Say yes to things you would normally say no to! On my last sabbatical I went to two unusual events: a science communication conference and a game-design and education industry meet-up. Both sparked new ideas / new perspectives for research and teaching.
Curious for a slightly deeper dive into the Music Perception infographic series I shared last month? Click on over to Substack for more. #psychscisky#psychology#musicopen.substack.com/pub/ericakle...
Music perception research offers insight into a fav pastime of mine - is it one of yours, too?
Stumbling upon posts like this is what makes social media so fun! Thnx for the share
A great example and lesson we shld be sharing all over the place this election season!
I wish Iād heard this sage advice when I was early-career, so Iām sharing now! I knew ācorrectiveā wasnāt working but it took a brave student to share āHow her Eng Prf did itā for me find a different way. Iām now a champion: give Agentic a try. www.scientificamerican.com/article/usef...
Teacher feedback that gives students options can make them feel empowered
Thanks for this!
I have this article: www.frontiersin.org/journals/art... but wld like something from Psych to add to the human side of the story too. Deweyās 2012 paper wld work, but I am Hoping for something newer and more engaging.
AI is one of the most debated subjects of today and there seems little common understanding concerning the differences and similarities of human intelligence...
Iām all ears if you are willing to share some of your ideas too tho? Either here or in a direct messageā¦ wld love to connect.
Thatās super generous of you Christina! I agree that it is a squishy and convoluted topic- which is the point I intend to get across as we compare human to artificial agents. I have some good lecture content Iāve worked up over the years but I want to add a reading for students later reference too.
Thanks for this rec! For my class upcoming I need something briefer but I will check this out for my own sake.