Monthly Archives: May 2016
Lifting a Million Pounds of Stainless Steel
John McCarthy: Reminiscences on the Theory of Time-Sharing (1983)
Search Bangs
They knew it was round, damn it
Return of incandescent light bulbs as MIT makes them more efficient than LEDs
Esperanto: the language that never was
A work from 1616 called ‘the first science fiction novel’
Squid, octopus, and cuttlefish populations have been rising since the 1960s. Why?
A billion prices can’t be wrong
Four hundred miles with Tesla’s autopilot forced me to trust the machine
Why Education Does Not Fix Poverty (2015)
Personalisation
When we talk personalization, we tend to talk about targeting. You learn a certain set of things, you get tested, the personalization software finds knowledge gaps and runs you through the set of canned explanations that you need.
And
While not entirely useless, this conception doesn’t fit the bulk of my experience as either a teacher or a learner. In my experience, students often have very similar skill gaps, but the remedy for each student may be radically different.
from We Have Personalization Backwards
I though this was a brilliant post. To me it reinforces that the best online learning involves contact with real people in real ways (still #ds106). I’ve stuck with online learning when there is more conversation than automation. This may change if the ‘real personalisation’ comes to online systems.