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  • 22/09/2021

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    The next five years will be worse

    The next five years will be worse

    The next five years will be worse for English universities than the past five years have been. And the five after that could be worse still.

    Alison Wolf writing in 2015. And don’t think this is all to do with Covid.

    Can higher education’s golden age of plenty continue? | Times Higher Education (THE)

  • 28/06/2021

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    School’s out for summer

    Things will be even quieter here than usual. Summer is here, and I have some long form writing to do. Take a break.

  • 27/06/2021

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    Good teaching

    A comment on this article on the WONKHE site. Scale matters, but not in the way that the C-suite want.

    It has been salutary being an insider-academic doing visit days. It has confirmed my long held view that one of the most important things for a would be student is to get on a smallish course irrespective of subject wherein they will be personally known and recognized by their lecturers, not just an allocated ‘tutor’ or ‘supervisor’.

    In my personal, and anecdotal, admittedly, experience, of family members, and of teaching undergrads this has determined more than anything how well students do, in terms of academic performance and personal development. It is not wholly related to RG vs post-92 either. The latter seem to do really well, if the cohort is small.

  • 27/06/2021

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    The Long Now

    The Long Now

    Which living thing is the best ‘mascot’ for long-term thinking? – The Long-termist’s Field Guide

    Richard Fisher:

    Perhaps the most famous one is about the oaks of New College, Oxford. The tale goes that, sometime in the 1800s, officials realised they needed replacement beams for their main hall. To their surprise, they discovered that the college’s founders had planted a grove of oaks in the 1300s to supply the job. The story is often told to illustrate the virtues of long-term planning – even the former British Prime Minister David Cameron recounted it once during a Tory party conference speech. However, it is apocryphal. “I am amazed that this myth still continues: long-term tenacity if not long-term thinking,” the college archivist Jennifer Thorp once told me.

    Such a shame. I always loved the story.

  • 27/06/2021

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    Discuss

    A university is a gym not a hotel

    (source ?)

  • 26/06/2021

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    Regulatory subventions

    Regulatory subventions

    Pluralistic: 02 Jun 2021 – Pluralistic: Daily links from Cory Doctorow

    Uber’s main project has always been regulatory, not technological: that’s why it funneled hundreds of millions of dollars into passing California’s Proposition 22, a law that legalized worker misclassification and banned unionization.

    The irony? Uber is a “bezzle” – JK Galbraith’s name for “the magic interval when a confidence trickster knows he has the money he has appropriated but the victim does not yet understand that he has lost it.” Uber is a scam and it will never be profitable.

  • 26/06/2021

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    I give you the tea bag and Tractatus!

    I give you the tea bag and Tractatus!

    A century ago Ludwig Wittgenstein changed philosophy for ever | The Economist

    Of all the innovations that sprang from the trenches of the first world war—the zip, the tea bag, the tank—the “Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus” must be among the most elegant and humane.

    That the book ever made it into print was miraculous. Before the war, as a student at Cambridge, Wittgenstein’s talent was clear to his contemporaries, who begged him to put his many thoughts into writing. He refused, fearing that an imperfect work of philosophy was worthless. His mentor, Bertrand Russell, made a habit of taking notes when the two spoke, lest his protégé’s genius be lost to memory. Wittgenstein himself had other preoccupations, principally suicide.

  • 25/06/2021

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    Now I don’t have to feel so guilty

     Now I don’t have to feel so guilty

    Letter: Socialist historian foresaw Covid work habits in 1967 | Financial Times

    Anyone who has read the socialist historian EP Thompson’s article “Time, Work-Discipline and Industrial Capitalism”, written in 1967 and collected in Customs in Common in 1993, will recognise his account of pre-industrial work habits in Pilita Clark’s article about modern workers’ reluctance to engage on Mondays (Business Life, May 17).

    Thompson identifies a work pattern composed of “alternate bouts of intense labour and of idleness, wherever men were in control of their own working lives”. He remarks that the “pattern persists among some self-employed — artists, writers, small farmers, and perhaps also with students — today [1967], and provokes the question whether it is not a natural human work-rhythm”.

    Michael Williams, Letchworth Garden City, Hertfordshire, UK.

  • 25/06/2021

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    Arithmetic matters

    Arithmetic matters

    Summer reading 2021 | Science

    From a review of “The Ascent of Information” by Caleb Scharf.

    Every cat GIF shared on social media, credit card swiped, video watched on a streaming platform, and website visited add more data to the mind-bending 2.5 quintillion bytes of information that humans produce every single day. All of that information has a cost: Data centers alone consume about 47 billion watts, equivalent to the resting metabolism of more than a tenth of all the humans on the planet.

    Scharf begins by invoking William Shakespeare, whose legacy permeates the public consciousness more than four centuries after his death, to show just how powerful the dataome can be. On the basis of the average physical weight of one of his plays, “it is possible that altogether the simple act of human arms raising and lowering copies of Shakespeare’s writings has expended over 4 trillion joules of energy,” he writes. These calculations do not even account for the energy expended as the neurons in our brains fire to make sense of the Bard’s language.

  • 25/06/2021

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    Better not a “mere snip” at £6m a litre

    Better not a “mere snip” at £6m a litre

    Thoroughbred horses are increasingly inbred | The Economist

    Superstar sires “cover”, as horsey types call mating, over 200 mares per year, up from 40 in Northern Dancer’s day.

    At first, horse breeders did not consider inbreeding a problem. On the contrary: horses, like maidens, were better when purer. Within a century of the arrival of those three stallions, it was decided that the job of perfecting the horse had been done so well that the stud book was closed to new entrants. Aristocrats policed the parentage of their horses, listing their dams and sires in Weatherbys stud book. In 1826 Burke’s Peerage appeared, allowing aristocrats to do much the same for themselves. Francis Galton, the father of eugenics, recommended that “no time ought to be lost” in instituting a human equivalent to the stud book, to record not class, but fitness and form.

    Eugenics has fallen out of fashion. The horsey equivalent has not. Thoroughbreds can earn far more from propagating their race than from running races. At the National Stud, one commands a fee of £25,000 ($35,000) for a cover. Galileo, among the world’s finest stallions, is rumoured to command £600,000 a pop.

    Such fees make the very best thoroughbred semen one of the world’s most expensive substances, at around £6m a litre.