Monday, April 08, 2013
prohibition scuttles promising medical science...,
By
CNu
at
April 08, 2013
6
comments
Labels: alkahest , narcoterror , neuromancy
views from the borders of mental illness...,
By
CNu
at
April 08, 2013
0
comments
Labels: neuromancy
autistic brains organized differently (neandertals)
By
CNu
at
April 08, 2013
0
comments
Labels: neuromancy
Sunday, April 07, 2013
characteristics of nde memories as compared to real and imagined events memories
By
CNu
at
April 07, 2013
1 comments
Labels: high strangeness
human breath analysis and individual metabolic phenotypes
By
CNu
at
April 07, 2013
23
comments
Labels: microcosmos , symbiosis , What IT DO Shawty...
Saturday, April 06, 2013
cancer pandemic: reaping the seeds of nuclear testing
By
CNu
at
April 06, 2013
19
comments
Labels: Living Memory , unspeakable
Arkansas Nuclear One Reactor and ExxonMobil Pipeline Both Suffer Major Accidents
By
CNu
at
April 06, 2013
2
comments
Labels: unintended consequences , unspeakable
fukushima fallout sickens u.s. babies...,
By
CNu
at
April 06, 2013
1 comments
Labels: unspeakable , What IT DO Shawty...
Friday, April 05, 2013
what is the alternative to the war on the poor?
By
CNu
at
April 05, 2013
10
comments
Labels: global system of 1% supremacy
some of the "Top" about to get outed?
By
CNu
at
April 05, 2013
1 comments
Labels: global system of 1% supremacy
Thursday, April 04, 2013
online video instruction makes another quantum leap
| The online version of 2.002 offers video lectures searchable by keyword, and organized as a tree of basic concepts that branch into related subtopics. |
By
CNu
at
April 04, 2013
20
comments
Labels: edumackation , tactical evolution
Wednesday, April 03, 2013
the prisoner's dilemma: trust as a negative survival value...,
By
CNu
at
April 03, 2013
2
comments
Labels: Livestock Management , psychopathocracy
the counterproductivity of targets
Fear (2013), wrote:
I first heard Frans Leeuw talk about the "Performance Paradox" in relation to evaluation. Unfortunately I don't think he wrote about it other than a thesis by one of his students.
However, quite by chance I found some of the roots of it today.It seems that MarilynStrathern was one of the first to articulate this phenomenon in recent times. I like her quote for it's brevity.
1. "When a measure becomes a target, it ceases to be a good measure."
- Marilyn Strathern (1997)
2. Goodhart's Law "Any observed statistical regularity will tend to collapse once pressure is placed upon it for control purposes." Also: "Once a social or economic indicator or other surrogate measure is made a target for the purpose of conducting social or economic policy, then it will lose the information content that would qualify it to play such a role."
- Charles Goodhart (1981).
3. The Lucas critique "It is naïve to try to predict the effects of a change in economic policy entirely on the basis of relationships observed in historical data, especially highly aggregated historical data."
- Robert Lucas (1976)
4. "A risk model breaks down when used for regulatory purposes."- Jon Danželsson (2002)
5. Campbell's Law: "The more any quantitative social indicator is used for social decision-making, the more subject it will be to corruption pressures and the more apt it will be to distort and corrupt the social processes it is intended to monitor."
- Donald Campbell (1976)
By
CNu
at
April 03, 2013
2
comments
Labels: edumackation
Tuesday, April 02, 2013
the child, the tablet, and the developing mind...,
By
CNu
at
April 02, 2013
4
comments
Labels: cognitive infiltration , edumackation
inquiry science rocks, or does it?
I am not alone in suggesting that common practices in physics education may have scant empirical support. Several years ago Handelsman, et al.1 asked: " … why do outstanding scientists who demand rigorous proof for scientific assertions in their research continue to use and, indeed, defend on the basis of their intuition alone, teaching methods that are not the most effective?" (p. 521) The specific lament in Handelsman et al. is the claim that much science education is based on a traditional form of didactic lecturing. However, one could just as well use that very same critique about the lack of "rigorous proof" to challenge the current enthusiasm for "inquiry approaches" to science education.
For example, an influential report from the NAS on inquiry approaches to science education2 states that "…studies of inquiry-oriented curriculum programs … demonstrated significant positive effects on various quantitative measures, including cognitive achievement, process skills, and attitudes toward science." This would seem to be clear evidence in support of inquiry-approaches to science instruction, except that the report goes on to note, parenthetically, that "there was essentially no correlation between positive results and expert ratings of the degree of inquiry in the materials (p. 125)." Thus we have an argument for the benefits of a particular pedagogy, but no consensus from experts about the "dose response", i.e., the extent to which different "degrees of inquiry" lead to different types or amounts of learning.
One wonders about the evidential basis for the wide-spread enthusiasm for inquiry science, given the lack of operational definitions of what constitutes an "inquiry-based" lesson–or entire curriculum–and what specific features distinguish it from other types of instruction. There is a particular irony here in that the very field that has developed extraordinarily clear norms and conventions for talking about methods, theories, instrumentation, measurement, underlying mechanisms, etc. often abandons them when engaging in research on science education.
By
CNu
at
April 02, 2013
8
comments
Labels: edumackation
Monday, April 01, 2013
the love of money IS the root of all kinds of evil...,
By
CNu
at
April 01, 2013
1 comments
Labels: ethology , History's Mysteries , Living Memory
Sunday, March 31, 2013
social glue and world-changing?
By
CNu
at
March 31, 2013
0
comments
Labels: not gonna happen...
does science make you moral?
By
CNu
at
March 31, 2013
0
comments
Labels: culture of competence
game recognize game..,
By
CNu
at
March 31, 2013
2
comments
Labels: deceiver , ethology , What IT DO Shawty...
Saturday, March 30, 2013
your grandma's favorite drug songs...,
For better or worse, drugs and popular culture are irrevocably entangled. Nowhere is the link more pronounced than in popular music, an art form that has an almost symbiotic relationship with substances. Whether drugs influence music or vice versa is a subject for debate—but few would argue that the Beatles would have transformed popular culture as they did without the influence of psychedelics; that house music would have become the behemoth it did without ecstasy culture; or that punk would have been quite the same without the relentless energy of speed and the nihilistic black hole of heroin as the twin engines that drove it.
Many might lazily assume that drug culture started in the 1960s—the era when supposedly everybody started turning on, tuning in and dropping out. But the truth is, just as human beings have been getting high since practically the dawn of time, popular musicians have been recording songs about getting high since they first started pressing 78s. To prove it, here's my selection of amazing pre-rock 'n' roll tracks about shooting smack, snorting coke, getting blitzed on booze and dancing all night on speed. Ladies and gentlemen, we present your grandmothers’ favorite drug songs:
By
CNu
at
March 30, 2013
0
comments
Labels: American Original , Living Memory
Chipocalypse Now - I Love The Smell Of Deportations In The Morning
sky | Donald Trump has signalled his intention to send troops to Chicago to ramp up the deportation of illegal immigrants - by posting a...
-
theatlantic | The Ku Klux Klan, Ronald Reagan, and, for most of its history, the NRA all worked to control guns. The Founding Fathers...
-
NYTimes | The United States attorney in Manhattan is merging the two units in his office that prosecute terrorism and international narcot...
-
Wired Magazine sez - Biologists on the Verge of Creating New Form of Life ; What most researchers agree on is that the very first functionin...
