Canadian scientist aims to turn chickens into dinosaurs
After years spent hunting for the buried remains of prehistoric animals, a Canadian paleontologist now plans to manipulate chicken embryos to show he can create a dinosaur.
Hans Larsson, the Canada Research Chair in Macro Evolution at Montreal's McGill University, said he aims to develop dinosaur traits that disappeared millions of years ago in birds.
Larsson believes by flipping certain genetic levers during a chicken embryo's development, he can reproduce the dinosaur anatomy, he told AFP in an interview.
Sophia, you could make it a two part interview process. Think of a typical task that you would assign the student that involves some self starting. After you narrow down the candidates, ask the ones that you do to do the task, and see what you get.
Shitshitshit. My babysitter has a conflict tonight. We have tickets to a fancy fundraiser. And since my cell phone is fried, I do not have numbers for backup babysitting.
Do you have a neighborhood listserv, Cash?
Nope, Sparky. I'm calling the childcare center at my gym and getting some phone numbers.
It's just a pain finding someone last minute.
Good idea, Vortex, thank you.
I believe this weekend I will be buying a storm door.
PITA, Cash! Good luck finding someone.
I am interviewing potential student employees and need a good way to determine if they are people who both listen to direction but are capable and like figuring things out for themselves.
You could ask a more open-ended question about work style/motivation and see what they say. I can't think of how to phrase it in an actually open-ended way, but asking questions like, "Would you rather work more independently or with closer supervision" has gotten me people who will say they're happy to do both, as well as people who say they prefer one or the other.
I am interviewing potential student employees and need a good way to determine if they are people who both listen to direction but are capable and like figuring things out for themselves. Without giving away that that is what I am asking, because of course they will say that they can!
Is it for a costuming position. I once had a test where I had to perform very specific sewing tasks, including using a specific stitch length/type for each different task and it had to be done within a time limit. (The interviewer had graduated from a tailoring course and was super anal.)
It was of course one of those days were the sewing machine would not yield to my will and I stank.