The Pleasures of Reading are coming at you! (also in a good way)
class blogs
On Twitter this morning I asked for thoughts on how best to run a class blog, and replies are coming in. People are reminding me of Mark Sample’s excellent post on “blog audits,” and are tossing…
adventurousness and its enemies, part 2
adventurousness and its enemies, part 2
It’s not just in writing that the social can militate against innovation: it happens in teaching too. Some administrators want teachers to be willing to tweak their assignments, their syllabi, and…
I predict we’re in a phase. In a few years, people will learn to reduce their message sending, the same way many of us have learned not to answer the phone during dinner. Technology enriches our lives. I’m hoping the students of today will embrace the nearly instantaneous electronic communication that modern mobile technology enables, and use it to make things better.
I don’t think such a law should pass. I think the current laws, which criminalize the leaking of secrets but not the publishing of leaks, strike the right balance. However, as a citizen of a democracy, I’m willing to be voted down, and I’m willing to see other democratically proposed restrictions on Wikileaks put in place. It may even be that whatever checks and balances do get put in place by the democratic process make anything like Wikileaks impossible to sustain in the future.The key, though, is that democracies have a process for creating such restrictions, and as a citizen it sickens me to see the US trying to take shortcuts. The leaders of Myanmar and Belarus, or Thailand and Russia, can now rightly say to us ‘You went after Wikileaks’ domain name, their hosting provider, and even denied your citizens the ability to register protest through donations, all without a warrant and all targeting overseas entities, simply because you decided you don’t like the site. If that’s the way governments get to behave, we can live with that.’
adventurousness and its enemies
adventurousness and its enemies
Yesterday I wrote that insofar as writing becomes social, it will become less, not more, adventurous. Here’s why: imagine that James Joyce drafts the first episode of Ulysses and posts it…
Ohio State lists 458 people in its athletic department. Included are the athletic director (who’s also a vice president of the university), four people with the title senior associate athletic director, 12 associate athletic directors, an associate vice president, a “senior associate legal counsel for athletics” and plus a nine-person NCAA compliance office. NCAA rules are complex, to be sure, but does Ohio State really needs nine people who do nothing but push NCAA paperwork? The Ohio State NCAA compliance staff is lean and mean compared to the football staff, which includes 13 football coaches, a director of football operations, three associate directors of football operations, a “director of football performance” and three football-only trainers.How do these numbers compare to academic departments at the school? There are 192 faculty members in Ohio State’s English department, with a support staff of about 50. Thus the Ohio State athletic department has roughly twice as many people as the Ohio State English department. Sports receive more staffing than English though nearly all Ohio State students at some juncture take a course through the English department, while few participate in NCAA athletics. And sports receive more staffing than English, though there is a widespread feeling that many Americans are inadequately educated in subjects such as English, while not one single person in the entire United States believes there isn’t enough emphasis on sports.
crabwise
Umberto Eco always makes me think:
I once had occasion to observe that technology now advances crabwise, i.e. backwards. A century after the wireless telegraph revolutionised communications, the…
brave new digital world (number 3,782 in a series)
brave new digital world (number 3,782 in a series)
Craig Mod on how the digital world changes books:
The biggest change is not in the form stories take but in the writing process. Digital media changes books by changing the nature of…

