Sometime last spring, I began to
have trouble falling asleep at night. It was a real downer until I discovered
baseball. What could be more soporific than a big screen filled with relaxed
looking people standing around on a field of soft green? Zzzz.
Thursday, April 30, 2015
Saturday, March 28, 2015
Conservative Economics
Recently, I remarked to a conservative friend that I thought
Paul Krugman’s writing was among the best I’d ever read. He replied that I should
read the Wall Street Journal to get a
more balanced perspective.
I let that pass, but if I’d been more assertive I’d have
stated that I don’t want to pay a chunk of dollars every month to read people advocating
antediluvian economic theories.
Thursday, March 19, 2015
Cultural Dimensions
Decoding the Rules of
Conversation
By Pamela Druckerman
Ms. Druckerman’s essay resonates at two levels.
At the most basic, she is an unusually intelligent person, a
gifted writer and, I would speculate, a very pleasant person to be around.
Tuesday, March 10, 2015
Me, The Great
Sylvia and I were discussing relatives during our beach walk the other day, and I realized that most of the people I called “aunt,” and “uncle,” were in fact “great” aunts and uncles.
And this led me to realize that, thanks to Alex and Kate Didion, I am also a Great Uncle.
Remembering that ambassadors and former ambassadors get to be called “ambassador” no matter where they are, I now wish to be addressed as “His Excellency, Garrison The Great Uncle.”
Monday, March 9, 2015
It Must Be Very Sad When Children Start School
“It must be very sad when your children start school.”
I stared blankly. A moment ago I’d been asleep on the couch, then the doorbell rang and here was this tall, blond man, blathering about school. Odd, but I had to respond…
Thursday, February 26, 2015
Russia’s Ukrainian Disaster
Nearly everyone believes the best way to solve problems is careful discussion among reasonable, rational people. Unfortunately, political conflicts often produce emotional dimensions that have the ability to sweep away exchanges of this kind, and the long-term crisis in Ukraine is a case in point.
What if reasonable, rational people on each side were able to bypass the politicians and sit down to develop a solution?
Tuesday, February 24, 2015
No Child Left Behind is a Sideshow
The New York Times editorial of February 21, 2015 (“Don’t Give up the Gains in Education” http://www.nytimes.com/2015/02/22/opinion/sunday/dont-give-up-the-gains-in-education.html?partner=rssnyt&emc=rss&_r=0 ) makes reasonable arguments if you are willing to accept its very traditional premise: the school is the locus of educational improvement.
But recent research challenges that premise.
Saturday, February 21, 2015
Martial Arts, Grit, and Education Reform
After decades of failing to change education by “fixing schools,” some in the U.S. are beginning to look beyond the closed loop of the classroom and consider the attitudes students bring both directly to school as well as to the whole concept of education and learning.
Flipped Out Over Flipping
I’ve finally had it. I can’t stand it any more. I just saw another serious academic article touting the benefits of the “flipped classroom.”
This last one was one too many. I flipped out.
Measuring The Inexpertise of Experts
A recent story quoted two professors at the University of Illinois as saying that many self-described education experts weren’t actually experts. The professors determined this by first looking at people quoted in the media on education reform, then looking to see how many had Ph.D.s and then running their names against databases containing research citations. It seems that lots of published and popularly cited experts were under-credentialed.
I’m not impressed with the study.
Martial Arts and the Italian Door
In another essay, I described how the support and encouragement of others made it possible for me to succeed in taekwondo. One interesting little vignette was left out of that story, for the excellent reason that it’s not relevant to the main message. But it is fun, so here it goes.
Sunday, February 15, 2015
Playing with Languages
Everyone has plans for retirement, and a key goal for me was refreshing some of the foreign languages I’d studied.
I’ve dabbled in lots of languages, including exotics like Albanian and Hungarian, but wanted to be reasonable and focus on restoring ability in the languages I knew the best: French, Romanian, and Bulgarian.
Saturday, February 14, 2015
Motivation and Sports
In the initial round of college football’s first playoff, players at favored Alabama and Florida State knew they had to do well to win, but saw the real challenge as the next game—against each other.
By contrast, players at the underdogs, Oregon and Ohio State, believed they would need to have an exceptional performance to win.
Friday, February 13, 2015
Rental Car Journal
A Review of the Chevrolet Malibu, Hyundai Sonata, and Chrysler 200
During the last month, I’ve had the experience of driving three of the major entries in the American market’s fiercely competitive mid-size market. These vehicles, all of which I drove courtesy of rental companies, give an interesting window into the state of the automobile industry today.
Wednesday, February 11, 2015
Monday, February 9, 2015
Don’t Give In to Poverty
James Harvey of the National Superintendents Roundtable has provided some valuable insights into the international education rankings that are so often used to bash the U.S.
Saturday, February 7, 2015
And Thus Spake Google
The
humanities are under attack. Enrollments are plummeting, tax cutting zombies in
state legislatures are looking for more reasons to cut higher education funding
and, most worrisome, a national panel of distinguished persons has published a
report.
As an
historian and former lesser deanlet in a college with the word “humanities” in
its official title, I find the attacks discouraging. And, as someone who writes
about technology, I can see further dangers. Specifically, is computer
technology in general, and Google in particular, going to destroy the role of
the humanities in studying foreign countries and cultures? Even foreign
languages themselves? Is French writer Fabien Cazenave right to suggest
Google’s Translate software as a solution to the EU’s multiplicity of
languages?[i]
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