My big ol' head.

The Indiana Jones School of Management

Wed 31 Oct 2007

“Nothing happens until you start.”

Filed under: Geof F. Morris @ 18:14

Co-op: [hands me data] “Here’s everything I have. The first couple sheets are exact quality records, the next two are photocopies of build paper, and the rest is all stuff I wrote down on an indentured parts list.”

Me: “Excellent! Just the kind of data that we need.”

Co-op: “How do you want me to organize this?”

Me: “Well, we need weights and part numbers.”

Co-op: “We’ve also got serial numbers …”

Me: “Good point. Just … get started with the data entry, and the organization will come to you. Promise.”

And that’s the truth: faced with a blob of data that you know only in part, you’re best to get it all entered and then figure out how to make it pretty. You could spend a half-hour with a plan for all this, and something on page 47? Gonna kick your ass. Better to just get started.

[And now my co-op is going to see this on Facebook, since I import notes there, and she'll know that I care. 'Cause I do. 'Cause she's kicking ass. I'm just trying not to tell her too much so she won't get complacent. ;)]

links for 2007-10-31

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Tue 30 Oct 2007

links for 2007-10-30

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Sun 28 Oct 2007

On Recruiting Teachers

Filed under: Geof F. Morris @ 14:16
The ideal condition
Would be, I admit, that men should be right by instinct;
But since we are all likely to go astray,
The reasonable thing is to learn from them who can teach.
– Sophocles, Antigone, I, 720

Today’s Washington Post has an anecdotal story about the failure of No Child Left Behind to force any improvements at tiny Como Elementary in Como, Miss., a school that has been the state’s worst at a time when Mississippi is coming in last in standardized testing. [Dangit, what happened to "Thank God for Arkansas"?!] The story discusses all what you’d expect: those who can afford it have gone to the local private school, a common occurrence in Mississippi that’s created separate and unequal [although my experience with most of these private rural academies is that they're worse at teaching than the public schools]; the difficulty of bringing in teachers, leading to Como taking on faculty generally considered unqualified or incapable by other districts; and the general issues of getting lost in the system. Most days, I would have read this, shaken my head slowly, and said, “Yeah, NCLB didn’t make much inroads, and it’s made a lot of things worse.”

But as I was in the airport yesterday, I read “How to be top” in the 20 Oct 2007 issue of The Economist. The Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development’s Programme for International Student Assessment studies what makes education actually tick:

Are students well prepared for future challenges? Can they analyse, reason and communicate effectively? Do they have the capacity to continue learning throughout life? The OECD Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA) answers these questions and more, through its surveys of 15-year-olds in the principal industrialised countries. Every three years, it assesses how far students near the end of compulsory education have acquired some of the knowledge and skills essential for full participation in society. The results of the PISA 2006 survey will be released on 4 December 2007.

–OECD.org, 28 Oct 2007

There are many things that make other countries’ educational systems perform well, but how they do recruiting is, to me, one of the most important:

In Finland all new teachers must have a master’s degree. South Korea recruits primary-school teachers from the top 5% of graduates, Singapore and Hong Kong from the top 30%.

They do this in a surprising way. You might think that schools should offer as much money as possible, seek to attract a large pool of applicants into teacher training and then pick the best. Not so, says McKinsey. If money were so important, then countries with the highest teacher salaries—Germany, Spain and Switzerland—would presumably be among the best. They aren’t. In practice, the top performers pay no more than average salaries.

Nor do they try to encourage a big pool of trainees and select the most successful. Almost the opposite. Singapore screens candidates with a fine mesh before teacher training and accepts only the number for which there are places. Once in, candidates are employed by the education ministry and more or less guaranteed a job. Finland also limits the supply of teacher-training places to demand. In both countries, teaching is a high-status profession (because it is fiercely competitive) and there are generous funds for each trainee teacher (because there are few of them).

South Korea shows how the two systems produce different results. Its primary-school teachers have to pass a four-year undergraduate degree from one of only a dozen universities. Getting in requires top grades; places are rationed to match vacancies. In contrast, secondary-school teachers can get a diploma from any one of 350 colleges, with laxer selection criteria. This has produced an enormous glut of newly qualified secondary-school teachers—11 for each job at last count. As a result, secondary-school teaching is the lower status job in South Korea; everyone wants to be a primary-school teacher. The lesson seems to be that teacher training needs to be hard to get into, not easy.

I have friends who are teachers or are studying to be them: Adam, Jeremy’s wife Hallie, Brian, and Kari’s husband Mike. All of them are smart folks who have chosen teaching over other careers where they could make more money or have more prestige. That said, I don’t think that any of them would feel that there was much competition for them to get into their educational coursework. At many universities, including my alma mater, the education department is the 90-pound weakling; as an engineering major, I arrogantly considered most of my liberal arts peers to be slacker punks, but I at least knew that the kids majoring in English or history or whatever were working their asses off. It never felt like the education majors were pushed all that hard, and it was widely known at UAH that education majors had the lowest average incoming ACT and SAT test scores.

And sure, we all know an Adam, a Hallie, a Brian, a Mike—a smart, dedicated student who chose education. But are those folks the norm? The statistics nationwide say that they aren’t. Why is education not considered a high-prestige major at UAH, where nursing is? I’ll argue along with the PISA folks and McKinsey: at UAH, nursing is a selective major. The upper division slots are limited—more folks are trying to get into them than spots exist. Do nurses make more money than teachers—certainly they do. But at UAH, nursing majors were respected because there was competition; conversely, education as a major seemed like a last resort, the degree you got if you weren’t smart or hard-working enough to stick in some other major. Sure, we all know the smart folks who choose to become educators, but they feel like the exception, rather than the rule.

Smart students today in America have a lot of educational and vocational possibilities. Medicine is still considered an ideal, despite the hours and workload, despite the time commitment of medical school, internship, and residency. Even in a time when our nation needs desparately needs more doctors, our nation’s medical schools refuse to lower their standards; instead, we import top talent from South Asia. The statistical evidence of other nations, as taken by PISA, would argue that we might see the same network effects if education suddenly became a difficult school to get into. Just as with highly-selective educational institutions themselves, smart kids seek the selective places not because they’re demonstrably better than anyplace else—most studies show that undergraduate education is generally good at most any nationally-recognized university—but the best of the best want to go to the toughest places not only because they are good, but because there is prestige merely in making it there. Education doesn’t have that cachet these days, and so I believe that smart students generally pass it by in favor of more prestigious, challenging, and lucrative prospects.

[And hey, I'm one of these people that argues that it's not all about the money. I could make a lot more money in middle management in fully private industry than I do working as a government contractor. But dadgummit, there just aren't that many people who get to put stuff into space, either.]

links for 2007-10-28

Filed under: del.icio.us Linkdumper @ 04:18

Geof’s New Music: 28 Oct - 3 Nov 2007

Filed under: Geof F. Morris @ 00:29

I take a break from traveling this week, but it’ll still be busy … program reviews at work, the start of the home hockey season, and a Derek and Sandra concert to cap the week. Promises to be fun!

Last week was a mixed bag:

  • George Strait - 50 Number Ones George Strait’s 50 Number Ones. Okay, I feel like I have to apologize for this a wee bit. If you follow along in this space, you’re wondering, “What the hell is Geof doing listening to straightforward, clean-cut country music like George Strait? What’s your major malfunction, Morris?!” Well, my second roommate my junior year of high school loved country music. I liked Thomas, so I had two choices: learn to tolerate country music or snap. I chose the former, and thus began a three-year period where I listened to country. [What cured me of it? Working in small-town country FM radio. Oh my gosh, y'all, that was the cure.] But despite all that, I have an affinity for George Strait, which I won’t apologize for one bit. That said: I don’t like all of his hits, and I don’t like what MCA Nashville did to make 51 songs fit on two discs. 40% of the tracks are cut by at least 20 seconds, some very noticeably so even if you don’t know the song. George gets five stars, MCA Nashville gets two, so it gets three-and-a-half overall.
  • 20040716 - Keane - cover 16 Jul 2004 [Arvika, Sweden] concert bootleg of Keane. It’s a very clean- and crisp-sounding recording, which is always tough at festivals, but it’s an FM broadcast, so presumably they had a good board feed. Three-and-a-half stars.
  • 20070718 - The Decemberists - cover 18 Jul 2007 [Chicago, IL, USA] concert bootleg of The Decemberists. Shut up, talkers! Oh, and this also sounds tinny, thin, and meh. Two stars.
  • 20071001 - Feist - cover 1 Oct 2007 [Copenhagen, Denmark] concert bootleg of Feist. My main fuss is that it could stand to be a hair more compressed. Also, it sounds like Leslie’s a bit bushed and not as full of energy. She sounds good but not great. Three-and-a-half stars.
  • 20071005 - Jeff Tweedy - cover 5 Oct 2007 [San Francisco, CA, USA] concert bootleg of Jeff Tweedy. This sounds very, very good for being recorded outdoors. If you like Jeff on a guitar playing a smattering of Wilco and Woody Guthrie tunes, you’ll like this recording. Four stars. The only downside is that there are a few talkers in the crowd. Talkers need to be smacked upside the head with a cluestick.
  • Wilco - 20071014 - cover 14 Oct 2007 [Iowa City, IA, USA] concert bootleg of Wilco. It sounds “off”, for a reason I can’t describe. The only thing that I can figure is that it’s a location thing—the setup might have not been in the best place to pick up the show, so it’s picking up weird artefacts. I mean, it’s better than anything I would have pulled out of this venue, but I have high standards for Wilco bootlegs. Two-and-a-half stars.

Sat 27 Oct 2007

links for 2007-10-27

Filed under: del.icio.us Linkdumper @ 04:17

Fri 26 Oct 2007

Pedal to the Metal

Filed under: Geof F. Morris @ 19:53

So, let’s see …

  • Tomorrow I fly back from Houston.
  • Sunday is Consecration Sunday at my church.
  • Monday, I’ll jump right back into the work scene after being out of the office for three days. I’m up on my email, though, so I think it’ll be okay.
  • Tuesday and Wednesday will be prep days as we get ready for …
  • Thursday, when I have program reviews with my VP. I’ve got some good news and some bad news. I’m gonna like giving the good news a whole lot more, but hopefully Monday through Wednesday will give me all the prep time I need to answer the questions I know I’ll face. Also, Thursday night should be the first hockey get-together of the season.
  • Friday night is the first UAH home hockey game of the year. I’m so stoked.
  • Saturday afternoon has the second game of the year, and Saturday night, it’s Derek and Sandra! Yes, hockey and music in one day. No, I’m not sure that I can stand it. And after the show, I’m sure I’ll be hanging with the McCrackenWebbs at my friend William’s house, because …
  • Sunday I have a 6:00 a.m. flight to Denver to spend a couple days with Alex. I need some time away [and have a week's worth of comp time to use], and Alex offered. I’m really looking forward to it, and I hope to get to meet his cohorts at Crowd Favorite.

It’s gonna be a fun week. I’m ready to get started.

links for 2007-10-26

Filed under: del.icio.us Linkdumper @ 04:18

Thu 25 Oct 2007

It’s About the Interactions

Filed under: Geof F. Morris @ 20:39

So come around 10:30 this morning, I was a little annoyed: I’d killed all of yesterday, with all of its bad travel [ask anyone who follows me on Twitter, they were tired of my tweeting about travel], and traveled here for a two-hour meeting where I didn’t learn anything that I didn’t already know about this design last month when I was in town. My first instinct was to see if I could get out of town and back home, but there were no flights that were not ridiculously expensive. And hey, taxpayers, I’ve already spent enough of our money making this trip, so it made no sense to spend a lot more money coming home.

So instead, I decided to take lemons and make lemonade. I proceeded to have a terribly productive afternoon purely by being a short walk down the hallway from all the people I interact with here in Houston, rather than playing phone tag with them. Not in their cube? No worries, I’ll go touch base with someone else and come back later. I touched base with about a dozen folks on five different projects.

All in all, it ended up being a good day, especially for the big hardware delivery we shipped the first half of two weeks ago and will ship the second half of tomorrow.

And no, it wasn’t cool just because there was NASA TV on the TV in conference room with a crew in orbit and docked to ISS, moving around the hardware we spend a couple thousand hours a year each worrying about, but that helped.

Wed 24 Oct 2007

links for 2007-10-24

Filed under: del.icio.us Linkdumper @ 04:17

Nuking and Paving Apple Mail

Filed under: Geof F. Morris @ 00:48

Anyone got suggestions about how to start over with Apple Mail? I’m trying to resolve some crashiness issues with it for me—stuff that was making my entire Mac unstable, as I’m discovering now with Mail not running for the last 36 hours or so and all the problems I was having [Launchbar locking up, Camino sometimes locking up, Address Book eating its files completely] seeming to go away now that Mail is in the off position[1]. That said, here’s what I’ve tried to no full avail:

  • rm -rf ~/Library/Mail
  • rm -rf ~/Library/Preferences/com.apple.mail.plist

Do I have to do more? Yes, I backed up ~/Library/Mail and the .plist before I did this. [I'm not that dumb.]

Suggestions desired. People who tell me to use GMail will get my foot up their ass.

[1] The true test will be this: I’m heading out of town for three days tomorrow, and I will leave Launchbar, iPulse, iTunes, Camino, and Seasonality up and running while I am gone. [Not NetNewsWire, because I imagine that I will read news in the hotel room at night. NNW is the only other program that I have up at pretty much all times, but to sync NNW properly, you best only have one instance of it running at a time.] If I come home with none of those programs in need of a Force Quit, life will be good.

Tue 23 Oct 2007

Google AdSense

Filed under: Geof F. Morris @ 11:35

You’ll note that there are now Google AdSense ads down in the footer. I’m trying to defray my server lease costs [which run about ... ugh ... $4000/yr], and subscription fees for the forums I run and sub-leasing space to friends isn’t defraying the full cost. [Not even close.] So sorry … you get ads.

I’ve tried to find a WordPress plugin that chooses to show ads only to those folks coming in from Google, or perhaps only to people who don’t already have a comment on the site [as the comment sets a cookie locally], but … no dice.

1645: I ran the numbers, and the “not even close” is like $1500. :wince: Why do I do this again?

links for 2007-10-23

Filed under: del.icio.us Linkdumper @ 04:17

Mon 22 Oct 2007

Bots Are Dumb

Filed under: Geof F. Morris @ 16:59

I love it … I’m getting all sorts of PHP XSS injection attack attempts on GFMorris.org purely because I’ve mentioned phpBB there before. Shoot, until lately, I’ve hardly been a phpBB admin, choosing Simple Machines in the meantime.

Even funnier is that the two or three phpBB installs on the box? Going unattacked.

links for 2007-10-22

Filed under: del.icio.us Linkdumper @ 04:17

Sun 21 Oct 2007

Geof’s New Music: 21-27 Oct 2007

Filed under: Geof F. Morris @ 05:08

Damn, gotta go to Houston this week. Well, this might help me get through it. With that said; Elliott Smith died four years ago today. In memoriam, only Elliott tunes for me today [other than what I sing at church, obviously].

Sadly, last week had some real clunkers with the bootlegs:

links for 2007-10-21

Filed under: del.icio.us Linkdumper @ 04:18

Sat 20 Oct 2007

links for 2007-10-20

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Fri 19 Oct 2007

links for 2007-10-19

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Thu 18 Oct 2007

links for 2007-10-18

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Wed 17 Oct 2007

links for 2007-10-17

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Tue 16 Oct 2007

links for 2007-10-16

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Mon 15 Oct 2007

links for 2007-10-15

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Sun 14 Oct 2007

Geof’s New Music: 14-20 Oct 2007

Filed under: Geof F. Morris @ 05:46

The new studio cut this week comes to me as a recommendation from Derek. I asked him once about Tom Waits …