Cesar Harada: How I teach kids to love science
TED Senior Fellow Cesar Harada aims to harness the forces of nature as he invents innovative remedies for man-made problems like oil spills and radioactive leaks. Full bio
Double-click the English transcript below to play the video.
my parents would tell me,
but you have to clean up after yourself."
to all these wonderful places,
to protect us from the ugly truth.
that adults make a mess,
at cleaning up after themselves.
at the Hong Kong Harbour School.
and stumble upon piles of trash.
we clean up the beaches --
and if he is, I did not give it to him.
of the oceans have plastic in them.
and those big nets,
that we look at under a microscope,
it's very expensive,
to take those big boats out.
of inventing a better way.
Hong Kong classroom into a workshop.
this small workbench,
so even really short kids can participate.
are awesome and safe.
to the size we find it in the ocean,
because it breaks down.
of my students run wild.
the best of each kid's idea
that hopefully would work.
that instead of collecting plastic bits,
of the plastic with a robot --
we do what we call "rapid prototyping."
when we're hacking it.
into plumbing fixtures
that will be slowly moving through water
that we have there --
that we get in the robot.
floating slowly through the sensor,
will process this image,
of how much plastic there is in the water.
this invention step by step
called Instructables,
would make it even better.
was that the students saw a local problem,
to immediately address it.
are hyperconnected kids.
they watch the Internet,
cleaning up an oil spill bare-handed,
largest mangrove forest in Bangladesh.
this is the water they bathe in,
this is the place where they live.
the mud is brown and oil is brown,
what's in the water.
that's rather simple,
of a spectrometer,
through different substances
identify what's in the water.
a local problem,
and their sense of being creative
by doing the second experiments,
and it's also closer to my heart.
there was a massive earthquake in Japan.
several giant waves --
on the eastern coast of Japan.
died in an instant.
power plant of Fukushima,
into the Pacific Ocean.
has traces of contamination of cesium-137.
you can measure Fukushima everywhere.
it can look like most of the radioactivity
from the Japanese coast,
it looks like it's safe, it's blue.
more complicated than this.
every year since the accident,
and with other scientists,
the parents wouldn't allow that to happen.
to "Mission Control" --
the work seriously, but they really did
with radioactivity their whole life.
we collected that day,
we should be going next --
a very rough topographical map
the nuclear power plant.
real-time data for radioactivity,
to simulate the rainfall.
that the radioactive dust
into the river system,
we organized this expedition,
to the nuclear power plant.
from the nuclear power plant,
we've invented and built.
to hundreds of small bags
of the seabed radioactivity,
where the fish will reproduce,
and of your favorite sushi.
to a remote problem to a global problem.
to work at these different scales,
open-source technologies.
it's been increasingly frustrating
the damage that we have done.
to try to solve the problems.
if we should just take a leap
to do all these things.
started to feel a little bit small,
site in Hong Kong,
the largest mega-space
and environmental impact.
with wood, metal, chemistry,
pretty much everything there.
adults and kids can play together.
kids' dreams can come true,
questions such as,
with renewable energy?
of the aging population
into cool, electric vehicles?
are horrible, horrible legacies,
that we can leave our children is lies.
to shield the kids from the ugly truth
to invent the solutions.
the environment and people,
do something about it.
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Cesar Harada - Inventor, environmentalist, educatorTED Senior Fellow Cesar Harada aims to harness the forces of nature as he invents innovative remedies for man-made problems like oil spills and radioactive leaks.
Why you should listen
Cesar Harada believes that ocean currents, the wind and other naturally occuring phenomenon can provide unique inspiration and novel solutions to mankind’s worst disasters, like oil spills and radioactive leaks. A French-Japanese inventor and TED senior fellow, he is the creator of Protei, a revolutionary sailing technology -- featuring a front rudder, flexible hull and open-soure hardware -- that allows for efficient clean up of both oil and plastics from the sea. Currently based in London, Harada recently traveled to Japan and is designing Protei to measure radioactivity along the country's coast.
The general coordinator of the future International Ocean Station, Harada teaches at Goldsmiths University London. A former project leader at MIT, he graduated form the Royal College of Arts Design Interactions in London and worked at the Southampton University Hydrodynamics laboratory on wave energy. Harada has also studied animantion, and his films and installations have been seen at festivals and events across the world, from the United States to Japan.
Cesar Harada | Speaker | TED.com