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Science seeks answers that accurately reflect nature by being grounded in observation, control, logic, and a drive to reduce bias.

The problem with bias: individuals are usually unaware of their biases. This makes recognizing and addressing them incredibly difficult.

What if I am wrong?

Asking this question leads to better decisions .

Problems are essential for learning, not just a teaching technique. They provide context, relevance, and active engagement for students.

Learners must actively use their acquired skills to address problems.

One thing I learned during almost 40 years in education: Problems aren't just exercises; they are the driving force behind meaningful learning.

Problems help learners immediately see the relevance of what they're studying, making the material's importance clear.

For maximum impact, instruction should always begin with a problem that learners need to solve.

I've watched a lot of sports on TV. American football is among the worst.

Ditch dry lectures. Problems are far more interesting and informative than learning outcomes for motivating students. Let challenges drive learning... they work better than outcomes.

“We all know…” is followed by claptrap. *Always* claptrap.

The question "what would happen if…?" has focused human inquiry since our species evolved, driving our curiosity to understand nature through science.

I encountered “infrastructuring” for the first time... the more I think about it the more I like it.

I just realized Ben Folds Five - Song for the Dumped is probably not great office music when you have an open meeting for faculty to drop in for help.

Asking “what works?” isn’t really the way to improve

Taking a look at my old Palm IIIx – by Paul Lefebvre
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- 3 days ago | 7 points | 0 comments
- URL: goto10retro.com/p/taking-a-loo
- Discussions: news.ycombinator.com/item?id=4
- Summary: The author rediscovered their original Palm IIIx, a retro pocket computer from 1999, while cleaning. The device still worked after inserting new AAA batteries. The Palm IIIx features a monochrome screen, 4MB of RAM, and a 160x160 pixel resolution. The author reminisced about using Graffiti, a stylus-based input method, to interact with the device. Although they found it easy to recall Graffiti strokes, the non-backlit screen made it difficult to use. The device lacks WiFi or network connectivity, making it nearly useless today. The author compared it to later Palm models, such as the IIIc and TX, which had color screens and rechargeable batteries.

Knowing “things” is of limited use... knowing how things interact... that is useful.

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