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Scooped by
Ana Cristina Pratas
February 17, 2016 6:40 AM
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Voices in the Feminine - Female Voices Around the Web
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Scooped by
Ana Cristina Pratas
Today, 3:18 AM
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“We cannot deeply love anything without becoming vulnerable to loss. And we cannot become separate people, responsible people, connected people, reflective people without some losing and leav…
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Scooped by
Ana Cristina Pratas
July 24, 7:45 AM
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“It’s a mercy that time runs in one direction only, that we see the past but darkly and the future not at all.”
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Scooped by
Ana Cristina Pratas
July 10, 7:33 AM
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British astronaut Tim Peake* recently wrote: “We stand on the brink of what will be the most adventurous and exciting decade yet in the history of space flight.” Peake was reflecting on risky and competitive first space flights to purposeful missions aimed at sustaining life beyond Earth.
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Scooped by
Ana Cristina Pratas
July 4, 8:48 AM
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“Nothing beats kindness… It sits quietly beyond all things.”
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Scooped by
Ana Cristina Pratas
June 29, 12:02 PM
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I am in hospice care and reflecting a lot on what a good life is.
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Scooped by
Ana Cristina Pratas
June 25, 8:35 AM
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Practical, low-tech ways to support student engagement and faculty wellbeing in online classes—especially during stressful end-of-semester weeks.
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Scooped by
Ana Cristina Pratas
June 24, 9:32 AM
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Scooped by
Ana Cristina Pratas
June 16, 3:26 PM
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"There is no one way to think, hell, often there is no way to think at all as one grieves. How does one, how can one ever even think about the loss of a loved one – parent, child, lover, friend – before or after it occurs? So I appreciate too the heavy work that other writers have undertaken to try to express the inexpressible, to try to understand the unfathomable. Here's where I pause for the refrain, the reminder: artificial intelligence "knows" nothing. It "knows" nothing because it "experiences" nothing. Debate all you want about "reasoning" and "reasoning models." The provocative and disruptive ways of thinking lie elsewhere – in imagination, in curiosity, in hope, in unraveling... in how we grapple with love and loss."
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Scooped by
Ana Cristina Pratas
June 6, 5:32 AM
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"'Now, what I want is, Facts. Teach these boys and girls nothing but Facts. Facts alone are wanted in life. Plant nothing else, and root out everything else. You can only form the minds of reasoning animals upon Facts: nothing else will ever be of any service to them. This
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Scooped by
Ana Cristina Pratas
June 4, 9:02 AM
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Explore how students are using generative AI beyond writing—to create visuals, design slides, enhance presentations, and communicate more effectively in business communication courses.
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Scooped by
Ana Cristina Pratas
June 2, 8:39 AM
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"She calls for something beyond empathy, something achingly missing from our harsh culture of dueling gotchas — a literature of tenderness: Tenderness is the art of personifying, of sharing feelings, and thus endlessly discovering similarities. Creating stories means constantly bringing things to life, giving an existence to all the tiny pieces of the world that are represented by human experiences, the situations people have endured and their memories. Tenderness personalizes everything to which it relates, making it possible to give it a voice, to give it the space and the time to come into existence, and to be expressed."
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Scooped by
Ana Cristina Pratas
June 1, 10:48 AM
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Narrow the aperture of your attention enough to take in any one thing fully, and it becomes a portal to everything. Anneal that attention enough so that you see whatever and whoever is before you f…
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Scooped by
Ana Cristina Pratas
Today, 3:21 AM
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Improve student communication with practical, theory-based strategies to reach today’s learners across platforms with empathy, clarity, and connection.
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Scooped by
Ana Cristina Pratas
July 25, 5:07 AM
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Over a decade ago, at the height of the MOOC madness, many people crowed excitedly about "the end of college" – not because the various technologies they believed would enable this were any good (by "good" I mean either "pedagogically sound" or "at all pleasant to use"), but because they hoped
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Scooped by
Ana Cristina Pratas
July 13, 6:59 AM
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I once asked ChatGPT to write a poem about a total solar eclipse in the style of Walt Whitman. It returned a dozen couplets of cliches that touched nothing, changed nothing in me. The AI had the wh…
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Scooped by
Ana Cristina Pratas
July 6, 9:59 AM
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One of the most important things to have learned in life is that choosing joy in a world rife with reasons for despair is a countercultural act of courage and resistance, choosing it not despite th…
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Scooped by
Ana Cristina Pratas
July 2, 1:59 PM
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Learn how to transform your unique perspective and insights into valuable content that will help you develop thought leadership as a learning professional.
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Scooped by
Ana Cristina Pratas
June 27, 9:21 AM
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"(...) But here's what I think: most people don't want "AI." Most people are exhausted by the onslaught of technology "upgrades" that have consistently made everything worse. Most people stopped being wowed by technology a decade ago because they don't have a stock portfolio or consulting gig that demands their ooohs and aaahs. Most people know "AI" is bad for their future – that it's something their bosses want in order to surveil, control, and probably fire them. (According to Bloomberg, tech companies are no longer bragging about the "hyperscaling" of their user-base; they're boasting about how few people are on their payrolls.) There's a reason that one of the big backers of Cuomo, alongside the Democratic establishment, was DoorDash incidentally: the future of work is piecemeal employment algorithmically organized."
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Scooped by
Ana Cristina Pratas
June 24, 9:35 AM
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"There is a deep disorder in the discourse of generative artificial intelligence (AI). When AI seems to make things up or distort reality — adding extra fingers to human hands, inventing nonexistent court cases, or generating surreal advertisements — we commonly describe them as AI hallucinations. But a metaphor of hallucination reinforces the misconception that AI is conscious; it implies that AI experiences reality and sometimes becomes delirious. We need a new way to talk about AI outputs when they don't match our expectations for realism or facticity. For this paper, we analyzed the implications of more than 80 alternative terms suggested by scholars, educators, and commentators. Ultimately, we chose a more fitting term: AI mirage. Just as a desert mirage is an artifact of physical conditions, an AI mirage is an artifact of how systems process training data and prompts. In both cases, a human can mistake a mirage for reality or see it for what it really is. We propose the general use of the term AI mirage in place of AI hallucination because it can help build AI literacies, prompting us to explore how AI generates outputs and how humans decide what those outputs mean."
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Scooped by
Ana Cristina Pratas
June 18, 3:33 AM
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"From reactive to predictive design: Rather than designing based on past experiences and receiving feedback after development, we can now simulate learner responses before committing resources to development phases. From generic to psychologically informed design: Instead of treating learners as cognitive processing units with preferences, we can engage with them as complete psychological entities with complex motivations, concerns, and contextual pressures. From assumption-based to evidence-based iteration: AI personas provide methodologically sound alternatives between expensive learner research and assumption-driven decisions, offering evidence-based insights with superior reliability compared to conjecture while maintaining greater accessibility than comprehensive learner studies."
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Scooped by
Ana Cristina Pratas
June 8, 10:23 AM
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The Importance of Art Education with or without AI Sociologist Zygmunt Bauman argued that modernity is characterized by fluidity and that “the job of critical thought is to bring into the light the many obstacles piled on the road to emancipation.” (Bauman, 2000, p. 51).
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Scooped by
Ana Cristina Pratas
June 4, 9:06 AM
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"When an AI cheerfully validates poorly written learning objectives, inappropriate delivery methods, or evaluation strategies that measure satisfaction rather than impact, it's not being helpful—it's enabling underperformance, perhaps even professional malpractice."
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Scooped by
Ana Cristina Pratas
June 3, 2:21 PM
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So let’s get one thing out of the way: I think “AI literacy” is a dangerous device of neoliberal education and it deserves to be dismissed out of hand.
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Scooped by
Ana Cristina Pratas
June 2, 8:37 AM
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Explore the benefits of alternative grading systems, including contract grading and labor-based models, to reduce student stress, enhance motivation, and clarify expectations for success in the classroom.
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Scooped by
Ana Cristina Pratas
May 30, 11:35 AM
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Back in 2012 ("the year of the MOOC"), when Sebastian Thrun told Wired that, in fifty years time there would only be ten universities left in the world and his startup Udacity had a chance to be one of them, I admit, I laughed. I laughed and laughed and laughed (...) Artificial intelligence – not just generative AI but particularly generative AI – is one way to do this, and it functions quite neatly as a package of ideologies and practices that seeks to destroy education. I mean, I know that many folks think they can bend these technologies to "make easy" and "do good," but under our current political and economic conditions, that is dangerous, if not impossible. I am appalled – truly appalled – to read calls to "reconsider reading" because of AI; to outsource not just teaching but thinking to AI; to shrug off research and writing because of an imitation of inquiry that comes packaged with a friendly chat interface; to allocate care and service with AI; and, in the end, to mock those who question and refuse AI – to actively undermine others' choice and autonomy – just because the marketing copy insists "things are changing so fast" and someone's got the stats to "prove" it. "
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