the unfinished self

The human self (is) not simply a finished product, a kind of entity, but a developing process. A self is not simply something I am but something I must become. To be sure, there is also a sense in which the self must have a kind of substantial reality, for there must be something that is undergoing the process of becoming. But the substantial reality of the self includes potentialities, and thus selfhood is a process in which a person must try to “become what one already is.” This unfinished self gives shape to itself through its choices; every decision I make is also a decision about what kind of person I want to be.

C. Stephen Evans, Introduction: Kierkegaard’s life and works

Listen Slowly

Some years back, I was snapping at my wife and children, choking down my food at mealtimes, and feeling irritated at those unexpected interruptions through the day. Before long, things around our house reflected the pattern of my hurry-up style.

After supper one evening, the words of one of our daughters gave me a wake-up call. She wanted to tell me something important that had happened to her at school that day. She hurriedly began, “Daddy-I-wanna-tell-you-somethin’-and-I’ll-tell-you-really-fast.”

Realizing her frustration, I answered, “Honey, you can tell me... and you don’t have to tell me really fast. Say it slowly.”

I’ll never forget her answer: “Then listen slowly.”

Charles Swidoll

Articles of Interest - April 11

***SOCIAL MEDIA

How to Use Snapchat  Wired

Instagram rolls out 60-second video option  PR Daily

Snapchat Content Survey: How Much Millennials Actually Use Live Stories, Discover and More  Variety

Facebook Users Are Sharing Fewer Personal Updates and It's a Big Problem  Fortune

How to make your GIFs load fast every time  Cnet

Up Periscope: Inside Twitter’s one-year-old broadcast startup  Mashable

Is Snapchat a Threat to Facebook? 2 Charts Offer Conflicting Answers  Fox Business News

***BIG DATA  

Data-Mining Algorithm Reveals the Stormy Evolution of Mathematics over 700 Years   MIT Tech Review

Big data vs. smart data: the subset will actually apply to your problem-and take you toward a solution  Tech Republic  

Machine learning helps data mining algorithm reveal the chaotic evolution of mathematics over 700 years  Technology Review

Google explains: What it Means to be ofthe Core algorithm  Search Engine Land

***THE INTERNET                       

 What cats can teach us about content creation  PR Daily

***GENDER ISSUES

Thinking They’re ‘Unqualified’ Is A Big Reason More Women Don’t Run For Office   FiveThirtyEight

***RACE

The Unbearable Whiteness of Baseball  New York Times

From multiracial children to gender identity, what some demographers are studying now  Pew Research

Why Talented Black and Hispanic Students Can Go Undiscovered  New York Times

***WRITIN’ AND READIN’

Caustic reactions, pro and con, as AP opts to lowercase ‘Internet’  PR Daily

Pay for Editing, Your Writing Will Thank You  Huffington Post

***GRAMMAR         

Sidestepping the Semicolon  Chronicle of Higher Ed

An upcoming puzzle game tasks you with decoding classic literature  KillScreen

***LITERATURE

16 Children’s Books For ‘Spiritual But Not Religious’ Families  Huffington Post

State Lawmaker Proposes eliminating grants for students who study "Poetry or some other pre-Walmart major"  Philly

Literature’s Emotional Lessons  The Atlantic

30 Days of Shakespeare: One Reading of the Bard Per Day, by The New York Public Library, on the 400th Anniversary of His Death  Open Culture

***RESEARCH            

The challenges for scientific publishing, 60 years on  Wiley Online Library

The Debunkers of a Gay Marriage Study Just Re-bunked It, Sort Of  Wired

A guide to top medical journals: A primer for healthcare journalists   Michel Accad

***FREE SPEECH

Ninth Circuit ruling in California student expression case may be “dangerous for campus speech,” lawyers say   Student Press Law Center

***ART AND DESIGN

This Tool Makes It Stupid Simple to Turn Data Into Charts  Wired

***RELIGION

Mississippi Residents Divided Over Guns In Churches Law  NPR  

This Pastor Claims He Visited Heaven And Was Able To Take A Selfie  BBC

Mississippi's Religious Objections Law Sparks Backlash From Other States  NPR

Hundreds of libraries in the US are getting complaints for carrying the Bible  Business Insider

A Case For State Religious Freedom Laws  NPR

***THE BUSINESS OF MEDIA

Samsung patents smart contact lenses with a built-in camera  Mashable

***JOURNALISM

Stop the presses! 'All the President's Men' and great journalism movies  CNN

Panama Papers Leak Is The Result Of Unprecedented Media Collaboration  NPR

The Queens of Nonfiction: 56 Women Journalists Everyone Should Read  New York Mag

Girl, 9, told to "go play with dolls" over crime coverage  The Globe and Mail

Want to start a small data journalism team in your newsroom? Here are 8 steps  Harvard’s Nieman Lab

If Trump were president: Boston Globe's fake front page dares to imagine  The Guardian

Activist says agents seized anti-Planned Parenthood videosan attack on citizen journalism  USA Today

***STUDENT JOURNALISM

Albion College newspaper apologizes for April Fools' Day story on Hillsdale College closing  Michigan Live

Six reasons you should join your college’s student newspaper  Slippery Rock Student Newspaper

***STUDENT LIFE

Beware Dating Site Scammers and Their Ungrammatical Game  Wired

Breeding Narcissists (New study suggests that narcissistic business students thrive under narcissistic professors, while less narcissistic students suffer, to the detriment of all)  Inside Higher Ed                                               

Are Young Voters Altering Republican And Democratic Primary Races?  NPR

Studies Show That Millennials Are Most Vulnerable to Scams Consumer Reports

Review of two books on girls and growing up  Economist

The age when people are the most popular, according to science  Washington Post

***JOBS

Will You Sprint, Stroll or Stumble Into a Career?  New York Times

The Science of Smart Hiring  The Atlantic

Job Hunting in the Digital Age  New York Times

***SCIENCE

How Scientific Scandal Can Become Scientific Progress  Five Thirty Eight

***NEUROSCIENCE

A Map of the Brain Could Teach Machines to See Like You Wired

IBM Wants to Implant Fake Brains in Real Brains to Prevent Seizures  Wired

Mapping the Brain to Build Better Machines (A race to decipher the brain’s algorithms could revolutionize machine learning)  Quanta

***PERSONAL GROWTH

Self-Renewal and Motivation   Becoming (my blog)

***HIGHER ED

States Call For Removal Of College Watchdog For “Spectacular” Failures  Buzz Feed News

The Cost of Remediation (An inadequate high school education can get expensive for students when they need to take remedial courses in college, according to a new report)  Inside Higher Ed

Rifles on campus: College police forces add firepower   Associated Press

Google's 'Education Evangelist': Students Are Changing Faster Than Colleges  Chronicles of Higher Ed

Scholars warn Western universities could be held accountable for conduct in countries in which they operate campuses  Inside Higher Ed

The Pillaging of America's State Universities  The Atlantic

USD Students Get a Personal Assistant Mobile App  Campus Technology

What Higher-Education Professionals Made in 2015-16  Chronicle of Higher Ed

***ACADEMIC LIFE

U Wisconsin Madison professors losing hope of preserving traditional tenure in campus policy  Inside Higher Ed

Less Is More (A detailed class plan full of bullet points is a security blanket. Maybe it’s time to leave more to chance?)  Chronicle of Higher Ed

***TEACHING

Is plagiarism changing over time? (A 10-year time-lag study with three points of measurement)  Taylor & Francis Group

***CAMPUS CRIME

College tries to withhold names of students charged with misconduct under FERPA  Student Press Law Center 

***SEXUAL ASSAULT ON CAMPUS

Student Journalists Cleared of Charges for Reporting on Sexual Assault Awareness Event  The FIRE

Revisiting 'Rolling Stone's' Discredited Campus Rape Story  NPR

FIRE Aims to Challenge Legality of Federal Sexual Misconduct Mandate  The FIRE

 

 

Top performers secret: They chunk it

The idea that skill-which is graceful, fluid, and seemingly effortless--should be created by the nested accumulation of small, discrete circuits seems counterintuitive. But a massive body of scientific research shows that this is precisely the way skills are built--and not just for cognitive pursuits like chess.

Physical acts are also built of chunks. When a gymnast learns a floor routine, he assemblies via a series of chunks, which in turn are made up of other chunks. He’s grouped a series of muscle movements together in exactly the same way you grouped a series of letters together to form a Everest. The fluency happens when the gymnast repeats the movements often enough that he knows how to process those chunks as one big chunk, the same way that you process the above sentence.

From below, top performers look incomprehensibly superior, and see if they’ve leaped in a single bound across a huge chasm. They aren't nearly as different from ordinary performers  as they seem. What separates these two levels is not innate superpower but a slowly accrued act  of construction and organization: the building of a scaffolding, bolt by bolt  and circuit by circuit.

Daniel Coyle, The Talent Code

Articles of Interest - April 4

 ***BIG DATA  

Why big data's future is important for NASA  Dataconomy

Is Data Science just a rebrand of statistics? Or do emerging types of data &  technology require a new approach?  Inside Big Data

What a GE data scientist does with their day.. starting with curiosity  Wall Street Journal

The top 12 Data Science & Machine Learning related Podcasts by popularity on iTunes  KD Nuggests

Machine Learning as a Service: How Data Science Is Hitting the Masses  Huffington Post  

***THE INTERNET

How we’re unwittingly letting robots censor the Web  Washington Post

A study of 16 billion e-mails reveals distinct patterns in our e-mail behavior Scientific American

***SOCIAL MEDIA

Snapchat just made a huge change to become your go-to messaging app  Quartz

Facebook and Snapchat are trading blows in a fight for messaging domination and the money that comes with it  Business Insider

***MUSIC

Music industry pushes for digital copyright law reform  Engadget

Pharrell Made Only $2,700 In Songwriter Royalties From 43 Million Plays Of 'Happy' On Pandora   Business Insider

Streaming Has Officially Taken Over the Music Business  TIME magazine

The Math Behind Beethoven’s Music  Open Culture

***RACE

Library of Congress to stop using 'illegal' and 'alien' to describe immigrants, group says  CNN

The Most Prejudiced Places in America  The Daily Beast

Netflix big data truth: some "profiling can’t rely on broad categories like race or location"  Fortune

Some medical students still think black patients feel less pain than whites  Stat News

***SCIENCE

How to (seriously) read a scientific paper  Science Mag

***PSYCHOLOGY    

Teaching Men to Be Emotionally Honest  New York Times

***NEUROSCIENCE

Let’s debunk these ten brain and brain health myths  Sharp Brains

“Lost” memories can be found (Neuroscientists retrieve missing memories in mice with early Alzheimer’s symptoms)  MIT news

Keeping The Heart Healthy May Protect Brain From Aging  Tech Times

We All Know The "Not Face" – Now We Have A Name For It  NPR

***GRAMMAR         

Being a Subjunctive (Some grammar purists seem to think the English subjunctive is a fragile creature in danger of extinction. As usual they can't tell their adjective from their elbow, says Geoff Pullum)  Chronicle of Higher Ed

***LANGUAGE

Whoo-Hoo for ‘Woo Woo’  Chronicle of Higher Ed

***LITERATURE

‘Gangsta’ Shakespeare  Chronicle of Higher Ed

When It Comes To Talking Sex, Young Adult Books Can Be A Parent's Best Friend  NPR

What If Famous Characters from Literature Had Access to Today’s Technology?  The Blaze

Sinclair Lewis’ 1935 book It Can’t Happen Here & Donald Trump (opinion)  The Verge

11 Shakespeare Tragedies Mapped Out with Network Visualizations  Open Culture

***RESEARCH

 10 demographic trends that are shaping the U.S. and the world  Pew Research

This scientist nearly went to jail for making up data  Washington Post

Science community looks for ways to stop fake papers  CBC

Is scientific misconduct a bigger problem than we think?  Science Nordic

***RELIGION

AP Explains: Violence against Christians in Pakistan   Associated Press

Bible charity vows to continue translation work after murders of four employees  Fox News

C.S. Lewis predicted Donald Trump  Washington Post

The Baptist-on-Baptist fight within Georgia’s ‘religious liberty’ debate  AJC

Atheists at University of Iowa protest creation of Muslim prayer rooms  USA Today

***JOURNALISM

A matter of AP Style  Columbia Journalism Review

How Reporters Pulled Off the Panama Papers, the Biggest Leak in Whistleblower History  Wired

Local TV station reads nasty viewer letters on air; women endure the most vicious attacks  Washington Post

The Associated Press style guide will no longer capitalize 'internet'  The Verge

Northwestern University journalism fraud story still has life (opinion)   Illinois’ News-Gazette

AI is already making inroads into journalism but could it win a Pulitzer?   The Guardian  

***THE BUSINESS OF JOURNALISM

Newspapers Gobble Each Other Up to Survive Digital Apocalypse  Bloomberg

Editor and 70-plus others fired at the Orange County Register 

The Hyper-Local Media Magnate Journalism Can’t Ignore  PBS

***STUDENT JOURNALISM

Student Journalists put out Satire Issue at University associated with the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America

Twitter’s Newest Parody Account Celebrates the Guy at Your J-School  Observer

***STUDENT LIFE

Why I Don't Hire Millennials: I hire individuals  AdAge

Millennial Problems: Being Tone Deaf   San Francisco Weekly

College students mostly support free speech with some restrictions, survey finds   Student Press Law Center

***ACADEMIC LIFE

The Shrinking Ph.D. Job Market  Inside Higher Ed

Why I’m Sticking to My ‘Noncompliant’ Learning Outcomes  Chronicle of Higher Ed

New rule on personal cellphones enrages Minnesota faculty unionsMove will let personal phones be inspected if used for work  StarTribune

***PERSONAL GROWTH

“Imagineering” is the use of mental images to build factual results, and it is an astonishingly effective procedure  Becoming (my blog)

***ETHICS

The eugenic legacy of a 1927 Supreme Court decision to sterilize “imbeciles”  New Republic

***HUMANITIES /STEM

The Humanities Must Rise to the Global Environmental Challenge (opinion)  Chronicle of Higher Ed

Why Theater Majors Are Vital in the Digital Age (opinion)  Chronicle of Higher Ed

Is 'Design Thinking' the New Liberal Arts?  Chronicle of Higher Ed

***HIGHER ED

Honors Colleges Promise Prestige, but They Don’t All Deliver  Chronicle of Higher Ed

How Sal Khan Hopes to Remake Education  Chronicle of Higher Ed

U of California Accused of Favoring Non-Californians  Inside Higher Ed

Study Abroad and Terror  Inside Higher Ed

Supreme Court Hints at Way to Avert Tie on Birth Control Mandate  New York Times

Christian Universities Increasingly Apply for Exemptions From Anti-Discrimination Rules   Truth Out

***TEACHING

When Plagiarism Is a Plea for Help (Instead of failing students for intellectual dishonesty, shouldn’t we try to help them not fail?)  Chronicle of Higher Ed

Major publishers report sales of digital course materials surpass sales of print textbooks for the first time  Inside Higher Ed

New MLA Handbook seeks to make citing sources from a variety of media easier and more commonsensical  Inside Higher Ed

Straight A's for everyone (Behind the College GPA Arms Race)  Washington Post

How To Get Kids Hooked On Books? 'Use Poetry. It Is A Surefire Way'  NPR

 

Articles of Interest - March 28

***THE INTERNET

How Geopolitics and Commerce are Fragmenting the World Wide Web (book review)  Economist

Google Reveals Top Ranking Factors For Search Results  Media Post

How one programmer broke the internet by deleting a tiny piece of code  Quartz

***ART AND DESIGN

How physics and math helped create modernist painting  Aeon

Nonverbal Man With Autism and Synesthesia Set to Host First Solo Art Exhibit   ABC News

How Critical Thinking Sabotages Painting premium (Creating art is a very different skill than articulating what art is about-subscription)  Chronicle of Higher Ed

What's The Point Of That Weird Minimalist Art?  (video)  PBS                         

A Guide to the Beautiful, Elaborate ‘Jungle’ of Script Typefaces  Wired

***RESEARCH       

Retractions rise to nearly 700 in fiscal year 2015  Retraction Watch

The mismeasure of scientific significance  Stats.org

***GENDER ISSUES

North Carolina Bans Local Anti-Discrimination Policies   New York Times

Gender-Specific Terms Replaced in Ohio Supreme Court Rules, Forms  Court News Ohio

What Sexual Harassment Does to Female Gamers  New York Mag

More than one in five physicists from sexual and gender minorities in the US report having been excluded, intimidated or harassed at work in the past year because of their gender or sexual identity or expression  Nature

Hate and racism in the South gave rise to ‘social justice journalism’  Poynter

Feminist economics deserves recognition as a distinct branch of the discipline Economist

***LEGAL ISSUES

Donald Trump Wants To 'Open Up' Libel Laws So He Can Sue News Outlets NPR

Rich people are paying lawyers to get truthful stories deleted from the internet  Business Insider

The FBI Drops Its Case Against Apple After Finding a Way Into That iPhone      Wired

***IMAGES

Google Makes Its $149 Photo Editing Software Now Completely Free to Download  Open Culture

One picture from the Brussels attacks is a lesson in the delicate art of propaganda  The Guardian

***SOCIAL MEDIA

Twitter has changed how your timeline works. Here's how to fix it  Chronicle of Higher Ed

We’re More Honest With Our Phones Than With Our Doctors  New York Times

Teen Girls Flip The Negative Script On Social Media   NPR

Inside the world of Twitter's favorite depressive  Elle

Smartphone 'voices' not always helpful in a health crisis  Associated Press

Social media have made the world more democratic—for now  Economist

Inside Facebook’s Quest to Be Your Bestie—By Owning Your Memories  Wired

Even easier communications and ever-growing data mountains are transforming politics   Economist

Social media now play a key role in collective action  Economist

Worries about fraud and fragmentation may prompt a shake-out in the crowded online-ad industry  Economist

***BIG DATA  

Streaming analytics speeds decision making by high velocity real-time data diving. Here's an overview Inside Big Data  

Could voter targeting thru more data/better algorithms mean the democratic process becomes a marketing exercise?  Economist

MITs 1-year $75k #BigData finishing school (& its many rivals)-Is it really necessary? For many, the answer is no  Financial Times

Machine learning intro with limited math & theoretical constructs  Economist

***RELIGION

Birth Control At The Supreme Court: Does Free Coverage Violate Religious Freedom?  NPR

Evangelicals Key To Republican Support For Israel  NPR

New Kansas Law Lets Campus Religious Groups Restrict Members  ABC News

Pope Washes Feet of Muslim Migrants at Easter Week Mass  TIME

A religious gender gap for Christians, but not for Muslims  Pew Research

Little Sisters argue contraception case at Supreme Court  Baltimore Sun

***ADVERTISING

Mobile Advertising: Ad-blocking may not quickly spread to smartphones  Economist

***THE BUSINESS OF MEDIA  

U.S. Ad Market Forecast 2016: A Good Year, But Some Slowdowns For TV, Radio  Media Post

A startup seeks to keep the conventional TV station alive in the digital era  Economist

***JOURNALISM

Vice Media Traffic Plummets, Underscoring Risky Web Strategy  Variety

The Internet is pushing the American news business to New York and the coasts (Rather than create geographic diversity, digital news has pushed the industry into a few tight clusters. That has real impacts on the journalism we get)   Nieman Labs

Ohio TV station tries to convince its viewers to cancel their newspaper subscriptions   Daily Dot

British journalism is 94% white and 55% male, survey reveals  The Guardian

Blendle Is Here To Re-Invent The Way You Consume Journalism  Huffington Post

Wesleyan student government revokes student newspaper's funds  Student Press Law Center

***STUDENT LIFE

When Depression Hits, Teens Find Help  NPR

Why are our kids so miserable?  Quartz

Here's What Young People Care About. Listen And Learn  NPR

How millennials should deal with baby boomers at work (opinion)  LA Times  

The Disturbing Truth About Anxiety and Depression in College (Why was I so unhappy after finally making it to college? And what was my cure?)  Psychology Today

Young, Broke, and Scared of the IRS: The Millennial Tax Trap  Bloomberg

How millennials should deal with baby boomers at work (opinion)  LA Times

What Happens When Millennials Run the Workplace?  New York Times

A Wave of Sexual-Assault Cases Kindles Anger on Baylor’s Campus (subscription)  Chronicle of Higher Ed  

***SCIENCE

Data & Narrative: Our Brains Like Numbers But Love A Good Story  Digg (video)

Big-name scientists may end up stifling progress in their fields  Economist

Science Needs to Learn How to Fail So It Can Succeed  Wired

*PERSONAL GROWTH

Don't forget the blue goat  Becoming (my blog)

***PHILOSOPHY

What happened when the World Bank asked a philosophy professor to consider its policies  Quartz

***ETHICS

The Ethics of Doing Ethics (over view of ethical issues that arise in research into ethics)  Springer

***WRITIN’ AND READIN’

An Exercise in Bad Writing  Chronicle of Higher Ed

Virginia Woolf Offers Gentle Advice on “How One Should Read a Book”  Open Culture

***LANGUAGE

The theories of the world’s best-known linguist have become rather weird  Economist

***LITERATURE

Tolstoy Calls Shakespeare an “Insignificant, Inartistic Writer”; 40 Years Later, George Orwell Weighs in on the Debate  Open Culture

***HIGHER ED

How LinkedIn Views Its Role in Education (subscription) Chronicle of Higher Ed

Does Engineering Education Breed Terrorists? (Nascent terrorists seem to be drawn to engineering. Their education may further radicalize them)  Chronicle of Higher Ed

AAUP Slams Education Dept. and Colleges Over Title IX Enforcement   Chronicle of Higher Ed

AAUP:  Title IX as a Threat to Academic Freedom  Inside Higher Ed

***ACADEMIC LIFE

A Professor and His College Fight over Learning Outcomes  Chronicle of Higher Ed

What You Teach Is What You Earn: Study Finds Large Salary Gaps based on Discipline  Inside Higher Ed   

What Tenured and Tenure-Track Professors at 4-Year Colleges Made in 2015-16  Chronicle of Higher Ed

 

Articles of Interest - March 21

***SOCIAL MEDIA

The BuzzFeed Buzz Saw: Why Campaigns Should Fear These Four 20-Somethings  NPR

How to Make Twitter Actually Useful (With new features, the social network is fixing its biggest problems to win back Twitter quitters—but it still needs to do more)  Wall Street Journal

social media is making us shallow, says science  Vice

Medium Evolves Again (The service will add human editorial decisions to its mobile app)  The Atlantic

Twitter Rules Out Long Tweets, Sticking to 140-Character Limit  New York Times

Instagram's Biggest Change Since 2013 (The app is piloting an algorithmic, non-chronological feed)  The Atlantic

How 'I don't have Facebook' became the new annoying 'I don't watch TV'  Mashable

Social Media Expert Checklist: Questions To Determine Who Is And Isn't An Expert  Search Engine People

***PSYCHOLOGY    

Should your Therapist Read your Twitter?  Motherboard

Psychologists Throw Open The “File Drawer”  Discover Magazine

Can Big Data Help Psychiatry Unravel the Complexity of Mental Illness?  Scientific American

Why smart people are better off with fewer friends  Washington Post

***PERSONAL GROWTH

What Exactly IS "critical thinking"?  Becoming (my blog)

***SCIENCE

Why scientific fraud hurts people  Stat News

Many scientific “truths” are, in fact, false  Quartz

Embracing 'Messy' Science (The American Statistical Association pushes for more data transparency by rejecting a common measure of statistical significance)  Inside Higher Ed

***GRAMMAR         

A ‘Perfect’ Storm (What superlative, asks Ben Yagoda, could possibly follow "perfect" in the procession of enthusiastic adjectives?)  Chronicle of Higher Ed

What grammar pedants and fashion victims have in common  The Conversation

***LANGUAGE

The future of the Spanish language is looking a lot more like English  LA Times

How language gives your brain a break BioEngineer

***LITERATURE

What People Around The World Are (And Aren't) Reading About  Digg

Scientists Discover That James Joyce’s Finnegans Wake Has an Amazingly Mathematical “Multifractal” Structure  Open Culture

***RESEARCH

Wikipedia and the Momentum of Tiny Edits  The Atlantic

***GENDER ISSUES

As Women Take Over a Male-Dominated Field, the Pay Drops  New York Times

***RACE

Can Computers Be Racist? The Human-Like Bias Of Algorithms  NPR

'Resume whitening' doubles callbacks for minority job candidates, study finds  The Guardian

Trump as a Taunt  Inside Higher Ed

'The Bell Curve' still Dividing Campuses   Inside Higher Ed

Professor Cleared to Teach After Furor Over Race  Inside Higher Ed

***CAMPUS CRIME

Despite public interest in increased police transparency, most private universities shield police reports  Student Press Law Center

***FREE SPEECH

Does the First Amendment protect people who film the police?  The Conversation

Defining Intolerance: First Amendment concerns at the U of California  Inside Higher Ed

***LEGAL ISSUES

The legal battle over this monkey's selfie is far from over The Daily Dot

Lions Gate TM Copyright Claims Against TD Ameritrade Dismissed  Bloomberg

***TECHNOLOGY

Report: Wearables To Top 10 Million Shipments in 2016  Campus Technology

***ART AND DESIGN

Artists Put Online 3D, High Resolution Scans of 3,000-year-old Nefertiti Bust (and Controversy Ensues)  Open Culture

Art and loneliness  The Economist

How Critical Thinking Sabotages Painting: Creating art is a very different skill than articulating what art is about (subscription required) Chronicle of Higher Ed

The Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) Puts Online 65,000 Works of Modern Art  Open Culture

***BIG DATA  

Google just released its Analytics 360 Suite. Is this 6 product package a game changer?  Venture Beat

In support of Bayesian evidence measures: reconsider the "role of testing & P values in quantitative research" Inside Higher Ed

Is the "reproducibility crisis” due to overuse of P values & a preference for easily digestible conclusions?  American Statistical Association

In 4 years, some $4.6 trillion will be spent by co's to save useless and dark data  Veritas  

More data isn't necessarily better. Here's 7 cases where #BigData won't improve your model  Data Science

***RELIGION

Exit polls and the evangelical vote: A closer look  Pew Research

Baptist Youth Pastor's Wife Says She's Wearing Hijab on Mondays to Show Solidarity With Muslim  Christian Post

Jimmy Swaggart didn’t Go away  Greater Baton Rouge Business Report

Former Scientology "Life Counselor" Sheds Light on the Church's Gay Reparative Therapy Process  Gawker

How Will Young People Choose Their Religion?  The Atlantic

Percentage of Americans who pray or believe in God at an all-time low  City News Service

***POLITICS

Measuring Donald Trump’s Mammoth Advantage in Free Media  New York Times  

***THE BUSINESS OF MEDIA  

Digital Video Advertising For Traditional TV Tops $2 Billion  Media Post

Has the podcasting renaissance been overstated?  The Media Briefing

***JOURNALISM

The Washington Post is trying to make it easier to read long features  Nieman Labs

Who is posting comments on news stories, and why do they do it?  Harvard's Nieman Lab  

As Sunshine Week dawns, more need than ever for transparency  Poynter

Study Finds Legacy Newsrooms Embrace Innovation, But Not Cultural Change  Media Shift

Digital Digging: How Fusion is producing investigative journalism for the Jon Stewart generation Poynter

Beyond Spotlight: 6 more data journalism projects that influenced policy  Online Journalism Blog

Here are the most practical tips for reporters shooting video with smartphones  GateHouse NewsRoom

***THE BUSINESS OF JOURNALISM

Us antitrust lawsuit aims to block California newspaper sale Salon

Why narrative journalism startup Latterly called it quits  Venture Beat

***STUDENT JOURNALISM

As FCC Auction Looms, Colleges Consider the Value of Their Airwaves  Chronicle of Higher Ed

Florida student news website files lawsuit against university for access to student government hearings  Student Press Law Center

***STUDENT LIFE

How the chance of breaking up changes the longer your relationship lasts  Washington Post

***HIGHER ED

Why Are Some Academics So Unprofessional? (Calls go unreturned, emails are ignored. That’s the way business is conducted too often in higher education)  Chronicle of Higher Ed

A growing number of European students are opting to pay for their education  Economist

How 'Safe Spaces' Stifle Ideas  Chronicle of Higher Ed

***HUMANITIES /STEM

15 arts and literature majors with the best value 2016  USA Today

 

Step back from the Canvas

Pico Iyer,  author of The Art of Stillness, has found that removing himself from the bustle of society is key to thinking outside the box (and recalling what he cares for). The various demands placed on us, which rob us of the idle time we need to be creative— expectations that we will be available 24/7 and interruptions made possible by the various technologies we use every day— aren’t going to go away. For Iyer, the solution lies not in changing those demands (which most of us can’t anyway) but in altering our relationship to them— which is fundamentally an internal process.

 “When you stand about two inches away from the great canvas that is our world and our lives— just as when you stand too close to a painting— you can’t catch the larger patterns in it, the meaning,” Iyer explains.

Stanford psychologist Emma Seppälä writing in the Washington Post

Articles of Interest - March 14

***GENDER ISSUES

Women on Boards  Bloomberg

Girls keep out: Female video gamers face vile abuse, threats  Associated Press

Strong global support for gender equality, especially among  Pew Research Center

Gender Bias in Academe: An Annotated Bibliography of Important Recent Studies  London School of Economics & Political Science

No, The Federal Government Did Not Spend $412K to Study Gender and Glaciers  Gawker

One Professor Has a Clue As to Why Women Choose Not to Stay in STEM  New York Magazine

Making Categories, Breaking Categories  Chronicle of Higher Ed

***RACE

Why Publishing Is So White  Publishers Weekly  

The “Model Minority” and the Hidden Discrimination of Asian Americans  Jstor

White Privilege, Quantified (Recent experiments put numbers on everyday discrimination, shifting the dialogue away from victim-blaming and anecdotal observations)  The Atlantic

***GRAMMAR         

 Trump's word of honer: in defense of Donald's sloppy spelling  The Guardian

Order and Chaos in English Spelling  Chronicle of Higher Ed

There, there, singular "their" objectors  Baltimore Sun

***LANGUAGE

A scholarly dictionary of words about Donald Trump  Chronicle of Higher Ed

Do You Even Language, Bro? Understanding Why Nouns Become Verbs  Jstor

***LITERATURE

Free: Read All of George Orwell’s War Diaries Online (1938-1942)   Open Culture

***LEGAL ISSUES

It Took a FOIA Lawsuit to Uncover How the Obama Administration Killed FOIA Reform  Vice

***TECHNOLOGY

Want Safer Passwords? Don’t Change Them So Often  Wired

***MOBILE

Small screens, full art, can’t lose: Despite their size, phones open up new opportunities for interactives  Harvard's Nieman Lab

***ART AND DESIGN

Aerial Bold: A Clever Typeface Crafted From Satellite Shots of Buildings  Wired

MIT Media Lab’s Journal of Design and Science Is a Radical New Kind of Publication   Wired

Graphic Designers Spill Their Career Secrets in Infographics  Wired

***SOCIAL MEDIA

Facebook is eating the world  Columbia Journalism Review

LinkedIn open sources its internal data mining software  Zdnet

Yik Yak Introduces Screen Names To Curb Anonymous Trolling  Huffington Post

Facebook Instant Articles opens to all publishers April 12: Freebooting for Articles?   Plagiarism Today

***BIG DATA  

China's real-life "Minority Report"? (a Big Data platform for “precrime” profiling to catch "terrorists" in advance)  Ars Technica 

How to tell a compelling story with data--6 simple rules and 6 simple tools  Data Science Central

The big ideas out of the MIT Sloan Sports Analytics conf involve large data sets and Machine Learning  FiveThirtyEight

A robust list and description of 22 of the best blogs and publications for Data Miners and Data Scientists  KD Nuggets

***JOURNALISM

Diving into Data Journalism: Strategies for getting started or going deeper  American Press Institute

Female Sportscasters Feel Staying On Defensive Is Part Of The Job  NPR

Group Bids $45.5 Million for Southern California Newspapers  ABC News

***STUDENT LIFE

Pets, debts and e-cigarettes: how millennials spend their paychecks   The Guardian

Competent, hardworking millennials are getting shafted by older employees who feel they deserve bigger salaries  (opinion)  Business Insider

Yelp was right to fire entitled millennial who whined about salary online (opinion) New York Post

Fired Yelp worker's rant doesn't make all millennials 'entitled' (opinion)  Chicago Tribune

The Real Reasons College Students Drop Out  Fortune

Globalization, Technology, Customization & Overparenting - Meet the Millennial Generation  Gigaom

***RELIGION

New Set Of TV Shows Tackle Complexities Of Religion  NPR

7 key findings about religion and politics in Israel  Pew Research Center

The Church Collection Plate Goes Digital   Bloomberg

***SCIENCE

Saving Science from the Scientists ("Could two-thirds of psychological research really be useless?" podcast)  BBC

***PSYCHOLOGY    

An influential psychological theory may have just been debunked  Slate

***PHILOSOPHY

Schools are finally starting to teach kids philosophy  Tech Insider

Philosophy’s True Home  New York Times

A Sip of What Philosophy Needs  (Existentialism, born over cocktails in 1932, still speaks to what we can learn from ordinary life-subscription)  Chronicle of Higher Ed

***ACADEMIC LIFE

Pretentious Academic Quote Generator   

Philosophy Professor Displays Sign Opposing Concealed Weapons on Campus, Gets Arrested  Savannah Now

***HIGHER ED

The Armed Campus in the Anxiety Age (Campus-carry laws add unnecessary worry to communities already overwhelmed by unease)  The Atlantic

Median Salaries of Senior College Administrators, 2015-16 (administrative salaries are growing more quickly at private colleges than at public institutions)  Chronicle of Higher Ed

Trump Rallies Raise Safety Concerns College Campuses  Inside Higher Ed

Mount Saint Mary College president to step down  The Poughkeepsie Journal

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

The LGBT Politics of Christian Colleges (At many evangelical universities, you can be gay—as long as you don’t “act” it)  The Atlantic

***HUMANITIES /STEM

The Shrinking Humanities Major (number of bachelor's degrees awarded fell 8.7 percent between 2012 and 2014, study finds)  Inside Higher Ed

A Forgotten Field Could Save the Humanities  Chronicle of Higher Ed

***TEACHING

The Last 5 Minutes of Class  Chronicle of Higher Ed

Blue Books Energized My Teaching  Chronicle of Higher Ed

Students Will Rise When Colleges Challenge Them to Read Good Books (Common-reading programs for freshmen too often aim for the lowest common denominator)  Chronicle of Higher Ed

***RESEARCH

A Scholar’s Sting of Education Conferences Stirs a Hornet’s Nest (he sent fake research-paper summaries larded with unforgivable methodological errors to the organizers of 15 conferences he believed to have lax standards-subscription required)  Chronicle of Higher Ed

Study: The Effects of Publication Retraction on Scholarly Impact  Cornell University Library

Somebody explain to me again why we have journals (opinion)  Steve Shea

The Case of the Missing Data  MedPage Today

Correlation between impact factor and public availability of published research data in Information Science and Library Science journals  Springer

Statistics is like basketball, or knitting (opinion)  Andrew Gelman

Articles of Interest - March 7

***SOCIAL MEDIA

Why We Post: A global study reveals how people fit social media into their lives  The Economist

The dark side of going viral that no one talks about  Washington Post

Controversial Calgary-based app Peeple launches Monday  Calgary Herald

We calculated the year dead people on Facebook could outnumber the living  Fusion

Meerkat Is Ditching the Livestream—And Chasing a Video Social Network Instead  Recode

How Facebook’s ‘App for Everything’ Could Revolutionize Media and Marketing  Contently

Colbert introduces FB alpha (video)  Stephen Colbert

How Snapchat Built a Business  Bloomberg

Quiz: Can we guess your age and income, based solely on the apps on your phone?  Washington Post

***THE INTERNET

The organisation that runs the internet address book is about to declare independence (subscription)  The Economist

Infographic: Email Is Eating More of Your Life Than You Think  Contently

Engineering the internet is too big a task for one outfit  The Economist

***TECHNOLOGY

See that Billboard?  It may see you too  New York Times

Retailers Experiment With Surveillance Tools Used by Police (Soon, a department store robot may be greeting you by name)  Bloomberg

What Comes After Apps (Apps now crowd our devices, but alternatives are in the works)  Wall Street Journal

***ART AND DESIGN

Cycloid Drawing Machine  (A virtual version of the classic Spirograph toy)  

MIT Scientists embraces a new chaos theory: Art  New York Times

***BIG DATA  

Future Of Big Data: Here's How Amazon, LinkedIn, Salesforce Are Reshaping Elite MBA Programs  Business Because

Growing demand for data analytics is reshaping elite MBA programs Business Because

The forces shifting the geospatial industry  IT ProPortal

Big Data Myths That Just Won't Die (1-You Need the Perfect Data Scientist)  Business.com

So exactly how does one start a career in machine learning?  Data Science Central

Child Advocate: Risk scores created by predictive modeling software can endanger children  Forbes

***PERSONAL GROWTH

Did you feed the bears?  Becoming (my blog)

***WRITIN’ AND READIN’

How Someone with Dyslexia may experience reading  Github

Become Your Own Writing Teacher  Chronicle of Higher Ed

“The Most Dangerous Writing App” Destroys Your Progress if You Stop Typing  Life Hacker

Social Sharing – Can You Write a Post People Trust Enough to Share?   Semrush

When robots write poetry  The Daily Dot

Coming Down from the Clouds: On Academic Writing  Chronicle of Higher Ed

***LANGUAGE

French, Spanish, German ... Java? Making Coding Count As A Foreign Language  (Florida is poised to become the first state to allow computer coding to fulfill a foreign-language requirement in high school)  NPR

***LITERATURE

Jane Eyre and the Invention of the Self (Charlotte Brontë’s 1847 novel helped introduce the idea of the “modern individual”—a surprisingly radical concept for readers at the time)  The Atlantic

Gorgeous new covers for 100 great public domain books  BongBong

***SCIENCE & RESEARCH

Statisticians Found One Thing They Can Agree On: It’s Time To Stop Misusing P-Values  FiveThirtyEight

Can Science’s Reproducibility Crisis Be Reproduced?  Chronicle of Higher Ed

#IAmAResearchParasite (the need for quality data sharing) (opinion)  Science Magazine

Human-animal studies academics dogged by German hoaxers  (fooled by fake PhD student’s paper on role of alsatians in totalitarianism)  The Guardian

PLOS ONE retracting paper that cites “the Creator”  Retraction Watch

Many surveys, about one in five, may contain fraudulent data  Science Magazine

Evaluating a New Proposal for Detecting Data Falsification in Surveys  Pewq Research

How to Keep Bad Science From Getting Into Print (‘Irreproducible’ research is more often due to error than misconduct or fraud, but fighting it is vital-written by the Dean of Harvard Medical School)  Wall Street Journal

***RACE & GENDER ISSUES

Why Do Some Women Quit Science?  New York Times

How Does Gender Affect One's Willingness To Compete?  NPR

Our glass-ceiling index: Still a man’s world (Our index of the climate for working women now includes paternity leave)  The Economist

Researchers have found strong evidence that racism helps the GOP win  Washington Post

Female medical researchers hit a paper ceiling Stat News

Gender bias in open source: Pull request acceptance of women versus men (study)  PeerJ

The best—and worst—places to be a working woman   The Economist

My Brilliant (White Male) Professors (Study finds students are more likely to use certain words of praise when describing professors who are men or who are in fields with few female and black scholars)  Inside Higher Ed

***LEGAL ISSUES

A Plagiarism Scandal Is Unfolding In The Crossword World  FiveThirtyEight

***RELIGION

Wycliffe Associates Leaves Bible Translation Alliance over ‘Son of God’ for Muslims  Christianity Today

Jerry Bridges' Pursuit of Holiness Has Come to an End  Christianity Today           

Russian Faces Up to Year in Prison for Denying Existence of God  NBC

Churches Are Twice as Likely to Fear Refugees as to Help Them (Survey studies how American Protestants are engaging the refugee crisis, and why many are not)  Christianity Today

Women relatively rare in top positions of religious leadership  Pew Research

This college is launching a bachelor’s degree in gospel music, the first of its kind  Washington Post

‘It’s embarrassing to be an evangelical this election’  (opinion written by recent PLNU chapel speaker Jim Wallis)  Frost Illustrated

Don’t Take Your Kids to a Megachurch: An Open Letter to Andy Stanley (opinion)  Patheos

***RELIGION & POLITICS

Echoing Republican split, evangelicals divide over Trump  Associated Press

Evangelical Leaders Question Movement's Support Of Trump  NPR

What Wouldn’t Jesus Do? (opinion)  New York Times

God files for divorce from Republican Party  Religious News Service

***ECONOMICS

Microeconomists’ claims to be doing real science turn out to be true  The Economist

***THE BUSINESS OF MEDIA  

Study Finds Only 40% Of Digital Buys Going To Working Media  Media Post

Traditional TV Audience Ages, Big Chunk Of Viewers 65+  Media Post

***JOURNALISM

10 newsgathering and verification tools for newsrooms on a budget  First Draft News

'Spotlight' celebrates journalism that couldn't have happened in these countries without press freedom  Public Radio International

Forget 'Spotlight': There's a war against journalism  Philly.com

10 journalism movies that journalists love  Indy Star

Media Veterans Get in on the Nonprofit News Boom (American Media Institute staffs up)  Observer'

CUNY’s new Spanish-language journalism program, with big ambitions, opens for applications  Harvard's Nieman Lab

***FREE SPEECH

The Glaring Evidence That Free Speech Is Threatened on Campus  The Atlantic

Court strikes down student code prohibiting ‘distressing’ speech  Student Press Law Center

***JOBS

CV vs. resume: Here's how the two differ   USA Today

***PSYCHOLOGY    

Psychologists and massage therapists are reporting ‘Trump anxiety’ among clients  The Washington Post

***NEUROSCIENCE

Which Exercise is best for the Brain  New York Times

The magical thing eating chocolate does to your brain  The Washington Post

Couch potatoes may have smaller brains later in life  CBS News

***PHILOSOPHY

CUNY philosophy professor takes on Bill Nye (opinion)   Plato’s Footnote

Why are so many smart people such idiots about philosophy? (opinion)  Quartz

Philosophy’s True Home (The idea that philosophy was and still is isolated from other disciplines ignores much of its history-opinion)  New York Times  

***STUDENT LIFE

5 facts about online dating  Pew Research

Strategies For When You're Starting Out Saddled With Student Debt  NPR

Students Enter Global Competition To Counter Extremism  NPR

3 Tips for Marketing to Millennials – When You’re Not a Millennial  Umbel

Study shows certain types of emails often go unread by students -- but social media isn't the reason why  Inside Higher Ed

Fixing The Freshman Year: Here's What College Sophomores Say  NPR

How the Great Generational Shift is Causing Transformation in the Very Nature of Employment  Gigaom

Outbreaks of norovirus and mumps hit college campuses around the country  Inside Higher Ed

Recent study attracting press attention says students use the app to make friends. Some experts doubt it  Inside Higher Ed

***SEXUAL ASSAULT ON CAMPUS

Students say Christian College assigned a 500-Word Essay as Punishment.. for Rape  Inside Higher Ed    

For Sexual Assault Victims, An Effort To Loosen Statutes Of Limitations  NPR

University of Texas System instructs its police officers to base sexual assault investigations in neuroscience  Inside Higher Ed

***HUMANITIES /STEM

Enough with trashing the liberal arts. Stop being stupid  Washington Post

Our current national mood may be revealing something missing in our educational agenda  (opinion)  Keith Evans  

***TEACHING

Rethinking online education (The first generation of online learning came with a lot of hype but didn’t fully deliver on its promise. What does the future hold?)  Medium

Why Do Colleges Still Use Grades?  Chronicle of Higher

Instructional Design: Demand grows for a new breed of academic  Chronicle of Higher

Report: Game-Based Learning Helps Students Develop Writing Skills  Campus Technology

did you feed the bears?

A phone conversation with a four-year-old:

Did you feed the bears?

      What bears?

The bears under your bed.

      There aren’t any bears under my bed.

Oh, yes, their names are Teddy and Charlie. Teddy Bear and Charlie Bear.

      I’m going to go check.

      (a moment passes)

      There are no bears under my bed.

They must have gone to the bathroom.

      I’ll go see.

Don’t do that, they’d be embarrassed if you saw them.

      (a few more moments of discussion)

      I’m going to see if the bears are in the bathroom.

      (phone is dropped)

      The bears are in the tub. They’re taking a bath!

Life is filled with such interesting and remarkable things when you are four. The further we get away from that imaginative, amazing world, the harder it is to hear the voice of God in our lives and see his hand at work in the world around us. Hang on to the joy of a child.

Stephen Goforth

Articles of Interest

***PSYCHOLOGY                           

The uniquely American appeal of Donald Trump’s favorite insult: You're not an extrovert  Washington Post

Does Your College Student Have a Problem with Addiction? (Steps parents can take to identify & treat drug and alcohol problems)  Psychology Today

What Google Learned From Its Quest to Build the Perfect Team (New research reveals surprising truths about why some work groups thrive and others falter)  New York Times

***NEUROSCIENCE

Beam Me Up, Scotty? Turns Out Your Brain Is Ready For Teleportation  NPR

A Year Ago, The Dress Murdered the Idea of Objective Color  Wired

***PHILOSOPHY

Dear Immanuel — Kant Gives Love Advice to a Heartbroken Young Woman (1791)  Open Culture

***ETHICS

How Secular Are Secular Ethics?  Chronicle of Higher Ed

Evolution of moral outrage: I’ll punish your bad behavior to make me look good  The Conversation

***PERSONAL GROWTH

Dealing with a Moody Man  Becoming (my blog)

Three Steps for Creating a New Habit   Chronicle of Higher Ed

***THE INTERNET

SEO: How Do You Solve A Google Problem Like Rick Santorum's?   NPR

***HUMANITIES /STEM

The Case Against Mandating Math for Students (algebra is overrated)  Chronicle of Higher Ed (subscription required for this story)  

***LANGUAGE

Linguists Not Exactly Wow About Facebook’s New Reactions  Wired

Linguistics could help future driverless cars cooperate better  The Stack

***LITERATURE

You’ve never seen your favorite books like this before  Washington Post

Where's The Color In Kids' Lit? Ask The Girl With 1,000 Books (And Counting)  NPR

***RACE & GENDER ISSUES

Blackflix: How Netflix's algorithm exposes technology's acial bias  Marie Clarie

Zuckerberg Furious With Employees For Erasing 'Black Lives Matter' Slogans  NBC News

English-speaking Asian Americans stand out for their technology use  Pew Research

Is speaking Spanish necessary to be Hispanic? Most Hispanics say no  Pew Research

Sense and Sensibility and Jane Austen's Accidental Feminists  The Atlantic

***FREE SPEECH

Apple May Use a First Amendment Defense in That FBI Case. And It Just Might Work  WIRED

Donald Trump says he wants to change Libel Law  Washington Post

***TECHNOLOGY

Service Launched to Help Universities Comply With ADA Web Site Regulations  Campus Technology

'Body Hacking' Movement Rises Ahead Of Moral Answers   NPR

A new wave of mobile technology is on its way, and will bring drastic change  Economist

Now You Can Type in Google Docs by Speaking  Wired

***IMAGES & DESIGN

Vertical video is becoming more popular, but there’s no consensus on the best way to make it  Harvard's Nieman Lab

Handy Chart Helps You Understand the Elements of Typography  Wired

***SOCIAL MEDIA

Your Social Media Accounts Are A Criminal's Best Friend (One California burglar tracked women using their Instagram locations)  Vocativ

Snapchat employee data leaked following phishing scam  The Stack

How to Keep Instagram From Taking Over Your Phone  Wired

So Social: How to create and use Twitter lists  Providence Journal

***BIG DATA  

Obama Set to Expand Sharing of Data between NSA to other American intelligence agencies   New York Times 

Child Advocate: Risk scores created by predictive modeling software can endanger children  Forbes

Obama set to expand data sharing between NSA and other American intel agencies  NY Times  

Of the many reasons that Big Data initiatives fail, here are seven  First Post

***RELIGION

How a Leading Christian College Turned Against Its Gay Leader  Time

Does Religion Matter In The Presidential Election? (Faith-driven voters are quite likely getting down on their knees to pray for their candidates)  Vocativ

U.S. religious groups and their political leanings  Pew Research

Who Are the Gay Evangelicals?  New York Times

Did Nike stop Steph Curry from putting scripture on his basketball shoes?  Snopes

***BUSINESS

Reports of the death of performance reviews are exaggerated (opinion)  Economist

***MEDIA  

Jeb’s Downfall Proves Political TV Ads Don’t Work Anymore  Wired

***JOURNALISM

“Rolling Papers:” The crazy experiment called weed journalism  University of Colorado Student Newspaper

Nearly Eight-in-Ten Reddit Users Get News on the Site  Pew Research

5 of the best: podcasts about data journalism  Online Journalism

How millennials read news; lessons from the Engaging News Project  Gatehouse

Wired Warns Four stories were plagiarized  Retraction Watch  

***JOURNALISM / SPOTLIGHT

November Post by a Member of the Spotlight team  Medium

Oscars 2016: Read about the Pulitzer-Prize Winning Journalism That Got Spotlight the Best Film Award  First Post

***THE BUSINESS OF JOURNALISM

Can Technology Save Journalism?  Forbes

The Fading Newspaper  Bloomberg

***STUDENT LIFE

Joe Biden Asked Oscar Viewers to Fight Rape Culture on College Campuses   Mic  

Study: Millennials could help sway the election in these 10 states  USA Today

15% of American Adults Have Used Online Dating Sites or Mobile Dating Apps  Pew Research

Millennials Make Up Almost Half of Latino Eligible Voters in 2016  Pew Research

The cost of skipping class, by the numbers  USA Today

Fixing A Broken Freshman Year: What An Overhaul Might Look Like   NPR

The baffling reason many millennials don’t eat cereal   Washington Post

Millennials less confident about nation’s future, but so were their parents, grandparents when young  Pew Research

A new study says half of US students could be internet addicts  Quartz

***ACADEMIC LIFE

What is the best way to assess faculty activity?  Chronicle of Higher Ed

***HIGHER ED

President Quits at Mount St. Mary's  Inside Higher Ed

Colleges say the Department of Education's guidance on campus sexual assault is vague and inconsistent  Inside Higher Ed 

University of Missouri fundraising takes $6 million hit in December as donors hold back funds  Columbia Tribune