One: Thought which came to me, this evening --
What it means to be Human: to Ascribe Meaning to Everything Else (whether we get it right or not is immaterial).
Two: The English noun, "Sweet," has meant both 'an edible high in sugar' and 'a beloved person' for about an equal amount of time (since circa 1300, C.E.)... I think that's rather ... sweet.
Three: Dragon.
Four: Caught a YouTube video the other night, where some professor dude was explaining about dyscalculia by comparing it to dyslexia... And he said that dyslexia really had nothing to with how the eye scans across the page, but its just that children with it have trouble understanding the proper connection between sounds and letters.
I'm sorry, but (no, correction - not sorry) -- I make a very strong Vexation Face at anyone who discounts and/or tries to explain away reports of people's own experiences in their own words.
My philosophy teacher in college had dyslexia, and so, when we handed in a typed paper for grading, it had to be in a font with serifs. The way she explained it to us (paraphrased, if I recall correctly) was that the arrangement of serifs in relation to each other in a word gave her eyes something to focus on, so she could scan a line of text without the letters going in and out of focus.
That doesn't sound anything like an incomprehension of phonics to me -- especially since she could read handwriting just fine (or with much less trouble).
So naturally, I have my doubts about how he tells us to cure dyscalculia, too...
Five: And the opposite of vexation comes in the form of this post, from last month -- it makes me very, very happy: Choosing lessons.
What it means to be Human: to Ascribe Meaning to Everything Else (whether we get it right or not is immaterial).
Two: The English noun, "Sweet," has meant both 'an edible high in sugar' and 'a beloved person' for about an equal amount of time (since circa 1300, C.E.)... I think that's rather ... sweet.
Three: Dragon.
Four: Caught a YouTube video the other night, where some professor dude was explaining about dyscalculia by comparing it to dyslexia... And he said that dyslexia really had nothing to with how the eye scans across the page, but its just that children with it have trouble understanding the proper connection between sounds and letters.
I'm sorry, but (no, correction - not sorry) -- I make a very strong Vexation Face at anyone who discounts and/or tries to explain away reports of people's own experiences in their own words.
My philosophy teacher in college had dyslexia, and so, when we handed in a typed paper for grading, it had to be in a font with serifs. The way she explained it to us (paraphrased, if I recall correctly) was that the arrangement of serifs in relation to each other in a word gave her eyes something to focus on, so she could scan a line of text without the letters going in and out of focus.
That doesn't sound anything like an incomprehension of phonics to me -- especially since she could read handwriting just fine (or with much less trouble).
So naturally, I have my doubts about how he tells us to cure dyscalculia, too...
Five: And the opposite of vexation comes in the form of this post, from last month -- it makes me very, very happy: Choosing lessons.
no subject
Date: 2012-08-05 10:56 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2012-08-05 03:14 pm (UTC)Ha! Only a little?! It's people like this that (imnsho) makes "I want a flamethrower for my wheelchair!" such a common meme...
no subject
Date: 2012-08-06 09:43 pm (UTC)Re: five, <3
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Date: 2012-08-07 04:37 am (UTC)You know... I think your pet peeve may actually be linked to Number One: that we're each driven to give meaning to everything we see -- and what has meaning for us is constrained by the context of our own limited experiences...
I love the take-away message of Five: You don't "have" to learn every thing, if knowing that thing does not serve you.