Page 53 of 78
Re: Stuff we're reading / watching / listening to
Posted: Fri Nov 15, 2013 9:16 pm
by Tally M.
I just watched last week's Studio C episode, and the very sketch was definitely not funny. Actually, it was kind of sad. And put adoption in a bit of a bad light.
Re: Stuff we're reading / watching / listening to
Posted: Sat Nov 16, 2013 6:48 pm
by Digit
Pretty good dancer. It actually looks just like a guy I used to know.
Re: Stuff we're reading / watching / listening to
Posted: Tue Nov 19, 2013 5:46 pm
by Digit
12 Dozen Places To Educate Yourself Online For Free. I'm intrigued by Harvard Medical School Open Courseware. Teach yourself surgery?

Re: Stuff we're reading / watching / listening to
Posted: Wed Nov 20, 2013 11:32 am
by Dragon Lady
I just finished reading A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court and... I feel like I'm completely missing whatever social commentary he's trying to make. I really expected to just get a good novel with a good story (but maybe because I grew up watching the movie, A Kid in King Arthur's Court) and that is not at all what I got. The ending was tragic. On all sides. This is what I pulled out of it:
Having one group in charge of government is bad. Even if that one group is a church. Don't follow the government blindly. Be smart and reasonable. But... if you fight against the system, you and everyone you love will lose in a very tragic way. But you'll hurt your enemy in the process!
Umm... huh? Do you see why I feel I'm missing something? Help!
Re: Stuff we're reading / watching / listening to
Posted: Wed Nov 20, 2013 11:52 am
by Marduk
I haven't read that novel in particular, but I have read a lot of Twain, and I'll just say, it probably isn't "even if that one group is a church" but "especially if."
Re: Stuff we're reading / watching / listening to
Posted: Wed Nov 20, 2013 11:01 pm
by Dragon Lady
True, Marduk. He does seem to have an issue with the church being in charge. His main goal in the book is to bring down the One Catholic Church and set up a variety of Protestant churches that are just churches and not government.
Which is why it kind of surprised me when he eventually fails in his mission (when it looks so much like he'd probably win) and dies a miserable, lonely death. (Sorry if that spoils anything for anyone.)
Re: Stuff we're reading / watching / listening to
Posted: Thu Nov 21, 2013 4:07 pm
by Portia
I liked
this article about artificial divisions and how religious communities can (possibly) transcend them.
Re: Stuff we're reading / watching / listening to
Posted: Sat Nov 23, 2013 10:58 pm
by Tally M.
Via something Whistler liked on Facebook:
Crickets sound like humans singing.
Re: Stuff we're reading / watching / listening to
Posted: Sun Nov 24, 2013 5:44 pm
by Whistler
it's like the harmonic series
Re: Stuff we're reading / watching / listening to
Posted: Sun Nov 24, 2013 5:52 pm
by Dragon Lady
I recently downloaded a Christmas album by both Andy Williams and another by Bing Crosby. It is making me very happy. I haven't been loving my Christmas playlist for a few years now (ever since I went through and made my library legal. And then downloaded some free songs to build it back up.) so these additions are amazing.
Re: Stuff we're reading / watching / listening to
Posted: Sun Nov 24, 2013 6:26 pm
by Giovanni Schwartz
I have a friend that said she made a Christmas playlist on Pandora. Any guesses on what the first song was?
Nope.
"Wrecking Ball" Miley Cyrus
Re: Stuff we're reading / watching / listening to
Posted: Sun Nov 24, 2013 6:33 pm
by Portia
Giovanni Schwartz wrote:I have a friend that said she made a Christmas playlist on Pandora. Any guesses on what the first song was?
Nope.
"Wrecking Ball" Miley Cyrus
Just did this. Got "It's Beginning To Look A Lot Like Christmas" by Perry Como.
Re: Stuff we're reading / watching / listening to
Posted: Wed Nov 27, 2013 5:05 pm
by Digit
The Jabberwock. It has the nyms of two people here.
Re: Stuff we're reading / watching / listening to
Posted: Wed Nov 27, 2013 7:21 pm
by Digit
1979
SNL skit What if Superman's ship had landed in Nazi Germany?
Re: Stuff we're reading / watching / listening to
Posted: Wed Nov 27, 2013 8:03 pm
by Emiliana
I'm reading the novel Half Brother by Kenneth Oppel. It's about a boy in the 1970s whose parents adopt a chimp to try to teach it to use sign language. It's aimed at young adults, but has some interesting insights into the psycholinguistic theories of the time.
Re: Stuff we're reading / watching / listening to
Posted: Wed Nov 27, 2013 10:38 pm
by Portia
On the
period encoding anger in texts and IM.
Re: Stuff we're reading / watching / listening to
Posted: Tue Dec 03, 2013 4:29 am
by Portia
Reading The Second Sex by Simone de Beauvoir. It's probably the best work of non-fiction I've ever read.
Re: Stuff we're reading / watching / listening to
Posted: Tue Dec 03, 2013 10:46 am
by Katya
About Time (which was really good!)
Re: Stuff we're reading / watching / listening to
Posted: Wed Dec 04, 2013 9:10 pm
by Digit
Unschooling. According to this news video report, it sounds like the teachers in "schools" like this don't do a whole lot of anything, certainly not teaching. According to the reporter's paraphrasing, the kids choose what they want to learn for the day, and direct themselves at it, while the teachers watch. If that's really what happens, I imagine that when it comes to objective things like arithmetic, where there are definite right and wrong answers, then at best the kids who do eventually discover on their own correct algorithms for addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division do a lot of reinventing of the wheel, and at worst, since most kids are no Carl Friedrich Gausses, they never end up choosing to stick to it until they come upon the correct procedures at all.
I think there are a few educators here if I'm not mistaken. What do you think of this let-the-kids-teach-themselves model?
Re: Stuff we're reading / watching / listening to
Posted: Wed Dec 04, 2013 9:58 pm
by Dead Cat
I can see that there are some kids that would benefit from this sort of free, figure-it-out-yourself model, but for most kids, it seems a really inefficient use of their time. The world isn't
Aperture Science: we don't have to do all our science from scratch. We shouldn't avoid the tried-and-true methods unless there's a good reason and teachers wanting to be lazy is not a good reason.