Flickr version here.
Student challenges prof, wins right to post source code
Fascinating Boing Boing post by Cory Doctorow about a student’s fight to publish code that he wrote for an assignment.
Kyle’s a student at San Jose State University who was threatened with a failing grade for posting the code he wrote for the course — he wanted to make it available in the spirit of academic knowledge-sharing, and as code for potential future employers to review — and when he refused, his prof flew into a fury and promised that in future, he would make a prohibition on posting your work (even after the course was finished) a condition of taking his course.
Kyle appealed it to the department head, who took it up with the Office of Student Conduct and Ethical Development and the Judicial Affairs Officer of SJSU, who ruled that, "what you [Kyle] have done does not in any way constitute a violation of the University Academic Integrity Policy, and that Dr. Beeson cannot claim otherwise."
There’s a lot of meat on the bones of this story. The most important lesson from it for me is that students want to produce meaningful output from their course-assignments, things that have intrinsic value apart from their usefulness for assessing their progress in the course. Profs — including me, at times — fall into the lazy trap of wanting to assign rotework that can be endlessly recycled as work for new students, a model that fails when the students treat their work as useful in and of itself and therefore worthy of making public for their peers and other interested parties who find them through search results, links, etc.
Kyle’s blog post has lots more detail — including copies of the correspondence with his Prof and the university administration.
Thanks to Glyn Moody for Tweeting it.
Jam tomorrow?
A corny image? Flickr version here.
Holy Catholic Ireland: the parliamentary debate
This morning from 10.30am, the Irish Dáil (Parliament) debates the Ryan report into child abuse by Catholic religious orders. You can watch it here.
The Internet at 40
From ‘Hot News’ on the Apple site this morning:
The Internet turns 40, June 9, 2009
You’re so used to paying bills, getting your news and weather, and doing more and more of your purchasing online, you probably think the Internet has been around forever. But it hasn’t. As you’ll learn from this program on Open University, the Internet turns 40 this year. How did it get started? Where is it taking us next? Find out by listening to these Internet pioneers on iTunes U…
It seems that the recording of my interview is #4 in the top 100 downloads.
Where the classified-ad revenue went
From this morning’s New York Times.
SAN FRANCISCO — As the newspaper industry and its classified advertising business wither, one company appears to be doing extraordinarily well: Craigslist.
The Internet classified ads company, which promotes its “relatively noncommercial nature” and “service mission” on its site, is projected to bring in more than $100 million in revenue this year, according to a new study from Classified Intelligence Report, a publication of AIM Group, a media and Web consultant firm in Orlando, Fla.
That is a 23 percent jump over the revenue the firm estimated for 2008 and a huge increase since 2004, when the site was projected to bring in just $9 million. “This is a down-market for just about everyone else but Craigslist,” said Jim Townsend, editorial director of AIM Group. The firm counted the number of paid ads on the site for a month and extrapolated an annual figure. It said its projections were conservative.
By contrast, classified advertising in newspapers in the United States declined by 29 percent last year, its worst drop in history, according to the Newspaper Association of America…
Lens test
Taken just now with a Zeiss 50mm, f1.4 Planar. Amazing lens. Flickr version here.
A Grief Observed: print journalists and the Internet
Last month I gave a seminar at the Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism at Oxford. My talk was based on the metaphor of grief as a way of interpreting the response of print journalists to the Net. The audio recording of the talk is here. Nic Newman also did an excellent summary, for which many thanks.
Hawthorne Hooey
My post about the illusory Hawthorne Effect brought this lovely email from a reader:
“Curiously I was reminded of the Hawthorne studies just last week – I spent a pleasurable few hours with some friends at a local cinema watching Cinema Paradiso…a lovely film that I first saw one Thursday afternoon nearly 20 years ago.
As a student in Edinburgh, we had two lecturers in Organisational Psychology. One was always able to hold a theatre of 100 students attention no matter how dry the subject matter. The other spent far too long on the Hawthorne studies, and sadly for her, also lectured to us on Thursday afternoons.
Thursdays was half price for students at the Edinburgh Filmhouse.
Needless to say, in my finals, an essay choice centered around the Hawthorne studies. It was luck that I was able to choose from the others.
Almost 20 years later I am reassured that my time was not wasted.”
It’s strange to think of the colossal theoretical edifices that social ‘scientists’ have erected on such a flimsy foundation.
The next Twitter scare
Now that the Daily Mail has latched on to Twitter, stand by for scare stories about how it is — like Google Streetview — the ‘burglar’s friend’. A starting point will be this AP story about an American couple who shared real-time details of a recent trip on Twitter. Their posts said, for example, they were “preparing to head out of town,” that they had “another 10 hours of driving ahead,” and that they “made it to Kansas City.”
While they were on the road, their home in Arizona was burgled. The chap has an online video business called with 2,000 followers on Twitter and he thinks his Twitter updates tipped the burglars off.
“My wife thinks it could be a random thing, but I just have my suspicions,” he said. “They didn’t take any of our normal consumer electronics.” They took his video editing equipment.
You have been warned!