droganbloggin - meanderings and musings
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Note on Posting a Comment: If your comment warrants a response and you wish it sent privately, please provide an e-mail address. Otherwise I will comment on your comment and it will be public.Entries from September 1, 2006 - September 30, 2006
Just the facts, ma'am
I've been in higher education for almost five years now, helping my students equip the survival kits required for "out there where the cold wind blows." An essential tool in their kit is fact-based hypothesis-driven thinking.
In the last few weeks I've discovered evidence-based management.
Today, Bob Sutton's blog brings me a link to Why Managing by Facts Works, more support for instilling in students Paul Samuelson's admonition: “There is no substitute for paying attention to the empirical facts of life, and no substitute for systematic reasoning about them.”
Distance Learning
Re Conversations with Dave and Rich
Thanks for your kind comments. You may be interested to know the paper was rejected by the Journal of Educational Technology. Perhaps it was for the reasons you hint at.
The one thing that frosted me was that it took almost seven months, I think, for them to arrive at that decision. Now their process, which I suspect is geared to a more tranquil time, may not permit speed greater than that. Which leads me to wonder whether academia, as we currently understand it, will be able to keep up with the demands of the world. See No Teacher Left Behind from yesterday's Wall Street Journal.
I maintain that distance learning is not for all subjects, all teachers, or all students. One needs to be careful in how these triples are put together. I'm tempted to say that this might be the most critical decision of all that need to be made in this area.
It is hard work as you can see from the numbers in the paper.
But it has its rewards. Students who would rarely if ever open up in class come alive online. They contribute significant personal experiences and insights that improve the quality of the educational experience. Through this they grow, develop their self-esteem, and become better prepared to tackle the world.
And the self-proclaimed experts exist here as they do anywhere else. I'm reminded here of Shakespeare's Henry V's speech on St. Crispin's day. Strip your sleeves and show me your scars; we can them talk.
There is a marvelous little book -- The Portable Curmudgeon, New American Library (1987), 0-453-00740-6 -- which I recommend to your attention. It is full of inspirational phrases to use with the pretentious and the presumptive.
Dubai Ports World
In March I mentioned Dubair Ports World in a post. Today, courtesy TPMCafe - America Abroad, I learn that Dubai Ports World is “first global marine terminal operator in the world to gain international certification for its security management system.”
The American politicians look a bit lame on this one.
High Performance from High Potentials
I came across this courtesy of Creative Generalist. I recommend that you, at a minimum, read and think about the Creative Generalist entry. You may subsequently wish to follow the links to the original source.
Be introspective when you read this. How do you match up to what is called for? What are you going to do if you find yourself short of the mark?
Official Seal
Just in case anyone wondered.