Your Strength Zone
/Successful people know their strength zone and consistently works in it. Successful leaders know how to find the strength zone for the people they lead and help them consistently work in it. John Maxwell
Successful people know their strength zone and consistently works in it. Successful leaders know how to find the strength zone for the people they lead and help them consistently work in it. John Maxwell
***BIG DATA
Companies commissioning data projects need to grasp the difference between two types of analytics projects Computer Week
Industrialized analytics are beginning to make truly life & death decisions- necessitating ethical/legal frameworks Smart Data Collective
Data science is a tool that is not necessarily going to give you answers, but probabilities New York Times
How Bayesian inference gives you sharper predictions from your data (esp. when data is scarce) Data Science Central
***WRITING& READING
Avoiding Plagiarism, Self-plagiarism, and Other Questionable Writing Practices: A Guide to Ethical Writing The Office of Research Integrity of the DHHS
Head Of National Book Foundation Encourages Young People To Read More NPR
10 tips to tighten your writing Gatehouse
***RESEARCH
There’s a way to spot data fakery. All journals should be using it STAT News
Discovery Versus Sequestration – Dealing with Complex Electronically Stored Information (ESI) in Research Misconduct Cases Investigations Law Blog
A court case may define the limits of anonymous scientific criticism Economist
***GENDER ISSUES
Being from a privileged background helps men, but not women, get top jobs Washington Post
Gender Gap: When Women and Men Vote Differently Bloomberg
Gender Politics: Women Actually Do Govern Differently New York Times
***RACE
Author Of 'They Can't Kill Us All' Discusses Race And Police Shootings NPR
***TECHNOLOGY
Los Angeles booms as a startup hub Economist
How I Used A/B Testing to Hack My Kids LifeHacker
***ART & DESIGN
How to make a logo, for free, in about 5 minutes Medium
Georgia O’Keeffe: A Life in Art, a Short Documentary on the Painter Narrated by Gene Hackman Open Culture
***SOCIAL MEDIA
Zuckerberg: the idea that fake news on Facebook influenced the election is ‘crazy’ The Verge
What we know, and what we don’t, about Facebook’s effort to reduce hoaxes The Verge
***ADVERTISING
Digital advertisers battle over online privacy Economist
Advertisers Don’t Care About Fake News Sites: Yet Medium
***INTERNET
Google Estimates More Than 130 Trillion Web Pages Media Post
***PERSONAL GROWTH
Comfort Habits: Everyday habits can play a critical role in providing us with needed balance and continuity Becoming (my blog)
***RELIGION
Why Donald Trump Won With Women and Pro-Life Christians The Atlantic
Evangelical Left admits it doesn’t really exist Colorado Springs Gazette
The West has gained a lot from Christianity: There is still more to learn (book review) Economist
Trump Election Revealed Fractures Among Diverse Evangelical Community NPR
If the U.S. had 100 people: Charting Americans’ religious affiliations Pew Research
***JOURNALISM
Impartial journalism is laudable. But false balance is dangerous The Guardian
Media’s Next Challenge: Overcoming the Threat of Fake News New York Times
Whites more likely than nonwhites to have spoken to a local journalist Pew Research
Storytelling education: Berkeley to offer “Nonfiction Narratives” minor Berkeley Beacon
Buffalo College Newspaper Headline Links Donald Trump With White Supremacist Group NBC New York
***STUDENT LIFE
Implications of Trumps Presidential Victory for international and undocumented students Inside Higher Ed
Black Freshmen at UPenn Added to a “Daily Lynching” Hate Group Slate
Yale professor: My students aren’t snowflakes, and they don’t melt (opinion) Washington Post
Millennials Reject Car-Shopping Gender Stereotypes Media Post
***HEALTH
Safety Of Painkiller Celebrex Affirmed In New Study NPR
Their brains had the telltale signs of Alzheimer’s. So why did they still have nimble minds? Stat News
'Minibrains' Could Help Drug Discovery For Zika And For Alzheimer's NPR
Trump just dropped a big hint to the pharmaceutical industry: Trump's health-care plan may help the drug and medical device industries Washington Post
***PSYCHOLOGY
How Contestants' Social Security Numbers Could Affect 'Jeopardy' Wagers NPR
***PHILOSOPHY
A Princeton philosophy professor on the ethical argument for working for the Trump administration Quartz
What Did Nietzsche Really Mean When He Wrote “God is Dead”? Open Culture
Five Steps To Arguing On The Internet, According To Philosophy Junkee
***ETHICS
Ethical Implications Of Industrialized Analytics Smart Data Collective
Academic Ethics: The Legal Tangle of ‘Trigger Warnings’ Chronicle of Higher Ed
***HIGHER ED
Yes, You’re Right, Colleges Are Liberal Bubbles. Here’s the Data Chronicle of Higher Ed
Marx as Educator Chronicle of Higher Ed
***THE CAMPUS & POLITICS
Texas State University police looking into Trump 'vigilante' fliers Austin Statesman
The New Congress and Higher Ed Inside Higher Ed
AAUP Warns of Historic Threat to Academic Freedom Posed by Trump Chronicle of Higher Ed
Voters in many states weren't exactly thrilled with the notion of raising taxes to fund higher education Inside Higher Ed
***TEACHING
Why today’s college students don’t want to be teachers Washington Post
***SEXUAL HARASSMENT & ASSAULT
Trump Administration May Back Away from Title IX, but Campuses Won’t Chronicle of Higher Ed
Surrogates of President-elect Trump and other Republicans say they would scale back enforcement of Title IX Inside Higher Ed
Baylor Faces Rising Calls for Transparency in Sexual-Assault Scandal Chronicle of Higher Ed
***FREE SPEECH
Student says Georgetown Law suppresses political activity; school says it supports free speech Washington Post
Some pursue happiness. Others create it.
Some people have already died. They just haven’t bothered to set the funeral date. John Maxwell
Some men see things as they are and say, "Why?" I dream of things that never were and say, "Why not?" – George Bernard Shaw
***ELECTION COVERAGE
The New York Times to Offer Open Access To NYTimes.com November 7-9 New York Times
Nate Silver: Forecasts Showing Clinton With 99% Chance of Winning "Don't Pass Commonsense Test" ABC News’ This Week
***SOCIAL MEDIA
Meme warfare: how the power of mass replication has poisoned the US election The Guardian
Social Media's Increasing Role In The 2016 Presidential Election NPR
Social media leads some users to rethink a political issue Pew Research Center
Twitter still might save Vine by selling it Tech Crunch ***FREE SPEECH
Students at one college were threatened with arrest for handing out copies of the Constitution Business Insider
***LEGAL ISSUES
A Highway Sign Is At Center Of An Unusual Trademark Dispute NPR
Rolling Stone found liable for defamation for fraternity rape story CNN
Jury Finds 'Rolling Stone,' Reporter Liable For Damages In Rape Allegation Story NPR
'Loving' Tells Story Of Supreme Court Ruling Legalizing Interracial Marriage NPR
***BIG DATA
Data Analytics in Higher Education: A Mixed Bag Datanami
Little Data Is Making Learning Personal Wired
Two-thirds of public doesn’t understand data, yet increasingly influenced by data: study Talking New Media
What you can learn from GitHub's top 10 open source projects Tech Republic
***ART & DESIGN
Album Turns Into Something New Each Time It’s Streamed PSFK
***FILM
Decoding the Screenplays of The Shining, Moonrise Kingdom & The Dark Knight: Watch Lessons from the Screenplay Open Culture
***RELIGION
Methodist High Court Affirms Bishop's Decision Overruling LGBT Resolution Christina Post
Amy Grant’s new Christmas album reignites the old ‘What’s Christian enough?’ question Washington Post
The most and least educated U.S. religious groups Pew Research
Evangelicals Consider Whether God Really Cares How They Vote NPR
Religious freedom at stake in this election, but not in the way evangelicals think (opinion) Religious News Service
SD Catholic church: Democratic voters are doomed to hell, Clinton is satanic Union Tribune
Steinberg: Evangelical youths weigh vexing presidential choice (opinion) Chicago Sun-Times
No, John Podesta didn’t drink bodily fluids at a secret Satanist dinner Washington Post
More than $180,000 raised for church burned, marked with ‘Vote Trump’ graffiti Religious News Service
Latino Evangelicals Are The Ultimate Swing Voters That Could Tip Florida's Scale NPR
***MUSIC
The Greatest Invention of One Thousand Years Ago Foundation for Economic Education
***THE BUSINESS OF MEDIA
News Corp, hit by an 11% drop in print ad revenue, records a loss in its Q1 2017 earnings report Talking New Media
***JOURNALISM
When interviewing trauma victims, proceed with caution and compassion IJNet
Profiles in mobile journalism: Defining a new storytelling language IJNet
***THE BUSINESS OF JOURNALISM
Cuts underway as advertising tumble accelerates Columbia Journalism Review
***STUDENT MEDIA
Censored Liberty University columnist steps down from position at student newspaper Student Press Law Center
***STUDENT LIFE
Millennials: Welcome to the Voting Booth Bloomberg
Millennials Are Drinking the World’s Coffee Supply Dry Vice
College Is A 4-Year-Long Balancing Act For First-Generation Students NPR
Having a Hard Time in College? Take Some Advice From 2 Million Students TIME
Sharp Growth of STDs in College age Population Inside Higher Ed
40% of Millennials fear the election is rigged USA Today
***PERSONAL GROWTH
Behind Door #3 (The Monty Hall Problem) Becoming (my blog)
The Simple Logical Puzzle That Shows How Illogical We Are - Facts So Romantic Nautil
Why We Can’t Finish Things Chronicle of Higher Ed
***SCIENCE
The Science behind 'Doctor Strange' Bustle
***HEALTH
First cases of new superbug in US STAT
How Doctors Could One Day Use Your DNA to Cure You Wired
Use Canada and the WHO’s ‘essential medicines’ as guides for US drug pricing STAT
***PSYCHOLOGY
Why Big Liars Often Start Out as Small Ones New York Times
***NEUROSCIENCE
Vibrant New Brain Scans Reveal What Makes You You Wired
Fear and Your Brain Jstor
***BUSINESS
Why People Stay in Jobs They Hate Bloomberg
***PHILOSOPHY
How Nietzsche Became the Most Absurdly Bastardized Philosopher in Hollywood Slate
How a Philosophy Professor Found Love in a Hidden Library New York Times
Thing-in-Itself brings Kant’s philosophical expression to videogames Kill Screen
Philosophy is cool again (sub. req’ed) Houston Chronicle
A new philosophy of science? Surely that’s been outlawed Oxford University Press
***WRITING& READING
When Vladimir Nabokov Taught Ruth Bader Ginsburg, His Most Famous Student, To Care Deeply About Writing Open Culture
***LANGUAGE
Native English speakers are the world’s worst communicators BBC
Princeton Proposal Would Require all students to Study another Language beside English Inside Higher Ed
215 Hours of Free Foreign Language Lessons on Spotify: French, Chinese, German, Russian & More Open Culture
***LITERATURE
Children's Book Author Natalie Babbitt Dies At 84 NPR
Benedict Cumberbatch Reads Kurt Vonnegut’s Incensed Letter to the High School That Burned Slaughterhouse-Five Open Culture
Friday Reads: Madeline L’Engle Jstor
***ACADEMIC LIFE
***RESEARCH
Now you can see who’s not sharing their trial results STAT
How to improve the quantitative predictions in psychological studies EFPSA
What should you do if a paper you’ve cited is later retracted? Retraction Watch
***RACE
BBC Airs Tone-Deaf Segment On Black People And Fried Chicken Huffington Post
Changing Standards for Collecting Data on Race and Ethnicity Inside Higher Ed
***HIGHER ED
Ballot Measures and Higher Ed Inside Higher Ed
Fear And Anger When Trump Comes To Campus (opinion) BuzzFeed
New Era for Disability Rights in higher education Inside Higher Ed
A jolt to private colleges from the NLRB: Gagging employees violates federal labor law Student Press Law Center
***TEACHING
Do You Make Them Call You ‘Professor’? Chronicle of Higher Ed
200 MOOCs Starting in November Open Culture
***CRIME ON CAMPUS
Feds Investigating Sandusky Fine Penn State $2.4M for Violating Clery: A law requiring schools to report campus crimes and warn people if their safety is threatened US News and World Report
***SEXUAL HARASSMENT & ASSAULT
Students Urge Colleges to Define Rape Culture in their Sexual Assault Policies Inside Higher Ed
A sign that someone is growing is that they expose themselves to people and places that are better than they are, different than they are, and more successful than they are. John Maxwell
Remember the old television show Let’s Make a Deal? Monty Hall would given contestants, typically dressed in outrageous costumes, a choice of three doors. The contestant would receive whatever was behind the door they selected. One of the doors had a great prize behind it. Pick that door and you get a valuable gift like a car or a vacation. But behind the other two doors were gag gifts. It might be a rooster or a lifetime supply of paper clips.
There was always one extra twist to the show: Once you pick a door, before revealing what was behind it, Monty would do you the favor of opening one of the remaining two doors and show one of the gag gifts. At that point, he'd let you switch doors if you wanted to do so. You could stick with your original choice as well.
What's the right move? Our instinct tells us to to stick to our guns. But you should go against that instinct and switch. Why? The chances you’ve picked the wrong door is two-out-of-three. But with only two doors left, your odds of getting the great prize goes up to 50-50.
But there’s more afoot here than just winning a prize on a TV game show.
Economist M. Keith Chen says this phenomenon has been overlooked in some of the most famous psychology experiments. He claims The Monty Hall Problem shows there's a logical flaw in the idea of choice rationalization. Choice rationalization is the idea that once we reject something, we tell ourselves we never liked the one we rejected anyway. Psychologists say we do this because it spares us the pain of thinking we made the wrong choice. Chen believes it’s not the act of picking that makes people suddenly prefer one over the other. He claims the preference was there all along. It's just that the preference was so slight it was not initially obvious until other possibilities are cleared out. You can read his own explanation here.
Stephen Goforth
Show up in your life everyday.
Shame drives me to hide in my room. Lament pulls me into tomorrow. Ryan Shoemaker
See rejection as feedback.
Buy assets, not liabilities. People are either liabilities or assets.
Respect people for who they are, not for what their titles are. -Herb Kelleher
***TECHNOLOGY
Gartner’s Top 10 Strategic Technology Trends for 2017 Information Management
Top 200 Tools for Learning 2016: Overview Centre for Learning and Performance Technologies
Companies Try Out Selfies as Password Alternatives: Facial-recognition apps use smartphone snapshots to verify identity of customers, taxpayers Wall Street Journal
Concerts put phones on lockdown for a phone-free event (the service has also been used in classrooms) New York Times
***SOCIAL MEDIA
Those Facebook lives from space are fake AF Mashable
Vine is Closed Medium
Do Parents Invade Children's Privacy When They Post Photos Online? NPR
If You’re Mourning The Loss Of Vine, Check Out The New App From Its Co-Founder Tube Filter
Facebook’s fake news problem won’t fix itself Poynter
***BIG DATA
The AI disruption wave Tech Crunch
Which data science functions will be automated in the near future? Forbes
Prediction: By 2020 60% of AI apps will run on the platform of one of 4 companies: Amazon, Google, Microsoft & IBM New York Times
How Apache Ignite pulls RDBMS, NoSQL, and Hadoop data sets into memory for improved performance InfoWorld
What do everyday people-not techies or co's-think about AI’s potential/pitfalls. Will AI will help/hurt the world? Harvard Business Review
Let’s break down 7 data/analytics job titles for today's data pros Information Week
Two-thirds of public doesn’t understand data, yet increasingly influenced by data, study says Talking New Media
What you can learn from GitHub's top 10 open source projects Tech Republic
***ART & DESIGN
Making Art Off The Grid: A Monthlong Residency At A Remote National Park NPR
***FILM
Film and the prez election NPR
***PRODUCING MEDIA
How These Netflix And NPR Vets Plan To Reinvent PodcastsFast Company
***GRAMMAR
Spelling errors to wet your appetite and furl your brow Washington Post
***WRITING& READING
Having an Aspirational Home Library Is Totally Normal Slate
Kurt Vonnegut’s Term Paper Assignment from the Iowa Writers’ Workshop Teaches You to Read Fiction Like a Writer Open Culture
An education expert says reading to kids makes them more curious than giving them phones or tablets Business Insider
***LITERATURE
Hear Marshall McLuhan’s The Medium is the Massage (1967) Open Culture
***RELIGION
The history of Satanic Panic in the U.S. — and why it's not over yet Vox
Few Americans identify with more than one religion Pew Research
Chicago public school cancels ‘Christian’ haunted house depicting Orlando LGBT mass shooting Raw Story
A Suicide Cult’s Surviving Members Still Maintain Its 90s Website Vice
Shared religious beliefs in marriage important to some, but not all, married Americans Pew Research
***THE BUSINESS OF MEDIA
The Long, Weird Transition from Analog to Digital Television Atlas Obscura
Is media bias really rampant? Ask the man who studies it for a living Poynter
Vice’s New Gaming Channel, Waypoint, Kicks off With Three-Day Twitch Stream Tube Filter
***JOURNALISM
A daily’s loss in court may cause journalists to rethink how they communicate Columbia Journalism Review
These Women Reporters Went Undercover to Get the Most Important Scoops of Their Day Smithsonian
For journalists investigating corruption, free tool offers millions of searchable documents International Journalists' Network
How the Global Fact-Checking Movement is Changing How We Train Journalists PBS MediaShift
The 70 Greatest Conspiracy Theories in Pop-Culture History Vulture
Journalist arrested for filming in courthouse has charges dismissed Student Press Law Center
***THE BUSINESS OF JOURNALISM
Gannett's billion-dollar deal to buy Tronc put on hold Political
***STUDENT MEDIA
UT student paper's anti-Muslim letter stirs controversy Knox News
***HEALTH
Patient Zero in AIDS crisis was misidentified, study says, rewriting early history of virus Stat News
Why Insulin Prices Have Kept Rising for 95 years Washington Post
***NEUROSCIENCE
The Inept Story Behind 100 Missing Brains from the Psych Dept at the University of Texas Atlas Obscura
The Brain Wiring Behind a Frustrating Speech Disorder Wall Street Journal
Why you shouldn’t blame lying on the brain The Conversation
Fear and Your Brain Jstor
***SOCIOLOGY
What a liberal sociologist learned from spending five years in Trump's America Vox
***GENDER ISSUES
'Good Girls Revolt' Takes On Gender Bias In The Newsroom NPR
Odd Vintage Postcards Document the Propaganda Against Women’s Rights 100 Years Ago Open Culture
Mind the (Pay) Gap Scholarly Kitchen
***RACE
A Professor Circled “Hence” On A Latina Student’s Paper And Wrote “This Is Not Your Word" BuzzFeed
***PHILOSOPHY
Stephen Fry Narrates 4 Philosophy Animations On the Question: How to Create a JustSociety? Open Culture
***PERSONAL GROWTH
The strongest political bias Becoming (my blog)
***HIGHER ED
Why the Future of Content Creation in Higher Education Is Digital Tech.Co
The Man Who Shed Light On Why College Keeps Getting More Expensive NPR
Colleges Crackdown Targets Drinking and Sexual Assault New York Times
Liberty University Students Want to Be Christians—Not Republicans The Atlantic
***TEACHING
Community College FAQ: You Teach How Many Classes? Chronicle of Higher Ed
Tips for Effective Online Learning – Community Edition Chronicle of Higher Ed
Private Facebook pages created by students for your course are the new cyber watercooler Chronicle of Higher Ed
***FREE SPEECH
Student forced out for Facebook Comments Inside Higher Ed
One University Asks: How Do You Promote Free Speech Without Alienating Students? (sub. req’d) Chronicle of Higher Ed
***LEGAL ISSUES
In a Copyright Case, Justices Ponder the Meaning of Fashion New York Times
Federal judge smacks down Northern Kentucky's reliance on FERPA privacy to keep secrets in student's sexual-assault lawsuit Student Press Law Center
***CRIME ON CAMPUS
Campus Cop on trial for Murder NPR
BYU police accessed thousands of external agencies' police records, actions questioned Herald Extra
***STUDENT LIFE
Should Students Major in What They Love? Inside Higher Ed
Clerk wanted to block early voting for students Wisconsin Rapids Tribune
‘Not Your Language’: How a Classroom Interaction Led a Student to Speak Out on Microaggressions Chronicle of Higher Ed
Having a Hard Time in College? Take Some Advice From 2 Million Students TIME
***SEXUAL HARASSMENT & ASSAULT
Brigham Young Students Who Report Sexual Assault Won’t Face Honor Code Sanctions New York Times
USF reviewing sex harassment finding at administrator's previous job Tampa Bay Times
Study: Gay and bisexual men are reporting sexual assaults on the campus at the same frequencies as heterosexual women Mary Ann Liebert, Inc. publishers
More details of Baylor's 'horrifying and painful' sexual-assault scandal have emerged Business Insider
Brigham Young Will Grant Disciplinary Amnesty to Sexual-Assault Victims Chronicle of Higher Ed
***TITLE IX
Resident Assistants Find Themselves on the Front Lines of Title IX Compliance Chronicle of Higher Ed
CUNY’s Hunter College Violated Title IX, Education Dept. Says Chronicle of Higher Ed
A religious awakening which does not awaken the sleeper to love has roused him in vain. -The Quaker Reader
The reason people lie is to avoid the pain of challenge and it’s consequences.
The point of life is not to become a more satisfied shopper. -Rod Dreher
***SOCIAL MEDIA
Facebook Says It Still Isn't a Media Company Despite Deciding What's Newsworthy Fortune
Hyperpartisan Facebook Pages Are Publishing False And Misleading Information At An Alarming Rate BuzzFeed
Social-media endorsements are the latest thing in advertising Economist
The Social Mediators: 7 Young Social Stars Share Their Rules For Engagement Fast Company
First Snapchat-Native Documentary Films to Launch From PBS Series POV Variety
***INTERNET
Would You Click on These Fake Gmail Alerts? Motherboard
***TECHNOLOGY
The Feds Already Have Your Face in a Database Gizmodo
The Internet of Things: When Toasters Go Online Blooomberg
Are E-sports Eating Up Traditional Sports Viewership? Watching other people play video games is just as compelling to millennial men as baseball and hockey MIT Technology Review
***ART & DESIGN
Reading Gaol, Where Oscar Wilde Was Imprisoned, Unlocks Its Gates For Art NPR
Tiny Hand Will Be Your New Comic Sans: BuzzFeed News made a font BuzzFeed
108 million web users are color blind. Tips for designing keeping them in mind Ux Planet
Disenfranchised by Bad Design Propublica
***BIG DATA / STATS
Three big data trends that 2016 brought out: Spark, Multi-core Servers, & IoT Dzone
Spark for Scale: the fundamental concepts Social Cops
MachineLearning is like a deep-fat fryer IdleWords
***FREE SPEECH
Writers Group Seeks Middle Ground on Campus Speech Inside Higher Ed
***LEGAL ISSUES
The Billion Dollar Copyright Lawsuit that could Legalize a new kind of Scam Fast Company
Rolling Stone Defamation Trial: UVA Student Who Made Up Rape Story Got Tattoo To Mark It Huff Post
***GENDER ISSUES
Education Department opens civil rights investigation at Baylor University Politico
Connie Chung ‘went through hell’ as a woman in journalism Page Six
'Mansplaining' On 'Jeopardy!' Huff Post
***DIVERSITY
Study: Immigrants Face Backlash But Do The Same To The Next Group NPR
***RACE
Graduation Gap for Black Football Players Inside Higher Ed
ProPublica Reveals Discriminatory Pricing By Computer Algorithms NPR
The Importance of Talking Explicitly About Race Chronicle of Higher Ed
Growing Racial Disparities in Student Debt Inside Higher Ed
Every Asian American has been asked this question. A computer gives the best answer Washington Post
***SEXUAL ASSAULT
Colleges are debating when to notify students about sexual assaults Business Insider
UNM fires professor tied to sexual misconduct allegations Albuquerque Journal
Education Dept. Opens Title IX Investigation at Baylor Chronicle of Higher Ed
***FILM
How Movie Studios Rejected Scripts During the Silent-Film Era: A Cold, 17-Point Checklist Circa 1915 Open Culture
***RELIGION
Evangelicals are a lot more chill about religion and politics than they used to be Washington Post
Dobson is calling for civil disobedience against a California law Associated Press
RIP Jack Chick, father of the Satanic Panic BongBong
***MUSIC
Bob Dylan Set to Share His Gospel Roots CBN
Hear Igor Stravinsky’s Symphonies & Ballets in a Complete, 32-Hour, Chronological Playlist Open Culture
***THE BUSINESS OF MEDIA
Print advertising woes are getting worse Poynter
NBCUniversal is doubling its bet on BuzzFeed by investing another $200 million Recode
AT&T Is Buying Time Warner Because the Future is Google Wired
The Next Generation Of Local, Low-Power FM Stations Expands In Urban Areas NPR
German Chatbot Startup Tries to Help Publishers Reach Larger Audience MediaShift
Newsonomics: Here are 10 storylines we’ll be talking about into 2017 Harvard’s Nieman Lab
***BUSINESS
The full-time MBA is under pressure from specialist degrees and online education Economist
Two economists win the Nobel prize for their work on the theory of contracts Economist
***JOURNALISM
Black Christian producer sues CNN because his colleagues kept saying 'Jesus Christ Daily Mail
Kidnapped Journalist Forced To Explain To ISIS Captors What BuzzFeed News Is The Onion
Writing about think tanks and using their research: A cautionary tip sheet Journalist’s Resources
The power of comics journalism Economist
Hacking: What journalists need to know. A conversation with Bruce Schneier Journalist’s Resources
For journalists battling censorship, focus on people, not politics International Journalists' Network
***THE BUSINESS OF JOURNALISM
It’s 2016, and we’re still arguing whether newspapers should have websites Poynter
Can A.G. Sulzberger Save The New York Times? Vanity Fair
Gannett announces across chain staff layoffs, while ‘tronc’ acquisition rumors continue Talking New Media
***STUDENT MEDIA
Student newspapers trashed over rape story WFTS-TV
Missouri Journalism School Was A Bit Too Bullish Before Middle Tennessee Game
Liberty Blocks its Student Paper Publishing Column Critical of Trump Inside Higher Ed
***STUDENT LIFE
UC Irvine Is Offering E-Sports Scholarships Fox Sports Radio
Student at Washington University in St. Louis reveals 5 apps that people are talking about on campus Business Insider
***SCIENCE
Keep politics out of science? Fugghedaboutit STAT
***HEALTH
The Cure for Cancer Is Data—Mountains of Data Wired
Millennials took Adderall to get through school. Now they’ve taken their addiction to the workplace Quartz
Electrodes in the brain can mimic sensations from the hand Economist
***PSYCHOLOGY
How The Concept Of Implicit Bias Came Into Being NPR
Colleges Turn Online Text Messaging Services to Help with Counseling Demand Inside Higher Ed
Psychiatric patients wait the longest in emergency rooms Washington Post
A new generation of drugs could change the way depression is treated Economist
Social attitudes to faces: Your class determines how you look at your fellow creatures Economist
Hazards of pointing out bad meta-analyses of psychological interventions PLOS
How do politicians get so comfortable with lying? One theory: practice Vox
***NEUROSCIENCE
Space Brain': Mars Explorers May Risk Neural Damage, Study Finds NBC
There’s Such a Think as Too Much Neuroscience New York Times
Brain study shows how small lies grow into whoppers Stat News
Frequent liars show less activity in key brain structure Science News
***GRAMMAR
***WRITING& READING
Student Writing in the Digital Age Jstor
'Blackacre': A Collection Of Poems About 'Searching And Being Buffeted' NPR
Bye-Bye, Cursive Chronicle of Higher Ed
***LITERATURE
Bob Dylan Wins Nobel Prize, Redefining Boundaries of Literature New York Times
#TrumpBookReport trends after debate as people imagine Donald Trump's response to literature Telegraph
11 of literature’s best closing lines PR Daily
The 8 Most Misunderstood Witches In Literature Bustle
Oxford University Press: New edition of Shakespeare's works will co-credit Christopher Marlowe Business Insider
***PHILOSOPHY
John Cleese & Jonathan Miller Turn Profs Talking About Wittgenstein Into a Classic Comedy Routine (1977) Open Culture
***PERSONAL GROWTH
How our brain tricks us when visualizing the future Becoming (my blog)
***HIGHER ED
What You Need to Know About the Overtime Rule and Higher Ed Chronicle of Higher Ed
To an enthusiastic crowd at Regent University, Donald Trump makes his case in final days of campaign Virginian Pilot
***TEACHING
LinkedIn Free Courses Week LinkedIn
A Defense of the Multiple-Choice Exam: Its value may be limited, but there is no better way to test whether students have read the material Chronicle of Higher Ed
***ACADEMIC LIFE
There Is No Excuse for How Universities Treat Adjuncts The Atlantic
What was it like to get a PhD in the 1840s? Physics Today
This photo essay shows what it really means to be adjunct faculty Washington Post
***RESEARCH
How many IRB members does it take to screw in a light bulb?" Anonymous
Why Data Citation Is a Computational Problem ACM
Ask The Chefs: What’s Your Favorite ‘Dirty Little Secret’ About Scholarly Publishing? Scholarly Kitchen
The reason most people never reach their goals is that they don't define them, learn about them, or even seriously consider them as believable or achievable.
Denis Waitley
Not only do you tend to hang out with people like yourself, your friends will influence you toward or away from self-control. Even the people you are forced by circumstances to hang out with (like co-workers) have an influence on your behavior.
That's the finding of researchers who asked participants to watch people either select carrot sticks or cookies to eat before taking tests related to self-control (not involving cookies and carrots). Participants who watched someone eat cookies before the tests did not do as well as those who had watched someone decide to eat carrots.
In another test, participants were told to think of a friend with good self-control. This group performed better on a handgrip test (used to measure self-control) than did the participants assigned to think about a friend with weak self-control. Other tests showed similar results.
Their conclusions: If you surround yourself with people who make wise choices, you are more likely to do the same. You can boost your self-control simply by networking with other people who reinforce positive behavior (or vise versa). And when you show a lack of self-control, you are probably influencing someone else to do the same.
Details of the study are published by the Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin.
Stephen Goforth
Becoming is a service of Goforth Solutions, LLC / Copyright ©2025 All Rights Reserved