between the two categories has increased or
decreased. The point that I will focus on the most is technology. This is
because I believe that this will be developed the most and will also affect the
other components of life the most. It will also be the deciding factor of the
difference of developed and developing countries. Though I want to have key
messages in my presentation, I will also have facts that will make my
presentation interesting. Now that I know what I want to do for my
presentation, this week I hope to start creating a PowerPoint or some kind of
presentation to make my findings more clear.
Tuesday, October 14, 2014
technology continued
This week I decided to just look up how technology
will change the world in fifty years. I must say, people are very ambitious. I read
on many websites that technology would bring a drastic change almost every
aspect of our lives. This includes transportation, communication, energy use,
and food production. Many believe that solar energy will be the major method of
energy in less than fifty years. One website (http://www.businessinsider.com/10-ways-technology-will-change-the-world-by-2025-2014-6)
lists out all of the future technological innovations by 2025. It was interesting
to see what another person meant by technology. While I was focusing on
computer/engineering related changes, this author also explored how technology
would affect medicine an economy. For example, one of changes listed that
technology would cause was the prevention of type one diabetes. Borison claimed
that “A human genome engineering
platform will make it possible to modify disease-carrying genes and prevent
conditions like Type I Diabetes.” However, it seems that not
all technological change will be good. Some sites indicate that more technology
use creates more energy consumption, which is bad for the environment and bad
for the economy. I feel that I need to spend more time to fully understand the
world’s future in technology, so I hope to look further into it before I start
to make conclusions and decide how to present my research.
Thursday, October 9, 2014
Technology in Fifty Years
This week I researched the technological advances in
developed and developing countries. From what I found from both this and last
week, I now believe that this world is rapidly experiencing globalization. This
means that the people in the world are communicating, sharing knowledge, and
becoming less ignorant. For example, English is known as the global language,
and it has become almost necessary to learn it. Nations as well as people can
connect and communicate with others very clearly and quickly. Furthermore,
technology is increasing the speed of globalization. Phones are used almost all
around the world, from developing countries like Senegal (http://www.huffingtonpost.com/rev-larry-hollon/developing-world-technology_b_3764553.html)
to prospering countries like UAE. New technology will also affect other
proponents of people’s daily lives, including the economy and the environment.
Throughout the 20% time, I have researched how this world will change
environmentally and economically. However, the world will not change technologically;
but rather technology will change the world. New technology can help decrease
pollution, increase health, eradicate disease, and create demand for newer products.
One product that technology has altered to help many is the straw. In developed
countries, people are using steel straws to reduce the plastic pollution. Plastic
is really just processed oil, and takes a very long time to decompose. However,
people living with poverty do not care about the health and pollution of the
world. Instead, they care about the polluted nutrients they have to consume because
they have no other choice. Technological innovations made to help them are the
smaller and easier-to-use pollution measurement devices. Before drinking water,
people can check to see if the water is safe to consume.
Next week I hope to find more information in how technology
will change the future and start to tie all my research to make conclusions
about how Earth will be in fifty years.
Monday, September 29, 2014
Developed Countries Versus Developing Countries
When
I was in middle school, my teacher would call developing countries PINGs and developed
countries PEDs. Since then, I have known the obvious differences between the
two categories. However, I wanted to learn about the economic differences, and
how they will change in the near future. Though America still has one of the
largest GDP in the world, the GDP of India, Japan, and China are growing the
fastest. This means that America is at the top, but it is likely that it will
not stay there for long, depending on future progress. Through this research, I
feel that the gap between the PINGs and PEDs will start to decrease as time
passes by. Yet, there are still a numerous amount of other countries, such as
Ethiopia and Libya, that are struggling to help their people and economy
survive. Fortunately, many seem to think that conditions are getting much
better. The literacy rate is growing, while the fertility rate is shrinking.
Furthermore, there is a lot of trade between Africa and China, as well as a
project, called Trade Africa, between America and Africa-- it's designed to
help the currency and quality of life in many countries of Africa gain more
value. Both of these things are helping Africa significantly. The economic
future looks much better than the environmental future.
Monday, September 22, 2014
World Economy and American Debt
There are not that many solutions to solving
American debt. Honestly, most people are unsure of all the debt and more
focused on decreasing the deficit. However, I did find more information on the
economy of developing countries. There was an article in TIME that explained
how the success of Alibaba foreshadows the success of the developing world. It
even went on to say that people living in developed countries will most likely
start to find jobs in developing countries like China and India (http://time.com/3401924/china-alibaba-ipo-world-business-trade-internet-economy/).
Though this is a strong statement, I was not very surprised. The GDP (real) of
United States and Japan is decreasing, while the GDP of places like China,
India, and Bangladesh is increasing (http://research.stlouisfed.org/fred2/categories/32291).
According to the CNN website, America's economy is growing nowhere near as fast
as developing countries, particularly throughout the different parts of Asia.
Although USA does not have the world's fastest growing economy, it does still
have the largest economy, which the same website shows will not change for at
least five years (http://money.cnn.com/news/economy/world_economies_gdp/).
I also researched the reason for our debt. This became quite political, but one
website clearly showed at what time the debt started to accumulate. It
explained that if Presidents Ronald Reagan and George H.W Bush had correctly
balanced their budgets, the debt would not have existed. In fact, it shows an
alternate graph that shows how the debt would have been much lower if different
paths were taken in the 1980s (http://zfacts.com/p/318.html).
Of course, this website is highly biased, but it does give a reason.
Starting next week, I want to find the differences
between developed and developing countries in fifty years. I need to see
whether the economic and environmental gap between the two increases or
decreases.
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