Bob Parker, in the comments, re the speed of cash transactions vs. credit:
Credit can’t be slower then cash — Visa told me so. They told me I am a social pariah if I pay in cash.
I believe he refers to this ad spot:
Bob Parker, in the comments, re the speed of cash transactions vs. credit:
Credit can’t be slower then cash — Visa told me so. They told me I am a social pariah if I pay in cash.
I believe he refers to this ad spot:
Jerram Froese, taking offense that anyone would walk out of a conference session after it started:
Damn. If only our students could stand up and walk out of class at any time. Wow, people.
That’s a mixed metaphor right there, but an essential hypothetical for any classroom teacher and especially for core subject teachers who are (overall enrollment notwithstanding) guaranteed an audience year after year.
Cigotie and his mom stopped by this weekend to register their opinion on the obstacles to creative growth facing today’s students. Both are extremely good-natured, especially since they are responding to a post entitled, “How Do You Solve A Problem Like Cigotie?”
Cigotie: I also see many kids online doing the same exact thing, as inspirations like Video CoPilot, Creative Cow, etc. And I also agree on how people are getting too sucked into a world, full of copying and project file manipulation, that they have lost all creativity themselves.
Jason Dyer, responding to my NLOS cannon post:
Since I’ve done this over the summer with real life bottle rockets, a launcher that could be set at any angle, and a vertical target, I’m not finding the computerized version nearly as interesting. I’ve also run a simpler version of this in my classroom with wads of paper. Why must everything be digital? [emph. added]
Hopefully I’ve made clear by now my preference for pedagogy over technology. If digital media makes for inferior learning, then, by all means, let’s stuff it in a burlap sack and toss it in the river. My preference is also for the real thing over a digital simulation of the real thing. That said, there are three circumstances where digital media is preferable to the real thing:
I played [math basketball] today in class. Class versus the teacher. When I told them I never lose, this was all the motivation they needed.
This kind of hyper-authoritative faux-confidence informs at least 50% of my student-teacher interaction, letting me acknowledge to them that, yeah, I realize this particular lame-duck teacher is real, that I don’t like them any more than my students do, letting me have some cake and eat it too. We get along.