Grade Inflation and Abdication

While the debate on the moral virtues of any particular form of grade distribution fascinates as cultural artifact, the variability of grading standards has a more practical consequence. As grades increasingly reflect an idiosyncratic and locally defined performance levels, their value for outside consumers of university products declines. Who knows what an ?A? in American…

A Fork in the Road

“Since the war has ended, all is good.” “Are the people happy?” I asked. Mr. Shukry paused for a moment, as if it were the simplest question he’d been asked in months, “Of course they are happy,” he said. “Are you Muslim?” I asked. “Yes,” he said. —Michael Yon —A Fork in the Road (Michael Yon:…

Tools to keep the user from being hurt

The world is full of devices associated with the word ergonomic. A scholar trying to learn the word by studying the way it’s used in today’s culture is likely conclude that it means “curvy” or possibly “funny-looking.” Nearly all mice, trackballs, and other devices are now described as ergonomic; this doesn’t mean they’re all good…

Coders Want Fatter Paychecks, Too

“(They’re) nuts if they think they deserve residuals for a half-day of voice-over work,” said Long. “A development team (might) slave away for two years to produce a title.” —Xeni Jardin —Coders Want Fatter Paychecks, Too  (Wired) Similar:Waiting for a talk on preserving artifacts from NASA’s Apollo program So much to see at the Heinz…

The Fire Rebels

Over the last three decades, building materials have changed dramatically. Plumbing, flooring, siding, roofing – most are now made from synthetics. The same goes for the stuff inside the building, like foam rubber seat cushions, plastic computer cases, and nylon carpet fibers. As a result, today’s blazes produce two to three times as much energy…

How to do the Star Wars trilogy in 58 minutes

Ross, a professional actor who had spent years working with theater groups across Canada, knew how to mimic all the voices in “Star Wars” – as well as the fluorescent hum of a lightsaber – when he set about adapting the trilogy for stage. Ross and director T.J. Dawe then devised ways to physically represent…

Salute to the good people

Yay for the students who… …hand in their assignment a week early and still manage to go above and beyond what is asked of them. …write far more than the required minimum by the time you ask for a rough draft. …progress from a C on the first exam to an A on the third…

Ander-Saxon

The firststuffs have their being as motes called unclefts. These are mighty small: one seedweight of waterstuff holds a tale of them like unto two followed by twenty-two naughts. Most unclefts link together to make what are called bulkbits. Thus, the waterstuff bulkbit bestands of two waterstuff unclefts, the sourstuff bulkbit of two sourstuff unclefts,…

Devoid of Content

Most composition courses that American students take today emphasize content rather than form, on the theory that if you chew over big ideas long enough, the ability to write about them will (mysteriously) follow. The theory is wrong. Content is a lure and a delusion, and it should be banished from the classroom. Form is…

Best in Class

Between 1990 and 2000, the over-all mean G.P.A. of high-school students increased from 2.68 to 2.94, which is attributable in part to grade inflation and in part to the fact that students are working harder. Last year, more than a million students took at least one A.P. course. During the nineteen-nineties, the percentage of students…

SMU lecturer takes heat for telling blog

The educator’s anonymous Web log, set at an unnamed university “in the South,” spun tales of spoiled-rich “Ashleys” with their $500 sandals and $1,500 handbags, eating disorders, plagiarism and drug use, legal and illegal. “At this school it seems like every kid is on multiple medications,” the professor wrote, describing her charges as “barely literate,”…