Para peserta pada Forum Keilmuan Soedirman.
(Sumber: Kementerian Pengembangan Keilmuan)

BEM Unsoed – Kementerian Pengembangan Keilmuan mengadakan agenda Forum Keilmuan Soedirman pada Minggu (14/06) dan Sabtu (19/09). Agenda ini diadakan untuk menjalin kolaborasi yang kuat dengan lembaga keilmuan di Universitas Jenderal Soedirman serta bekerja sama dengan bidang keilmuan BEM fakultas se-Unsoed untuk membahas isu dan permasalahan keilmuan yang ada di Unsoed.

Diikuti oleh perwakilan bidang keilmuan organisasi di Unsoed, agenda ini diselenggarakan melalui Whatsapp dan Google Meet. Penyelenggaraan FKS pertama dihadiri oleh 27 perwakilan BEM fakultas dan UKM keilmuan, sedangkan pada FKS kedua dihadiri 19 perwakilan BEM fakultas.

FKS yang pertama dibuka dengan perkenalan dari pihak BEM fakultas, UKM keilmuan dan Kementerian Pengembangan Keilmuan BEM Unsoed 2020. Agenda kemudian dilanjutkan pemaparan program kerja dari para peserta, kemudian diskusi mengenai pelaksanaan program kerja pada masa pandemi.

Penyelenggaraan FKS yang kedua membahas mengenai program kerja sebagai kelanjutan pembahasan FKS pertama, dilanjutkan pembahasan mengenai mekanisme PKM tiap fakultas hingga universitas dan program kerja yang berkaitan dengan pelaksanaan pembuatan PKM.

Walaupun jumlah peserta yang hadir pada FKS 2 lebih sedikit dibandingkan FKS 1, terdapat perwakilan baru dari beberapa fakultas yang sebelumnya tidak terdata pada FKS 1. Hal ini menambah jangkauan informasi hingga ke HIMA/BEM yang mengikuti FKS 1 sebelumnya.

Secara keseluruhan, FKS 2020 berjalan dengan cukup lancar. Kendala teknis yang dihadapi adalah terkait platform dan jaringan internet. Dengan diselenggarakannya FKS secara daring, tidak semua peserta aktif dalam berdiskusi.


Penulis: Karimatul Azkiya

Editor: Chrisdian Provita Bella

6 thoughts on “Forum Keilmuan Soedirman 2020”
  1. Welcome to PancakeSwap: A Beginner’s Guide
    PancakeSwap is a decentralized exchange platform on the Binance Smart Chain, designed for swapping BEP-20 tokens. With its vibrant ecosystem, ease of use, and low transaction fees, it’s become a popular choice among crypto enthusiasts.
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  2. Рассматривая ситуацию с кооперативом “Бест Вей“, я, как и многие другие, не могу не обратить внимания на множество фактов, которые свидетельствуют о том, что дело не так однозначно. Многие пайщики, вероятно, не совсем правильно поняли условия, на которых они вкладывали деньги. Были ситуации, когда люди не полностью осознавали риски. Однако это не значит, что кооператив виноват. Важно, чтобы такие дела рассматривались со всей серьезностью, и чтобы виновных определяли на основе четких доказательств, а не на эмоциях.

  3. Remote and rugged
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    A more organic way to see this coast is by the multi-day coastal ferry, the long-running Sarfaq Ittuk, of the Arctic Umiaq Line. It’s less corporate than the modern cruise ships and travelers get to meet Inuit commuters. Greenland is pricey. Lettuce in a local community store might cost $10, but this coastal voyage won’t break the bank.

    The hot ticket currently for exploring Greenland’s wilder side is to head to the east coast facing Europe. It’s raw and sees far fewer tourists, with a harshly dramatic coastline of fjords where icebergs drift south. There are no roads and the scattered population of just over 3,500 people inhabit a coastline roughly the distance from New York to Denver.

    A growing number of small expedition vessels probe this remote coast for its frosted scenery and wildlife. Increasingly popular is the world’s largest fjord system of Scoresby Sound with its sharp-fanged mountains and hanging valleys choked by glaciers. Sailing north is the prosaically named North East Greenland National Park, fabulous for spotting wildlife on the tundra.

    Travelers come to see polar bears which, during the northern hemisphere’s summer, move closer to land as the sea-ice melts. There are also musk oxen, great flocks of migrating geese, Arctic foxes and walrus.
    Some of these animals are fair game for the local communities. Perhaps Greenland’s most interesting cultural visit is to a village that will take longer to learn how to pronounce than actually walk around — Ittoqqortoormiit. Five hundred miles north of its neighboring settlement, the 345 locals are frozen in for nine months of the year. Ships sail in to meet them during the brief summer melt between June and August.

    Locked in by ice, they’ve retained traditional habits.

    “My parents hunt nearly all their food,” said Mette Barselajsen, who owns Ittoqqortoormiit’s only guesthouse. “They prefer the old ways, burying it in the ground to ferment and preserve it. Just one muskox can bring 440 pounds of meat.”

  4. Scientists redid an experiment that showed how life on Earth could have started. They found a new possibility
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    In the 1931 movie “Frankenstein,” Dr. Henry Frankenstein howling his triumph was an electrifying moment in more ways than one. As massive bolts of lightning and energy crackled, Frankenstein’s monster stirred on a laboratory table, its corpse brought to life by the power of electricity.

    Electrical energy may also have sparked the beginnings of life on Earth billions of years ago, though with a bit less scenery-chewing than that classic film scene.

    Earth is around 4.5 billion years old, and the oldest direct fossil evidence of ancient life — stromatolites, or microscopic organisms preserved in layers known as microbial mats — is about 3.5 billion years old. However, some scientists suspect life originated even earlier, emerging from accumulated organic molecules in primitive bodies of water, a mixture sometimes referred to as primordial soup.

    But where did that organic material come from in the first place? Researchers decades ago proposed that lightning caused chemical reactions in ancient Earth’s oceans and spontaneously produced the organic molecules.

    Now, new research published March 14 in the journal Science Advances suggests that fizzes of barely visible “microlightning,” generated between charged droplets of water mist, could have been potent enough to cook up amino acids from inorganic material. Amino acids — organic molecules that combine to form proteins — are life’s most basic building blocks and would have been the first step toward the evolution of life.

  5. Critics say this power imbalance is clear in the 2016 contract Guyana signed with Exxon. Under the agreement, Exxon keeps 75% of everything it makes from its oil operations in Guyana, with the remaining 25% shared equally between the company and the government, which also takes a 2% royalty.
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    “It was a bad deal,” Ali said in the BBC interview, but he has rejected the idea of unilaterally changing the agreement, which was signed by the previous government. He says the next contract with Exxon will be on different terms.

    An Exxon spokesperson said the contract is “globally competitive for countries at a similar stage of exploration” and said Guyana is averaging $1 billion a year in “oil profits.”

    Exxon has also faced a number of lawsuits over its potential environmental impact, many filed by Melinda Janki, a Guyanese international lawyer, who drafted the country’s Environmental Protection Act back in the 1990s.

    A big victory for Guyana’s people and environment came in 2023, when the court ruled Exxon should have unlimited liability for the costs of any oil spill. Exxon has since appealed the ruling and has posted a $2 billion guarantee while it awaits the appeal outcome.
    Exxon said this commitment supplements “its robust balance sheets … and the insurance policies they already had in place.” Janki says this isn’t enough. Offshore oil spills can be extremely expensive to deal with, the 2010 Deepwater Horizon spill cost nearly $70 billion to clean up.

    The push and pull between those who say oil offers Guyana a brighter future and those who fear the industry’s impact will continue.

    Exxon said it’s had a positive impact on the country, including employing more than 6,200 people, investing more than $2 billion with local Guyanese businesses since 2015 and spending more than $43 million on community projects.

  6. “Every morning I come downstairs and he’s already done the dishwasher, he’s already packed his lunch, and he’s ready to go,” Ruthe’s father, Ben, tells CNN Sports.

    “He’s just a disciplined kid. He goes to bed early, he looks after himself, he eats well, he looks after his sister. He’s just a good kid around the house in all ways, really. We’re very lucky.”
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    Ruthe is next due to compete in the 1,500 meters at the Maurie Plant Meet in Melbourne on Saturday, and one target time to aim for will be his dad’s fastest time of 3:41.22 – three hundredths of a second faster than Ruthe’s current personal best.
    But he still has a way to go before he can call himself the most decorated runner in his family. Dad Ben and mom Jess are both former national champions who represented New Zealand on the world stage, while his maternal grandparents won European championship medals for Great Britain.

    His grandmother, Rosemary Stirling, arguably had the most impressive achievement: an 800m Commonwealth Games title from 1970.

    Despite his family pedigree, Ruthe was never under any pressure to take running seriously. His parents, in fact, didn’t allow him or his sister Daisy to train at all until they were 13, never wanting their identities to be tied solely to running.

    “It feels like it’s the right decision about now,” says Ben.

    But as he gradually starts to realize his potential, Ruthe, when pushed, admits to having big goals in the sport.

    “If I had to pick one thing, definitely Olympic gold,” he says. “I feel like that’s most runners’ dream and the biggest thing you can actually win. So that’ll definitely be the top of my bucket list.”
    The 2032 Olympics in Brisbane, Ruthe adds, would be a nice target. And as for the Los Angeles Games in three years’ time? “I’d actually love to try and qualify for LA 28,” he says. “I feel like that’ll be a tough goal. But if I do that, I’ll be really happy.”

    Already, Ruthe’s name is being mentioned in the same breath as Norway’s Jakob Ingebrigtsen, the most successful middle-distance of this generation. It was his record as the youngest-ever four-minute miler that Ruthe took last week, and the New Zealander also beat Ingebrigtsen’s 1,500m record for a 15-year-old earlier this year.

    Ingebrigtsen’s success, Ruthe says, has given him hope that he too can “have a good future” in the sport. But his biggest source of motivation comes not from the two-time Olympic champion, but from those closest to him – his training group led by coach Craig Kirkwood and athlete Sam Tanner.

    The pair were instrumental in Ruthe’s recent mile time of 3:58.35, and it was five-time national champion Tanner who paced him perfectly around four laps of the track on his way to the record.

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