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#1
The State of Higher Ed / Re: DEI programs in the news
Last post by spork - Today at 01:54:54 AM
Nice to see MIT formally abandoning this meaningless fad. Its institutional practices -- e.g., no legacy admits, no sports scholarships -- already did far more for diversity than anything done by Ivy League universities.
#2
General Discussion / Re: Movie Thread
Last post by secundem_artem - May 06, 2024, 07:34:54 PM
Quote from: Wahoo Redux on May 06, 2024, 05:23:19 PMAbsolutely loved Unfrosted.  Cannot understand why the critics, or anybody for that matter, don't like it.

Agreed.  I thought it was an absolute hoot.  Seeing Hugh Grant as Tony the Tiger but shirtless and wearing face paint and viking horns and leading a protest.....  The allusion wasn't very subtle but I thought it was hilarious. 

But then again, I thought the 3 Stooges and the Marx Brothers were high art. 

And for those of you north of the 49th parallel and old enough to remember, I absolutely loved Wayne & Shuster back in the day. Some sample W&S humor:

"That's not Ojibway writing saying Ma Day in Oh Sha Wa.  It says Made in Oshawa." 

Also -

A Roman centurion walks into a bar.  "I'll have a martinus."

"Don't you mean martini?" asks the barkeep.

Says the Centurion "When I want 2, I'll ask for 2.  What's the matter don't you speak plain Latin???"

Still cracks me up
#3
General Discussion / Re: Movie Thread
Last post by Wahoo Redux - May 06, 2024, 05:23:19 PM
Absolutely loved Unfrosted.  Cannot understand why the critics, or anybody for that matter, don't like it.
#4
Teaching / Re: Topic: Bang Your Head on Y...
Last post by Puget - May 06, 2024, 05:17:00 PM
Haven't even started grading the seminar papers and I'm already banging my head.

One student has a 25% similarity match on her term paper per Turnitin, showing she copied/vary lightly paraphrased from several of her sources and some other websites. They can view their own report when they submit, and are instructed that if it indicates they may have "inadvertently paraphrased too closely" they can correct it up to the deadline. Deadline has passed, but being nice (probably nicer than I should) I email her that she can correct it and take the late penalty. She responds that she will, but "didn't realize 25% would be a problem since that has been fine in other courses." Um, what? I think we may have an unreliable narrator here, but even if not, not relevant to THIS course. Everyone else is at 5% or lower, per usual.

Meanwhile, two students have still not submitted their papers (after I gave the whole class a 3 day extension) and are racking up late penalties.
#5
Research & Scholarship / Re: May Research Thread
Last post by Parasaurolophus - May 06, 2024, 05:15:03 PM
Quote from: Parasaurolophus on May 06, 2024, 08:20:22 AMJust work on T1 when time permits.

Made it through to the end of the chapter. I'm almost halfway done now, and catching fewer errors, which is nice.
#6
The State of Higher Ed / Re: DEI programs in the news
Last post by Langue_doc - May 06, 2024, 04:59:15 PM
QuoteM.I.T. Will No Longer Require Diversity Statements for Hiring Faculty
Applicants were required to explain how they would enhance diversity. Free-speech advocates and others said that requirement enforced groupthink.

QuoteThe Massachusetts Institute of Technology said on Monday that it would no longer require candidates applying for faculty positions to write diversity statements, which have been denounced by conservatives and free-speech advocates as forcing a kind of ideological conformity.

In their statements, generally a page-long, candidates were required to explain how they would enhance the university's commitment to diversity.

Such statements have become enshrined in faculty hiring at many elite public and private universities, as well as in corporate life. Academics have defended them as necessary in judging whether a faculty member can reach out to an increasingly diverse student body.

In announcing the change, M.I.T.'s president, Sally Kornbluth, said diversity statements constituted a form of compelled speech that do not work.

"My goals are to tap into the full scope of human talent, to bring the very best to M.I.T. and to make sure they thrive once here," Dr. Kornbluth said in a statement. "We can build an inclusive environment in many ways, but compelled statements impinge on freedom of expression, and they don't work."

M.I.T. and Dr. Kornbluth have been under scrutiny by House Republicans for the university's handling of antisemitism accusations. In December, Dr. Kornbluth testified alongside two other presidents, Claudine Gay of Harvard and Elizabeth Magill of the University of Pennsylvania, in a congressional hearing on antisemitism, which helped lead to Dr. Gay and Ms. Magill's resignations. And M.I.T., like many other campuses, has struggled to handle an increasingly intense pro-Palestinian encampment.

Diversity statements have long been opposed by conservatives and many academics as enforcing a kind of ideological conformity. M.I.T.'s decision to drop them could embolden other universities to take a second look. A 2021 study by the American Enterprise Institute found that selective universities were more likely than less selective ones to require such statements.

M.I.T., whose students are required to immerse themselves in science and technology courses, has been in the forefront of pushing back against measures that some say could dilute the rigor of its education. After the pandemic, it was among the first universities to restore standardized testing in admissions, saying that it helped predict academic success.

The practice of screening candidates for their diversity statements, sometimes before considering their academic qualifications, has been attacked as particularly corrosive in the sciences, where maintaining academic rigor in research projects can actually be a matter of life and death. Dr. Kornbluth is a research cell biologist.

Dr. Kornbluth made the move to remove diversity statements with the support of other top officials, including the provost, chancellor, all six academic deans and the vice president for equity and inclusion, according to her statement.

It was not immediately clear whether jobs beyond faculty positions would require diversity statements, or whether this was a first step in dismantling M.I.T.'s broader diversity, equity and inclusion infrastructure.

To supporters, diversity statements are an important tool, now that the Supreme Court has banned race-conscious admissions, in creating a more welcoming environment for students of every background and ethnicity, and bringing in different life experiences to the classroom.

But diversity, equity and inclusion programs have come under concerted attack by conservatives, as well as free-speech advocates and some academics who say they stifle open inquiry.

"They require faculty to endorse or apply specific positions on race, gender and related issues as if they are beyond question, and as if a professor who disputes them is ipso facto incompetent," the Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression says on its website.
#7
Teaching / Re: Favorite student emails
Last post by the_geneticist - May 06, 2024, 03:11:46 PM
Quote from: FishProf on May 06, 2024, 10:01:49 AMHello Dr. Fishprof,
I am interested in your [Behavior of Underwater Basket Weavers] course during the summer I semester. I do have a family vacation planned from June 12th - 23rd. If this prohibits my ability to succeed in your course please let me know. I am willing to make up any work and or complete any work while on vacation as well.
Thank you,
STU

Hmmm.  Six week filed-based course in which we meet 2x a week = 12 class meetings, and you are going to miss 3.  Yes, that is going to make it hard to succeed.


I never understand *how* the student plans to make up that much class in that short of a time (let's ignore the fact that your class has an essential field component).
They don't seem to understand that they have to work twice as hard to just barely get caught up.  That's challenging enough for an online, self-paced class.  Basically impossible for an in-person course.
#8
Teaching / Re: Favorite student emails
Last post by FishProf - May 06, 2024, 10:01:49 AM
Hello Dr. Fishprof,
I am interested in your [Behavior of Underwater Basket Weavers] course during the summer I semester. I do have a family vacation planned from June 12th - 23rd. If this prohibits my ability to succeed in your course please let me know. I am willing to make up any work and or complete any work while on vacation as well.
Thank you,
STU

Hmmm.  Six week filed-based course in which we meet 2x a week = 12 class meetings, and you are going to miss 3.  Yes, that is going to make it hard to succeed.
#9
Research & Scholarship / Re: May Research Thread
Last post by Parasaurolophus - May 06, 2024, 08:20:22 AM
Just work on T1 when time permits.
#10
General Discussion / Re: NYT Spelling Bee
Last post by ab_grp - May 06, 2024, 07:53:09 AM
Good morning!

I have 3/4 pangrams and am at genius so far.  I agree that this is a rough start for a Monday! Yesterday we needed bee buddy for palmy. ?

No luck on LB again.

Happy solving!