2011-01-27

Grants & Remediation

A FAQ on New York State TAP (Tuition Assistance Program) grants says this:

Can I get TAP for remedial courses? Remedial courses may be counted towards either full-time or part time enrollment for TAP purposes. However, to qualify for TAP, you must always be registered for a certain number of degree credit courses. [http://www.cuny.edu/admissions/financial-aid/grants-scholarships/nys-grants.html]

Now, why would you want to incentivize taking degree-credit courses when someone hasn't yet completed necessary remedial courses (i.e., prerequisites thereof)? In fact -- require full-time registration for credit courses prior to paying for remedial courses? Especially so when we know half or more of such students won't graduate from the program? (Link.)

That seems quite backwards. Complete the basics first (remediation), then qualify for funding for credit courses afterward.


2010-10-06

Stuff I'm Reading

"Preferred numbers" in engineering and product design; standardized near-logarithm increments to make both interchanging parts and mental arithmetic as easy as possible. (I've liked 1-2-5 for some time, myself.)

The "19-equal temperament" scale in music, a proposal to divide the octave (doubling of frequency) into 19 near-logarithmic parts. Argued in composer Joel Mandelbaum's PhD thesis that it's the only viable system with a number of divisions on this order of magnitude. Coincidentally matches the Hebrew calendar system and its pattern of leap years.

2010-09-24

One-Day Calculus Lecture

Dan's brief one-day calculus lecture (1-page PDF): link.

2010-09-17

Morse Code




Visited the USS Intrepid aircraft carrier museum yesterday (here in New York City). Among the numerous exhibits in the hangar deck is this one on Morse Code. The scrolling digital blue lines are supposed to be translations of each other. What's rather glaringly wrong with this?

2010-09-01

Now I Use More Greek Letters


Here's one of the full-page ads currently running on the Virgin Mobile USA home page. Thanks, you jackasses.

2010-08-31

Permutation Puzzle

Among the things I'm not good at are combinatorics and whatnot -- Let's say you have a fixed set of 18 numbers all in the range from 1 to 6 (so obviously a bunch of duplicates), and you need to put 3 of the numbers in each of 6 ordered bins. How many ways can the totals in all the bins come out?

2010-08-25

On Corrupt Godless Programmers

There's a kerfuffle around Second Life at the moment and some shady antics of 3rd-party clients that are officially allowed to connect to the game. That I wouldn't care about, except that it motivated one of the fiercer critics to come up with this novel argument: computer programming (especially 3D) is inherently a godless and corrupt activity.

This completely short-circuits my usual "angry" filter. Is this a genuinely new idea in the world? Or is this the same as Dungeons & Dragons game religious criticism back in the 80's?

It's all about criminality.

And yes, I will say that coding as an activity does corrupt. I think it's because geeks as a class tend to be godless or agnostic. Sure, you will find the occasional self-professed believing Christian or Muslim or Jew, but by and large, coders do not recognize a Higher Power. They are not People of the Book, because they only recognize their own book, which is code. There are some that realize this manufactured, man-made thing is merely a creation, and not the Creator, and merely a bad imitation of the Creator's works in Nature. But most don't. Most think the coded artifacts are *better*.

This cult of the belief in code-as-law and coders as god particularly infects the virtual world industry, where people get to code not merely some word-processing application or processor of some function on the web, but get to control human beings very visibly, in the round, in 3-D. They love that.

I don't.

I think it's the beginning of their criminality, by which I mean their violations of the law and civilization norms to take, keep, and abuse power.