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Beyond the Stupidity Defence This is the “Buffoon Defence” As in ‘Just because I’m waving a loaded gun around, doesn’t mean anybody thinks I’ll fire it”. This is fairly close to an insanity plea.

Asimov begins his Guide to Science by suggesting mobile organisms must be curious about their surroundings. “As early as that, curiosity concerning the environment was enforced as the price of survival.”

How can I make students do x?

If this focuses your planning, you don't understand learning.

"Just don't hurt yourself or others" is the primary goal of many science education activities.

Can we agree to stop drawing unlabeled arrows between clumps of words and calling it a graphic?

In reality, lesson planning is one of the least certain tasks an educator undertakes. The lesson planner can be sure of what they intend to teach; it may even be articulated in measurable learning outcomes (the value of which is dubious). The teacher also believes they know how to present the material so that students achieve those outcomes. Further, they believe they know how students can best demonstrate what they learn. Other than the intended outcomes, planning is grounded in predicting (I think “guessing” is a more accurate verb) how students will be learning from the intended lessons and the degree to which the assessments will capture the intended learning.

I’ve always found those who truly “understand” concepts are not bothered by ambiguous definitions at any level. They know we make some progress, reach our limit, then dig in again.

From now on when I read or watch news pieces and pundit discussions about “the economy” I’ll think of this…

Yes, you are entitled to your opinion.

No, I’m not obligated to take it seriously.

Some people weaponize email CC’s… they include everyone they can think of.

I’ve never seen that practice do anything but alienate those whose support they need.

I live in a state with town named Washington and Moscow. In the 1980’s it was common for groups to organize walks between the two.

Albert Schweitzer said, “Our age has discovered how to divorce knowledge from thought….”

He died in the year I was born; I haven’t grown a non-grey hair on my head for decades.

The ranting we are seeing is not new.

There is a sub population of educators who are content teaching and testing whatever they are directed to. There is another sub population that is critical of standard curriculum.

It’s interesting to me how each is unaware of the other.

To collect data without a clear question to be answered, appropriate analysis methods identified, and reporting plans in place (not to mention informed consent) is unethical.

I'm amazed at the number of "data-driven leaders" who do not understand this.

i've been in search of resources to update the collection of sites/ resources I use to share with those who ask. I do not include items with ads. Some otherwise excellent resources are excluded.

Educators’ technology needs tend to be different from those encountered in other businesses and industries. Educators generally value flexible systems that allow them to assess the usefulness of software, sites, and services; and to respond to new discoveries and changing expectations quickly. Students who are just learning to read and write often find complicated systems difficult to use. Technicians experienced in designing secure systems that provide predictable and stable access can find these needs of educational populations to be contrary to their expertise.

Daniel Dennett wrote, “We’d better see what can be done to help people get over their delusion.” He used it in a specific context, but it sure seems apt in many contexts today.

One reason educators are reluctant to change is they interpret change as “what I’ve been doing isn’t good.”

Real life is on-going, open ended, uncertain. Laboratories and classrooms are not.

It we could engineer schools that “work,” we already would have done it. The reality is that learning and being “smart” are multifaceted, complex, context-dependent, and changing. When we engineer for one part, everyone complains we’ve missed the others.

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