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November 14, 2007

How to Think: Managing brain resources in an age of complexity

When I applied for my faculty job at the MIT Media Lab, I had to write a teaching statement. One of the things I proposed was to teach a class called "How to Think," which would focus on how to be creative, thoughtful, and powerful in a world where problems are extremely complex, targets are continuously moving, and our brains often seem like nodes of enormous networks that constantly reconfigure. In the process of thinking about this, I composed 10 rules, which I sometimes share with students. I've listed them here, followed by some practical advice on implementation.

1. Synthesize new ideas constantly. Never read passively. Annotate, model, think, and synthesize while you read, even when you're reading what you conceive to be introductory stuff. That way, you will always aim towards understanding things at a resolution fine enough for you to be creative.

2. Learn how to learn (rapidly). One of the most important talents for the 21st century is the ability to learn almost anything instantly, so cultivate this talent. Be able to rapidly prototype ideas. Know how your brain works. (I often need a 20-minute power nap after loading a lot into my brain, followed by half a cup of coffee. Knowing how my brain operates enables me to use it well.)

3. Work backward from your goal. Or else you may never get there. If you work forward, you may invent something profound--or you might not. If you work backward, then you have at least directed your efforts at something important to you.

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July 30, 2007

I'm a Bazllionaire!

Legonomics

Gold is dumb. What can you do with it? Gild stuff -- lilies and Capitol buildings and whatever -- or cram it into your cavities, that's about it. So I'm glad the U.S. dropped the gold standard back in, um, back in whenever they dropped the gold standard. But I can't seem to get fired up about the dollar either. Dollars are all the same boring color, they get wadded up and torn, and, frankly, I think Andrew Jackson was having a serious Bad Hair Day when he snapped his picture for the twenty. Plus the value of the dollar keeps going down. (Apparently it used to go up too, but that was back in the late 90's when people still thought e-potbelliedpigs-online.com was a pretty good idea).

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June 25, 2007

lessons from the lives of bees

An article in National Geographic this month describes how bee swarms decide on a new nesting location. It's a complex process that involves group concensus chosen from a diversity of opinions. Interesting concept when applied to human behavior.

"The bees' rules for decision-making -- seek a diversity of options, encourage a free competition among ideas, and use an effective mechanism to narrow choices -- so impressed Seeley that he now uses them at Cornell as chairman of his department.

I've applied what I've learned from the bees to run faculty meetings," he says. To avoid going into a meeting with his mind made up, hearing only what he wants to hear, and pressuring people to conform, Seeley asks his group to identify all the possibilities, kick their ideas around for a while, then vote by secret ballot. "It's exactly what the swarm bees do, which gives a group time to let the best ideas emerge and win. People are usually quite amendable to that."

Miller, Peter. "Swarm Theory." National Geographic July 2007: 130-147.
http://www7.nationalgeographic.com/ngm/0707/feature5/

April 13, 2007

A.S.P.T.

After watching the video called "Did You Know" at the advisory board meeting today, I came up with a brilliant new degree program.

A.S. Psychic Technology: Training students to solve problems we don't even know exist yet!

August 4, 2005

Space Bags

Matt has been bugging me for a year now to buy Space Bags. He keeps seeing the commercials and telling me that we have to get some. So, we were in Home Depot this morning and low and behold, there were some Space Bags. With a little prodding from the six year old at my side, I went ahead and bought a box... 1 large, 2 mediums, and a small bag included. Looks good on the box and I have lots of winter stuff and blankets, so why not try it? A bit later at Walmart I added to the Space Bag experiment a Jumbo and Extra Large bag. Onward, to home, to see what we could see!

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July 24, 2004

Transition

Seems like my blog should reflect my current state of mind, so here it is. I'm still transitioning all of the archive and auxillary pages to the new template... i'll get there :)

December 12, 2003

Am I Crazy?

Ok, rhetorical question...

But...

I woke up with an idea this morning. I think it's something that's been formulating in my mind for a while. Having the opportunity to talk with someone alone yesterday before class helped solidify the idea...

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July 31, 2003

ZenGarden

http://www.csszengarden.com/

Have my web design students take the Zen Garden Challenge... using the HTML code supplied, can they create a style sheet to change the look? Some of the examples given are simply breathtaking. What better way to illustrate the separation of style and content?

July 30, 2003

Iron Chef Takes Over the World

And I thought Sue was just a little loopy with her Iron Chef activity at VirtCamp...

http://www.joinwow.org/ironchef/ic-webdesign.asp

Wouldn't this be fun to do at the end of the semester? I'm going to contact WOW and see if they will share details.

July 14, 2003

Technology Truths

Have web design students come up with their own three technology truths or truths about web design and share with the class.

July 3, 2003

Case Studies

Have my advanced web design students (and maybe even the beginners) do a case study of a website. Analyze for usability, style, audience, etc. Use Amazon.com as an example of a site to case study. The idea... by deconstructing a website, you learn more about how to put one together.

June 26, 2003

Class Announcements

Talking to Peita this morning and she had a Bright Idea... something I might be able to use for my classes, and maybe even for the faculty. I can create an announcement blog. For students, I could post assignments so if they missed class, they could see it, announcement of upcoming events, etc. For faculty, I could post BB news, distance ed news, workshop announcements, etc. Very easy for me to update, very easy for them to check.