academic turns city into a social experiment
Facebook | Harvard Gazette: Academic turns city into a social experiment

Facebook | Harvard Gazette: Academic turns city into a social experiment

Not sure what to think of the twitter project. Tinkered with it today. I’ve enjoyed using facebook but not sure if I’ll be tweeting much for now. We’ll see…
As I enter 2009 I found the preceding interview of Gladwell on Charlie Rose very important for me at this particular time. I haven’t read his new book and to be honest, I don’t plan to at this time. I’m planning on going back to finish Blink and think about the relationship between rapid cognition, meaningful work and curiosity (important culminating point at the end of the interview) and how that affects not only my work as an educator but my day to day living as well.
I first discovered Malcolm Gladwell via his talk on TED on What we can learn from spaghetti sauce.

It’s hard not to love anything on TED but this talk was particularly poignant for me at the time. I am not an artist and have never claimed to be but this talk re-affirmed for me my interest in the importance of intentionally teaching creativity (or curiosity) in schools.
It also helped support my feeling that the fact that art and visual literacy is something that is merely taught at the fringe or in an extra-curricular setting significantly hurts our students. In an attempt to help students in the area of science, math and technology, we fail to see the importance of art, creativity and visual literacy in this age. Despite our efforts and investment in science, math and technology in this country, why are our students still so significantly behind? And, more importantly, why does so much creative work seem to come from those same students from those same countries that are so significantly ahead of our students in the area of science, math and technology? It seems like these students have no problem being strong in disciplines that are both right and left brain.
Dan Pink has something to say about that.
After that talk on TED, I began reading Blink and reflected on the importance of “rapid cognition” and how it was immensely related to his talk on spaghetti sauce and how that relation was significantly relevant to teaching in a web2.0 classrooms(whatever that means since, for the most part, they really don’t exist…sticking hardware in a classroom doesn’t count…and, it may, in fact, hurt more than help).
So, again as I enter 2009 I plan to go back to finish Blink and enjoy thinking about the relationship between rapid cognition, meaningful work and curiosity and how that affects not only my work as an educator but my day to day living as well.
it’s been a while since i’ve picked up a gatopardo issue. i love this magazine. it hits me right there. right at my very right capito-left wing love good art, crazy politicz and good stuff heart. it’s good. it’s like the good magazine of latin america. at times,at least. at times.
“change is good…but only right before or right after…never when you’re in it.”
it’s a beautiful day. not sure the arc completely bends toward justice with an obama win. but it is a slight bend.
and a slight bend toward justice is an improvement from the sick bend towards hell that took place over the last years. a simple end to a nightmare.
so, i’m grateful. for those who hope. and for those who worked their asses off. to make good dreams come true.
tonight, lina and i will relax and enjoy david.

on the night before, i could not make or read a better argument.
For me, if Obama is elected, it will feel more like a simple end to a nightmare. The earth has been scorched these past seven years. No Heaven awaits. Just an end to some sort of Hell. -Andrew Sullivan
pues si…
…and to celebrate, some politics with a brain. after a week of one too many tongue talking pit bulls with go-go boots.
first, well, first things first (not sure if this show is part of the “elite” media according to the repubs…)
and then, beware—the eastern media elite…
and now, beware—the eastern media elite is coming to get you…
as a former coordinator (basically, i just opened up the place at 4am) of a day labor site, i got a special laugh out of this one. especially the “gotta speak java” part…