Course Report: A Brief History of Timekeeping 01

As mentioned a few times previously, the class I’m teaching this term is a “Scholars Research Seminar” on time and timekeeping. As this is an entirely new course, and will be consuming a lot of my mental energy, I plan to post occasional reports on what I’m doing to the blog. Today was the first… Continue reading Course Report: A Brief History of Timekeeping 01

Active Learning Experiment: Nearly the End

As noted in previous posts, I’ve been trying something radically different with this term’s classes, working to minimize the time I spend lecturing, and replace it with in-class discussion and “clicker questions.” I’m typing this while proctoring the final exam for the second of the two classes I’m teaching, so it’s not exactly the end,… Continue reading Active Learning Experiment: Nearly the End

O Brave New-Media World That Has Such Bloggers In It

I’ve been incredibly busy this term, but not so busy I couldn’t create more work for myself. Specifically, by writing an opinion piece for Physics World about the FTL neutrino business, that just went live on their web site: The result quickly turned into one of the most covered physics stories of the year, with… Continue reading O Brave New-Media World That Has Such Bloggers In It

Reinventing Discovery by Michael Nielsen

This coming June will mark ten years since I started this blog (using Blogger on our own domain– here’s the very first post) and writing about physics on the Internet. This makes me one of the oldest science bloggers in the modern sense– Derek Lowe is the only one I know for sure has been… Continue reading Reinventing Discovery by Michael Nielsen

Statistical Significance Is an Arbitrary Convention

In typical fashion, no sooner do I declare a quasi-hiatus than somebody writes an article that I want to say something about. For weeks, coming up with blog posts was like pulling teeth, but now I’m not trying to do it, it’s easy… anyway, that’s why there’s the “quasi-” in “quasi-hiatus,” and having been reasonably… Continue reading Statistical Significance Is an Arbitrary Convention