U.S. / Canada

30 08, 2016

Sifting through and sifting out: ways employers are testing the college degree (Ryan Craig, EdSurge)

By |2016-08-29T20:12:43-04:00August 30th, 2016|2016, Academia, August, Economics, education, Employment, Everything Else, News, U.S. / Canada|0 Comments

Sifting through and sifting out: ways employers are testing the college degree. Do employers (and students) expect too much from university education, or too little? From the article: According to the Gallup-Lumina survey, only 11 percent of employers think graduating students have the skills that their businesses need. It’s not as though degree holders are only falling [...]

21 08, 2016

Solve problems, find work, enjoy automation (David Autor, Journal of Economic Perspectives)

By |2016-11-02T11:52:07-04:00August 21st, 2016|2016, August, Economics, education, Employment, Everything Else, History, News, STEM, Technology, U.S. / Canada|0 Comments

Solve problems, find work, enjoy automation: how technology enhances the value of the humanities. From the article: The final section of this paper reflects on how recent and future advances in artificial intelligence and robotics should shape our thinking about the likely trajectory of occupational change and employment growth. I argue that the interplay between machine and [...]

19 08, 2016

Forests of philosophy

By |2016-09-04T23:44:23-04:00August 19th, 2016|2016, August, education, Everything Else, Literature, Philosophy, poetry, Quotes, U.S. / Canada|0 Comments

Forests of philosophy: how our trail-blazing only leads to passing points of rest. No one like the path-finder himself feels the immensity of the forest, or knows the accidentality of his own trails. Columbus, dreaming of the ancient East, is stopped by poor pristine simple America, and gets no farther on that day; and the poets [...]

16 08, 2016

Therapy and the nurture of nature (Fiona Macdonald, BBC Culture)

By |2016-09-04T23:44:58-04:00August 16th, 2016|2016, August, Europe, health, History, Literature, News, poetry, U.S. / Canada, Writing|0 Comments

Therapy and the nurture of nature: how landscape and the natural world foster (from the Greek, therapeia) wholeness. From the article: For many writers, the act of observing nature has healing properties. Amy Liptrot found it from returning time again to the same spot, and feeling more aware each time of “the height of the tide, [...]

2 08, 2016

The humanities bring home the (Canadian) bacon (Nikki Wiart, Maclean’s)

By |2016-09-04T23:48:10-04:00August 2nd, 2016|2016, Academia, August, Economics, education, Employment, Everything Else, News, U.S. / Canada|0 Comments

The humanities bring home the bacon: a Canadian study looks at the earnings power of humanities and liberal arts graduates. From the article: [Ross Finnie, Director of Ottawa's Education Policy Research Initiative] says more research can help pinpoint the soft skills and figure out how post-secondary institutions can help develop them. “If we identify those skills, we can [...]

29 07, 2016

Business people need the liberal arts (Yoni Applebaum, The Atlantic)

By |2016-09-04T23:49:17-04:00July 29th, 2016|2016, Academia, education, Employment, Everything Else, History, July, News, U.S. / Canada|0 Comments

Business people need the liberal arts: why more than specialization is required to succeed in business when you're really trying. From the article: Businesses want workers who have “the ability to think, the ability to write, the ability to understand the cultural or historical context of whatever business decision they’re making,” added Rachel Reiser, assistant [...]

26 07, 2016

Gnomic genomics of happiness (Will Storr, The New Yorker)

By |2016-09-04T23:50:52-04:00July 26th, 2016|2016, Academia, Everything Else, health, July, News, Philosophy, psychology, U.S. / Canada|0 Comments

Gnomic genomics of happiness: is happiness in our genes, and can our euphoria alter the way our genes express themselves? From the article: The study indicated that people high in eudaemonic happiness were more likely to show the opposite gene profile of those suffering from social isolation: inflammation was down, while antiviral response was up. Since [...]

23 07, 2016

Science, industry, and racial barriers

By |2016-09-04T23:50:14-04:00July 23rd, 2016|2016, Academia, education, Employment, Everything Else, History, July, Quotes, science, Technology, U.S. / Canada|0 Comments

Science, industry, and racial barriers: one of America's most eminent historians reflects on a lifetime of change and stasis But the challenges I, my brother, Buck, and my sisters, Mozella and Anne, faced were always formidable. Living through years of remarkable change, the barrier of race was a constant. With the appearance of each new institution [...]

18 07, 2016

Easily lies the head that would wear a crown

By |2016-11-02T11:52:09-04:00July 18th, 2016|2016, Arts, Debate / dialogue, Europe, Everything Else, July, Language, Literature, Politics, Quotes, U.S. / Canada, Writing|0 Comments

Easily lies the head that would wear a crown: why political falsehoods maintain their efficacy There is one essential point wherein a political liar differs from others of the faculty, that he ought to have but a short memory, which is necessary, according to the various occasions he meets with every hour of differing from himself, [...]

5 07, 2016

Natural empathy and artificial intelligence (Satya Nadella, Slate)

By |2016-07-02T13:42:57-04:00July 5th, 2016|2016, Debate / dialogue, education, Everything Else, Language, News, Philosophy, STEM, Technology, U.S. / Canada|0 Comments

Natural empathy and artificial intelligence: the CEO of Microsoft calls for a greater appreciation of the human condition as computational technology becomes more sophisticated. From the editorial: At a developer conference earlier this year, I shared our approach to A.I. First, we want to build intelligence that augments human abilities and experiences. Ultimately, it’s not going [...]

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