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Multilingual education of students on a global scale and perspective—international networking on the example of bioindication and biomonitoring (B&B technologies)
Authors:Bernd Markert  Edita Baltr?nait?  Ewa Chudzińska  Silvia De Marco  Jean Diatta  Zahra Ghaffari  Svetlana Gorelova  Jorge Marcovecchio  Guntis Tabors  Meie Wang  Naglaa Yousef  Stefan Fraenzle  Simone Wuenschmann
Institution:1. Environmental Institute of Scientific Networks, Fliederweg 17, 49733, Haren, Germany
2. Vilnius Gediminas Technical University, Saul?tekio al. 11, 10223, Vilnius, Lithuania
3. Institute of Experimental Biology, Department of Genetics, Adam Mickiewicz University, ul. Umultowska 89, 61-614, Poznań, Poland
4. Faculty of Exact and Natural Sciences, Department for Biology, Universidad Nacional de Mar del Plata, 25 de Mayo, 2855, Mar del Plata, Argentina
5. Department of Agricultural Chemistry and Environmental Biogeochemistry, Poznań University of Life Sciences, Wojska Polskiego 28, 60-637, Poznań, Poland
6. Faculty of Environment and Energy, Science and Research Branch, Islamic Azad University, Hesarak, 1477893855, Tehran, Islamic Republic of Iran
7. Department of Botany and Plant Growing, L.N. Tolstoy Tula State, Pedagogical University, 125 Lenin Avenue, 300026, Tula, Russian Federation
8. Instituto Argentino de Oceanografia (IADO - CONICET/UNS), Camino La Carrindanga km 7, B 8000 FWB, Bahía Blanca, Argentina
9. Faculty of Biology, University of Latvia, Rai?a bulvāris 19, Riga, 1050, Latvia
10. State Key Laboratory of Urban and Regional Ecology, Research Centre for Eco-environmental Sciences, Chinese Academy of Sciences, 52 Sanlihe Rd., 100864, Beijing, China
11. Faculty of Science, Department of Ecology, Sohag University, 82524, Sohag, Egypt
12. International Institute Zittau, Department of Biological and Environmental Sciences; Research Group of Theoretical and Environmental Chemistry, Technical University of Dresden, Markt 23, D-02763, Zittau, Germany
Abstract:Living or formerly living organisms are being used to obtain information on the quality of the general health status of our environment by bioindication and biomonitoring methods for many decades. Thus, different roads toward this common scientific goal were developed by a lot of different international research groups. Global cooperation in between various scientific teams throughout the world has produced common ideas, scientific definitions, and highly innovative results of this extremely attractive working field. The transdisciplinary approach of different and multifaceted scientific areas—starting from biology, analytical chemistry, via health physics, up to social and economic issues—have surpassed mental barriers of individual scientists, so that “production” of straightforward common results related to the influence of material and immaterial environmental factors to the well-being of organisms and human life has now reached the forefront of international thinking. For the further sustainable development of our common scientific “hobby” of bioindication and biomonitoring, highest personal energy has to be given by us, being teachers to our students and to convince strategically decision makers as politicians to invest (financially) into the development of education and research of this innovative technique. Young people have to be intensively convinced on the “meaning” of our scientific doing, e.g., by extended forms of education. One example of multilingual education of students on a global scale and perspective is given here, which we started about 3 years ago.
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