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In the context of wicked problems, every solution and interaction with it becomes a permanent part of an individual's experience, implying that all data collection is significant and can have lasting effects on subjects.

Ethical education research demands respect for subjects, the process, and the community. Always prioritize well-being.

Today it was difficult to avoid responding, “in the time it took you to compose this email, you could have answered your own question.”

@toddconaway That sentence made me laugh, until I realized those who are “good” at teaching, know their stuff, and attend to students make it look like the students are doing it themselves. Maybe we call it “tacit design?”

Looking at my transcripts, you can tell when I no longer cared about grades. My classmates in undergraduate education courses were aghast. My prof’s (who were John Dewey fans) nodded and smiled.

Is it just me or are images that show steps unnecessary? If the process has bounded and definable steps enumerate them. Putting the in boxes with arrows doesn’t explain them with any more clarity than a list. Projecting the list? Just capture the steps in single large words.

“Under the cloak of empirical evidence...” so many bad (and unsupported) ideas are accepted.

Yeah... so that question I answered for you two weeks ago, then you asked the exact same things again today... the answer has not changed. I know you did not like the answer the first time, but today's answer is no different.

Let’s be clear educators... there is a theory if learning that guides your teaching... you may not see it... you may deny it... but it is there.

Some people so enjoy pilot projects, they never move on from them.

Did you ever notice those with toxic positivity are also the people who give the most unsolicited advice on how everyone else should do their work.

Hey coders... it’s obvious when you don’t include users in your designs. Hey users... it’s obvious when you don’t pay attention to “this is how to use the system.”

“Fabricated AI dreck” is my new favorite phrase.

Learning environments should evoke curiosity—not compliance. Dewey’s vision of the classroom as a miniature society demands relational thinking.

Faculty complaining about getting stuff from textbook publishers web sites... is it OK to respond “adopt an OER book?”

Transparency through data is valuable—but overload without context erodes trust. Leadership requires discernment, not just disclosure.

Data-driven leadership presumes objectivity—but who selects the metrics, and what remains unmeasured? No dashboard can fully capture institutional complexity.

Science is a collective act of imagination and inquiry. It reflects our persistent desire to understand, anticipate, and improve the world we inhabit.

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