Between Tijeras and Albuquerque: Google Map |
Carefully calibrated steel plates were used to crimp the asphalt into a musical rumble strip so that a vehicle traveling at 45 miles per hour will play the familiar melody of America the Beautiful (followed by a brief jingle to thank the project's financial sponsor). The work was completed by National Geographic in partnership with New Mexico Department of Transportation, as described in detail below.
As of this writing, a lot of the YouTube comments focus on the fact that the narrator talks over the music. I promise we won't do that, but I also think folks took this whole thing a bit too seriously. A video by Beth Thomas provides just the music and ambient road noise:
Pam learned of this treasure from Snopes, which also includes Jennifer Nalewicki's Musical Highway article in Smithsonian.
Lagniappe
Pam learned of this treasure from Snopes, which also includes Jennifer Nalewicki's Musical Highway article in Smithsonian.
Lagniappe
This story brought the same phrase to mind for both of us: STEM to STEAM. With any luck, it will have run its course by the time we run our course (get it?), but probably not. STEM, as most people in education now know, stands for Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics, which is NCLB-era jargon for "most of the things we dropped when ill-informed school reformers focused too narrowly in reading tests."
Realizing that this still excluded the humanities, the "A" for "Arts" was inserted -- with some degree of success -- in order to attract some attention and funding to yet another area that the Clinton-Bush-Obama reformers had marginalized. See the work of reformed reformer Diane Ravitch for more background. See Google for hundreds of examples of this jargon in use.
Full disclosure: this is a game I both decry and play. The EarthView program I help to coordinate was moved into a STEM framework in order to sustain its support, and I always remind folks that it is a great example of STEAM.
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