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13 votes
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The best childcare in the world? Maybe so, but new parents in Iceland are holding out for better
7 votes -
Cognitive Endurance as Human Capital
4 votes -
The rise of the "trauma essay" in college applications | Tina Yong
10 votes -
Indiana governor signs “Don’t Say Gay” bill that forces teachers to out trans kids to their parents
11 votes -
Welcome to America’s most elite girls boarding school. Let the hazing begin.
11 votes -
Teachers in Denmark are using apps to audit their students' moods – some experts are heavily skeptical of the approach
7 votes -
Munger Hall: A billionaire's bizarre social experiment
4 votes -
University of California under fire for Blackstone investment
3 votes -
Why Sweden punches above its weight in music
5 votes -
Lord of the Rings–quoting performance wins this year’s ‘Dance Your PhD’ contest
5 votes -
Globetrotting Black nutritionist Flemmie P. Kittrell revolutionized early childhood education and illuminated ‘hidden hunger’
2 votes -
Texas parents voice concern over gun found in elementary bathroom
9 votes -
Banned in the USA: The growing movement to censor books in schools
14 votes -
The campaign to sabotage Texas’ public schools
13 votes -
A Black professor trapped in anti-racist hell
35 votes -
What will "classically trained" look like for computer science and digital literacy??
This might be a weird framing but it's been bugging me for a few days. Many fields have a concept of classical training -- this is most common in music but applies in the humanities and many other...
This might be a weird framing but it's been bugging me for a few days. Many fields have a concept of classical training -- this is most common in music but applies in the humanities and many other areas. For example I do a lot of CAD work for my job, but I received what I would consider a "classical education" in design...I learned to draft by hand and physically model before I was ever allowed to work digitally. I got a lot of value out of this approach and it still informs the way I work today.
A lot of people view computers and technology as modern and almost anti-classical, but as the tech industry matures and the internet moves from something shiny and new to something foundational to our society, what will the new classicism look like?
Thanks for reading my question.
14 votes -
University of California plans to deduct pay for employees who participated in strike
14 votes -
Build Your Own: React, ProseMirror, and Redux
12 votes -
The Florida High School Athletics Association said student athletes should be required to give detailed information about their periods to school administrators when they register to play
6 votes -
School librarians vilified as the 'arm of Satan' in book-banning wars
8 votes -
Government refuses to fund UK students at new medical school despite ‘chronic’ doctor shortage
6 votes -
Norway's golden generation of athletes proves the value of sport as a public good – commitment to making the “joy of sport” available to all is producing world-class talent
3 votes -
India police detain students gathered to watch BBC documentary on Modi
8 votes -
Five days in class with ChatGPT
13 votes -
The lights have been on at a Massachusetts school for over a year because no one can turn them off
17 votes -
How Finland is teaching a generation to spot misinformation
8 votes -
Sabaton awarded Enlightener of the Year Award 2022 by The Swedish Skeptics Association – presented to those that go above and beyond in order to educate people
10 votes -
New Jersey requiring students to learn 'media literacy' to fight 'disinformation'
15 votes -
A lecturer showed a painting of the prophet Muhammad. She lost her job.
13 votes -
Age that kids acquire mobile phones not linked to well-being, says Stanford Medicine study
16 votes -
Sold a story: How teaching kids to read went so wrong
12 votes -
The University of California and workers reached a tentative deal to end strike
12 votes -
Students rebel against heat-sensing crotch monitor surveillance devices
14 votes -
Infectious disease applicants plummet, and US hospitals are scrambling
2 votes -
AI homework
9 votes -
Talk to me about: School
What was your experience like? What do you remember? Any favourite moments, least favourite, most memorable? Note: School is different in every country! Please respect the international audience:...
What was your experience like? What do you remember? Any favourite moments, least favourite, most memorable?
Note: School is different in every country! Please respect the international audience: if you talk about a type of school or year, include the age range. Eg “Sophomore (age 15-16)”.
6 votes -
Teletubbies: The bizarre kids' TV show that swept the world
6 votes -
Can anyone recommend a specific type of statistics course?
I would like to find a good Statistics course to do for myself, and also to recommend to others, down the road ... one that specifically focuses on risk, and the discrepancy between actual...
I would like to find a good Statistics course to do for myself, and also to recommend to others, down the road ... one that specifically focuses on risk, and the discrepancy between actual statistical probability vs humans' intuitive sense of risk.
I recall a quote, which The Interwebs informs me right now, came from Albert A. Bartlett ... "The Greatest Shortcoming of the Human Race Is Man’s Inability To Understand the Exponential Function".
Alternately, Mark Twain popularized (but did not originate) the saying "There are lies, damned lies, and statistics".
That's the kind of course I'm looking for, that focuses on questions like how much should we actually worry about supervolcanoes, asteroid strikes, Covid 2.0, WWIII, Trump getting re-elected, etc.
There are two parts to this. One, people often (naturally, human nature, how our brains are wired to handle Risk) obsess about a short list of risks in life that are overblown, or appear to be more of a concern than they actually are.
The other part is, some things have a very small risk of actually happening, but when considered in conjunction with the potential consequences (asteroid strikes, WWIII, global pandemic), are still worthy of aggressive efforts to prevent ... and people often focus on the first element (statistically unlikely) and dismiss or overlook the second piece (devastating consequences).
Anyway, stuff like that ... ideally an actual, hands-on MOOC-type Statistics course, but even a good youtube video or blog article would suffice.
As usual, thanks in advance.
5 votes -
The secret skills of US Coast Guard rescue swimmers
1 vote -
Finnish astronomers acquitted in defamation case related to protesting harassment – astrophysicist Christian Ott argued protests cost him postdoc position
5 votes -
What the Suzuki method really taught
5 votes -
48,000 UC graduate student workers go on strike
20 votes -
All people are created educable, a vital oft-forgotten tenet of modern democracy
14 votes -
Anti-trans candidates fail to make major gains in Ontario school board elections
8 votes -
Security services in Norway say they have arrested a university lecturer accused of working for Russia as a spy
5 votes -
Iranian schoolgirl ‘beaten to death for refusing to sing’ pro-regime anthem
10 votes -
This 33-year-old made more than 1,000 Wikipedia bios for unknown women scientists
15 votes -
As the midterm elections approach in the US, does Finland have the answer to fake news?
6 votes -
A ‘Most Outstanding Teacher’ from the Philippines tries to help save a struggling school in rural Arizona
11 votes