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#THE ANDROMEDA STRAIN MOVIE EXAMPLES OF SCIENTIFIC METHOD HOW TO#
Twister is about how to be able to track and predict tornadoes.
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The Terminal Man is about unlocking the hidden potential of the human brain. The Andromeda Strain is one of the first books that presented how the world would react to the spread of a deadly epidemic (in this case, it was an extraterrestrial biological infestation brought back by an American satellite that returns to Earth). Most of Crichton's novels focus heavily on scientific theory. Sphere also addresses time travel as well as what lies at the bottom of the ocean in a highly complex, psychological manner. Timeline addresses time travel, explaining how time travel is similar to transmitting a message via a fax machine in which the original form of a person stays in the present and a "facsimile" of them actually travels through the time spectrum.
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They are actually academic and even highly cerebral tomes that address open-ended, thought-provoking essential questions in an entertaining manner. If you're familiar with Michael Crichton's works, you know that his novels, films, and TV shows are not mindless tales that showcase nonsensical topics. Perhaps you read his nonfiction work Travels. Perhaps you've read one of his fiction novels that was not turned into a film such as Airframe, Pirate Latitudes, Next, Prey, State of Fear, or Pirate Latitudes. Perhaps you've seen the film Twister or watched the TV show E/R. Perhaps you've heard of Michael Crichton's books or their movie adaptations - Jurassic Park, Congo, Sphere, Rising Sun, The Great Train Robbery, Disclosure, The Andromeda Strain, A Case of Need (apparently, there was a film adaptation made in the 1970s), or Eaters of the Dead, which was adapted into the film The 13th Warrior. However, what if this year for the book study your school read a Michael Crichton novel and analyzed and evaluated how his books reflect the kind of learning we want students to demonstrate and communicate?