The Marshmallow Test

IN THE 1960s Walter Mischel, then an up-and-coming researcher in psychology, devised a simple but ingenious experiment to study delayed gratification. It is now famously known as the marshmallow test. In a sparsely furnished room Mr Mischel presented a group of children aged four and five from Stanford University’s Bing Nursery School with a difficult challenge. They were left alone with a treat of their choosing, such as a marshmallow or a biscuit. They could help themselves at once, or receive a larger reward (two marshmallows or biscuits) if they managed to wait for up to 20 minutes.

The marshmallow test is often thought of simply as a measure of a child’s self-control. But Mischel shows that there is much more to it. One of Mr Mischel’s early studies in Trinidad suggests that a preference for delayed rewards also can be a matter of trust. Children who grow up with absent parents, Mr Mischel surmised, may be less likely to believe that they will actually get the promised delayed reward from the stranger who is carrying out the experiment. Indeed, he found that children with absent fathers, in particular, were prone to opt for immediate rewards. He believes the test also shows how the ability to postpone rewards is closely related to vigorously pursuing goals and to holding positive expectations. These traits, in turn, help explain why waiting for marshmallows at the age of five has such a strong relationship to outcomes in adult life.

from The Economist

articles of interest - Feb 6

***SOCIAL MEDIA

Don't Fall For This 'Facebook Customer Service' Scam : All Tech Considered  NPR

Facebook changes feed to promote posts that aren’t fake, sensational, or spam  Tech Crunch

What teens want Snapchat to spend its big IPO bucks on  Mashable

***JOURNALISM

OPINION: Remembering the real victims of the #BowlingGreenMassacre   College Heights Herald (student newspaper of Western Kentucky University)

Advocates Fear Trump's Stance Against Media Will Block Flow Of Information  NPR

Reuters orders reporters to cover Trump like an authoritarian regime: Expect ‘physical threats’  Raw Story

***THE BUSINESS OF JOURNALISM

The Guardian has gone from 15,000 to 200,000 paying 'members' in the past year  Digiday

***GRAMMAR           

Trump’s ‘Use’ of ‘Quotation Marks’  Chronicle of Higher Ed

***LANGUAGE

DC to get Language Museum called ‘Planet Word’  Washington Post

This Is Why You Probably Hate Slam Poetry, According to a Linguistic Scholar  VICE

Language in 2016, seen through Google Search Trends  Flowing Data

Merriam-Webster gets a little bit cheeky  USA Today

***LITERATURE

James Joyce, Catholic Writer?  Jstor

***GENDER  

Why Single Women Are Buying Homes at Twice the Rate of Single Men  Bloomberg

Data science is creating a tidal wave of opportunity for women to get into executive leadership  Recode

***DIVERSITY

Study finds students' negative diversity experiences, though less common than positive ones, hinder cognitive development and student learning  Inside Higher Ed

***FREE SPEECH

Bills Across The Country Could Increase Penalties For Protesters  NPR

Breitbart speaker at Berkeley stirs debate over free speech  Associated Press

***LEGAL ISSUES

The Copyright Barons Are Coming. Now’s the Time to Stop Them  Wired

Art Briles dropped his lawsuit against Baylor after months of fighting  SB Nation

Judge Gorsuch’s dissent in the case of a 13-year-old arrested for making fake burps in class  Washington Post

Whistleblower gets court backing in defamation case — but at a cost  Retraction Watch

California to decide whether personal device communication is public record  The Stack

BuzzFeed has apologized to a Russian executive named in the unverified Trump dossier who is suing the site  Recode

***TECHNOLOGY

A playwright and a children’s novelist among those on a team helping Microsoft give it's personal digital assistant some personality  Financial Times

Google has patented a drone for videoconferencing  Recode

***BIG DATA & STATISTICS

There’s still an important place fo old-school assembler hackers in the brave new world of Deep Learning  Pete Warden

How secure is your Hadoop installation? It’s easy to deploy w/poor security while tightening it requires effort  Naked Security

The rise of the Bayesians.. looking to automate the scientific method using small data systems  Wired

A Pandas cheat sheet for Data Scientists in Python  Data Camp

The search for abductive reasoning.. where the machine takes action on incomplete info based on an educated guess  Data Science Central

The declining authority of #statistics & the experts who analyze them is at the heart of the “post-truth” crisis  The Guardian

***RELIGION

3 Things You Should Know About Jerry Falwell Jr.  Chronicle of Higher Ed

Report: Average Christian Spends 37% Of Prayer Time Saying Word ‘Just’  Babylon Bee

The One Weird Trait That Predicts Whether You’re a Trump Supporter (or “how so many Christians could support The Donald”)  Politico

The Johnson Amendment, Which Trump Vows to ‘Destroy,’ Explained
New York Times

Campuses Are the Place for Difficult Conversations About Faith  Chronicle of Higher Ed            

Parents who believe in 'faith healing' charged after daughter, 2, dies from untreated pneumonia   New York Daily News

You have to be Christian to truly be American? Many people in the U.S. say so  Washington Post

Most Americans oppose churches choosing sides in elections  Pew Research

Only 1 in 7 Senior Pastors Is Under 40  Christianity Today

Town rallies after being forced to remove Christian flag  WREG-TV

Black Sabbath's Tony Iommi writes choral music for Birmingham Cathedral  Telegraph

***STUDENT LIFE

Trump temporarily banned immigration from 7 countries — here's how many students from each attend college in the US  Business Insider

You probably didn't need this survey to tell you that millennials are pessimistic  USA Today

***SEXUAL HARASSMENT & ASSAULT

U. of California Will Pay Student $1.15 Million to Settle Sexual-Assault Suit  Chronicle of Higher Ed

Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Share via Email A student claimed her college could have prevented her rape. She just got a monumental settlement  Washington Post

***RESEARCH

It Just Got Much Harder To Know What’s Going On In US Animal Research Labs  BuzzFeed News

A Crime in the Cancer Lab   The New York Times

The high-tech war on science fraud  The Guardian

The “What does not kill my statistical significance makes it stronger” fallacy   Statistical Modeling, Causal Inference, and Social Science

***SCIENCE

Scientists protest immigration ban with boycotts of journals, conferences  Stat News

The Map of Mathematics: Animation Shows How All the Different Fields in Math Fit Together  Open Culture

Getting a scientific message across means taking human nature into account  The Conversation

***HEALTH

Printed human body parts could soon be available for transplant  Economist

Heat, Humidity And Aging Make Medicine Less Potent  NPR

***PSYCHOLOGY           

Your Personality Changes When You Move to a New Place  NY Mag

A dangerous wait: Colleges can’t meet soaring student needs for mental health care  Stat News

***ETHICS

Your Students Crave Moral Simplicity. Resist  Chronicle of Higher Ed

***PERSONAL GROWTH

It doesn't happen all at once," said the Skin Horse. "You become.."  Becoming (my site)

 ***HIGHER ED

Nearly 600 colleges object to Trump’s travel ban  Washington Post

Christian Colleges Balance Faith and Politics in Response to Trump’s Ban on Refugees (sub. req.’ed)  Chronicle of Higher Ed

With Falwell as Education Adviser, His Own University Could Benefit  New York Times

Colleges may be happy Falwell will lead review of higher ed regulations, but students and parents should be worried  Washington Post

***TEACHING

Is 'Inclusive Access' the Future for Publishers?  Inside Higher Ed

Study explores effect of data dashboards on student performance  Inside Higher Ed

New open-access journal  Prompt

Teaching materials for visualization  Flowing Data

***STUDENT MEDIA

Federal rule change frees student journalists from Institutional Review Board requirements  Student Press Law Center

NLRB: Big-time college football players at private institutions should be considered employees  Inside Higher Ed

It's no gag: Major-college athletes gain legally protected right to speak with media  Student Press Law Center

***ACADEMIC LIFE

AAUP says institutions need to defend professors targeted for online harassment due to their political views  Inside Higher Ed

 

Good intentions are not enough

Movement is not necessarily progress. More important than your obligation to follow your conscience, or at least prior to it, is your obligation to form your conscience correctly. Nobody -- remember this -- neither Hitler, nor Lenin, nor any despot you could name, ever came forward with a proposal that read, "Now, let's create a really oppressive and evil society." Hitler said, let's take the means necessary to restore our national pride and civic order. And Lenin said, "Let's take the means necessary to assure a fair distribution of the goods of the world."

In short, it is your responsibility... not just to be zealous in the pursuit of your ideals, but to be sure that your ideals are the right ones. Not merely in their ends, but in their means. That is perhaps the hardest part of being a good human being: Good intentions are not enough. Being a good person begins with being a wise person, then when you follow your conscience, will you be headed in the right direction.

Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia

Commencement Address at Langley High School

June 17, 2010

Good intentions are not enough

Movement is not necessarily progress. More important than your obligation to follow your conscience, or at least prior to it, is your obligation to form your conscience correctly. Nobody -- remember this -- neither Hitler, nor Lenin, nor any despot you could name, ever came forward with a proposal that read, "Now, let's create a really oppressive and evil society." Hitler said, let's take the means necessary to restore our national pride and civic order. And Lenin said, "Let's take the means necessary to assure a fair distribution of the goods of the world."

In short, it is your responsibility... not just to be zealous in the pursuit of your ideals, but to be sure that your ideals are the right ones. Not merely in their ends, but in their means. That is perhaps the hardest part of being a good human being: Good intentions are not enough. Being a good person begins with being a wise person, then when you follow your conscience, will you be headed in the right direction.

Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia

Commencement Address at Langley High School

June 17, 2010

inhibition

John Mazziotta pulled out a neurology textbook with pictures of a woman kneeling and praying next to a man who was also kneeling and praying. The woman, Mazziotta explained, had suffered brain damage and could no longer inhibit certain actions. She had not the slightest interest in kneeling and praying at that moment, but she could not stop herself from doing what brains want to do, imitate the action they see, like a monkey behind the glass at a zoo, making faces back at you.

Another thing to remember, Mazziotta said, is that many of the brain’s systems are running all the time. “Think of an airplane,” said Mazziotta. “Most people think that when it lands it has its engines on low and it’s just floating in. But that’s not always so; in landing, an airplane often has to be at full throttle in case it has to react quickly if something happens.” The brain, too he says, is set up to be whirring all the time. Even when we think of it as resting, its neurons are often firing at a low level, ready and waiting, so it can react in time before, for instance, it’s eaten by a bigger, quicker brain.

The brain is working constantly, and one of the tasks it works at is to inhibit itself from a variety of actions. It is striving to resist the urge to raise the coffee cup like the guy across the table, and striving not to do a number of things that might not be in its best interest. As the brain develops- in children and, science is now learning, in teenagers- it is this very inhibition machinery that is being fine-tuned.

“Development,” says Mazziotta, "is progressive inhibition.”

Barbara Strauch, The Primal Teen

articles of interest - Jan 30

***SOCIAL MEDIA

Twitter Tries, One More Time, to Help You Figure Out Twitter  Wired

Facebook News Feed Algorithm: Percent of a Video Watched By Users GivenWeight  Ad Week

***PRODUCING MEDIA

One Dataset, Visualized 25 Ways  Flowing Data

Lessons from Knight Investments in digital audio and Podcasting  Medium

***INTERNET

Zerg Rush: The Story Behind Google's Best Easter Egg  The Daily Dot

Google and the Misinformed Public  Chronicle of Higher Ed           

Google Maps now shows you how hard it is to find parking  Daily Dot

***BIG DATA & STATISTICS

The declining authority of #statistics & the experts who analyze them is at the heart of the “post-truth” crisis  The Guardian

Apache Eagle uses machine intelligence to probe, alert, and report back on behaviors of Hadoop users and clusters   InfoWorld

The best data scientists get out from behind their computers and talk to people and gather “soft data”  Harvard Business Review

This “may sound like a heresy to (devotees of) the religion of data.. but what if data isn’t enough?"  Datanami

Some Apache Hadoop myths: The devil is in the very expensive details  CIO

The goals of AI, Machine Learning, and Deep Learning: "creating an intelligent machine"  Codes of Interest

***THE BUSINESS OF MEDIA

List of the top Media Co's by Social Media Performance  Shareablee

***JOURNALISM

Four more journalists get felony charges after covering inauguration unrest  The Guardian

How Mary Tyler Moore Inspired a Generation of Female Journalists  Vanity Fair

Journalists around the country are joining a Slack channel devoted to FOIA and Trump  Poynter

Mary Tyler Moore and women in journalism  CBS News

Police Are Making It Impossible To Use Drones To Document Protests  Vocativ

***FAKE NEWS

Psychologists say they can inoculate people against fake news  CBC

Google has banned 200 publishers since it passed a new policy against fake news  Recode

Media orgs like San Diego-based Snopes lead the charge against fake news  City Beat

When is a false claim a lie? Here’s what fact-checkers think  Poynter

Fake News Is About to Get Even Scarier than You Ever Dreamed  Vanity Fair

***THE BUSINESS OF JOURNALISM

Gannett slashes more than 140 jobs at NJ newspaper group  New York Post

Women’s March on Washington Raises Ethical Questions for Media Outlets  WWD

***WRITING & READING

Sorry, But Speed Reading Won’t Help You Read More Wired

The Mystery and Occasional Poetry of, Uh, Filled Pauses  Atlas Obscura

Academics don't have to be great writers, but they do have to realize that it's their job to create interest in their topics  Chronicle of Higher Ed

Five ways to skip content when checking a Word document for spelling errors  Tech Republic

***LANGUAGE

Watch a New Yorker Copy Editor Take a Hacksaw to a Recent Donald Trump Speech  Mediate

It is America’s greatest word—arguably, the world’s greatest—and it deserves regular recognition  Chronicle of Higher Ed

***LITERATURE

George Orwell Explains How “Newspeak” Works, the Official Language of His Totalitarian Dystopia in 1984  Open Culture

 WSU professor uses big data to research Shakespearean texts  Wichita

A Free Course on Dante’s Divine Comedy from Yale University  Open Culture

Publisher printing more copies of George Orwell's '1984' after spike in demand  CNN

Ian McKellen Reads a Passionate Speech by William Shakespeare, Written in Defense of Immigrants  Open Culture

How Tolstoy’s ‘War and Peace’ can inspire those who fear Trump’s America  The Conversation

***GENDER ISSUES

Trans* in College  Inside Higher Ed

6-Year-Old Girls' Gendered Beliefs About Intelligence  The Atlantic

Rift in Women’s Studies Over Transgender Issues: Popular online discussion group sees resignations and call for boycott over comments some see as bigotry toward trans scholars  Inside Higher Ed

***FREE SPEECH

When Horse Diapers and Freedom of Religion Collide  WSJ

***LEGAL ISSUES

Judge Sides With University In Legal Fight With Student Newspaper  NPR

Don’t Expect the First Amendment to Protect the Media  New York Times

The Most Important Law in Tech Has a Problem: How “safe harbor” turned into a protector of privilege  BackChannel

Actress in Viral Video Can’t Prevent Video From Being Made Into an Advertisement–Roberts v. Bliss  Technology and Marketing Law Blog

***RELIGION

ISIS magazine calls for attack on First Baptist Dallas  KXAS-TV (NBC5)

A large Colorado congregation just became LGBT-inclusive. Here’s why it matters  Religious News Service

Tennessee Megachurch Withholds Funds From SBC Over Support of Mosque Construction  The Christian Post

Amy Grant's daughter donates kidney to best friend  The Tennessean

Facebook’s Mark Zuckerberg meets with Waco pastors  Waco Trib

The fascinating science behind Ouija boards  Daily Dot

The Tyranny of Politeness (opinion)  Religious Dispatches

Why Christians Fall Prey to Fake News  Christianity Today

***ART & DESIGN

An Artist Put Wax Butts Around Miami to Expose Everyday Sexual Harassment  The Creators Project

Art Exhibition Celebrates Drawings By The Founder Of Modern Neuroscience  NPR

The Rise and Fall of Comic Sans (video)  Scholarly Kitchen

Richard Prince has disowned his Ivanka Trump work  The Guardian

Jimmie Durham and the Art of Interruption  jstor

***SEXUAL HARASSMENT & ASSAULT

Former Baylor financial aid officer Files Title IX lawsuit   ESPN

Education Dept. Releases Latest List of Title IX Investigations, After Failing to Do So  Chronicle of Higher Ed

Russia parliament votes 380-3 to decriminalize domestic violence  USA Today

New Baylor lawsuit alleges 52 rapes by football players in 4 years while current Liberty University AD was in charge at Baylor  Dallas Morning News

Newspaper gets records hearing in sexual assault investigation of Utah State University  Student Press Law Center

***RESEARCH

How likely are academics to confess to errors in research?  Times Higher Ed

Cancer scientists are having trouble replicating groundbreaking research: Does that mean the original research was wrong? No. It means science is really, really hard  Vox

***SCIENCE

John Arnold Made a Fortune at Enron. Now He’s Declared War on Bad Science  Wired

Professor Who Helped Expose Crisis in Flint Says Public Science Is Broken Chronicle of Higher Ed

USDA Scientists Have Been Put On Lockdown Under Trump  BuzzFeed News

***HEALTH

How to Spot Fake Health News  BBC

3D-Printer Creates Skin Made From Human Cells  Vocativ

Wider Racial Gap Found in Cervical Cancer Deaths  New York Times

No original reporting: Fox News story rehashes news release for story on autism and fecal transplants  Health News Review

***PSYCHOLOGY           

Why Time Seems to Speed Up as We Get Older: What the Research Says  Open Culture

China wakes up to its mental-health problems  Economist

7 lessons from psychology that explain the irrational fear of outsiders  Vox

***NEUROSCIENCE

Tests suggest the methods of neuroscience are left wanting  The Economist

***PHILOSOPHY

Motivated Reasoning: A Philosopher On Confirmation Bias  NPR

***PERSONAL GROWTH

The Mask of Guilt  Becoming (my site)

How Being Bored Out of Your Mind Makes You More Creative  Wired

 ***HIGHER ED & IMMIGRATION

Colleges Scramble After Trump’s Executive Order Bans Citizens of 7 Muslim Countries  Chronicle of Higher Ed

Campus administrators detail their plans for undocumented students  New York Times

Top academics lash out at Trump’s ‘un-American’ immigration ban  Stat New

Princeton University Dean Warns Against Travel Abroad for Students, Scholars after President Trump's Immigration Order  WCAU Philadelphia (NBC10)

How universities have vowed to help protect undocumented students  USA Today

What You Need to Know About Colleges and the Immigration Ban  Chronicle of Higher Ed

***HIGHER ED

Hackers are locking colleges’ data away and demanding payment to return it. But paying the ransom raises new issues, experts say  Inside Higher Ed

Concealed Carry Weapon Laws and College Campuses  National Conference of State Legislatures

Colleges and inequality: New data show that joining the 1% remains unsettlingly hereditary  Economist

Hundreds of students, alumni from DeVos’s Christian college oppose her nomination as education secretary  Washington Post

***TEACHING

Study: Easy grading is actually a symptom of poor assessment practices rather than a cause  Inside Higher Ed

Are great teachers poor scholars?  Brookings

***STUDENT LIFE

Study: Vanishing child care centers on college campuses impacts student access  Education Dive

 

the Mask of Guilt

The fear of repeating a wrong or a fear of repeating past failures can produce an anxiety that can be mistaken for lingering guilt. Rising to meet even the simplest of expectations can be difficult. We become angry at ourselves and guilt-ridden. The bar is so low. Why can't rise above it?  But guilt isn't the culprit. Fear wears the mask of guilt, fooling us into wearing its chains.

Stephen Goforth

Love is Slow and Difficult

It may be said that fidelity secures itself against unfaithfulness by becoming accustomed not to separate desire from love. For if desire travels swiftly and anywhere, love is slow and difficult; love actually does pledge one for the rest of one’s life, and it exacts nothing less than this pledge in order to disclose its real nature. That is why a man who believes in marriage can no longer believe seriously in ‘love at first sight’, still less in the ‘irresistible’ nature of passion…which is an alibi invoked by the guilty.

Denis de Rougemont, Love in the Western World

Black Swains

We have a natural tendency to look for instances that confirm our story and our vision of the world.

Seeing white swans does not confirm the nonexistence of black swans. There is an exception, however: I know what statement is wrong, but not necessarily what statement is correct. If I see a black swan I can certify that all swans are not white! If I see someone kill, then I can be practically certain that he is a criminal. If I don’t see him kill, I cannot be certain that he is innocent. The same applies to cancer detection: the finding of a single malignant tumor proves that you have cancer, but the absence of such a finding cannot allow you to say with certainty that you are cancer-free.

We can get closer to the truth by negative instances, not by verification.

Nissim Taleb, The Black Swain

articles of interest - Jan 23

***SOCIAL MEDIA

Making the most of social media  MIT

Why Instagram is reinventing itself  Recode

***ART & DESIGN

What’s the best font size for the web?  Prototypr

 

***PERSONAL GROWTH

Making Friends  Becoming (my site)

***FREE SPEECH

University debates whether Academic Freedom covers work considered Fake Science  Inside Higher Ed

***LEGAL ISSUES

Student Sues College Over 'Social Justice' Activism Mandate  Forbes

***TECHNOLOGY

Fired IT employee offered to unlock College’s data — for $200,000  Indianapolis Star

***BIG DATA & STATISTICS

A video explaining Machine Learning in a simple way University of Oxford

How Big Data, Deep Learning, Data Science & #AI have changed in the last year KD Nuggets

Assessing the frameworks for implementing Deep Learning   Medium

Why physicists make great data scientists  Wired

***RELIGION

Almost all U.S. presidents, including Trump, have been Christians  Pew Research

Trump's Spiritual Adviser Talks About Relationship With President  NPR

***MUSIC

In An Ever-Changing Music Industry, Cash For Hits Remains A Constant  NPR

Inside Pandora's Quest to Take on Spotify, Apple Music & Amazon  Billboard

***SCIENCE

The Fine Art of Sniffing Out Crappy Science  Chronicle of Higher Ed

***PSYCHOLOGY           

Kitty Dukakis: Electroshock Therapy Has Given Me A New Lease On Life  NPR

***PHILOSOPHY

An Introduction to Hegel’s Philosophy of History: The Road to Progress Runs First Through Dark Times  Open Culture

 ***HIGHER ED

What does Obamacare repeal look like on a college campus?   Education Dive

Some Colleges Have More Students From the Top 1 Percent Than the Bottom 60  New York Times

***ONLINE CLASSES

Study Finds Simple Interventions can help certain online Learners persist  Inside Higher Ed

Education Dept. Clarifies Rule Governing Online Courses  Chronicle of Higher Ed

***HUMANITIES /STEM

Report that first Trump budget will try to kill arts and humanities endowments alarms many academics. Science programs in Energy Department could also face cuts  Inside Higher Ed

The world couldn’t afford engineering degrees without philosophy majors  Quartz

***STUDENT LIFE

Whose dorm rooms are dirtier, men's or women's? Here's the answer  USA Today

***SEXUAL HARASSMENT & ASSAULT

At first, 55 schools faced sexual violence investigations. Now the list has quadrupled to 223 schools  Washington Post

***ACADEMIC LIFE

Northwestern U Faculty encouraged to put mental health services info on their syllabi  Inside Higher Ed

 

 

a stone and a rusty nail

How do we keep from developing judgmental attitudes? This used to be my big hang-up when I first started counseling. Whenever people shared their problems with me, I found myself thinking,

“If he had stay away from the wrong crowd, this would never have happened.”

“He should have known better.”

“A little common sense could have prevented this…”

“A good lecture show sort her out.”

One day I shared my difficulties with an older counselor, who said, “That used to be my problem, too- and this is how I overcame it.’

Reaching into a desk drawer he took out a stone and a rusty nail.

‘I keep these here,’ he said, "For a special reason. The stone to remind me of the text, 'Let him who is without sin.. be the first to throw a stone' and the nail to remind me what a Friend did for me a long, long time ago on a hill called Calvary."

Since then, whenever I counsel anyone who has gone astray, I say to myself, “There, but for the grace of God, go I.”

a Counselor

Digital Dating and Divorce

You are three times more likely to divorce if you met online instead of face-to-face, according to researchers at Michigan State University. They also say online daters are nearly 30 percent more likely to break up in the first year. It might have to do with how each person first approaches the relationship. Nearly everyone who uses dating apps and websites immediately begins by looking for false information in their prospective partner’s profile. The researchers believe suspicion damages the relationship at an early stage. You'll find more details in the online journal Cyberpsychology, Behavior, and Social Networking.

articles of interest - Jan 16

***BIG DATA & STATISTICS

Report: Tremendous growth in data analytics education nationwide (Data literacy is now a baseline expectation in jobs of all kinds)  Tableau

Big Data has all the properties of real world objects and are subject to real world physics  Dzone

Hadoop security is no longer optional  Datanami

“Bayes’ theorem may provide novel insights into pernicious mental problems that have so far defied explanation”  Science News

The role of open source R in bringing Data Science to the masses  InfoWorld

10 simple rules for effective statistical practice  Data Science Central

***JOURNALISM

What is the Worth of Investigative Journalism?  The Wire

Someone is trying to take down the Drudge Report  BusinessInsider

Clare Hollingworth, reporter who broke news about start of World War II, dies at 105  Washington Post

Was BuzzFeed Right to Publish Accusations Against Donald Trump? (opinion) New York Times 

***FAKE NEWS

Google Quietly Removes “Fake News” Language From Its Advertising Policy  Media Matters

The Real Story About Fake News Is Partisanship  New York Times

Fake news and the spread of misinformation (a gathering of resources)  Journalists Resources

***THE BUSINESS OF JOURNALISM

Report: Video isn’t as popular with viewers as it is with advertisers  Poynter

***GRAMMAR           

Tpyos vs. Mispelings: a Presidential Matter  Chronicle of Higher Ed

***LANGUAGE

Why Do Canadians Say 'Eh'?  AtlasObscura

Talking to In-laws Can Be Hard. In Some Languages, It’s Impossible  New York Times

How Old Is ‘Gaslighting’?  Chronicle of Higher Ed

Decrying Dialects and Despising Speakers  Chronicle of Higher Ed

***LITERATURE

On Optimism and Despair  The New York Review of Books

The American Novel Since 1945: A Free Yale Course on Novels by Nabokov, Kerouac, Morrison, Pynchon & More  Open Culture

The Opening Lines Of The World’s Most Famous Books  Daily Infographic
 

***GENDER ISSUES

Survey Finds Gender Gap in Presidential Spouse Expectations  Inside Higher Ed

Research production in high-impact journals of contemporary neuroscience: A gender analysis  Science Direct

Top Divinity Schools: Use Gender-Neutral Language to Refer to God  National Review

***FREE SPEECH

Student Painting Depicting Cops As Animals Sparks Tensions On Capitol Hill  NPR

Techdirt's First Amendment Fight For Its Life (opinion)  TechDirt

Free Speech Advocates, Publishers Wrestle With Questions Of Censorship  NPR

***LEGAL ISSUES

The impact on scholarly publications if there were no intellectual property law and if scholarly publications were entirely open access  UCLA Law Review

Uncle Sam’s hilarious offensive-trademark dilemma (opinion)  New York Post

The Supreme Court began debating a case that will impact millions of students with disabilities  Business Insider

***TECHNOLOGY

Cali College paid $28K cyber-ransom to hackers  KABC

***BUSINESS

Continued Learning as a corporate Priority  Economist

***PRODUCING MEDIA

Learn Digital Photography with Harvard University’s Free Online Course  Open Culture

***RELIGION

Gay couple will pastor historic church in Washington  Religious News Service

Evangelical Leaders Reject Compromise on LGBT and Religious Rights  Christianity Today

Donald Trump's Inauguration Prayer Leader Choices Show His Values  NPR

Controversial megachurch pastor Eddie Long dies at 63  Atlanta’s WPMT (FOX43)

***ART & DESIGN

Design thinking origin story plus some of the people who made it all happen  Medium  

How The Beatles’ Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band Changed Album Cover Design Forever Open Culture

***MUSIC

Classical Music Mashup II

Indie Rock Isn’t Dead  Vice

From Mozart To Adele To Chance The Rapper, Measuring Album Sales Means Being Specific  NPR

David Bowie Offers Advice for Aspiring Artists: “Go a Little Out of Your Depth,” “Never Fulfill Other People’s Expectations”  Open Culture

***FILM

How the French New Wave Changed Cinema: A Video Introduction to the Films of Godard, Truffaut & Their Fellow Rule-Breakers  Open Culture

***RESEARCH

Gates Foundation research can’t be published in top journals  Nature

The Statistical Crisis in Science 

***SCIENCE

On eve of Trump, Obama’s Energy Department announces new policy to protect scientists   Washington Post

Identity Theft in the Academic World Leads to Junk Science  SpringerLink

The Map of Physics  Scholarly Kitchen

***HEALTH

Wearables Could Soon Know You’re Sick Before You Do  Wired

Majority of Americans are one medical emergency away from financial ruin  New York Post

A cardboard centrifuge separates blood cells from plasma  Economist

Dangerous superbug appears to be spreading stealthily in US hospitals  Stat News

***PSYCHOLOGY           

Researchers Unravel Strange And Contradictory Feelings About Power  NPR

Anti-Gay Counselor Gets $25,000 From Missouri State  Courthouse News

***NEUROSCIENCE

As people age, the brain changes in both good ways and bad  Economist

The Brain Scrambles Names Of People You Love   NPR

***PHILOSOPHY

An Introduction to Confucius’ Life & Thought Through Two Animated Videos  Open Culture

***PRODUCTIVITY

How to view and edit Word documents from Google Drive with ease  Tech Republic

How to create and use templates in Google Inbox  Tech Republic

***PERSONAL GROWTH

Which is one is the true artist?  Becoming (my site)

***STUDENT MEDIA

Fake news, real solutions: The way educational institutions treat journalists makes a difference  Medium

***STUDENT LIFE

Chula Vista Olympic Training Center under new ownership and operation (Point Loma Trust was selected by the City of Chula Vista to operate the training center)  CW6

College graduates, on average, earned 56 percent more than high school grads in 2015  ABC News

Former student sues Univ. of Oregon law school  Register Guard

***CRIME ON CAMPUS

University apologizes for handing out leaflets wrongly identified a man a rape suspect  Connecticut Post

University punishes employee for reporting sexual harassment: Settles for $170,000  Idaho State Journal

***SEXUAL HARASSMENT & ASSAULT

Activists Fear Reversal Of Strict Rules On Campus Sexual Assault   NPR

***ACADEMIC LIFE

Claiming Your Right to Say No to Writing a Letter of Recommendation  Chronicle of Higher Ed

Iowa lawmaker looking to end tenure at public universities  Press Citizen

When Students’ Prejudices Taint Reviews of Instructors  Chronicle of Higher Ed

Scientific 'cartels' band together to cite each others' work  Stat News

***HIGHER ED

Federal Data Show Hundreds of Vocational Programs Fail Meet New Gainful Employment  Inside Higher Ed

Higher Ed Leaders Muted Response to Texas’ Bathroom Bill  Inside Higher Ed

Lifelong learning is becoming an economic imperative  The Economist

College grade inflation: Looking for a cause  Journalists Resources

U.S. News & World Report releases its 2017 Best Online Programs rankings

WAC: California Baptist University to join conference in 2018-19  CBS4

***ONLINE CLASSES

The return of the MOOC: Established education providers v new contenders (Alternative providers of education must solve the problems of cost and credentials)  Economist

Harvard/MIT Report Analyzes 4 Years of MOOC Data  Campus Technology

***TEACHING

Contemplative Listening (opinion; sub. req.’ed)  Chronicle of Higher Ed

 

the Beauty of Evil

Simone Weil said, “Nothing is so beautiful, nothing is so continually fresh and surprising, so full of sweet and perpetual ecstasy as the good; no desert is so dreary, monotonous, and boring as evil. But with fantasy it's the other way around. Fictional good is boring and flat, while fictional evil is varied, intriguing, attractive, and full of charm.”

The media strikingly bear out Simone Weil’s contention. In their offerings it’s almost invariably Eros rather than Agape that provides all the excitement. Success and celebrity rather than a broken and contrite heart that are made to seem desirable.

Good and evil, after all, constitute the essential theme of our mortal existence. In this sense, they may be compared to the positive and negative points which generates an electric current; transpose the points, and the current fails, the lights go out, darkness falls and all is confusion.

So it is with us. The transposition of good and evil in the world of fantasy created by the media leaves us with no sense of any moral order in the universe, and without this, no order whatsoever, social, political, economic or any other, is ultimately attainable.

Malcolm Muggeridge

(in a speech to the National Religious Broadcasters Convention in 1978)

Bridging the Generation Gap with Reading

And then one day, she asked him what he was reading. He had just started “The Hunger Games,” a series of dystopian young-adult novels by Suzanne Collins. The grandmother decided to read the first volume so that she could talk about it with her grandson the next time they chatted on the phone. She didn’t know what to expect, but she found herself hooked from the first pages, in which Katniss Everdeen volunteers to take her younger sister’s place in the annual battle-to-the-death among a select group of teens.

The book helped this grandmother cut through the superficialities of phone chat and engage her grandson on the most important questions that humans face about survival and destruction and loyalty and betrayal and good and evil, and about politics as well. Now her grandson couldn’t wait to talk to her when she called—to tell her where he was, to find out where she was and to speculate about what would happen next.

Will Schwalbe, Books for Living

articles of interest - Jan 9

***SOCIAL MEDIA

The best Social Media Conferences to attend in 2017   HootSuit

Telling Facebook you've changed your phone number – the weird T&Cs you've unwittingly signed up to  The Guardian

The Desire to Live-Stream Violence  The Atlantic

Using Social Media, Students Aspire To Become 'Influencers'  NPR

Vine app will shut down and become Vine Camera on January 17th  The Verge

Study: Half of American Internet Users Have Been Harassed or Abused Online  MediaShift

So Who's Behind all Those Snarky Tweets from Windy's  Washington Post

***CODING & SOFTWARE

This Video Explains How GitHub Works As Simply As Possible  Life Hacker

List of companies using the free programming language R  ListenData

***TECHNOLOGY

Computers have got much better at translation, voice recognition and speech synthesis But they still don’t understand the meaning of language  Economist

The quest to create animals with human organs has a long history – and it is now becoming a reality  BBC

How voice technology is transforming computing  Economist

***BIG DATA & STATISTICS

10 simple rules for effective statistical practice  Data Science Central

Willing to try Javascript for Machine Learning? Here are some useful libraries  KD Nuggets

Battling the Tyranny of Big Data: When an algorithm tells us what to do but we know it is wrong  Bloomberg

The 10 Coolest Big Data Products Of 2016  CRN

A video about how Bayesian inference works  Flowing Data

How to create a Best-Fitting regression model?   Data Science Central

5 expensive myths about Apache Hadoop  News Factor

Machine Learning Algorithms: A Concise Technical Overview  LinkedIn

 ***ART & DESIGN

What UX Designers Can Learn from Psychology  Prototyprio

***PRODUCING MEDIA

Hacks, tips and tricks for mobile journalists  Journalism.co.uk

How to Go Live: Facebook Live Streaming for News Publishers  Video Strategist

***JOURNALISM

The Debate Over Whether Journalists Should Call Donald Trump’s False Statements ‘Lies’ Is a Red Herring  New York Mag

Lies, Journalism and Objectivity  New York Times

As Journalism Becomes Even More Dangerous, Newsrooms Must Address Psychological Trauma  PBS MediaShift

Does nonpartisan journalism have a future? (opinion) The Conversation  

Why Meryl Streep wants you to support the Committee to Protect Journalists Daily Dot

Washington Post to Create Rapid Response Investigative Team  Washington Post

***FAKE NEWS

Fake news? That’s a very old story  Washington Post

Higher ed takes on fake news epidemic  Education Dive

Hoaxy Visualizes the Spread of Online News (Hoaxy is a new tool created as an antidote to the spread of fake news)  Chronicle of Higher Ed

***THE BUSINESS OF JOURNALISM

Can the news be saved?: 2017’s emerging media outlets face just as many challenges as old media  Salon

Why did the Los Angeles Times take so long to run an investigation? (there are questions also about its editorial decision-making)  The Guardian

Tronc If You Want to Save Journalism  Bloomberg

Medium lays off a third of its staff as it searches for a new business model  The Verge

Why Medium Failed to Disrupt the MediaBloomberg

'The underbelly of the internet': How content ad networks fund fake news  Digiday

***STUDENT MEDIA  

Report: US College Newspapers Assailed for Negative Stories  Voice of America

A college newspaper takes the right stand  Delaware Online

These Local Freshmen Saved Their College Newspaper from Going Out of Print  Honolulu Mag

***PERSONAL GROWTH

to be creative  Becoming (my site)

Why Focusing on Yourself Helps You Get Over Someone Else  Life Hacker

***GRAMMAR           

Which is preferable, "If only it were," or "if only it was"?  Chronicle of Higher Ed

***WRITING& READING

Portrait of the Artist as a Case Study  Chronicle of Higher Ed

Trump pick Monica Crowley plagiarized multiple sources in 2012 book  CNN

***LANGUAGE

Survey looks at foreign language programs' response to decade-old call to transform teaching  Inside Higher Ed

2016’s grim words of the year  Economist

***LITERATURE

Danger ahead: Collapse of Southern literature?  Charlotte Observer

Author Discusses his new book on the State of the Classics  Inside Higher Ed

How China uses Shakespeare to promote its own bard  Economist

***GENDER ISSUES

'National Geographic' Tackles Changing Gender Norms Worldwide  NPR

The Benefits of Gender Balance in a System’s Presidential Offices  Chronicle of Higher Ed

***RACIAL ISSUES

Can We Really Measure Implicit Bias? Maybe Not  Chronicle of Higher Ed

***SCIENCE

Using evolutionary dynamics and game theory to understand personal relations  MIT News

***HEALTH

Japanese white-collar workers are already being replaced by artificial intelligence in Medical Insurance Co.  Quartz

Today’s new drugs come through the pipeline no faster than 20 years ago, report finds  Stat News

Diagnosing illness by smell: A prototype device to detect the scent of disease  Economist

Obama vs. Trump: 5 ways they clash — or don’t — on health and science  Stat News

The AI effort to crack biology, accelerate drug discovery, & upend clinical care Economist 

Can data analytics aid in end-of-life care decisions?  Managed Health Care

Lies, Damned Lies, and P Values: the number of "positive" but wrong medical studies may be higher than you think  MedPage Today

***FREE SPEECH

Anger at a cop killer, a plea for clemency, and a fight over free expression at American U  Washington Post

U.S. Supreme Court will not examine tech industry legal shield  Reuters

A Lawyer Rewrote Instagrams Terms of Use in "Plain English" so kids would know their Privacy Rights  Denver Post

***LEGAL ISSUES

'Star Trek' Fan Film Dispute Goes to Jury Trial in Big Ruling  Hollywood Reporter

What law firms and law departments should know about Machine Learning algorithms  Inside Counsel

***PSYCHOLOGY           

Mariah Carey Feeds the Schadenfreude Cycle  The Atlantic

What happens when narcissists become parents  Washington Post

There’s a Problem With a Bunch of Psychology Textbooks  New York Magazine

A Unified Theory of Mental Illness: How Everything from Addiction to Depression Can Be Explained by the Concept of “Capture” in Psychology  Open Culture

***PHILOSOPHY

Why We Need to Teach Kids Philosophy & Safeguard Society from Authoritarian Control in Education, Philosophy, Politics  Open Culture

***ETHICS

'Facebook Live' torture video raises ethical questions for social media giant  CNN

***RELIGION

A Memoir Of Taking Christianity 'To The Extreme'  NPR

The Curious Case of Christians and Alcohol (opinion) HeartSupport

Carrie Underwood faces backlash after performance at evangelical event  Rolling Stone

Marvin Gorman, Assembly of God televangelist brought down by Jimmy Swaggart, dies at 83  NOLA

How Martin Luther has shaped Germany for half a millennium: The 500th anniversary of the 95 theses finds a country as moralistic as ever  The Economist

The future of evangelicalism in America  Religious News Service

***RELIGION & POLITICS

The New Congress Is 91% Christian. That’s Barely Budged Since 1961  New York Times

Faith on the Hill: The religious composition of the 115th Congress  Pew Research Center

Evangelicals should be deeply troubled by Donald Trump’s attempt to mainstream heresy (opinion)  Washington Post

***HIGHER ED

Average College Degree Pays off by age 34  CNN

When Colleges Rely on Adjuncts, Where Does the Money Go?  Inside Higher Ed

Claudio Sanchez Predictions For What Will Happen In Education In 2017  NPR

***ONLINE CLASSES

280 Free MOOCs Getting Started in January  Open Culture

Trainwreck: The Teach to One Math Experiment in Mountain View, CA Is a Cautionary Tale About the Perils of Digital Math Education  Open Culture

***HUMANITIES /STEM

Why STEM Majors Need the Humanities  Chronicle of Higher Ed

***TEACHING

What Technology Addiction Means for Educators  MyStudent Voice

We Know What Works in Teaching Composition  Chronicle of Higher Ed

How Can We Minimize Grade Challenges?  Chronicle of Higher Ed

***ACADEMIC LIFE

Claiming Your Right to Say No to Writing a Letter of Recommendation  Chronicle of Higher Ed

***SEXUAL HARASSMENT & ASSAULT

In Letter to College Presidents, Biden Urges Continued Fight Against Sexual Assault  Chronicle of Higher Ed

How Publicity Might Sway Reporting of Campus Sexual Assaults  Chronicle of Higher Ed

Few Colleges Use Controversial Sexual Misconduct policy adopted by Stanford  Inside Higher Ed

 

to be creative

I hope everyone will decide to take control of their lives, to reach inside themselves, to explore who they are and what they have, and learn to use those inner powers. Not for success, not to be seen; that's not important. What is important is that you fulfill your own personal need to keep growing.

Examine yourself and how you work. Get used to the pattern by which things come up in your mind and in your imagination. Find out when and at what times of the day you work best and what motivates you. Is it anger or serenity? Do you want to prove someone else wrong? What sort of inner needs do you fulfill?

Ken Bain, What the Best College Students Do