Author: Joseph Thibault
Malcolm Gladwell Does NECC
One of my favorite writers, Malcolm Gladwell (The Outliers, Blink, and The Tipping Point) gave one of the keynote addresses at NECC in Washington DC this year. It’s a great talk that ambles along to touch on the 10,000 hour rule (read Outliers for his complete piece about that), Fleetwood Mac and what it really means to learn and to construct a learning community.
Gladwell is savvy enough to touch on the most poignant aspects of the current education debate, specifically that small classes don’t mean jack. The recording is pretty good quality and more information can be found at this site.
Even if you’re not into education, this is a great listen about what it takes to be successful and how we often forget about/discount/downplay the hard work that our greatest and brightest put in before they become ‘stars’. Gladwell starts at about 54 minutes and closes out the recording.
Nixing the daily commute
I work from home, so commuting is not that difficult for me. I usually only make one stop (the bathroom) on my long commute from bed to desk. It’s a tough life sure. But I’ve been working on ways to shorten the commute (it’s all about desk location). On another note, not having any commute has caused a few strange byproducts to emerge:
- I hate driving (in traffic or not) now. It’s not that I find it difficult (though it arguably is the most dangerous thing I do these days), it’s just that I could be working, reading, sleeping or doing ANYTHING else besides putting all of my energy, effort and attention into driving a car and dodging dumb drivers (and not-so-dumb pedestrians and cyclists).
- It’s also decreased the time I spend outside or talking to people quite drastically. But that’s an entirely different topic.
The real issue, I think, is a total loss of efficiency when driving becomes the ‘job’. Removing focus from the task is dangerous (even listening to music can be hazardous…I recommend pulling over to change CDs or get an ipod/changer). According to a 07 Gallup poll, Americans spend about 46 minutes in a car every day as a product of their commute. Worse is 85% do the commute alone.
My point is this: The need for great public transportation is more than ever (but it’s absence is a long trend), but the real need is for automation. The more control we secede to technology in getting us to where we’re going (face it cars already park themselves) the better off America will be, in my humble opinion. The effects will be this:
- falling traffic injuries and fatalities
- drastically lower drunk driving offenses
- less congestion
- shorter commute times
- increased commuter productivity (remember, that’s 46 minutes that you could either spend working or sleeping)
- fewer traffic collisions
- and probably a few benefits that I haven’t thought of.
Some people are already thinking about this, but they always do with a caveat (that the public isn’t ready). I call bulls**t. I already hate driving. Really the only excuse is technology (but there are bright spots there). The military always has the best stuff and in the case of vehicles that drive themselves it’s leagues ahead of any civilian application (just read about the DARPA challenge or the newest “tools” that have come from it). Like the internet this technology will trickle down (but not soon enough for me) and revolutionize the way we get around.
To the left is a picture of a advanced concept of the Autonomous Mobile (Autonomobile) which was designed by the same dudes that did the G1. I don’t necessarily think this will garner the attention of the car enthusiast in America, but it does show how different a car that drives itself will make our lives (VERY VERY different).
Kinda like a small RV crossed with a unshapely Geo Metro, meets the bay windows of a beautiful Vermont home.
Looking at it only makes me think of one other thing: If cars are this cool and functional, why the hell do we need houses?!
The new News.
In a recent news article from Austin360.com‘s Omar Gallaga he reported on the news about the news that surrounded the death of the King of Pop (..tear..), and I think, got something right on.
The basic analysis is that TMZ, a celebrity gossip site and atrocious television show (honestly I want to hurt myself when Molly puts it on, it’s possible worse than the Hills) beat out CNN as the faster, more reliable news source. I’ll give them that (for celebrity gossip only) considering they have 100s of free lancers stalking the protagonists of their “news worthy” news stories (before they even make the story).
It’s an interesting point, but this quote is really sums up what has happened:
It was a make-or-break moment for TMZ: …a clearer signal that the torch for breaking-news coverage had been passed from cable news to scrappy online news sites. The 24-hour news cycle may now be closer to 24 minutes.
So thanks Twitter, for giving ADHD to our ADD.
The CrunchPad
I want one.
Probably one of the coolest concepts in a while. The difficulty of not having a keyboard could be overcome pretty quickly (Dragon NaturallySpeaking anyone?). This thing will kill the kindle’s usefullness as a feed aggregator/reader and will do pretty awesome in the personal media department by allowing streamed video/tv.
I think it’ll be a homerun. (via NYTimes)
How do you measure "Teacher Performance"?
From Open Education today…
In a major speech to the members of the National Education Association today, Secretary of Education Arne Duncan insisted it was time to not only rethink teacher seniority and tenure, it was time to tie those elements and pay to teacher performance.
Whether you’re on this side or not. We can all agree that the move is bold, but all the pieces have not been created yet. Most importantly, in my opinion, is that lack of a clear definition or method for measuring “teacher performance”. It’s ironic, because the legislation we’re moving away from had a clear objective (student performance) as measured by the standardized testing through NCLB. Unfortunately, after the hoopla of small class size, rural vs. urban schools, placement programs, magnets, etc. etc. we’re down from a meta analysis of data to 1 metric: Great teachers means students learn and succeed. John Dewey probably could have told you that. Looking back at my own education I could probably tell you which teachers were great and which were not, but that’s not very much use now (except for the fact that many of my teachers are still employed at the same schools I went to…so maybe I’m actually on to something…).
We (the USA) need to really buckle down on what teacher perfomance is, how it’s measured and what level of performance should our current and future teachers be working to achieve? One of the only details to date is that teacher bonuses are offered for teachers that have a National
Board Certification.
This is an interesting piece of information which plays well into the overall goal (if I’ve read the news correctly) of aligning the teacher performance question with that of a unified teacher certification for all states. As a short sighted solution, this could very quickly improve teachers in many of the lower performing states over the next 5 years. However in the long term significant research will be needed to address what teacher performance really means (or even the National Board for Professional Teaching Standards might struggle to answer).
Check out the new digs.
the Baaaa-studs.
I’d never heard of extreme sheparding. But this definitely is extreme.
I
I’ve been waiting to see this since I nearly peed my pants watching the trailer about 9 months ago. And I’m going tonight. I’ve been a little worried though after reading some of the reviews of the movie (notably the one on nytimes.com). Sure, sure Bay loves to merchandise, sell out and blow up some stuff with the support and permission of the US Army. But honestly, who in his position wouldn’t use transformers to blow up some tanks and artillery (even if you can make it look just as good with CGX)?
That’s all until I read the most amazing movie review ever on io9.com (part of Gawker media group).
So, to sum up: Transformers: Revenge Of The Fallen is one of the greatest achievements in the history of cinema, if not the greatest. You could easily argue that cinema, as an artform, has all been leading up to this. It will destabilize your limbic system, probably forever, and make you doubt the solidity of your surroundings. Generations of auteurs have struggled, in vain, to create a cinematic experience as overwhelming, and as liberating, as ROTF. [emphasis is mine]
AWESOME.
Space – the next frontier
History is being made this Friday, the world’s first spaceport (yes, spaceport) is breaking ground in NM, USA. Pretty exciting stuff, maybe I will make it to the Moon afterall.