I can hardly express how much I disliked the state writing tests. Maybe if I had learned to write good, I could express it better.
Monday, September 28, 2009
Test Graders Stink
A very good piece about the high subjectivity of open-ended test grading, how we need to better standardize the graders.
I can hardly express how much I disliked the state writing tests. Maybe if I had learned to write good, I could express it better.
I can hardly express how much I disliked the state writing tests. Maybe if I had learned to write good, I could express it better.
Wednesday, September 09, 2009
Obama's Health Insurance Reform Speech
My gut reactions to the speech:
"Ours is not the first generation to understand the dire need for health reform. And I am not the first president to take up this cause, but I am determined to be the last."
This comment just sounds really arrogant and in particular aggravated me. Regardless of what happens this year, we'll still need health care reform in the future. It's inevitable. Whatever changes they may make now, our health care system will still be imperfect, and everyone knows it. It might be better, but there will still be plenty of room for improvement. I sure hope he's not the last president to take on health care reform. And then he repeated this exact comment in an email to supports just minutes after the speech. Ay ay ay.
That said, overall, I think he did a very good job of trying to address as many concerns as possible and citing examples of Republicans being involved in the reform process. I'll be reading more and more post-speech analysis as it becomes available and further digesting it in the coming days.
I followed the fivethirtyeight.com live blog of the speech and enjoyed it. I really agree with Nate Silver's point about the advantage of a congressional address:
The images of Republicans clapping alongside Democrats when Obama mentions something like pre-existing conditions is the upside to doing this from the floor of the Congress, rather than another venue like the Oval Office. Note, though, that many Republicans didn't stand up and clap when Obama said "no one should go broke because they get sick."
Anyway, my favorite solution so far to the health insurance crisis is from one of the professors at UNC, Jonathan Oberlander. He wrote about an "all-payer" system in a great article in the New England Journal of Medicine on September 2. By far, it seems the most effective at actually cutting costs, and seems more politically feasible than most other drastic measures.
Sunday, May 24, 2009
Linky linky
Here is a Cleveland newcrew reacting to LeBron's crucial game winner in Game 2. You watch this and feel so bad for Cleveland fans. It's like they are expecting to be cursed forever and never win anything. They totally gave up and were looking to next year...already! via Bill Simmons
Check out the Study Ball and Chain:
Tuesday, May 12, 2009
Good reads
A couple of intersting piecse of writing:
Annals of Innovation: Malcolm Gladwell writes about how David defeats Goliath, in basketball and in life. Very fascinating. Maybe I need to rethink my approach to life.
Vauban, a car free suburb of Freiburg, makes the NY Times. I've been to Vauban when I was studying in Freiburg, though it wasn't finished yet at the time. This article is mostly of interest to me since I've been there, but I also like the bike-focused culture. Freiburg is notably for it's incredible bike-friendly community.
I couldn't believe Detroit traded away Chauncey Billups for Iverson earlier this seaon. Now Denver is crushing teams. The more I learn about Chauncey Billups, the more I like him. Great piece on ESPN's Outside the Lines.
Interesting note: Rick Pitino comes up in two of the above pieces. Completely unplanned.
Labels:
basketball,
Gladwell,
links,
reading,
transport
Friday, May 08, 2009
Thursday, April 23, 2009
Rep Price Introduces Legislation to Honor Heels
Somewhat hilarious, certainly amusing. I'm certainly proud of the Heels, but doesn't Congress have very pressing issues to tackle right now? Maybe this sort of thing happens every year.
Saturday, April 18, 2009
Monday, April 13, 2009
Sunday, April 12, 2009
NBA Team Scouting Report
Scouting out NBA teams for UNC's players:
Ty Lawson: Given Lawson's height and speed, I think he'd be best suited to a run-and-gun environment just like he had at UNC. I can see him wreaking havok in the open court with his usual coast-to-coast cruising, but plodding half-court set teams might not allow him to utilize his strengths. According to John Hollinger, the fastest NBA teams are Golden State (101.1 possessions/game), New York (99.2), Indiana (98.9), and Phoenix (98.3). The slowest NBA teams are Cleveland, San Antonio, New Orleans, Detroit, and Portland, and I think those would be the worst match for him. Of the good matches, I kinda like the idea of him on the Knicks because I hear Mike D'Antoni is supposed to be a great coach, and the other teams I'm not so sure about coaching-wise.
Wayne Ellington: I was pretty impressed with Wayne's performance in the second half of the season. I saw the Miami game where he found his shot, and since then, he's been fantastic. He hit 8 of 10 three pointers in the Final Four. And he was coming off of screens too, not just hitting open jumpers. As NBA shooting guards go, he's a little short at 6'4", so run-and-gun might be best, but if can he nail shots off of screens, then he'd probably be able to get enough separation to get his shot off in the half court set. I'd stick him on the Charlotte Bobcats for all of the Carolina connections, including coach Larry Brown.
Tyler Hansbrough: What stands out to me is that Tyler was 9 of 23 from 3-point range this year, a 39% hit rate. This is pretty impressive for a guy who isn't known for his perimeter play. I'm really happy he has built up this skill while at UNC. He also hit 84% of his free throws, so I think his three point percentage can continue to improve. I see Hansbrough working out well on a veteran team that needs some younger high energy players who will do all the little things and be selfless. I pick San Antonio for the team-first attitude and the great coaching.
Danny Green: He's a solid 3-point shooter, and he collects a lot of steals and blocks, which is an unusual combination. As far as I can tell, one of his weaknesses is ball handling, so maybe if he's on a team with great ballhandlers, he won't be required to dribble too much and he can spot up for open shots. I'm having a tough time finding the perfect situation, but for some reason I keep coming back to Toronto. They've got a good point guard in Jose Calderon (8.8 assists per game, leads point guards in assist/turnover ratio at 4.16), they're a low turnover team, and they play at a medium pace. I'm not really confident about this choice, but hey, I don't get to choose anyway so what does it matter. He'd probably be good on a variety of veteran teams, like Boston, San Antonio, etc.
I hardly know anything about the NBA, so maybe I'm way wrong. Good luck to all the Tar Heels!
Tuesday, April 07, 2009
UNC: National Champions
This UNC team reminded me of 2007 Florida team - they simply dominated and were never seriously challenged. If anything, I think UNC was much more overpowering. There was no way any other team was going to win.
UNC looked like an NBA team in the first half (well, a short NBA team). We were just making every shot. These were difficult shots too, but not out of control circus shots. We had balance. Lawson had 7 first half steals. The whole team played wonderfully. Between last year's player of the year (Hansbrough), this year's ACC player of the year (Lawson) and the Most Outstanding Player of the Final Four (Ellington), our team is pretty much stacked. Any of those 3 are capable of putting up 20 points on any given night, and Green is known to do it from time to time as well.
I felt sorry for Michigan State. The television showed them all teary eyed at the end. We really crushed them. They had come so far against strong odds and the media played up their chances so much to hype the game. I mean, we beat them by 35 earlier in the season, yet the media pretended it was a fair fight, emphasizing the crowd impact, MSU's improvement during the NCAA tournament, etc. Their hopes were raised, and then they were clobbered. Seriously, this entire UNC team has never lost in Cameron Indoor and you think they're going to get scared in a semi-away game because of the crowd impact? I kinda wish it had been a little closer so MSU might not feel so bad. I hope they do well next year.
As Pat Forde pointed out, UNC didn't blow Michigan State out to the point of displacing Duke in the record book for worse loss ever in the NCAA championship. Duke lost to UNLV by 30 points in 1990. This was brilliant strategy by UNC, maintaining Duke's embarrassing record and not embarrassing Michigan State excessively. Long last that Duke record.
Speaking of which, I even almost feel a little sorry for Duke fans. They've been in a drought for quite a while. They haven't even made it to the Elite 8 in ages. They've been suffering while UNC has eclipsed them, dominating the regular season series and NCAA tournament since Roy returned. I think the struggle is good for them though. Surely, when they win their next title, which will probably happen sometime in the next 10-50 years or so, they'll be very appreciative.
And, lastly, I just want a little senior spotlight for Mike Copeland. He's on my all-time underrated team. What a hilarious guy. I love his personalized handshakes for each player on the team. I think it's good for team spirit and it's good for him because he gets on television. Loved how his handshake for Tyler Hansbrough was Tyler ramming into him and Mike collapsing backwards. He seems to be such a good-natured fun loving guy, though sadly this image was somewhat tainted by the fracas at NC State. Before his knee surgery, he was a one-man wrecking crew. He would always come in at the end of games, play 4 minutes and finish with 4 points and a rebound (or so my memory idealistically recalls). Anyhow, I'll miss him. There was one part of the championship game that I really didn't like. At the end of the game, Copeland was in and there was a fast break. He was wide open closing in on the basket, but the scrubby UNC guard selfishly dribbled it all the way up and tried to score for himself. He took a contested shot and missed. Copeland would have been open and likely dunked the ball. Instead, no one got anything.
Monday, April 06, 2009
MJ and Dean
"There's no way you guys would have got a chance to see Michael Jordan play without Dean Smith" - Michael Jordon, upon his election to the Basketball Hall of Fame today
I'm just always amazed at the reverence that former players have for Dean Smith. At one game this year, I think it was the Virginia game, they had all of the UNC players who had been elected to the Hall of Fame present (MJ was not yet elected) for a ceremony of recognition. And during the ceremony, everyone deferred to Smith. The players all pointed to him, and I think it was Billy Cunningham who even started bowing to him. Dean, of course, was embarrassed and in "aww shucks" mode. It's impressive how much his players admire him.
Sunday, April 05, 2009
UNC and Pace
Ken Pomeroy has a very interesting piece on UNC and pace, identifying a few specific areas at which UNC uniquely dominates (scoring points after opponent scores or some stoppage).
Monday, March 30, 2009
Comment on UNC-Oklahoma
I don't think I've ever seen so many missed dunks in one game. Any by only one team. Roy is going to have them practice their dunking skills. At least UNC played great defense.
Tuesday, February 24, 2009
FoxNews Headlines
Here are the FoxNews headlines on their website following Obama's speech tonight (all of the headlines pertaining to his speech):
Obama Hits Hope Theme
President walks fine line between honesty about economic crisis, optimism for future | 1ST 100 DAYS
• Obama Errs in Saying U.S. Invented Automobiles
• AP FACT CHECK: Obama Glosses Over Complexities
• Jindal: Obama's Economic Plan Irresponsible
• Obama's Reputation as Good Speaker Debatable
Though I was listening while working, I thought it was a pretty good speech.
Burke and Obama
David Brooks has a warning of caution to the Obama administration about taking on too much at once. I think he makes some good points. The current economic situation certainly requires bold action, but proceding with caution and trying to build off of existing systems is a good way to good.
Jungle Primaries
Fivethirtyeight.com has an interesting article about jungles primaries. And it also has gotten "Welcome to the Jungle" from Guns and Roses stuck in my head. It seems to me like jungle primaries would be generally a good thing, probably allowing for more cooperation between parties and less extremism. I had never really considered before how much our current primary system feeds into our partisanship.
Monday, February 23, 2009
Wednesday, February 18, 2009
Low-Tech Fixes For High-Tech Problems
The NY Times has a cool little article about using low-tech stuff to fix high-tech devices when they break. No guarantees, but amusing and some may be worth a try. I've heard of kids successfuly using the cellphone in rice technique before.
If your home Wi-Fi router doesn’t reach the other end of the house, don’t rush out to buy more wireless gear to stretch your network. Instead, build a six-inch-high passive radio wave reflector from kitchen items, like an aluminum cookie sheet.
Thursday, February 12, 2009
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)