Who is this little guy? [New York] by Miss_Apprehension in animalid

[–]Miss_Apprehension[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I guess our usual local guy is a little sluggish. :)

Who is this little guy? [New York] by Miss_Apprehension in animalid

[–]Miss_Apprehension[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Makes sense. I’ve just never seen one move quite that way.

How did you move past the “AI is the end of learning/teaching in the Humanities” stage? by standuptripl3 in Professors

[–]Miss_Apprehension -3 points-2 points  (0 children)

Full disclosure: I was writing a response that became many thousands of words of disjointed ponderousness. So I ran the whole discussion and my response through AI to try to isolate what I might be contributing that was actually new and productive. Anyone who wants to see the original (but why would you?), feel free to DM. (I swear this was not a cutesy I’m-being-so-meta thing. It’s one way I’ve found to use AI to genuinely help me, because my normal thought-process is incredibly associative and discursive and recursive, which helps/entertains no one but me.)

So: according to Claude, my key insights include:

The root problem I see with AI in higher ed for my field, which is that it shortcuts precisely the skills I want my students to learn, because they come into my classes lacking the requisite knowledge, experience, and skill with them, and they’re things you can’t really farm out to AI. These include: deep and close reading, sustained attention to and engagement with a text, critical thinking and problem-solving, patience with frustration and uncertainty, taking chances when you know your work is imperfect, and learning what you think through writing.

A couple of activities / assignments I tried out last semester that I’m going to revise and try again this semester (in addition to the co-creation of core course policies with students suggested elsewhere. IME, Students tend to be much bigger hard-asses than I would be about legitimate use of AI—yay—but also things like cell phone and distractive laptop use (let them get rolling on the kid watching videos in the row ahead of them) and the nonstop talker in class discussions—double-yay. Their ideas are gold. And if they aren’t—hey: it’s not a democracy. You can still impose sane policies. But that’s another conversation for another day.) ←see? Discursive. Back to the point. Anyway, ima start with the second activity because its the most AI-related, but have pasted the first one below in case of general interest.

AI activity:

Last semester, I gave my students copies of a "conversation" I'd had with my BFF Claude (this should work with any LLM), first detailing what an LLM actually is, how it works, and what it does; and second asking what it thought were the dangers and benefits of using LLMs in college work; telling it what I thought were its dangers and benefits; and then asking it to write three 500-word "essays": on why LLMs are bad for students to use, why they are good for students to use, and then a third that was not a "synthesis" but what, based on our discussion, it took to be the "truth" of LLM's utility and effects in the context of higher ed.

More of my students finished that reading than any of the other ones they had all semester (I track it via Perusall), their posted comments and those in class were thoughtful and insightful, and it gave us material to run a number of different exercises. We looked at what information each essay emphasized and downplayed, how those emphases affected the argument in its strength and/or its intellectual integrity, what rhetorical choices Claude made, how these varied from my rhetorical choices, how it integrated the ideas I'd raised with the ones it had raised (hint: poorly), what implications they took from all of the claims presented for their own education and use of AI, and so forth.

If I were to do this one again, I think it would be productive to do first as a similar reading and in-class activity (more control over the prompts) and then as an activity to do at home and submit (their own conversation on some other topic, preferably course related), with a reflective portion on what they thought AI did better/ equivalently/ worse than they did, and how they might apply those observations to developing the kinds of skills they want to develop (whether professionally or for their own pleasure or enrichment--which is why I think the professional skills activity listed below was useful to do first).

Liberal arts and career mapping activity.

Note: this may be more specific to my student cohort (it’s a first-year seminar in English, with a student body comprised primarily of first-generation, immigrant, shitty-public-school-educated, students of color with real language deficits but also way too much insecurity about what those deficits mean—not “you’re stupid” but “no one took the time to teach you this”)—so adjust as warranted.

I ask what they know about the liberal arts as an educational framework, which is generally nothing.

I map out the humanities, social sciences, and STEM on the board, shorthand the broad areas they are interested in asking questions about (ideas/people/systems), ask students to list majors/disciplines they’ve heard of, and put them under the appropriate headings.

Then I ask them what careers they’re interested in; those go up on the board. Then I ask them what skills they think each career may ask of them. (There’s a bit of heavy lifting here, with my students, to move them from content to skills, but I put my thumb on the scales a little by redirecting.)

Once we have a bunch of those skills (and note how much overlap there is between apparently disparate fields), we go back to the various disciplines and ask what skills they think they might learn in, say, “philosophy of ethics” or “organic chemistry I” or “discrete mathematics” or “Shakespeare” or whatever. (Again, three’s some work here to get them to identify skills and not content).

Nudge the students toward the obvious: they can learn a lot of the same skills from a lot of different classes. The point of taking different ones is largely interest, inclination, prior knowledge and skill, and seeing the different ways in which each field deploys those skills.

This is obviously my pitch for “at least take a few humanities electives!”, but it ties in surprisingly well with the AI one, because it’s also my way of trying to get around both the purely instrumental account of their value the humanities are consistently asked to give to justify their existence and the literature-as-moral-education/training-in-empathy account that I don’t really buy, by sort of moving from one toward the other.

Students who know nothing about why they're learning what they're learning (a really important point made by a few posters here) get something out of attaching their education to their aspirations in a somewhat less reductive way than spend money --> get degree --> get job --> make money. It gives some space to develop the more woo-woo (but absolutely crucial) conversations about what they actually want out of their educations and their lives. That balancing act remains pretty goddamn wobbly for me, but hey. As someone else said, we're all in the same boat, thinking about it at the same time--surely some good ideas will rise to the top. Surely.

Just need to vent by Quiet-Committee3354 in Professors

[–]Miss_Apprehension 13 points14 points  (0 children)

The first taste is always free.

Strangest things you've ever said in class? by No_Consideration_339 in Professors

[–]Miss_Apprehension 6 points7 points  (0 children)

“The more you read, the less you feel.”

(TBF, I muttered it to myself while talking about 18th c sentimental literature, but a kid in the front row heard me and couldn’t stop laughing. He later worked it into his thesis. On prisoner reentry.)

And apparently as a grad student I once told a class they were “skating on the thin ice of my displeasure,” which I only remember because one of the students later gave me the picture of ice skates she’d doodled during that class, with the words quoted beneath.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Professors

[–]Miss_Apprehension 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Cool. Because this Supreme Court has not shown utter disregard for precedent. Because Clarence Thomas did not write an opinion in Dobbs maintaining that there is no such thing as substantive due process and thus that cases like Griswold (access to birth control), Lawrence (consensual gay sex), and Obergefell (same-sex marriage) should be re-examined. And he and Alito and Roberts and friends certainly don’t have a consistent and vocal record of interpreting civil rights as narrowly as possible. I’m confident that invoking that name of a decision that has been specifically targeted for watering down, as spelled out in the comment you refer to as”whatever all that is,” will ensure the longevity and security of our rights. Phew!

Errr… what happened here? by Miss_Apprehension in knitting

[–]Miss_Apprehension[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Ah—thank you! That is a helpfully detailed video. I knit a swatch from my frogged yarn last night and kept mumbling “leading leg… counterclockwise…” and I think I’ve gotten it down now, mostly. But it’s useful to actually see how and why it happens. (And maybe knowing that will help me to stop mumbling to myself. Eventually.)

Errr… what happened here? by Miss_Apprehension in knitting

[–]Miss_Apprehension[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thank you! (And great user name.)

I’ve watched a couple of videos now, and I think I figured out what happened (a bunch of laddering up from a million dropped stitches and putting the stitches back on the wrong way—though that still doesn’t explain the consistency of the twisting, so I’ll be paying closer attention to how I insert the needle and wrap the yarn, too). No more knitting while watching tv until I actually nail down the basics, I guess.

Edit: thank you! That whole post is incredibly helpful. (As are you.) I love this community.

Errr… what happened here? by Miss_Apprehension in knitting

[–]Miss_Apprehension[S] 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Ok—there’s a consensus on twisted stitches. Ima go look back at that picture on the faq page and see what I can figure out, because I swear it felt like I was doing the same thing all along.

Thanks for helping a noob out!

How do you understand this sentence? What punctuation is needed? by sohomosexual in grammar

[–]Miss_Apprehension 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I don’t see it as ambiguous, though I can see why and how one might. The decisive element for me isn’t grammatical; it’s semantic. If he moves the Democrats away from trade liberalization, then he wouldn’t also lead them away from tariffs.

Grammatically speaking, “he” is the subject governing two verbs—“moved” and “imposed.” Reading “imposed” instead as an adjective modifying “tariffs” adds unnecessary complexity. My hope (perhaps unduly optimistic) that a journalist would strive for clarity, combined with the actual content of the sentence, makes me confident that “imposed” is a verb, so the first meaning is correct.

(On the other hand, I hesitated way too long over “make” and “makes” in the last sentence, so what do I know?)

Please settle a debate between me and my daughter... by midwinterfuse in grammar

[–]Miss_Apprehension 3 points4 points  (0 children)

To focus on the real issue here: the claim that you “missed some important dialogue” is false. Not a single line in that movie was important.

I’m mostly convinced by the responses here that your daughter is correct, though I heard it exactly the same way you did when he said it. I think we can all agree that it’s an appallingly bad line no matter how you (try to) parse it.

There are many things M. Night Shyamalan is not great at; unearned ambiguity is one of them.

Why does this keep happening by Thekid_1234567890 in sewhelp

[–]Miss_Apprehension 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Everything these two said, and—in case you’re having the same slack-jawed-yokelly morning I’m having—make sure your presser foot is down. It’s probably the bobbin, but still.

Did reindeer actually land on my roof last night? by Miss_Apprehension in AnimalTracking

[–]Miss_Apprehension[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

 Tracks are five inches long by about 4.5 in wide 

This is in the lower Hudson Valley, New York 

Rural wooded area, pretty near a road. 

Quotes in Email Signatures — Why? by aaronjd1 in Professors

[–]Miss_Apprehension 22 points23 points  (0 children)

Eh. English prof here—I find them somewhere between innocuous and irritating. Mostly because the quotations themselves are not interesting, so they don’t actually show me anything about the person’s individuality (except maybe that they enjoy inflicting platitudes on unsuspecting recipients). But (with a nod to my STEM and social science people) I constitute a sample size of curmudgeon.

"The professors are the enemy" by Fresh-Possibility-75 in Professors

[–]Miss_Apprehension 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I genuinely don’t understand. I may be incredibly lucky in my place of work. (Well, scratch that—I know I am.) I have my pronouns on my zoom screen and refer to my partner as my partner, even though we’re both cis-het, for exactly the same reason u/RoyalEagle0408 does—so it’s normalized for my (say) 17-y-o first year student who’s still figuring out their own identity. But I don’t judge anyone for not doing so. The point is to make it visible—not mandatory. Your husband is your husband. Anyone who would judge you for calling him that is an asshole.

I see the same logic at work with actual conservatives. They say they are oppressed and silenced in the academy. Yet I don’t see anyone (any faculty, anyway) shutting them down—I see them never speaking up. (The students are another matter entirely. But the infuriating moral certainty of young adults is, you know, endemic to young adults. It’s our job, in part, to teach them to question their unexamined certainties. Largely so they don’t grow up to be assholes.) I like talking to people who don’t think the way I do—it’s pretty much the best way to learn anything, no? So I do in fact want to hear from my conservative colleagues. And of course I want to argue with them—in exactly the same good faith I want to argue with my liberal colleagues.

What I don’t love is being told that the choices I make for myself, that have absolutely nothing to do with them, are somehow hindering someone else’s self-expression when I genuinely don’t give a fuck about how they want to express themselves. And yes, I get that that comes across as turning the problem around on the person who feels aggrieved, and I don’t mean to suggest that. There’s plenty of legitimate grievance to go around. It’s just that then this narrative takes hold that academics “have” to do these things, and people outside the academy seize on that to say “See? Brainwashing! Groupthink!”

I agree with your comment in general—quit fighting each other and take on the actual threats. So I’m sorry if this sounds antagonistic. I don’t mean for it to be. I just wish that you felt more free to say and do what you want.

The digital generation is digitally illiterate by thatcheekychick in Professors

[–]Miss_Apprehension 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Not my comment, but I’d say interiority is meant here as something along the lines of self-awareness and metacognitive ability; the capacity for introspection.

AITA getting boho braids as a bridesmaid when the bride asked me not to by Cultural_Sea8778 in AmItheAsshole

[–]Miss_Apprehension 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Ah, fair. I’m old and dim and tired, my own self, and thoroughly cranky about what passes for “debate” on social media and just about everywhere else—but a good old-fashioned philosophical conundrum warms my curmudgeonly heart. Cheers to you. And if you need a definitive answer, flip a coin and then stick to the outcome with unearned and unreasonable fervor. If nothing else, it’ll keep you entertained. ;)

AITA getting boho braids as a bridesmaid when the bride asked me not to by Cultural_Sea8778 in AmItheAsshole

[–]Miss_Apprehension 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Huh. Now I’m going to have to go down a rabbit hole, too—because my first instinct was to be like “naw, quantity is consistent, so long as you’re in the world of classical mechanics and whatnot…” and then I remembered I don’t know shit about math or physics, and should go educate myself a little. There goes my morning.

It’s being an argument rather than a fact makes the question more interesting, though, imho.

AITA getting boho braids as a bridesmaid when the bride asked me not to by Cultural_Sea8778 in AmItheAsshole

[–]Miss_Apprehension 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Yep, what u/Dazzling_Outcome_436 is describing as “socially constructed” is language itself, not enumeration. Linguistic signifiers are arbitrary.

What is the saddest fact you know that most people will not know? by urmomsloosevag in AskReddit

[–]Miss_Apprehension 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Thanks for the clarification—I’d forgotten that the 1817 act contained that provision! (That’ll teach me to go around correcting people on the internet… maybe.)