Rough Theory

Theory In The Rough

Category Archives: Teaching

Life on Mars

“…there is no reason to suppose that an inhabitant of Mars would see us more ‘objectively’ than we, for instance, see ourselves.” ~ Karl Popper

Popper, K. (1976 [1962]), “The Logic of the Social Sciences”, The Positivist Dispute in German Sociology, p. 92. Read more of this post

Couldn’t Have Been Me…

I just received the following email:

What have you been teaching?

One of my students is talking about ‘regulatory ideals’ in relation to [an applied research project]! This is most distressing…

To Die For

So L Magee assisted with one of my planning theory tutorial sessions earlier today, and I returned the favour this evening by dropping in on one of LM’s quantitative methods sessions. I’m certain LM found my presence supportive and ever-helpful. LM never tells me such things, of course, but I’m sure that’s due to some personal reticence about expressing deep emotion.

At any rate, during the session, LM decided to answer a student’s question about expected values and the chi-square test with an example that started, “Suppose you roll a 5-sided die…” LM tried valiantly to progress beyond this starting point, but the example was just… distracting.

“I’m sorry,” one student objected, “but I have to visualise these things. What does a 5-sided die look like?”

LM tried to deflect the question – it’s a hypothetical; Dungeons and Dragons must have all kinds of strange dice; etc. But the student really wanted to know. You could see everyone in the room trying – and failing – to visualise such a thing. The hapless visual learner finally gave up and proposed that we substitute some sort of random spinning dial in our hypothetical example. The tute moved on, but I just couldn’t. I kept flashing back to this discussion, bursting into erratic, poorly-muffled giggling fits at unpredictable intervals while LM was trying to explain other statistical concepts. As I said, I’m sure LM finds me supportive and ever-helpful.

And since I’m supportive and ever-helpful, a gift! LM, the next time this happens in your tutorial, you can show your students this:

5-sided die

Green Activism

L Magee did me the favour of leading one of my class discussions this morning, giving me the chance to watch from the sidelines. The discussion revolved around Sandercock’s historical survey of various progressive, utopian, and radical approaches to planning. I felt just a bit guilty, realising that, when I asked LM to do this, there might have been some reasonable expectation that perhaps this discussion might revolve around… er… radicalism in some form of another. Instead, LM wound up on the receiving end of my students’ rather creative attempts to extract some practical tools from radical planning theories, so that they could apply these in their private sector consultancy work.

LM struggled valiantly to turn the conversation back to the motives or goals of various schools of radical planning, finally offering the explicit challenge: “But – don’t you think that consultants sort of sit outside the radical planning traditions? That they aren’t really trying to represent groups in the community?”

To which one student cooly responded: “Not necessarily. I mean, I know we’ve represented community groups. But… You know… Community groups with money.”

Motive and Lack of Opportunity

Students in one of my courses have an assessment task that requires them to read one common text each week, and then to choose at least one additional text from a list of supplementary works. The common text lays out certain basic concepts I want all students to be able to discuss, while the supplemental texts vary enough to allow students to chose readings around their own interests. Students must write a brief analysis of the texts they have selected, following some comments and questions set out in an assessment guide.

I was just marking the summaries from a couple of weeks back, and noticed an interesting thing. One of the readings on the supplemental list for that week couldn’t be provided on electronic reserve due to a copyright restriction. I had forgotten to take the reading off the supplemental list, but students would have noticed that the reading wasn’t available when they tried to access it on electronic reserve. This has happened a couple of times in the past, and I generally get a flurry of emails from students who would have been interested in the missing reading, and some enterprising students who are particularly keen will venture to the library and find the original journal or book. In this case, though, I received no emails asking where the work might be found and, in any event, it isn’t actually easy to source this text: the library doesn’t carry the journal, the article isn’t available online through any of our databases, and the print journal is in fact very difficult to find locally. I was therefore quite surprised to see a discussion of the article turn up in several students’ writing.

Now it’s of course possible that the article might have been used in some other course in past years, and a few students might still have had a copy handy. But from what the students’ writings actually said about the text, it looked more like what was going on was a kind of reference inflation. The assessment guide for this week had grouped this article with another in a description and, rather than make an argument with reference to the one article to which they had access, a few students seemed to have decided to toss in a citation to the missing one as well – perhaps on the theory that two cites are better than one. What was strangest about this, though, is that all the students who did it also also wrote on a third article, even though the assignment only requires two. They therefore weren’t trying to skimp on the assessment requirements – pretending, for example, to have read two articles when they had only read and discussed one. Yet they do seem to have been pretending to have read an article they are very unlikely to have seen.

This leaves me scratching my head a bit on motive. On the one hand, I can tell the students haven’t read the article – it’s not all that similar to the one they’re grouping it with, and you wouldn’t normally choose to cite the two pieces together if you had actually read both. (The two pieces mark a similar historical shift, which is why they are grouped in the assessment guide. This is, however, a bit of an abstract similarity to make its way into a student assessment, and in fact none of the student assessments tried to make this sort of argument.) On the other hand, I can tell the students did read sufficiently for the assessment, and didn’t need to include this citation to an unread piece – instead, by including it, they ensured that I scrutinised the rest of their writing particularly closely, to determine whether they had actually read the other pieces they were claiming to have read. I haven’t noticed anything like this in previous weeks: most students just stick to citing and discussing the two pieces they are required to read. I wonder what the temptation was, on this article specifically? I find the situation somewhat bizarre…

Explaining Research Proposals

I’ll try to write something substantive again later in the week – at the moment, I’m absolutely drowning in marking, which leaves me no time to have interesting thoughts, let alone pull them together into something others might want to read… For my own reference as much as anything else, I’ve tucked below the fold a sort of “Research Proposals for Dummies” piece I wrote this week for my quant methods students. It’s very, very, very simplistic – among other things, because it’s written for second-year undergrads, many of whom have no intention of going on to research careers – but some of my Research Strategies students also found the material helpful as a very basic breakdown and explanation of the strategic intent of the sections of a proposal. The piece might be useful for someone needing similar material for their own students, and not wanting to start utterly from scratch, but wanting to riff off of someone else’s basic structure.

Note that, because this piece was written in relation to a specific assessment, much of the material is obviously not relevant to a standard proposal (and I’m too lazy and too busy – hmm… can one be both? Evidently so… – to rewrite this as a more general piece right now). Note also that I wrote this at 3 a.m. – caveat emptor.

If anyone does convert this into something less assessment-specific – or improve it in all the various other ways it needs to improved – I’d consider it a great kindness if you’d share a copy of your revised version with me. Read more of this post

Tragedy or Hope

The things you find when putting together course materials… I was trawling through the Internet Archive, trying to find some short video material on postwar history that I could use to illustrate some points for the planning theory class. And of course I couldn’t help but get distracted when one of my searches pulled up: Tragedy or Hope: Educating 1960s campus protesters as to “what’s right with America.” Online reviewer Max Grody comments appreciatively:

This is just as appropriate today, except the creepy self-loathing sorts in America today can barely get more then 50 people to go to any protests. Thank god.

Though it is a strange idea, with revolutionary American clubbing down the dumb kid, it makes sense. Nothing wrong with America except the lazy abdicate their participation in government. Most who criticize America slough their responsibilities and cry because the world doesn’t dance to their childish, narcissistic whims. Instead they wish to enslave everyone to work half heartedly for communist ideas, or socialism (communism-lite).

In the 60’s people really purchased sophistry wholesale, and it still screws up this country. If this was tighter, with a slightly better direction, it should still be shown today…. if we have to indoctrinate our kids, why not use positive messages?

Indeed.

What interested me most in the film, I have to admit, is what was chosen as the main positive message – which is, in the words of the film, “America’s contribution to the world in materialistic ways” – material invention (or, where even this film becomes self-conscious about its more elaborate claims, something more like the capitalisation or commercial distribution of invention…). Our protagonist John Smith – “honours student, football star, Vietnam veteran” – has chosen “the way to anarchy and self-destruction” because he fails to appreciate America’s material contribution to the world – apparently he was rendered vulnerable to communist propaganda, because, like so many youth of his time, “he is a victim of irresponsible parenting – he has missed the stabilising influence of a good home and religious upbringing” and has therefore fallen under the influence of the wrong people, who have led him into “drugs, loose morals, and wanton destruction”. Fortunately for John, his many ancestors who return to haunt him during the short, as well as a concerned and clear-thinking history professor, are able to compensate for this lack, and turn John from his radical ways – just in time, for he was on the verge of opening the doors to let rioters in to destroy the medical books from his college’s library…

This piece is apparently a slimmed-down version of a longer effort titled Brink of Disaster, which I haven’t viewed. These films are part of a collection of materials on the virtues of capitalism generated from Harding College.

Socratic Methods

A colleague just observed one of my discussion sessions, and walked away expressing some surprise at my technique – specifically: “It’s very… Socratic…”

The pause makes me somewhat unsure whether this was meant as a compliment, or more an expression of dismay… ;-P

Neverquest

I’ve been having an interesting email discussion on the issue of how to teach students to do efficient and productive searches for academic literature in online databases. The discussion doesn’t relate to teaching the technical mechanics, but to teaching the conceptual strategies that underlie searching: we’re trying to respond to situations in which students will point, click and type in all the appropriate places, but then return to report things like “I can’t find any articles on the environment”.

Since I teach across a variety of methods courses, I run into this issue all the time – and, I have to confess, have a tendency to punt on it by referring the students to the library staff for help with search strategies. But we’re trying to figure out the best way to tackle the problem without… er… outsourcing…

Our discussion, however, is suffering from serious sample bias: everyone is a nerd, and therefore finds this sort of thing a bit too natural: none of us can really remember learning to do searches, and we are therefore struggling to figure out where the process breaks down, and what we need to do, in order to make the whole thing less abstract. And, since we’re all nerds, at some point I speculated about whether more time spent on text adventure games as a child might have made learning this whole search concept easier. And, of course, given my interlocutors, I immediately got back:

You are in a maze of twisting little library stacks all alike.
Exits are N, S, E, W.
> find research

I do not know how to ‘find research’

Group Dynamics in Teaching

The collective personalities that emerge in groups of students remain a source of wonder to me. Read more of this post

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