Labs and Learning

Steve Gimbel at Philosopher’s Playground is calling for the abolition of lab classes:p> As an undergrad I majored in both philosophy and physics and I have a confession my former physics profs will surely not like — everything I know about physics, I learned from my theory classes. You see, science classes come in two… Continue reading Labs and Learning

Class Issues in Perspective

Yes, the unofficial Admissions Policy Month continues here at Uncertain Principles. The problem really is that it’s Admissions Season in academia, so all the navel-gazing academic journals are loaded with articles about it, which means that having wandered into talking about it, I can’t get out without a major effort of will… Today’s worthwhile article… Continue reading Class Issues in Perspective

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Categorized as Economics

Stuck in a (Shining) Moment You Can’t Get Out Of

Via Dave Sez, a good Washington Post article about the post-Maryland career of Byron Mouton: Five years have passed since Mouton helped Maryland win the national title the last time it was held in Atlanta, but the significance of that weekend still casts a shadow over his daily life in the American Basketball Association. Since… Continue reading Stuck in a (Shining) Moment You Can’t Get Out Of

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Categorized as Basketball

Class Issues in College Admissions

I can stop blogging about college admisions any time I want. Really. In one of the previous posts, commenter AO noted a New York Review of Books article on class issues in college admissions. here’s the article in question, a review of several recent books about how the current college admissions system favors the wealthy… Continue reading Class Issues in College Admissions

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Categorized as Academia

In Which I Commit Carpentry

Here’s a project from a couple of weeks ago, that I forgot to post: “Big deal,” you say, “It’s an ugly box.” Ah, but what’s under the box?

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Categorized as Pictures

When Grad Students Snap

There’s a story in the New York Times today about a new movie on the infamous Iowa grad school shootings: On Nov. 1, 1991, outraged that his doctoral thesis had been passed over for an academic prize, a young physicist at the University of Iowa named Gang Lu opened fire at a physics department meeting.… Continue reading When Grad Students Snap

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Categorized as Movies