Snyder Than You

Why I am, who I think, maybe how I'm at, sometimes when, and possibly a vague what.
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Posts tagged "writing"
A writer must reflect and interpret his society, his world; he must also provide inspiration and guidance and challenge. Much writing today strikes me as deprecating, destructive, and angry. There are good reasons for anger, and I have nothing against anger. But I think some writers have lost their sense of proportion, their sense of humor, and their sense of appreciation.
Half a century ago, E. B. White articulated brilliantly much of today’s media folly. (via explore-blog)

(via explore-blog)

1. Never use a metaphor, simile, or other figure of speech which you are used to seeing in print.
2. Never use a long word where a short one will do.
3. If it is possible to cut a word out, always cut it out.
4. Never use the passive where you can use the active.
5. Never use a foreign phrase, a scientific word, or a jargon word if you can think of an everyday English equivalent.
6. Break any of these rules sooner than say anything outright barbarous.
After David Ogilvy’s now-infamous 10 tips on writing and Henry Miller’s 11 commandments of writing, here comes a list of rules for writers from George Orwell circa 1946. (via explore-blog)

agirlcalledchris:

snyderly:

agirlcalledchris:

“What if a computer could accurately grade student essays? It could change the way we test students (and the way they’re taught). And a new $100,000 competition is trying to spark auto-grading innovation.”
The End Of Multiple Choice? The Quest To Create Accurate Robot Essay Graders (via fastcompany)

This is the worst fucking idea ever. A computer will never be able to grade essays, particularly literature essays, due to their subjective nature. Sometimes I hate all of the things technology chooses to be.

As an OCD grammar nazi student teacher who recently spent four or five days — probably 30-40 hours — grading 54 five-paragraph essays written by high school freshmen, I can only hope there is some way to make this a reality.

As a nearly middle-aged adult who has watched the world go from 27-volume print encyclopedias and large pieces of vinyl plastic holding 9 to 16 songs to billions of websites full of more  information than a single human can consume in several lifetimes and devices the size of my thumb holding hundreds of songs…

…let alone Google… let’s not even go into that holy-freaking-cow amazement….

Finally, as a strong proponent of high quality education for all, one who strongly despises standardized multiple-choice tests and More No Children Left Behind

I not only know that this will be, at some point, possible, but I beg that it be so, hoping, of course, that somehow it doesn’t get screwed up like everything else in American education has.

But I don’t think this will eliminate standardized testing; in fact, I think this is a more heinous version of standardization. 

I mean, a robot is not going to be able to judge the soundness of a thesis assertion, it cannot tell how well a quote is embedded or whether or not it is pertinent to the argument, it cannot tell opinion from concrete evidence, it won’t be able to differentiate melodramatic or hyperbolic writing, it won’t make sure the right vocabulary is being used (I mean, come on, anyone with Word Thesaurus knows that not all synonyms are applicable in any sentence; in fact, I don’t even believe real synonyms exist, for there is usually a ‘best choice’). So what it’s going to be a program that makes sure everything is spelled correctly, there is the right number of words, and that it has enough talking points, whether or not those are valid. It will be a program, meaning it will be standardized-yet another way to stifle thoughtfulness, because rather than an essay being a tool to think about broader themes in a text, an essay will be quantifiable: how many quotes were used, how many spelling errors?

I’ve graded essays for high-schoolers. Some can be very tedious. Some make you want to rip your hair out. Some make you question your life’s profession because Jesus, do the kids even listen to you at all? I’m as grammar conscious as anyone else who majored in English. But none of these things mean essays should be graded by a robot. 

The elimination of multiple-choice does not mean the elimination of standardization. 

While your concerns are very legitimate and real and probably the same concerns of any decent teacher of language and writing, it’s not impossible. It might not be in the near future, it would probably be very expensive, and it obviously would require voluminous stores of data on word choice, connotation, and every other grammatical and linguistic concern, but it’s not impossible.

Have you seen some of the things people come up with? This is why it is a contest to see if anyone can build such a cognizant, perhaps AI computer. And why they are comparing computer results to real teacher results.

Of course, with the swift adoption of smartphones, tablets, smartboards, websites and content management, and even just computers into some school systems, and, worse yet, into many classrooms and curricula, even after this technology does become viable (let alone “affordable”), it will still be years before it becomes accepted, let alone standard, practice.

Finally, I don’t expect multiple choice to go away and I think it does have its place in student assessment. It just shouldn’t be the primary method.

Actually, I do have my doubts someone can make it work. After all, Tumblr still can’t even keep tags for reblogs.

agirlcalledchris:

“What if a computer could accurately grade student essays? It could change the way we test students (and the way they’re taught). And a new $100,000 competition is trying to spark auto-grading innovation.”
The End Of Multiple Choice? The Quest To Create Accurate Robot Essay Graders (via fastcompany)

This is the worst fucking idea ever. A computer will never be able to grade essays, particularly literature essays, due to their subjective nature. Sometimes I hate all of the things technology chooses to be.

As an OCD grammar nazi student teacher who recently spent four or five days — probably 30-40 hours — grading 54 five-paragraph essays written by high school freshmen, I can only hope there is some way to make this a reality.

As a nearly middle-aged adult who has watched the world go from 27-volume print encyclopedias and large pieces of vinyl plastic holding 9 to 16 songs to billions of websites full of more  information than a single human can consume in several lifetimes and devices the size of my thumb holding hundreds of songs…

…let alone Google… let’s not even go into that holy-freaking-cow amazement….

Finally, as a strong proponent of high quality education for all, one who strongly despises standardized multiple-choice tests and More No Children Left Behind

I not only know that this will be, at some point, possible, but I beg that it be so, hoping, of course, that somehow it doesn’t get screwed up like everything else in American education has.

thedailywhat:

Great job posting or greatest job posting?:

We want to add some talent to the Sarasota Herald-Tribune investigative team. Every serious candidate should have a proven track record of conceiving, reporting and writing stellar investigative pieces that provoke change. However, our ideal candidate has also cursed out an editor, had spokespeople hang up on them in anger and threatened to resign at least once because some fool wanted to screw around with their perfect lede.

We do a mix of quick hit investigative work when events call for it and mini-projects that might run for a few days. But every year we like to put together a project way too ambitious for a paper our size because we dream that one day Walt Bogdanich will have to say: “I can’t believe the Sarasota Whatever-Tribune cost me my 20th Pulitzer.” As many of you already know, those kinds of projects can be hellish, soul-sucking, doubt-inducing affairs. But if you’re the type of sicko who likes holing up in a tiny, closed  office with reporters of questionable hygiene to build databases from scratch by hand-entering thousands of pages of documents to take on powerful people and institutions that wish you were dead, all for the glorious reward of having readers pick up the paper and glance at your potential prize-winning epic as they flip their way to the Jumble… well, if that sounds like journalism Heaven, then you’re our kind of sicko.

For those unaware of Florida’s reputation, it’s arguably the best news state in the country and not just because of the great public records laws. We have all kinds of corruption, violence and scumbaggery. The 9/11 terrorists trained here. Bush read My Pet Goat here. Our elections are colossal clusterf*cks. Our new governor once ran a health care company that got hit with a record fine because of rampant Medicare fraud. We have hurricanes, wildfires, tar balls, bedbugs, diseased citrus trees and an entire town overrun by giant roaches (only one of those things is made up). And we have Disney World and beaches, so bring the whole family.

Send questions, or a resume/cover letter/links to clips to my email address below. If you already have your dream job, please pass this along to someone whose skills you covet. Thanks.

Matthew Doig

Sarasota Herald-Tribune
1741 Main St.
Sarasota FL, 34236
(941) 361-4903
matthew.doig@heraldtribune.com

[motherjones.]

This almost makes me wish I liked news writing, let alone Florida, a bit more.

(via thedailywhat)

I seriously did not want to do this, and still don’t, but I thought I’d put this out there and see what happens.

So I’ve been unemployed for two years now. And we’ve made it this far somehow - thanks mostly to family and to Jobs & Family Services and to tax refunds and yard sales… But I’m at a loss. I’m currently in school trying to get my teaching license and have little time for a decent job search let alone to get a job… although, if history serves, even Wal-Mart and McDonald’s haven’t and won’t call me.

So I’m looking to you, my friends, colleagues, and acquaintances. I love the concept of microfinance and the power of social networking. I have no income at all, so anything you can donate will help:

  • Keep the landlords, who already hate us and have threatened eviction twice, off our backs.
  • Pay the utilities (electric, gas, and sewer).
  • Keep us in diapers (hopefully pullups very soon), vitamins, and socks.
  • If you guys are so generous, it could even help pay for car insurance, repairs, and fuel to get to substitute teaching or field experience or class.
  • I won’t even ask about the cell phone bill or the internet.

I have started to dabble in freelance and content creation (textbroker.com), but haven’t really gotten into it, and, like I said, have school to deal with, also. And I have no idea about managing a small business (and I’m Asperger and ADHD, which makes things more interesting).

I’m not eager to beg, but feel compelled to try this. And if you want something in return, I can do almost anything on a computer short of creating music or high-quality video. If it’s words, slideshows, page layout, or pestering people on social networks, I’m your guy and will gladly work for the money.

The other thing about this is that I know that I would help anyone I could, and have always been a bit loose with my money and people in need. If you guys fund me more than I need, believe me, surplus will find it’s way into a charity or someone else’s pockets.

To be more specific, I need around $850 a month for shelter, utilities, diapers and vitamins, and to keep some gas the van’s tank. Another $300 would take the van payment and cell phone bill off of my mom’s hands (she’s hurting, too, but has a job and helps as much as she can).

Disclosure: I have a wife and three kids. When she’s not ill or dealing with migraines, she maintains the house and tries to school the kids.

And if I could get a full-time job right now — writing, editing, proofreading, powerpointing, or desktop publishing… I’d drop out of school in a moment and would be so freakin’ ecstatic.

Thank you for your time and consideration. And anything you are willing to give.

Comments and reblogs are also welcome.

Does anyone know anything about this site? Others like it? I need to get an income of some kind and writing might be the key.