Updated: 5/17/05; 7:44:14 PM.
Rock:Paper:Scissors
Rock breaks scissors, paper covers rock, scissors cut paper
        

 Wednesday, February 2, 2005
From The Red Pencil by Theodore Sizer, on how we define secondary schooling:

...a clsss of twenty or so adolescents gathered by age into grades to learn together a subject both for its content and for the skills embedded in that content taught by a single teacher who is responsible for delivering that material, assigning homework, and assessing each student's performance in a uniform manner, all this proceeding in sequential blocks of time of forty to sixty minutes each in a specialized school building primarily made up of a succession of identical rooms that are used for six hours for fewer than half the days in a year.
The more I mull that passage over, the more troubling it becomes. First off, the idea that learning (not schooling) is this linear is just so foreign to the ways we as adults learn. We have to relearn learning when we get out of school. We do so in groups large and small, with people of all different ages, from many different teachers without a defined curricula or method of assessment (other than whether or not we can use that learning successfully), in all sorts of timeframes and environments, weekends and holidays included. We learn those things that are meaningful to our lives, and we put that learning to use in some way. Otherwise, why learn it at all?

I'm not saying there aren't certain things that all students should know and be able to do. But how strange is it, when you really think about it, that we "teach" them these ideas and skills in a structure that is so totally irrelevant to what they'll find when their formal "schooling" is over? [Weblogg-ed News]

 9:32:04 AM.
An Apple lawsuit against the operators of fan websites stirs debate on whether bloggers can claim legal protections. [Christian Science Monitor | Top Stories]
 9:22:51 AM.
After a decade of cautious circling, some scientists and policy makers are now trying to define "dangerous climate change." By By ANDREW C. REVKIN. [NYT > Home Page]
 9:21:37 AM.
Chuck Joiner, editor of the Macintosh User Group (MUG) Center Web site, announced on Monday the launch of a new blog that promises "writings, ramblings, proclamations and prognostications from the front lines of the Apple community." His first entry focuses on taking "The Art of Traveling With Your Mac" -- a session held during last month's Macworld Expo -- and turning it into a MUG Meeting topic. [MacCentral News]
 9:20:39 AM.
Enterprise networking specialist Small Tree Communications on Monday announced its built-to-order Ultimate Mac Package Systems. The company, which is also a Apple-authorized Value Added Reseller (VAR), has taken its networking technology and integrated it into enhanced Macs, to take the setup and guesswork out of building a high-performance networking Macintosh. Small Tree's build-to-order systems include dual-port Gigabit Ethernet Network Interface Cards (NICs) and Small Tree's own 802.3ad Link Aggregation software, which makes multiple Ethernet ports appear as a single "virtual" interface. [MacCentral News]
 9:20:01 AM.
Brandchannel.com, an online magazine dedicated to branding, has awarded Apple its fourth annual Readers' Choice Award as "the brand with the most impact in 2004." Apple beat out Google, winner of the award for the last two years -- as well as furniture store Ikea, coffee chain Starbucks and Middle Eastern news agency Al Jazeera. [MacCentral News]
 9:19:19 AM.
"It is a mistake to think you can solve any major problems just with potatoes." [Quotes of the Day]
 9:18:30 AM.
Xerox researchers are working on a technology to embed digital data on paper. [Extremetech]
 9:17:36 AM.

© Copyright 2005 Hal Huffman.
 
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