things to look at (December 29th - December 30th)
a few, tasty links (December 29th - December 30th):
- PDF FAQ
- Bullet Continuous Collision Detection and Physics Library
- Do not set yourself on fire …: Extract PDF title from all files on a directory
- Nation & World | Inventor sacrifices family, savings to help world’s poor | Seattle Times Newspaper
- Terence Tao’s home page
- Ten Lessons I Wish I Had Been Taught
- On our duties as scientists
- Common Errors in College Math
- Does the Inertia of a Body Depend upon its Energy-Content?
- Thunar
- Hands on with Blueprint, a CSS Framework :: CSS Demos
- How Open Source Projects Survive Poisonous People (And You Can Too)
- Box2D - Home
- git-cheat-sheet-large.png (PNG Image, 3300x2550 pixels) - Scaled (30%)
- Einstein?s derivation of E=mc^2 « What?s new
- BRL-CAD Home Page
- Laser Image Projector - Instructables - DIY, How To, tech, art, diy
- Belt Sander Stand - Instructables - DIY, How To, tech, craft, diy
- Created by Camtasia Studio 2
- Classroom Activities, Kids Involved Doing Science, Charles & Priscilla Scaife, Union College
- Zack Rusin: Git cheat sheet
- Origami Paper
- AlternateIdea: Textmate Vibrant Ink Theme and Prototype Bundle
- How-To Build a Telephone Recording Circuit from an Old Modem - Engadget
- Harlem Children’s Zone
- Pneumatic Snowball Cannon - Instructables - DIY, How To, outdoors, offbeat, diy
- Autonomous Foosball Table - Instructables - DIY, How To, tech, games, diy
- Cheap secret compartment! - Instructables - DIY, How To, craft, offbeat, diy
- Build a Wind Harp! - Instructables - DIY, How To, offbeat, outdoors, diy
- Bamboo Dining Table and Benches - Instructables - DIY, How To, home, diy
- technobabbler » drive a webcam with python
things to look at (December 26th - December 28th)
a few, tasty links (December 26th - December 28th):
- Whats Its Color: Find the complementary and primary color of any image
- ·?Bendito Machine?·
- IT Conversations: Paul Tuckfield
- Funny and Creative Animated Videos | Graphics | Smashing Magazine
- MAPLight.org Video Tour
- What Is a Build System?
- BarackObama.com | Jessica Slider’s Blog: Barack Discusses Transparency in Toledo
- Jobs, News and Views for All of Higher Education - Inside Higher Ed :: New Collaboration for Scholarly Publishing
- 12 Filtering Tips for Better Information in Half the Time | The Blog of Author Tim Ferriss
- Hackszine.com: Servo hack: make a 360-degree robot drive motor
- programming: How to use Google Desktop, Apache, Firefox and a couple extensions to create a centralized search server for your LAN. Perfect for small business!
- #haml.tutorial
- Ask 37signals: How do you process credit cards? - (37signals)
- MIT World » : The Next Frontier: Bioelectronic Interfaces
- Ingrid, the jQuery Datagrid.
- RF Jammer - Instructables - DIY, How To, tech, diy
- The Organization Kid
- Giant Fresnel Lens Deathray: An Experiment in Optics - The World’s Biggest Show & Tell - tech, offbeat, diy
- leah buechley - do it yourself - getting started with AVR microcontrollers on mac OSX
- Eyescapes
- kwout | A brilliant way to quote
- Senior Remote - The World’s Biggest Show & Tell - tech, craft, diy
- leah buechley - do it yourself - make your own electronic sewing kit
- The World’s Most Toxic Value System
- Straight Dope Message Board - I waterboard!
- Mixing Memory : Priming “God Did It”
- O’Reilly School of Technology
- free university lectures - computer science, mathematics, physics, chemistry
- Python Motion Detection Library + Demo [python] [motion detection] [wiimote] [eyetoy]
i remember when i was excited about spellings’s appointment
Really, when she was first appointed, I was optimistic. But I’ve lost that optimism.
Last week, Secretary Spellings spoke at a meeting of the National Advisory Committee on Institutional Quality and Integrity (NACIQI). Reading through the transcript, I was struck by how deeply conflicted and fundamentally screwed up Spellings’s vision of education is. Surprised by how poorly thought out her positions were, I looked into her background, and discovered what felt so familiar about her mistakes: she has never taught. People with limited or no teaching experience frequently say things that make sense on the sound-bite level, but are fraught with contradiction upon closer inspection.
Like this:
All of us know that our higher education system is in a period of transformation. Where a college degree was once a sign of privilege, it’s now all but a prerequisite for opportunity. As a result, our postsecondary system is now called upon to serve a larger, more diverse group of people with diverse and ever-changing needs who are entering into an ever-changing labor market. […] As higher education changes, so must our accreditation system. Instead of only looking at process, we must work to emphasize results.
How do you reconcile crass credentialism with an emphasis on “results?” On the one hand, Spellings acknowledges college’s history of classism. On the other, she concludes that the triumph of credentialism necessitates egalitarianism. This is some train wreck of a syllogism: credentialism intrinsically opposes the egalitarian ideals Spellings cites in highlighting the need for education to “serve a larger, more diverse group of people with diverse and ever-changing needs who are entering into an ever-changing labor market.”
And then to call for a focus on results, instead of process? Spellings’s claim is that we can make the process of giving credentials more meaningful by requiring they more closely couple to the results of one’s education. All the hoodoo goes on in those few words: “requiring they more closely couple.” And therein lies the “assessment debate,” which frankly, I find difficult to engage without bringing along with me a slew of philosophical baggage that needs to be handled, first.
Setting that aside,
We are the only independent gatekeepers in the accrediting system. Without us, the process would be organized and governed by the same people it’s meant to evaluate. […] We do not expect medical or financial professionals to do their work without independent oversight.
This is plainly false. Both doctors and lawyers are examples of self-regulating bodies. The American Medical Association (AMA) is full of doctors; bar associations are full of lawyers and judges. I’m not suggesting that we should use our health and legal systems as models; however, it is valuable to point out that self-regulation is possible. Thinking in terms of gatekeepers and independent assessment creates top-down solutions characteristic of bureaucracy. In an industry plagued by complaints of administrative lethargy, I can’t imagine that the right step to take is to introduce reforms requiring even more bureaucracy.
Students rely on us to oversee issues from student outcomes to student lending. […] on behalf of consumers, be they students, families, or institutions, we have the right and the responsibility to ask for more and better information. […] In any enterprise, informed consumers can make smarter choices. The more knowledge students have, the easier it is to find the school that suits their needs. And the easier it is for taxpayers to see what their investments yield.
We rely on you implicitly and ignorantly! One of the most frustrating and frightening tendencies of a ballooning government is to obfuscate under the protection of self-righteousness. Bureaucracies are rarely malicious; it is their good intentions that lead them so far astray. Rather than concluding that a position as a public servant entails license to act on our behalf (as you see fit), it should conservatively entail the obligation to act on our behalf. I think a better first step would be to make the role the government plays in higher education transparent. I am far more concerned about the freedom and flexibility accorded colleges than potentially fraudulent accrediting bodies.
Spellings points out — rightly — that more data are needed. But she bites off more than she should in claiming that the government has a right to parse and dole that data out. I’m not asking the government to answer the “assessment question” for me. If the government wants to interpret that data and generate reports from it, fine. But first, please tell me what data you’re after, then work out how you’ll make that data available to me before jumping the gun and telling me what I should do.
Most students don’t know that different types of accreditation exist until they encounter hurdles. Every year, millions repeat coursework because their credentials don’t transfer. As a result, billions of dollars are wasted, not to mention lost time, productivity, and talent.
Let’s get this straight: talent is wasted if not validated by accreditation? This is an excerpt from the same speech in which Spellings proclaims the importance of putting results ahead of process! It is unconscionable to perpetuate a system whose mere incompetence and irrelevance is capable obviating talent.
Let me repeat: no one-size-fits-all measures. No standardized tests. All I ask is that institutions be more clear about the benefits they offer to students. Through the accrediting process, we can help bring this about.
I get it: you want to distance yourself from your miscarried NCLB poster child. But when was the last time governmental intervention made for more clarity? I know that’s taking an unfair (well, unsubstantiated) shot; however, I am convinced that the government’s reputation as the epitome of poor, wasteful organization and unnecessary bureaucracy (alongside the military) is well-deserved.1 I’m just asking that before we look to impose a top-down solution, unavoidably involving the government at a very fine scale, let’s try some more organic, distributed solutions.
I say that blithely, but unfortunately, this unavoidably requires straightforward discussion of what we want out of education. Despite the centrality of this question, by and large it is a question that goes unaddressed. I suspect that Spellings’s ambiguity about what information we should be getting from colleges stems from a fundamental ambiguity about the purpose and aims of education. And no committee convened to draft a statement of purpose for the educational system will ever be able to agree on something specific enough to be meaningful or general enough to be useful.
And you know why this is? It is because education is a fundamentally personal process.
- For the time being, at least — Obama’s efforts for transparency inspire hope. [↩]
things to look at (December 16th - December 25th)
a few, tasty links (December 16th - December 25th):
- ref Einstein Full Text
- 23andMe - Genetics Just Got Personal.
- WireIt - a Javascript Wiring Library
- The Pandemic Ventilator - The World’s Biggest Show & Tell - life, tech, diy
- Top 10 Javascripts for Image Manipulation | Blog Oh Blog
- Snowflake Movies
- The Database Programmer: Database Skills: Complete Contents
- Low speed AVR oscilloscope - The World’s Biggest Show & Tell - tech, diy
- The Python Challenge
- How to REALLY zap yourself - The World’s Biggest Show & Tell - offbeat, tech, diy
- Build a Microwave Transformer Homemade Welder - The World’s Biggest Show & Tell - tech, craft, diy
- sunkencity.org: flickrbackup
- Hackszine.com: Run a nested X11 desktop on the XO Laptop
- Ortho JavaScript Graphics - Home Page
- A Nickel’s Worth: Effective .emacs
- flot - Google Code
- IdeaTango.com About Us
- Damn Cool Algorithms, Part 3: Anagram Trees - Nick’s blog
- Linux Blog - linux.dsplabs.com.au » Blog Archive » latex ? professional Résumé layout made simple
- The PrintBot - The World’s Biggest Show & Tell - tech, art, diy
- 9-Volt Laser — — -Easy,Cool, and FUN!!!!!!!!! - The World’s Biggest Show & Tell - tech, diy
- The Sterling Engine, absorb energy from candles, coffee, and more! - The World’s Biggest Show & Tell - tech, home, diy
- Hackszine.com: HOWTO run Arduino on the XO Laptop
- CanvasPaint
- Install X11 on Tiger without the Tiger install DVD | Chris Martin
- codejibe.com - Free Code, Free Tutorials, Free Beer!
- Princeton 3D Model Search Engine
asian tour groups visit MIT on Christmas morning, too
i guess i’m talking at where 2.0 in may ‘08
…about the need for our resource networks to be opened up and made explicitly searchable, and how this has informed the way I’ve been playing around with geotagging resources in the effort to make a generic, resource matching framework for application developers.
For reference, Where 2.0 is:
Now in its fourth year, the Where 2.0 Conference is where the grassroots and leading edge developers building location aware technology intersect with the businesses and entrepreneurs seeking out location apps, platforms, and hardware to gain a competitive edge. In the O’Reilly conference tradition, Where 2.0 presents leading trends rather than chasing them.
overheard in front of 56-180
G: [sarcastically] Hopefully, my suicidal friend will call me, too!
Taking stress for granted is a perverted and disturbing characteristic of hyperstudents.
“Unschooling Yourself, Deschooling Society”
That’s the title of a seminar I’ll be running during IAP:
Unschooling Yourself, Deschooling Society
Alec Resnick, Eric Von Hippel
Thu Jan 10, 17, 24, 31, 03-04:30pm, E51-376
No limit but advance sign up required (see contact below)
Participants welcome at individual sessions (series)
Come take some time out to think about how the assumptions we’ve taken for granted about schooling and education for decades have perverted everything from the educational process to the job market to the health care system. We’ll be thinking about how to fix and change education through the lens of close readings of two books by Ivan Illich: Deschooling Society, and Tools for Conviviality. For those interested, we’ll work on writing articles about our educational experiences, as MIT students, for publication in educational media.
Contact: Alec Resnick, aresnick@MIT.EDU
Sponsor: Sloan School of Management
I’m looking for people to push back against Illich’s ideas. And I’m looking for people who will fall in love with them. And I’m looking to learn how to tell people about them and excite them effectively. And I’m pretty sure this seminar will do all of that (assuming anyone comes).
things to look at (December 9th - December 14th)
a few, tasty links (December 9th - December 14th):
- Books: None of the Above: Books: The New Yorker
- Splashup
- Make a trendy dry erase board out of aluminum - DIY Life
- Wiring Pen - The World’s Biggest Show & Tell - tech, diy
- hovercraft - The World’s Biggest Show & Tell - tech, craft, diy
- www.opengovdata.org - Open Government Working Group
- 8 Principles of Open Government Data
- pygooglechart
- How to make a steambox for bending wood - The World’s Biggest Show & Tell - tech, craft, diy
- The Art of the Startup Write-off « FoundRead
- Insane car battery hack! - The World’s Biggest Show & Tell - tech, offbeat, diy
- Ajax — A guide for the perplexed, Part 2: Develop a Dojo-based blog reader
- LED Rope Lights : Outdoor Patio String Lights : Holiday Lights
- O’Reilly Network — Creating Games in Ruby (Part 1)
- Jenn 3d
- Gear clock (Monoscope)
- Dr. Dobb’s | Hands-On Google Web Toolkit | December 10, 2007
- How to Make an OAWR (Obstacle Avoiding Walking Robot) - The World’s Biggest Show & Tell - games, tech, diy
- How to Build A Walking Robot - Passive Walker - The World’s Biggest Show & Tell - craft, tech, diy
- ASPN : Python Cookbook : I download all the Python Cookbook recipes
- Quagmire
- Flashcards - smarter, faster and more elegant
- Baker’s Student Encyclopedia of Music
- Evil Mad Scientist Laboratories - A Simple and Cheap Dark-Detecting LED Circuit
- Why (almost) every Web site needs an RDBMS
- A Home Power Plant - Wind Power Generator Revised - The World’s Biggest Show & Tell - tech, home, diy
- Coding Horror: Sorting for Humans : Natural Sort Order
- Johnny Chung Lee - Projects - Wii
- $14 Steadycam The Poor Mans Steadicam
- iText, a Free Java-PDF Library: Home Page
- Eric’s Page: Radio Modem
- FT.com / Columnists / Martin Wolf - Why the credit squeeze is a turning point for the world
- Ultimate Guide to Making a Cheap but Effective Aluminium Forge. - The World’s Biggest Show & Tell - craft, offbeat, diy
- Waterproof your Batteries in seconds! - The World’s Biggest Show & Tell - outdoors, tech, diy
- Extreme Business Cards - The World’s Biggest Show & Tell - tech, offbeat, diy
- Public dial on GigaDial
- PodNova | The best way to find, subscribe to, share, play and download your podcasts and vodcasts.
- Cruft: GLAT - Google Labs Aptitude Test
- Spotlight on DML | Panel Discussion & Second Life Simulcast on Digital Media and Learning
- Asymptote
- Project Splinescan
- Frieze Art Fair | Podcasts | Custodians of Culture: Schoolyard Art: Playing Fair Without the Referee
- Drawdio - a Pencil that draws sounds
- OPENSTUDIO
- Evil Mad Scientist Laboratories - Iterative Algorithmic Plastic Sculpture: Fimo Fractals
- Reuters QuickCut: Violin robot | Video | Reuters.com
- Itty Bitty Vibrobot - The World’s Biggest Show & Tell - tech, diy
- The Story of Stuff with Annie Leonard
- Live Free?Do It Yourself :: by Sarah van Gelder YES! Magazine
- Tavo gloves for the iPod - Engadget
“I’ve never before had the chance to apply my knowledge in pursuit of a real-world solution.”
I found this class survey in an empty classroom at MIT:
School is a pretty seriously screwed up place. Someone 17+ wrote that. They’ve never had the chance to use their knowledge in a real-world situation. Obviously (presumably?), they’re overstating the case. But even the fact that they feel this way is a strong indictment of the utter irrelevance of what we do to/for people in school.
