Skip to main content

Home/ ALT Lab/ Group items tagged rigor

Rss Feed Group items tagged

Jonathan Becker

A School That Ditches All the Rules, But Not the Rigor | MindShift - 1 views

  •  
    "We would much rather define rigor as the pursuit of solving a really difficult task that you care about solving. And that persistence can be taught in that way as opposed to, "Yeah, let's teach kids persistence by having them do this thing that they couldn't care less about, but it's really hard and just if you can survive it, that's persistence.""
Tom Woodward

(4) How many classes - and which ones - would an MIT student need to take jus... - 1 views

  •  
    Interesting idea . . . with some repercussions. "Courses are bogus.  You don't go to MIT for the courses (and every course that MIT teaches is online anyway).  You go to MIT so that you can learn how learn stuff that they haven't yet started a class for. "
Yin Wah Kreher

David Foster Wallace's syllabus: Is there any better? - 1 views

  •  
    There is in his syllabus no compromise with expediency, no taking for granted of power structures, nothing but rigorous honesty and tireless interrogation; there is some feeling or hope that if you could put every single thing under the sun into words you can head off sorrow, frustration, resentment, missed communication, thwarted ambition. Wallace refuses the habitual patterns and usual fictions that govern a classroom. His syllabus warns: "If you are used to whipping off papers the night before they're due, running them quickly through the computer's Spellchecker, handing them in full of high-school errors and sentences that make no sense and having the professor accept them 'because the ideas are good' or something, please be informed that I draw no distinction between the quality of one's ideas and the quality of those ideas' verbal expression, and I will not accept sloppy, rough-draftish, or semiliterate college writing. Again, I am absolutely not kidding."
Tom Woodward

Connected Learning Self-Assessment | Gero-Leadership - 0 views

  •  
    "Some may consider online learning to be the anti-classroom.  A rebellion against the chalkboard and the Blackboard in favor of virtual classrooms, avatars in sweater vests lecturing in a Charlie Brown monotone…  I simply look at it as a different kind of team approach to learning.  More opportunities for inputs.  If anything, it makes the scholarship more rigorous.  As both teachers and students, it is becoming increasingly difficult to hide behind airs of academia when the scholarship can be researched, published, evaluated and revised in a nano-second.  It makes educational leadership even more important when the skills necessary to synthesize information both in person and on line are changing, and changing quickly."
sanamuah

Circles Sines and Signals - Introduction - 1 views

  • This text is designed to accompany your study of introductory digital signal processing.1 It’s an eccentric piece of not-so-rigorous literature with a preoccupation for explaining things using interactive visualizations, animations and sound.
  •  
    In the vein of Bret Victor's Explorable Explanations, this site uses several interactive visualizations to explain complex topics
  •  
    Great example. He even references Victor's Magic Ink essay http://worrydream.com/#!/MagicInk
1 - 5 of 5
Showing 20 items per page