21978 research outputs found
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African Newspaper Coverage of Climate Change or Global Warming, 2004-2025 - December 2025
The Media and Climate Change Observatory Data monitors 131 sources (across newspapers, radio and TV) in 59 countries in seven different regions around the world. Data is assembled by accessing archives through the Lexis Nexis, Proquest and Factiva databases via the University of Colorado libraries. More information may be found at: http://mecco.colorado.edu.</p
Indian Newspaper Coverage of Climate Change or Global Warming, 2000-2025 - December 2025
The Media and Climate Change Observatory Data monitors 131 sources (across newspapers, radio and TV) in 59 countries in seven different regions around the world. Data is assembled by accessing archives through the Lexis Nexis, Proquest and Factiva databases via the University of Colorado libraries. More information may be found at: http://mecco.colorado.edu.</p
Canadian Newspaper Coverage of Climate Change or Global Warming, 2000-2025 - December 2025
The Media and Climate Change Observatory Data monitors 131 sources (across newspapers, radio and TV) in 59 countries in seven different regions around the world. Data is assembled by accessing archives through the Lexis Nexis, Proquest and Factiva databases via the University of Colorado libraries. More information may be found at: http://mecco.colorado.edu.</p
NEPC Review: Measuring Artificial Intelligence in Education (Bellwether, October 2025)
Because AI-powered technologies are rapidly proliferating in education, educators face urgent challenges in evaluating their impacts. Bellwether’s recent report seeks to address this by promoting logic models as a way to move beyond superficial metrics toward evidence-based outcomes. Yet it does not fully acknowledge the limitations of this approach and assumes AI should be integrated into education, using logic models to affirm AI’s taken-for-granted potential. By treating logic models as value-neutral, the report overlooks contextual complexity and possible harms. Rather than offering critical guidance on AI’s role in education, it provides methodological cover for predetermined conclusions about AI’s inevitability and desirability. Policymakers seeking rigorous, evidence-based approaches will find little support in what is ultimately a promotional document.</p
Asian Newspaper Coverage of Climate Change or Global Warming, 2004-2026 - February 2026
The Media and Climate Change Observatory Data monitors 131 sources (across newspapers, radio and TV) in 59 countries in seven different regions around the world. Data is assembled by accessing archives through the Lexis Nexis, Proquest and Factiva databases via the University of Colorado libraries. More information may be found at: http://mecco.colorado.edu.</p
Japanese Newspaper Coverage of Climate Change or Global Warming, 2000-2026 - February 2026
The Media and Climate Change Observatory Data monitors 131 sources (across newspapers, radio and TV) in 59 countries in seven different regions around the world. Data is assembled by accessing archives through the Lexis Nexis, Proquest and Factiva databases via the University of Colorado libraries. More information may be found at: http://mecco.colorado.edu.</p
World Radio Coverage of Climate Change or Global Warming, 2000-2026 - February 2026
The Media and Climate Change Observatory Data monitors 131 sources (across newspapers, radio and TV) in 59 countries in seven different regions around the world. Data is assembled by accessing archives through the Lexis Nexis, Proquest and Factiva databases via the University of Colorado libraries. More information may be found at: http://mecco.colorado.edu.</p
New Zealand Newspaper Coverage of Climate Change or Global Warming, 2000-2026 - January 2026
The Media and Climate Change Observatory Data monitors 131 sources (across newspapers, radio and TV) in 59 countries in seven different regions around the world. Data is assembled by accessing archives through the Lexis Nexis, Proquest and Factiva databases via the University of Colorado libraries. More information may be found at: http://mecco.colorado.edu.</p
German Newspaper Coverage of Climate Change or Global Warming, 2004-2026 - January 2026
The Media and Climate Change Observatory Data monitors 131 sources (across newspapers, radio and TV) in 59 countries in seven different regions around the world. Data is assembled by accessing archives through the Lexis Nexis, Proquest and Factiva databases via the University of Colorado libraries. More information may be found at: http://mecco.colorado.edu.</p
Regina Tornado Scenario Windspeed Maps
The maps presented here describe a hypothetical but realistic tornado striking Regina, Saskatchewan on Tuesday, June 30, 2026. The scenario tornado reaches a maximum rating of EF4 on the Enhanced Fujita scale. It resembles the Regina Cyclone of Sunday, June 30, 1912. The scenario tornado has a similar path and damage swath. It spans approximately 400 metres wide as it passes from soutrh to north through downtown Regina. With a translational velocity of 17 m/sec (61 km/hr) and counterclockwise rotation, the tornado produces windspeeds reaching 91 m/sec (328 km/hr) on the right side of the track. The map is available here in electronic format as a compressed Keyhole Markup Language (kmz) file. It depicts the scenario windspeeds. The file also contains the track and images of first-hand observations from 1912. The windspeed map comports with the current state of the art in tornado climatology. Severe rain and hail could accompany such a tornado. These other outcomes are addressed elsewhere. Windspeed map colors reflect bands of 3-second peak gust velocity that align with the Enhanced Fujita (EF) scale. White means 28-38 m/s (EF0). Green means 38-50 m/s (EF1). Yellow reflects 50-61 m/s (EF2). Red means 61-74 m/s (EF3). Burnt (hex color #74021a) reflects 74-91 m/s (EF4-EF5).</p