LATimes: She finally has a home: Harvard Khadijah Williams, 18, overcomes a lifetime in shelters and on skid row. – inspiring.
Category Archives: Education
When walking to school becomes a political act
NYTimes: Why Can’t She Walk to School? :
Certain realities also shape these procedures, such as the schedules of working parents, unsafe neighborhoods and school transportation cuts.
But when these constraints are mixed with anxiety over transferring children from the private world of family to the public world of school, the new normal can look increasingly baroque. Now, in some suburbs, parents and children sit in their cars at the end of driveways, waiting for the bus. Some school buses now have been fitted with surveillance cameras, watching for beatings and bullying.
Children are driven to schools two blocks away. At some schools, parents drive up with their children’s names displayed on their dashboards, a school official radios to the building, and each child is escorted out.
When to detach the parental leash? The trip to and from school has become emblematic of the conflict parents feel between teaching children autonomy and keeping them safe. In parenting blogs and books, the school-bus stop itself is shorthand for the turmoil of contemporary parents over when to relinquish control.
Thank you Les Paul (and Les Paul’s mom)
Les Paul passed away last week, and I just wanted to post this little piece of thanks and to share something about his story that I had heard before, but seems extra relevant to my personal exploration into education and how we learn – his childhood music teacher told his mom, “Your boy, Lester, will never learn music.” (NYTimes).
Yep. You read that right.
It sounds like his mom enabled him to keep at it. Read the entire NYTimes story. Not only did she enable him to continue to pursue music, it sounds like she empowered him to look at his entire house as a creative pallet. And he did. Minnesota Public Radio’s blog, “Trial Balloon” went so far as to say that “Les Paul’s Mom Invented Rock & Roll”. It’s hard to argue that.
Beyond empowering him, enabling him to continue when some indicated he had no talent was huge. Perseverance clearly became a core part of his story going forward, dealing with a car crash that would have eliminated his capability to play (he had his arm fused in position to be able to still do so), dealing with painful arthritis in his hands (he adjusted his playing style). He would cope with a myriad of life’s ups and downs and in doing so left so many gifts for the world.
Think about it. And think about how the world was changed because Les Paul believed in trying and trying again.
Psychology Today, “Les Paul, Skills, and Abilities”.
NPR: Guitar Legend And Innovator Les Paul Dies
NYTimes: “Les Paul, Guitar Innovator, Dies at 94”
The Wrap: Obit: Guitar Hero Les Paul.
Gibson: The World Has Lost a Remarkable Innovator and Musician: Les Paul Passes Away at 94
Inspiring
Four Videos on Changing Our Notions About Education
Dr. Tae: “Building A New Culture Of Teaching And Learning”:
TED.com: “Dave Eggers’ wish: Once Upon A School”
TED.com: “Alan Kay shares a powerful idea about ideas”:
TED.com: “Ken Robinson says schools kill creativity”:
Metafilter Thread: Scratch, a beginner’s programming language
Shamus Young: Scratch
Some interesting social science, programming, infographics, overlaps
The New York Observer: In the Battle Between Facebook and MySpace, A Digital ‘White Flight’
FlowingData: Rise of the Data Scientist
Coding Horror: Code: It’s Trivial
Zero Intelligence Agents: How to: Use Python and Social Network Analysis to Find New Twitter Friends
Quotes from Paul Lockhart’s terrific essay about the state of Mathematics education in America
Paul Lockhart’s terrific essay about the state of mathematics education and what should be done: A Mathematician’s Lament (25 page must read PDF):
G.H. Hardy’s excellent description:
A mathematician, like a painter or poet, is a maker
of patterns. If his patterns are more permanent than
theirs, it is because they are made with ideas.
So mathematicians sit around making patterns of ideas. What sort of patterns? What sort of ideas? Ideas about the rhinoceros? No, those we leave to the
biologists. Ideas about language and culture? No, not usually. These things are
all far too complicated for most mathematicians’ taste. If there is anything
like a unifying aesthetic principle in mathematics, it is this: simple is
beautiful. Mathematicians enjoy thinking about the simplest possible things,
and the simplest possible things are imaginary.
By removing the creative process and leaving only the results of that process, you virtually guarantee that no one will have any real engagement with the
subject. It is like saying that Michelangelo created a beautiful sculpture,
without letting me see it.By concentrating on what, and leaving out why, mathematics is reduced to an
empty shell. The art is not in the “truth” but in the explanation, the
argument. It is the argument itself which gives the truth its context, and
determines what is really being said and meant. Mathematics is the art of
explanation. If you deny students the opportunity to engage in this activity–
to pose their own problems, make their own conjectures and discoveries, to be
wrong, to be creatively frustrated, to have an inspiration, and to cobble
together their own explanations and proofs– you deny them mathematics
itself. So no, I’m not complaining about the presence of facts and formulas in
our mathematics classes, I’m complaining about the lack of mathematics in our
mathematics classes.
If teaching is reduced to mere data transmission, if there is no sharing of
excitement and wonder, if teachers themselves are passive recipients of
information and not creators of new ideas, what hope is there for their
students? If adding fractions is to the teacher an arbitrary set of rules, and
not the outcome of a creative process and the result of aesthetic choices and
desires, then of course it will feel that way to the poor students.Teaching is not about information. It’s about having an honest intellectual relationship with your students. It requires no method, no tools, and no training. Just the ability to be real. And if you can’t be real, then you have no right to inflict yourself upon innocent children. In particular, you can’t teach teaching. Schools of education are a complete crock. Oh, you can take classes in early childhood development and whatnot, and you can be trained to use a blackboard “effectively” and to prepare an organized “lesson plan” (which, by the way, insures that your lesson will be planned, and therefore false), but you will never be a real teacher if you are unwilling to be a real person. Teaching means openness and honesty, an ability to share excitement, and a love of learning. Without these, all the education degrees in the world won’t help you, and with them they are completely unnecessary.
It’s perfectly simple. Students are not aliens. They respond to beauty and
pattern, and are naturally curious like anyone else. Just talk to them! And
more importantly, listen to them!
Read the whole thing. This essay has reinforced some beliefs of mine about software engineering, teaching and parenting.
Slashdot has a decent thread on the piece.
“Amusing Ourselves to Death” a comic by Stuart McMillen
Thought provoking, conversation starting, and probably controversial counting upon who you are, check out the whole single page comic.
Parenting, Education and Inspiration for Sunday May 17, 2009
Inquirer: Bari Pepe, 46, Years of trauma behind her, now she wants to aid others – ex-addict acheives master’s in social work. Very inspiring story. Read it.
The Boston Globe: Inside the baby mind: It’s unfocused, random, and extremely good at what it does. How we can learn from a baby’s brain. – “Genius is nothing more nor less than childhood recovered at will.” – Metafilter thread.
New Yorker: The secret of self-control. – let your toddler’s imagination be free, encourage creativity, to try and try again, and understand that we have the power of choice.
Hacking Education – A New York Venture Capital Fund Focused on Early Stage & Startup Investing
NYTimes: Marc C. Taylor: End the University as We Know It – straight up inspiration about tearing down the status quo to meet the needs of today and tomorrow.
CSMonitor: In tough times, graduates (and parents) assess the worth of a liberal arts education – just an opinion – I think liberal arts majors are well positioned for the economy of today and tomorrow.
Deseret News: Universities will be ‘irrelevant’ by 2020, Y. professor says
Tom Baker: Getting Involved in Higher Education – software engineers should seriously consider teaching, here’s why.
Slashdot.org: With a Computer Science Degree, an Old Man At 35?
Inquirer: Daniel Rubin: Grads, please note: It’s not about you
xkcd: 1000 Times – its all about context isn’t it?
College Education Link Dump for Friday, April 3, 2009
NYTimes: Finding Hope Online, and Hoping a Job Follows – the story of Raymond Vaughn, out of work window installer, and his foray into online education in hopes to build a new career.
Salon: Gated communities of learning – the cost of higher education keeps rising, at time where it is increasingly an environment.
Ask Slashdot: With a Computer Science Degree, an Old Man At 35? – how should someone a little older than usual get back on track with his or her education?
guardian.co.uk: Online and on the money: – online and state colleges are seeing a boom in growth.
Times Online: Harvard’s masters of the apocalypse
The Internet revolution being felt in media, politics, art, will transform the education system over the next few years. Some related links:
Knowledge@Wharton: ‘The Objective of Education Is Learning, Not Teaching’
a vc: Hacking Education
a vc: One Thing You Don’t Need To Be An Entrepreneur: A College Degree
New Scientist: ‘iTunes university’ better than the real thing
correct me if i’m wrong: The Paradox of Self-Education