The internet has expedited the information age in every way. Academic collaboration has been facilitated by online communication. I wanted to highlight a new website which has many scientific lectures online. Compared to generic video sites such as www.video.google.com/ and www.youtube.com, sites that contain random videos, videolectures.net specializes in scientific and academic lectures. (more…)
Archive for the ‘Lessons’ Category
Videolectures.net
Friday, January 9th, 2009The Ten Commandments (for teachers), Part II
Wednesday, August 27th, 2008In an earlier entry, I had mentioned the first five of Polya’s ten commandments for teaching. In a similar fashion to that entry, here are the last five rules with some comments on them:
6. Let them learn to guess: guessing can be a pathway to proof (in the case of mathematics) and discovery (in the case of sciences). The key is to make more educated guesses. It helps if an easier approach can be taken. In algorithm design, we are also used to first trying out easier methods and then resort to more subtle approaches. (more…)
The Ten Commandments (for teachers), Part I
Tuesday, August 26th, 2008The advanced reader who skips parts that appear too elementary may miss more than the reader who skips parts that appear too complex – G. Polya
I was going through some books when I re-discovered a classic work by George Polya. Polya, who is better known for his best selling work entitled ‘How to solve it‘, wrote extensively on methods of learning, teaching and problem solving. The book which I re-discovered is more in depth and is called ‘Mathematical Discovery: On Understanding, Learning, and Teaching Problem Solving’. In one of the essays in the book, Polya proposes ten perennial rules for teaching. I’ll summarise the first five with my personal thoughts on them: (more…)
Putting Things into Perspective
Tuesday, August 12th, 2008
(The photograph is taken from http://download.srv.cs.cmu.edu/~pausch/)
Just when one starts to take degrees and careers too seriously one realizes that there are more important things: life itself, for instance! Lance Fortnow has an entry about Randy Pausch who passed away due to pancreatic cancer on 25th July 2008. Randy was a distinguished computer science professor at CMU with contributions in human-computer interaction. Randy had been commenting on his last days on this webpage. (more…)
