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@Drosmel not my domain but sounds interesting. Which programming language will you use?

@freemo @trinsec I am sure god damn Mondays would have existed back then

@freemo I am sure it does go back... but no record of it so far. Nature is a poor record keeper

@freemo most probably the recorded history will stop with the Babylonian

@murraybymoonlight Hi, do you think it is intentional by the author? Perhaps it reflects the main characters personality and is appropriate to the country side context.

Day 2 of in foreign languages. Today I responded two polls one was in German and the other was Scandinavian. Apparently, I was making better choices in Korean and Chinese yesterday. Today's tally was 58% and 50%. My curiosity level as to what I answered is also much low, 5% perhaps. Go figure!

@trinsec Right, got it! Thank you for your guidance. I have a lot of papers and books that could be candidates for dataview. But I'll go at it as suggested :-) Cheers!

@trinsec Hi! Started today. Data view you say? I'll check into it over the weekend 😊

You beauty!

I still have to get a hang of the themes and learn markdown

SGul :verified: boosted

RT @andre_spicer@twitter.com

The slowest peer review process in any scholarly field is organisational behaviour and human resource management. The average peer review process takes over 322 days. The process takes 94 days in structural biology. scholarlykitchen.sspnet.org/20

🐦🔗: twitter.com/andre_spicer/statu

@sraznoff It would be a called "theory that is of no help" 😛

There are four types of i.e., prescriptive, descriptive, predictive, and practice. We can argue that there might be a hybrid theory as well. One that emphasizes that it might not be as straightforward as it seems to assign a theory to an ideal type.

hmmm... answered several this morning that were in Korean and Chinese (I read neither). Each submission showed me 100% except one that showed 75%. Now I am wondering what I answered 🤭

@MrsDi thank you for sharing this. Best wishes

SGul :verified: boosted

Project Zero's Thinking Routine Toolbox
--> 'A thinking routine is a set of questions or a brief sequence of steps used to scaffold and support student thinking. PZ researchers designed thinking routines to deepen students’ thinking and to help make that thinking “visible.” '

pz.harvard.edu/thinking-routin

A national holiday tomorrow. Hump Wednesday looking excellent!

"If the human brain was complex enough to understand itself, then the human brain would be too complex for it to understand itself" (Musings of a drunk friend, circa 2001 on a terris in 04:00 hrs)

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