Fixed Intelligence

We’ve long assumed that positive feedback always has desirable results. But some recent research has painted a more complex picture. Melissa Kamins discovered that children who receive primarily person-praise (“how smart you are”) rather than good words about their efforts will usually develop fixed views of intelligence. When children are young and family members consistently tell them how brilliant they are (or how dumb), they get the message: life depends on your level of intelligence, not on how you work at something. You’ve got it or you don’t. Nothing can change that reality, they think. In short, fixed views of intelligence or growth mindsets stem from conditioning, not from some inborn character trait. They too can change.

Ken Bain, What The Best College Students Do

Social Media is no Panacea for Loneliness

A new study finds that spending more time on social media platforms is actually linked to a higher likelihood of feeling socially isolated. Although it's possible that increased social media use could help alleviate feelings of social isolation, increased social media use could also have the opposite effect in young adults, by limiting in-person interactions, the researchers wrote in the study.  In addition, social media can give people the impression that others are leading happier lives, because people sometimes portray themselves unrealistically online, the researchers wrote.

"It's possible that young adults who initially felt socially isolated turned to social media. Or, it could be that their increased use of social media somehow led to feeling isolated from the real world. It could also be a combination of both," said senior study author Dr. Elizabeth Miller. "But even if the social isolation came first, it did not seem to be alleviated by spending time online, even in purportedly social situations.”

Sara G. Miller, Live Science

articles of interest - March 20

***SOCIAL MEDIA

Social Media is no Panacea for Loneliness  LiveScience

Facebook Is Trying Too Hard  Techpinions

***TECHNOLOGY

Head in the cloud: Microsoft Transforms its Culture  The Economist

Facebook's secret team is working on hardware that can scan your brain and read your mind  Tech Republic

Google Maps will soon be able to find your parked car  Mashable

***BIG DATA & STATISTICS

The skills set needed when switching careers from Java to Big Data  Hadoop 360

The Fed Gov’s effort to more quickly buy commercial geospatial intelligence and cut redundant purchasing called CIBORG  FedScoop

Hadoop: “It’s free like a puppy, not free like a beer”  Datanami

A basic overview of machine learning for the novice  The Monkey Learn Blog

The Hadoop dream has all but failed in a smoking heap of cost and complexity  Datanami

***GRAMMAR           

A court’s decision in a Maine labor dispute hinged on the absence of an Oxford comma  Quartz

***WRITING& READING

Literature by Degree: Teaching Creative Writing  New York Times

***LANGUAGE

It Begins: Bots Are Learning to Chat in Their Own Language  Wired

When Language Can Cure What Ails You  Daily Jstor

***GENDER  

Women's International Film Festival at Liberty Station March 24-26  SD News

'BBC dad' parody imagines how a mom would handle the situation  Mashable

Only 4.2% of Fortune 500 companies are run by women  Quartz

Despite gains, women remain underrepresented among U.S. political and business leaders  Pew Research

***RACIAL ISSUES

New Interactive Map Visualizes the Chilling History of Lynching in the U.S. (1835-1964)  Open Culture

***FREE SPEECH

Talking Past Each Other on Free Speech (sub. req.’ed)  Chronicle of Higher Ed

Researchers: The more economically exclusive the institution, the more likely the students have attempted to hinder free speech  Brookings

***LEGAL ISSUES

Google thaws (a little) on defamation cases  Search Engine Land  

Supreme Court of Georgia Issues iHeart Radio Ruling  Coosa Valley News

California Today: A Journalism Scandal Roils the Central Coast  New York Times

***MUSIC

Why The Music Industry Is Finally Taking Podcasts Seriously  Forbes

A Crash Course in Contemporary Christian Music  OC Weekly

U2 On 'The Joshua Tree,' A Lasting Ode To A Divided America  NPR

***JOURNALISM

Researchers Examine Breitbart's Influence On Election Information  NPR

UT-owned Del Mar Times has a typo-filled job post  San Diego Reader

Drones in Visual Journalism  New York Times

WATCH: Journalism used to fight for the working man, now it’s a bastion of “trust fund kids”  Salon

Ten insights, three actions toward community-driven storymaking  AIR

Why Journalism, Education Could Benefit From a Mixed-Methods Approach  Media Shift

***FAKE NEWS

Why Piling On Facts May Not Help In The Battle Against Fake News  NPR

Watch Celebs Try (and Fail) to Tell Fake News From Real News  Wired

Facebook continues to be under fire for peddling fake news, but the platform will never take real responsibility  TechCrunch

Video: Top 5 ways to get trustworthy news  Tech Republic

***ADVERTISING

Brands Are Digging Into GIF Data to Understand Consumer Behavior  Ad Week

Guardian Pulls Ads from Google After They Were Placed Next to Extremist  The Guardian

The fine line between sponsored content and advertising  Talking New Media

***STUDENT MEDIA

The role of a college newspaper on campus  The Vantage (student newspaper at Newman University is a private Catholic college)

Administration refuses to provide public documents  The Nichollsworth (student newspaper for Nicholls State University)

Which College Degrees Produce the Most (and Least) Financially Responsible Students?  Priceonomics

Private California university requests takedown of student news article  Student Press Law Center

***SEXUAL HARASSMENT & ASSAULT

U of California strengthens faculty policies against sexual harassment and assault  Inside Higher Ed

Suit Alleges Ohio U sat on Complaints of Professor’s Sexual Misconduct for a Decade  Inside Higher Ed

***HEALTH

An Alarming Number of Kids Are Getting Their Hands on Opioids  Gizmodo

***PSYCHOLOGY           

Apocalypse Oak Park: Dorothy Martin, the Chicagoan Who Predicted the End of the World and Inspired the Theory of Cognitive Dissonance  Chicago Mag

***SOCIOLOGY

What if Sociologists Had as Much Influence as Economists?  New York Times

***PHILOSOPHY

An Animated Introduction to Arthur Schopenhauer  Open Culture

***PERSONAL GROWTH

 Feel like you’re not the person you used to be? You’re probably right  Becoming (my site)

***RELIGION

Fast-Growing, Entrepreneurial Christianity Is About A Lot More Than Church Attendance  Fast Company

Conservatives Question choice of churches by Trump’s Supreme Court Nominee  CNN

The Rise Of Secularism And The Alt-Right  NPR

MormonLeaks website squares off with Mormon Church, posts leaked ‘Enemies List’   Washington Post

Twila Paris Defends Brother Indicted for Bribery at Christian College  Christianity Today

***HIGHER ED

Sharp growth of California's free community college programs  Inside Higher Ed

Trump Seeks Deep Cuts in Education and Science  Inside Higher Ed

Investigation found that staff members improperly handled financial aid funds and changed student grades  Inside Higher Ed

This little circle in SoCal became the intellectual hub of Trumpism  Chronicle of Higher Ed

***TEACHING

Communication professor establishes ground rules for political conversations with his students in class  Inside Higher Ed

Can a Failing Grade Motivate a Student?  Chronicle of Higher Ed

***STUDENT LIFE

How Millennials Lose And Win Under The GOP Health Bill  NPR

Out Of Bounds: Competitive Video Gaming And Scholarships  NPR

A wider partisan and ideological gap between younger, older generations  Pew Research

The disturbing trend of homeless community college students  Washington Post

***ACADEMIC LIFE

Don’t allow yourself to be treated as a checked box on someone else’s to-do list  Chronicle of Higher Ed

Impact of Social Sciences – Google Scholar is a serious alternative to Web of Science  London School of Economics and Political Science

How can we tackle the thorny problem of fraudulent research?  The Guardian

Predatory publishers and events  The Research Whisperer

Honest mistakes by young scientists shouldn't doom their careers  Stat News

Bad incentives push universities to protect rogue scientists  Slate

 

I'm not who I used to Be

Feel like you’re not the person you used to be? You’re probably right. The longest-running personality study ever conducted reveals that people change so dramatically as the years go by that they often bear little resemblance to their younger selves.

In 1950, researchers asked teachers to assess specific personality traits of 1,208 14-year-old students, including their self-confidence, originality, perseverance, conscientiousness, stability of moods, and desire to excel. In 2012, 174 of the original students agreed to participate in a second evaluation. Now in their 70s, they completed cognitive tests and answered detailed questionnaires, rating themselves on the same characteristics. They also had a close friend or relative evaluate their personality.

After comparing the results, the researchers found no correlation between the participants’ current personality and who they were as teenagers, HuffingtonPost.com reports. “Personality changes only gradually throughout life, but by older age it may be quite different from personality in childhood,” the authors say, noting that genetic and environmental factors likely influence how personalities evolve over time.

The Week Magazine

 

pick a side

"There’s nothing I can do."  (Let’s look at our alternatives.)

"That’s just the way I am."  (I can choose a different approach)

"He makes me so mad."  (I control my own feelings)

"They won’t allow that."  (I can create an effective presentation)

"I have to do that."  (I will choose an appropriate response)

"I can’t."   (I choose)

"I must."  (I prefer)

"If only."  (I will)

A serious problem with reactive language is that it becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy. People become reinforced in the paradigm that they are determined, and they produce evidence to support the belief. They feel out of control, not in charge of their life or their destiny. They blame outside forces--other people, circumstances, even the stars--for their own situation.

Stephen Covey, The Seven Habits of Highly Effective People

a mental short-cut that can lead us away from truth

Imagine I tell you that a group of 30 engineers and 70 lawyers have applied for a job. I show you a single application that reveals a person who is great at math and bad with people, a person who loves Star Wars and hates public speaking, and then I ask whether it is more likely that this person is an engineer or a lawyer. What is your initial, gut reaction? What seems like the right answer?

Statistically speaking, it is more likely the applicant is a lawyer. But if you are like most people in their research, you ignored the odds when checking your gut. You tossed the numbers out the window. So what if there is a 70 percent chance this person is a lawyer? That doesn’t feel like the right answer.

That’s what a heuristic is, a simple rule that in the currency of mental processes trades accuracy for speed. A heuristic can lead to a bias, and your biases, though often correct and harmless, can be dangerous when in error, resulting in a wide variety of bad outcomes from foggy morning car crashes to unconscious prejudices in job interviews.

David McRaney writing in BoingBoing

Getting closer to the truth

Most of us view the world as more benign than it really is, our own attributes as more favorable than they truly are, and the goals we adopt as more achievable than they are likely to be. We also tend to exaggerate our ability to forecast the future, which fosters optimistic overconfidence. In terms of its consequences for decisions, the optimistic bias may well be the most significant of the cognitive biases. Because optimistic bias can be both a blessing and a risk, you should be both happy and wary if you are temperamentally optimistic.

Optimism is normal, but some fortunate people are more optimistic than the rest of us. If you are genetically endowed with an optimistic bias, you hardly need to be told that you are a lucky person -- you already feel fortunate.

An optimistic attitude is largely inherited, and it is part of a general disposition for well-being, which may also include a preference for seeing the bright side of everything. If you were allowed one wish for your child, seriously consider wishing him or her optimism. Optimists are normally cheerful and happy, and therefore popular; they are resilient in adapting to failures and hardships, their chances of clinical depression are reduced, their immune system is stronger, they take better care of their health, they feel healthier than others and are in fact likely to live longer.

Of course, the blessings of optimism are offered only to individuals who are only mildly biased and who are able to “accentuate the positive” without losing track of reality.

Optimistic people play a disproportionate role in shaping our lives. Their decisions make a difference; they are inventors, entrepreneurs, political and military leaders -- not average people. They got to where they are by seeking challenges and taking risks. They are talented and they have been lucky, almost certainly luckier than they acknowledge. Their self-confidence is reinforced by the admiration of others. This reasoning leads to a hypothesis: the people who have the greatest influence on the lives of others are likely to be optimistic and overconfident, and to take more risks than they realize.

Daniel Kahneman, Thinking, Fast and Slow

wobbly furniture

Craving emotional stability? Then start by fixing your shaky chair. A Canadian study found a connection between sitting in a wobbly chair and assumptions about judging relationships.

University of Waterloo Researchers divided volunteers into two groups. The group sitting in shaky furniture not only saw instability in the relationships of others but also said that they valued stability in their own relationships more highly. The researchers’ conclusion: Even a small amount of environmental wobbliness will encourage a desire for emotional balance and security.

Details of the study were published in the journal Psychological Science.

Stephen Goforth

articles of interest - March 13

***SOCIAL MEDIA

Why We Can’t Look Away From Our Screens  New York Times

Fake news scammers use his picture of Facebook so he took Facebook to court  Back Channel

Google is Slackifying Hangouts  Mashable

Culling Your Social Media Past  Chronicle of Higher Ed

Facebook, Instagram ban tools police use to spy on you  Daily Dot

Skepticism over Snapchat Stock (sub. req.’ed) The Week

 

***TECHNOLOGY

Personalized Scam Emails on the Rise: Smaller institutions report an increase in sophisticated attempts to gain access to financial and personal information Inside Higher Ed

Quantum technology is beginning to come into its own  Economist

Hackers and governments can see you through your phone’s camera — here’s how to protect yourself  Business Insider

Conformity, nostalgia and 5G at the Mobile World Congress  Economist

The strangeness of the quantum realm opens up exciting new technological possibilities  Economist

 

***JOURNALISM

Why Europeans are less eager consumers of online ranting than Americans: Perhaps because they trust the mainstream media more  Economist

What News-Writing Bots Mean for the Future of Journalism  Wired

Time for Journalists to Encrypt Everything  Wired

Russia’s RT Network: Is It More BBC or K.G.B.?  NY Times

A journalism student's response to Trump's attack on media  USA Today

 

***FAKE NEWS

Facebook combats fake news with new warning label  Chicago Tribune

Facebook Enlists Fact-Checkers To Probe Disputed Stories  NPR

Why Facebook and Twitter have a civic duty to protect us from fake news  Wired

Chinese media confuse Trump satire with news  CNN

Technology sites begin paying attention to role being play by Google and Facebook in ‘fake news’ controversy  Talking New Media

In A Crucial Election Year, Worries Grow In Germany About Fake News  NPR

5 fake stories that just won't go away  CNN

Lessons From the Fake News Pandemic of 1942  Politico

 

***BIG DATA & STATISTICS

Alphabet's Eric Schmidt: 'Big data is so powerful, nation states will fight' over it: “I'll bet my career”  Business Insider

The shift toward Dataism: Does shifting authority from you to the algorithm mean you are losing your ability to find your own way?  Wired

Employing a Naive Bayes classifier to create a model to classify an article as fake or real  Open Data Science

Google buys Kaggle: home to the world's largest community of Data Scientist and Machine Learning enthusiasts  Gizbot

Amazon machine learning to predict marketing campaign response  Gigaom

NY Times profiles Trump campaign Big Data co; experts say claims are “exaggerated”  New York Times

Creating service level agreements for big data from IT  Technology Republic

 

***PERSONAL GROWTH

When children ask why  Becoming (my site)

 

***LANGUAGE

Why words die: How to keep lexical treasures from keeling over  Economist

Google’s Gboard will now translate text into another language as you type  The Verge

 

***LITERATURE

Jane Austen poisoned by arsenic? Not so fast, experts say  CNN

Alt-Right Jane Austen: The alt-right wants to co-opt her as a symbol of meek, old-fashioned white womanhood. They don't have a clue  Chronicle of Higher Ed

Free Download: The Book Lover’s Guide to Coffee  Open Culture

 

***FREE SPEECH  

Colleges are ground zero for mob attacks on free speech, lawyer says  Washington Post

 

***GENDER 

The Gender Gap in Publications  Inside Higher Ed

Cleveland bookstore flips around 1000s of titles written by men   ABC News

Science remains male-dominated But a new report says females are catching up  Economist

 

***RACIAL ISSUES

Study: Blacks more likely to be wrongfully convicted  CNN

In Georgia, reaction to KKK banner is a sign of the times  Washington Post

 

***RELIGION

The alleged rape of a 13-year-old girl at a church camp has prompted the filing of a civil lawsuit against the Baptist General Convention of Oklahoma  News OK

20/20 on Gay Conversion Therapy ABC News

White Evangelicals Believe They Face More Discrimination Than Muslims  The Atlantic

Could Southern Baptist Russell Moore lose his job? Churches threaten to pull funds after months of Trump controversy  Washington Post

 

***ART & DESIGN

Knowing Your Type: Lessons from a typography expert   Explore

 

***MUSIC

The Neural Systems of People Who Don't Enjoy Music  The Atlantic

Italian Band Soviet Soviet Denied Entry To The U.S., Jailed And Then Deported  NPR

All of the Music from Martin Scorsese’s Movies: Listen to a 326-Track, 20-Hour Playlist   Open Culture

 

***FILM

Mesmerizing Map Renames LA Streets After Your Favorite Films  Wired

  

***RESEARCH

Using Text Analysis to Discover Work in JSTOR  Chronicle of Higher Ed

Research funds are wasted on reformatting manuscripts  Nature

Can a film count as research, and if so, can a journal publish it?  Times Higher Education

Remedy for Reproducibility: Opening a Dialog to Explore the Complexities  Society for Laboratory Automation

 

***SCIENCE

Inside the Anti-Science forces of the Internet  BuzzFeed

A big step towards an artificial yeast genome: Success would usher in true genetic engineering  Economist

 

***HEALTH

Alexa Now Offers Medical Advice, Because Your Hypochondria Wasn't Bad Enough  Gizmodo

Employers could impose hefty penalties on employees who decline to participate in genetic testing as part of workplace wellness programs if a bill approved by a House committee this week becomes law  Washington Post

‘Stunning’ gap: Canadians with cystic fibrosis outlive Americans by a decade  Stat News

The rise of the medical selfie  Economist

 

***PSYCHOLOGY           

Your Personality Completely Transforms As You Age  Huffington Post

Review of book about the man who invented the Rorschach test  The Week

GOP plans to strip addiction mental health coverage for millions  Forbes

The Secret History of Emotions  Chronicle of Higher Ed

As opioid overdoses rise, police officers become counselors, doctors and social workers   Washington Post

The Psychology of the Sample Sale  Racked

 

***NEUROSCIENCE

Neuroscience Study Finds Ads on Pandora Outperform TV and Radio Spots  Ad Week

 

***SOCIOLOGY

The Hidden Systems at Work Behind Gentrification  Motherboard

 

***PHILOSOPHY

A Case For Majoring In Philosophy  Forbes

Are We Living Inside a Computer Simulation?: An Introduction to the Mind-Boggling “Simulation Argument”   Open Culture

 

***HIGHER ED

177 Private Colleges Fail Education Dept.’s Financial-Responsibility Test  Chronicle of Higher Ed

The Most Cringeworthy Monuments to Colleges’ Innovation Jargon  Chronicle of Higher Ed

Republican State Lawmakers Seek to Ban ‘Sanctuary’ Campuses (sub. req.'ed)  Chronicle of Higher Ed

Four in 10 colleges are seeing drops in applications from international students  Inside Higher Ed

Intellectual intolerance poses an existential danger to the university (sub. req.'ed)  Chronicle of Higher Ed

How Colleges Can Open Powerful Educational Experiences to Everyone (sub. req.'ed)  Chronicle of Higher Ed

Scandal’s Constant Drip Means a Relentless Spotlight at Baptist School  Chronicle of Higher Ed

 

***STUDENT MEDIA

Holy Cross Student Newspaper Considers Name Change After KKK Confusion  WBZ-TV

Kentucky's attorney general said he'd intervene in two lawsuits, against student newspapers over open-records cases involving sexual assaults  Lexington Herald Leader

Student journalists deserve more protection (opinion)   NJ.com

 

***STUDENT LIFE

College professor says: Let your kids choose their own major  Washington Post

Carleton University comes under heavy criticism after gym scale removed  CBC

 

***SEXUAL HARASSMENT & ASSAULT

Campus Rape Victims Are Waiting Years For Title IX Complaints To Be Resolved  BuzzFeed

Judge: Federal Lawsuit Against Baylor University Can Proceed  Associated Press

  

***ACADEMIC LIFE

Northwestern U. Is Accused of Violating Academic Freedom  Chronicle of Higher Ed

Digital sociologist and social-media consultant picks Five books everyone should read to understand technology and social media  Chronicle of Higher Ed

Painful Memories

If you suffer from great, recurring anger, the cause could be painful memories, rooted in childhood. Charles Dickens said, “Injustice is the most painful hurt in childhood”. All of us remember times, especially in our youth, when we were "done wrong." Healing from this is a process that can take a great deal of time. It also takes reprogramming our thought patterns, so we don't react to current situations as if they are part of past injustices. Don’t stuff the past down. Are you on the road to healing? Are you a little further along today than you were yesterday? Life is not about having arrived, but “becoming.”

Stephen Goforth

Accountability

Holding people to the responsible course is not demeaning; it is affirming. Proactivity is part of human nature, and although the proactive muscles may be dormant, they are there. By respecting the proactive nature of other people, we provide them with at least one clear, undistorted reflection from the social mirror.

Stephen Covey, The Seven Habits of Highly Effective People

Being Bored Out of Your Mind Makes You More Creative

Boredom might spark creativity because a restless mind hungers for stimulation. Maybe traversing an expanse of tedium creates a sort of cognitive forward motion. “Boredom becomes a seeking state,” says Texas A&M University psychologist Heather Lench. “What you’re doing now is not satisfying. So you’re seeking, you’re engaged.” A bored mind moves into a “daydreaming” state, says Sandi Mann, the psychologist at the University of Central Lancashire who ran the experiment with the cups. Parents will tell you that kids with “nothing to do” will eventually invent some weird, fun game to play—with a cardboard box, a light switch, whatever.

The problem, the psychologists worry, is that these days we don’t wrestle with these slow moments. We eliminate them. “We try to extinguish every moment of boredom in our lives with mobile devices,” says Sandi Mann, psychologist at the University of Central Lancashire. This might relieve us temporarily, but it shuts down the deeper thinking that can come from staring down the doldrums. Noodling on your phone is “like eating junk food,” she says.

So here’s an idea: Instead of always fleeing boredom, lean into it. Sometimes, anyway.

Clive Thompson, Wired

articles of interest - March 6

***SOCIAL MEDIA

Big data, financial services and privacy: Should our bankers and insurers be our Facebook friends?  Economist

How YouTube Is Changing Our Viewing Habits  NPR

Driven to distraction: Smartphones are strongly addictive  The Economist

The New York Times redesigned A2 and A3 print pages include a Spotlight section, where tweets will often be featured  Ad Week

Emojis Begin Cropping Up Outside Of Your Smartphone  NPR

***PRODUCING MEDIA

Why the Internet Didn’t Kill Zines  New York Times

Traditional TV’s surprising staying power  The Economist

***TECHNOLOGY

The Golden Age of Email Hacks Is Only Getting Started  Wired

'Stupid Hackathon' Delivers Intentionally Useless Tools  (an app which misdiagnoses you with exotic diseases and a Facebook messaging app that makes your friend wait for a message that will never come)  The Verge

***BIG DATA

NY Times Profiles Trump Campaign Big Data Company  New York Times

Gaps in the Hadoop Security Stack, Ransomware and Corporate Bureaucracy Continue to Threaten Data Sanctity  Datanami

Will Big Data Fuel a New Religion When the Algorithm Understands you better than you do?  Wired

Machine Learning Impact: New Tools for Bankers Make Save 360K Lawyer Hours Bloomberg

Why Literature is the Ultimate Big-Data Challenge  Economist

***PERSONAL GROWTH

Fear that we are missing out on something  Becoming (my site)

***WRITING& READING

Online tools allowing students to paraphrase academic work are facilitating plagiarism  Inside Higher Ed

Journaling Showdown: Writing Vs. Typing  LifeHacker

It took Donald Trump three tries to spell 'hereby' correctly on Twitter  The Week

***LANGUAGE

The Language Wars  Jstor

***LITERATURE

The New Yorker's new bot will tweet 92 years worth of poetry at you  Poynter

***GENDER  

Supreme Court: Racism can upend jury verdicts  USA Today

Women's studies has changed over the years -- and it's more popular than ever  USA Today

***RACIAL ISSUES

Want to Profit Off Your Meme? Good Luck if You Aren’t White  Wired

Two Mizzou students arrested for anti-Semitic messages  St. Louis Today

Literature report shows British readers stuck in very white past  The Guardian

Racial Gap Among Senior Administrators Widens  Inside Higher Ed

Blacks more likely to follow up on digital news than whites  Pew Research Center

White Supremacists Ramp Up Efforts To Recruit College Kids  Vocativ

How The Internet Fueled The Rise In Hate Crimes In California  Fast Company

***FREE SPEECH

Supreme Court Considers Whether N.C. Law Violates First Amendment  NPR

A conservative author tried to speak at a liberal arts college. He left fleeing an angry mob  Washington Post

A Scuffle and a Professor's Injury Make Middlebury a Free-Speech Flashpoint  Chronicle of Higher Ed

***LEGAL ISSUES

Internet firms’ legal immunity is under threat  The Economist

High court sidesteps ruling on transgender rights  Politico

***RELIGION

Alabama Megachurch asks for its own police department  AL.com

Peter Popoff, the Born-Again Scoundrel  GQ

Religious Freedom Debate: Liberty To Some, Anti-Gay Discrimination To Others NPR

'The Shack' review: Grieving man embarks on spiritual quest  Chicago Tribune

Deadly storms damage churches, Baptist college  Baptist Press

Technology transforms ancient art of Bible translation  Orlando Sentinel

Muslims and Islam: Key findings in the U.S. and around the world  Pew Research Center

The key to understanding evangelicals’ upside-down support for the travel ban  Religion News Service

Does 'Logan' Have More of a Christian Message Than 'The Shack'?  Relevant

Ranking evangelical universities according to their Klout score  Washington Times  

***MUSIC

Music's Weird Cassette Tape Revival Is Paying Off  Fast Company

The Weirdest Thing About How Music Triggers Memories  New York Mag

***JOURNALISM

How a pop-up magazine experiment is turning journalism into performance art  PBS

California Supreme Court says officials' emails are public records  abc7.com

Science covered in the news is more likely to be overturned  Stat News

America’s State Secrets and the Freedom of Information Act  Jstor

The Associated Press' plan to put hyperlocal data in the hands of reporters  Tech Crunch

How youth navigate the news landscape  Knight Foundation

10 innovative data visualizations of Trump’s first month in the White House  StoryBench

***THE BUSINESS OF JOURNALISM

Journalism Fights for Survival in the Post-Truth Era  Wired

How The New York Times Is Clawing Its Way Into the Future  Wired

***PSYCHOLOGY    

These brain scans show how dying is very personal  Fast Company

***NEUROSCIENCE

Ben Carson Just Got a Whole Lot Wrong About the Brain  Wired

***ETHICS

Embryo Experiments On Human Development Raise Ethical Concerns  NPR

***CRITICAL THINKING

How to Fine-Tune Your Bullshit Detector  Fast Company

***HIGHER ED

Iowa lawmaker pushing to cap Democratic Profs at State Schools claimed a biz degree from Sizzler steak house  NBC News 

***ONLINE CLASSES

DOJ investigation finds many UC Berkeley educational videos are not ADA compliant: School to Remove Videos  Daily Cal

***STUDENT MEDIA

Judge Boots UCSD’s Satirical Newspaper Out of Court  CourtHouse News

Brown University Ready to Sell one of the last non-conglomerate owned commercial FM radio stations in Southern New England  WJAR-TV

Iowa’s college-based newspapers adapt to digital readers  Des Moines Register

***STUDENT LIFE

10 Reasons Why C Students Are More Successful After Graduation  The Huffington Post

***ACADEMIC LIFE

Northwestern U. Is Accused of Violating Academic Freedom  Chronicle of Higher Ed

***RESEARCH

Copyright compliance and infringement in ResearchGate full-text journal articles  SpringerLink

Peer-review activists push psychology journals towards open data  Nature News & Comment

Fear that we are missing out on something

We overschedule our days and complain constantly about being too busy. We shop endlessly for stuff we don’t need and then feel oppressed by the clutter that surrounds us. We rarely sleep well or enough. We compare our bodies to the artificial ones we see in magazines and our lives to the exaggerated ones we see on television. We watch cooking shows and then eat fast food. We worry ourselves sick and join gyms we don’t visit. We keep up with hundreds of acquaintances but rarely see our best friends. We bombard ourselves with video clips and emails and instant messages. We even interrupt our interruptions.

And at the heart of it, for so many, is fear—fear that we are missing out on something. Wherever we are, someone somewhere is doing or seeing or eating or listening to something better.

I’m eager to escape from this way of living. And if enough of us escape, the world will be better for it.

Will Schwalbe,  Books for Living