Sunday, 23 February 2014

Work it out with a pencil

This quote, which I found attributed to Isaac Asimow (1920-1992), sums up something I heard over tea in an academic staff room many years ago. We had been discussing how the university was allocating £200 to each member of staff for use in their research. Somebody noted that that provided mathematicians with a lot more, in terms of pencils, than it offered laboratory-based researchers.

"Why is it that you physicists always require so much expensive equipment? Now the Department of Mathematics requires nothing but money for paper, pencils, and erasers...and the Department of Philosophy is better still. It doesn't even ask for erasers."

...and what was he trying to say about philosophers?


Monday, 17 February 2014

Banality of Everything

Hannah Arendt introduced the notion of 'the banality of evil'. Her idea was that evil deeds were not preformed by fanatical wicked individuals but by ordinary people going with the flow. One way of observing the how banal people can be and how 'with the flow' they can go is by looking critcally at...

https://www.facebook.com/


Tuesday, 11 February 2014

Dorothea



Dorothea - Elfyn Lewis

I came across the work of the Welsh artist Elfyn Lewis some time ago at the gallery in Theatr Clwyd. I was fascinated by the intricacies and complexities within the images made by the way the paint has been moved to form the piece.


Wednesday, 5 February 2014

Too close to the sun?

Sadly, it has been some years since I was last in Vienna. When there I was somewhat bemused by one of the bars at the airport - a bar I understand to be still there. Why call a bar in an airport the Ikarus Bar? With all the connotations with falling from the sky, I would have thought Icarus to be the last person with whom one would want to be associated before getting on an aeroplane. (And I say this not as a superstitious person.)



Wednesday, 29 January 2014

2D Perspective


Appealing to my love of the right angle.


Thursday, 23 January 2014

On a University Campus



I was walking across a university campus last year musing on how academic standards had declined so seamlessly that few who cared had noticed when something happened to reinforce my lamentations. As I was coming to the end of my musings, I overheard two students talking about work they were about to hand it. This work consisted of an essay plan. Not an essay per se but just the plan for an essay: an essay that would never be written. It seems that essays are too much to ask. Now the assessment is based upon plans for things imagined and not upon real things. Even if one could prove that it was an equally difficult task (something I very much doubt), the task is still a lesser one.

It reminded me of the time in an examiners' meeting when a change in the course content (the word syllabus is no longer used) was mentioned. The change was proposed because students in recent years had been unable to cope with what was required of them. So content with which they could cope - content less taxing and easier to do - was to be substituted in it place. What was worse, this meeting was being attended by four or five external examiners from other institutions: those changed with ensuring academic standards are met and maintained nationally. None of them seemed to be conscerned by this 'dumbing-down'. So one was left wondering what things were like back at their institutions. Out of 120 or so universities in Britain, no university from the top 70 was represented at that meeting, let alone the top 10 or 20 - where the older, more traditional institutions still reside and stand somewhat apart from all the rest.

Once all universities were devoted to higher learning. (In the top universities that is still the case, I should add.) Previously, I have noted on this blog that universities were for thinking and learning. The 'higher' was implicit. Over time, the 'higher' seems to have faded from view leaving us with just 'learning'. But even that is no longer really the case. Now it is all about teaching: 'university teaching'. (That phrase was never even used when I was an undergraduate.) But it is even worse. It is not what is taught but how it is taught that seems to matter most nowadays. A lot of university teachers are spending time and effort on devising new ways of  teaching - new ways of keeping students 'engaged' - rather than finding the most up to date ideas to teach. Students mustn't find things boring. In the age of so much information, academics should be those devoted to finding and interpreting what is relevant and worth knowing. Instead the emphasis is on presentation and style; there are no prizes for content.