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Dive into the fascinating world of storytelling with Dr Simon Raybould, as he unravels the power behind the stories we tell. Simon challenges the traditional approach of parroted tales and introduces a more forensic use of stories to inspire true change. From prioritising factual storytelling over fictional narratives to emphasising truth and rigour in your information consumption, Simon's insights will reshape how you perceive stories, transforming them into powerful tools for real change. If you want to make a difference, embrace storytelling with substance. KEY TAKEAWAY ‘If it inspires you at all, that inspiration lasts no more than a few minutes biochemically and a few hours psychologically and maybe at best, a few days behaviourally.' BOOK RECOMMENDATIONS* Factfulness by Hans Rosling, Ola Rosling, Anna Rosling Rönnlund - https://amzn.eu/d/0uADPtO StoryMaking by Dr Simon Raybould - https://amzn.eu/d/1i7yrJK ABOUT SIMON Simon Raybould began his career as a university researcher, with his PhD focusing on environmental factors that may contribute to childhood leukaemia. His work was primarily rooted in complex statistical analysis rather than medicine and he and his colleagues made significant progress in understanding how to prevent the disease. He went on to spend over 24 years as a professional researcher in academia. Beyond research, Simon has worked as an actor, lighting designer and even a fire-eater. His diverse experiences led to a keen interest in communication particularly in conveying complex research findings to politicians and policymakers in a clear, accessible and unambiguous manner, often in high-pressure situations. This meticulous attention to precision and clarity now underpins his work as a trainer, speaker and author, ensuring that his insights are both rigorous and easily understood. CONNECT WITH SIMON LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/simon-raybould-presentations/ Website: https://storymaking.business/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/simonstorymaking/ ABOUT AMY Amy is a life purpose coach, author, podcast strategist, global podcaster, professional speaker, trainer and mastermind host. Work with Amy to improve productivity, engagement and fulfilment in your everyday life and work. Prepare to banish overwhelm, underwhelm and frustration to have clarity of purpose and create a more purposeful, sustainable and fulfilling way of life. WORK WITH AMY If you're interested in how purpose can help you personally and professionally, please book a free 30 min call via https://calendly.com/amyrowlinson/call BOOK RECOMMENDATION* Focus on Why by Amy Rowlinson with George F. Kerr – https://amzn.eu/d/6W02HWu KEEP IN TOUCH WITH AMY Sign up for the weekly Friday Focus - https://www.amyrowlinson.com/subscribe-to-weekly-newsletter CONNECT WITH AMY https://linktr.ee/AmyRowlinson HOSTED BY: Amy Rowlinson DISCLAIMER The views, thoughts and opinions expressed in this podcast belong solely to the host and guest speakers. Please conduct your own due diligence. *As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases.
An episode featuring a live panel discussion from Northern Ireland's newest contemporary music festival, TERRAIN in the Accidental Theatre, Belfast featuring Aisling Agnew, Lina Andanovska and Ian Wilson. Presented by Evonne Ferguson. Show Notes Aisling Agnew Lina Andanovska Ian Wilson CMC Composer page Music All music featured in this episode was performed live at TERRAIN Music Festival on 18 May 2024 Improvisation 1 - Lina Andonovska (contrabass flute & flute), David Lyttle (Drums) & Cathal Roche (alto sax) A Winter Sketchbook - Jane O'Leary - Aisling Agnew (flute) & Petcu-Colan (violin) Improvisation 2 - Lina Andonovska (contrabass flute & flute), David Lyttle (drums) & Cathal Roche (alto sax) 'Vigour, Rigour, Jigger' - Greg Caffrey - David McCann (cello) Episode Credits Music Recording and Engineering: Peter Cunningham Podcast Recording: Accidental Theatre, Belfast Editing: Keith Fennell
Many people think of summer as the best time to read. On the beach, on the airplane to a vacation, in between semesters… Sounds like a perfect time to do a literature review. But there are many ways to do a literature review, and in all honesty, we think most people choose the wrong type of review – the “systematic” literature review where they select papers about a phenomenon, do a supposedly structured but not exhaustive search across IS journals, and then criticize the knowledge others have created. We discuss a few alternatives that we think hold more promise: qualitative and quantitative meta analyses, or narrative and integrative reviews. We also point to a few papers that have helped us organize the conversations we read about in the literature – which really, is what literature reviewing is all about. References Berente, N., Lyytinen, K., Yoo, Y., & Maurer, C. (2019). Institutional Logics and Pluralistic Responses to Enterprise System Implementation: A Qualitative Meta-Analysis. MIS Quarterly, 43(3), 873-902. Noblit, G. W., & Hare, R. D. (1988). Meta-Ethnography: Synthesising Qualitative Studies. Sage. King, W. R., & He, J. (2006). A Meta-analysis of the Technology Acceptance Model. Information & Management, 43(6), 740-755. Zaza, S., Joseph, D., & Armstrong, D. J. (2023). Are IT Professionals Unique? A Second-Order Meta-Analytic Comparison of Turnover Intentions Across Occupations. MIS Quarterly, 47(3), 1213-1238. Trang, S., Kraemer, T., Trenz, M., & Weiger, W. H. (2024). Deeper Down the Rabbit Hole: How Technology Conspiracy Beliefs Emerge and Foster a Conspiracy Mindset. Information Systems Research, . Berente, N., Salge, C. A. D. L., Mallampalli, V. K. T., & Park, K. (2022). Rethinking Project Escalation: An Institutional Perspective on the Persistence of Failing Large-Scale Information System Projects. Journal of Management Information Systems, 39(3), 640-672. Skinner, R. J., Nelson, R. R., & Chin, W. (2022). Synthesizing Qualitative Evidence: A Roadmap for Information Systems Research. Journal of the Association for Information Systems, 23(3), 639-677. vom Brocke, J., Simons, A., Niehaves, B., Riemer, K., Plattfault, R., & Cleven, A. (2009). Reconstructing the Giant: On the Importance of Rigour in Documenting the Literature Search Process. 17th European Conference on Information Systems, Verona, Italy. vom Brocke, J., Simons, A., Riemer, K., Niehaves, B., Plattfault, R., & Cleven, A. (2015). Standing on the Shoulders of Giants: Challenges and Recommendations of Literature Search in Information Systems Research. Communications of the Association for Information Systems, 37(9), 205-224. Bunge, M. A. (1977). Treatise on Basic Philosophy Volume 3: Ontology I - The Furniture of the World. Kluwer Academic Publishers. Burton-Jones, A., Recker, J., Indulska, M., Green, P., & Weber, R. (2017). Assessing Representation Theory with a Framework for Pursuing Success and Failure. MIS Quarterly, 41(4), 1307-1333. Recker, J., Indulska, M., Green, P., Burton-Jones, A., & Weber, R. (2019). Information Systems as Representations: A Review of the Theory and Evidence. Journal of the Association for Information Systems, 20(6), 735-786. Saghafi, A., & Wand, Y. (2020). A Meta-Analysis of Ontological Guidance and Users' Understanding of Conceptual Models. Journal of Database Management, 31(4), 46-68. Leonardi, P. M., & Vaast, E. (2017). Social Media and their Affordances for Organizing: A Review and Agenda for Research. Academy of Management Annals, 11(1), 150-188. Orlikowski, W. J., & Scott, S. V. (2008). Sociomateriality: Challenging the Separation of Technology, Work and Organization. Academy of Management Annals, 2(1), 433-474. Felin, T., Foss, N. J., & Ployhart, R. E. (2015). The Microfoundations Movement in Strategy and Organization Theory. Academy of Management Annals, 9(1), 575-632. Cronin, M. A., & George, E. (2023). The Why and How of the Integrative Review. Organizational Research Methods, 26(1), 168-192. Paré, G., Trudel, M.-C., Jaana, M., & Kitsiou, S. (2015). Synthesizing Information Systems Knowledge: A Typology of Literature Reviews. Information & Management, 52(2), 183-199. Rivard, S. (2014). Editor's Comments: The Ions of Theory Construction. MIS Quarterly, 32(2), iii-xiii. Leidner, D., Berente, N., & Recker, J. (2023). What's been done, what's been found, and what it means. This IS research podcast, . Webster, J., & Watson, R. T. (2002). Analyzing the Past to Prepare for the Future: Writing a Literature Review. MIS Quarterly, 26(2), xiii-xxiii. Grisot, M., & Modol, J. R. (2024). Special Section Introduction: Reflecting and Celebrating Ole Hanseth's Contribution to the IS Community. Scandinavian Journal of Information Systems, 36(1), 39-40. Association for Information Systems (2023. History of AIS. .
Welcome to the Creative Blood Experience. One culture-defining creative guest… One passionate host… And a deck of 50 question cards designed to yield incredible creative tips, real life experiences and untold stories from the artists working across the creative industries today!New York-based Casey Brooks began her visual career shooting stills of friends in her dance community, and as her photographic technique developed so did her keen eye for movement and motion. She's gone on to collaborate with some of the greatest talent in the dance world. To give a flavour: Beyoncé's choreographer Dana Foglia, MacArthur Genius Grant recipient Michelle Dorrance, Emma Portner, Soraya Lundy, and principal dancers from The Royal Ballet, American Ballet Theatre, Shen Wei, and Cedar Lake Ballet.In this episode, Casey explains how she navigates between creative and commercially viable projects, the importance of an awe-inspiring outdoor location and what's next on her artistic agenda. She reveals the preparation, communication and creative pragmatism that goes into getting a job done on schedule and within budget – from ensuring shots are set up precisely to playing your part in a team.EPISODE INSIGHTSHow early experiences can make an impression and shape a careerWhy having collaborators who are just as invested as you is crucialHow to get the best out of a performerSubverting the ‘suffering artist' stereotypeFind out more about Casey @caseybrooks_Thoughts on the episode? Drop us a DM @creativebloodworldHosted by Laura ConwayProduced by Ben Tarrant-BrownMusic by Ben Tarrant-Brown
This episode is sponsored by PCBWay! When you get a quote from PCBWay, use our promo code 'REDACTED' for a special discount on us! Just go to PCBWay.com———————————————————Are you ready to peel back the layers of Industrial Design? On this episode, the (REDACTED) Team are joined by Benjamin Hubert. Benjamin is the visionary founder and the creative force behind LAYER, a cutting-edge design agency based in London, renowned for its innovative approach to industrial design, strategy and branding. With a keen eye for detail and a passion for pushing the boundaries of design, Benjamin has led LAYER to international acclaim. Listen in as we peel back the layers and find out what it takes to design the products of tomorrow, what it takes to publish a design book and how to separate your practice above the rest.Hosted Fraser Greenfield and Louis Mills with guest, Benjamin Hubert.———————————————————Layer Design Follow Benjamin on Instagram | @benjaminhubertFollow Layer on Instagram | @layer_designBenjamin Hubert - Founder - Layer | LinkedIn Layer | LinkedInLayer Design on Behance Jasper Morrison WGSNLAYER - Benjamin Hubert & Max Fraser | Phaidon —————————————————————- To follow the show, get in contact with us via email & more head to: https://linktr.ee/redactedpod
This is the defacto Part 2 of my previous episode with Jess Hopwood from Farm to Glass Wine Tours. In this podcast, you will hear the voices of Jody and Costa Gavaris from Rigour and Whimsy Winery in Okanagan Falls, along with Jess and I as we taste through a few wines from their portfolio. You'll hear the ambience from the cellar as well as the humour and fun (or is that whimsy?) of time well spent enjoying wine together. Support the showContact me at sipsterswinepodcast@gmail.com!Purchase copies of "The Sipsters Pocket Guides" here!Support the Sipsters Podcast by subscribing!Read Sipster's ICONS (Because sometimes more IS more.)Find us online at Sipsterswinepodcast.ca. Thank you for listening!
“It's your [leadership] job to make sure your people can do their job.”-Jared TaylorHave you ever wondered what it would be like to be part of an employee-owned organization? Today's guest pulls back the curtain of one such company, and insight into the world of education publishing.My guest is Jared Taylor, who is Publisher and Chief People Officer at Gibbs Smith Education and Gibbs Smith. Jared brings a wealth of experience to the fields of education and publishing. He has served as a Social Studies Teacher, High School Principal and Editorial Director. His passion lies in creating authentic and accurate social studies materials that can benefit students, teachers, and communities alike. In addition, he believes that cultivating a healthy and functional workplace culture is paramount to an organization's success, and he enjoys designing, implementing, and supporting leaders in achieving this goal.In this episode of Talent Management Truths, you'll discover:
Hosted by Chuck Blue Lowry, this episode of Reflecting Value: Evaluation Principles in Practice explores rigour. Keeping our evaluations rigorous is crucial if we want our findings to be accurate, giving us the best chance of learning from our activity and making meaningful changes to it. But how do we make our evaluation rigorous? How do we identify the appropriate methods for our work, and apply them properly? How do we balance pure numbers with the human stories that come out of evaluation? Join us as we ask our guests about identifying methods, sticking to the evidence and balancing analysis with description. We'll wade into the age old debate - "quantitative or qualitative data?" - and discuss how the two can be properly combined into a mixed methods approach. You can listen to Reflecting Value at Spotify, Apple Music or wherever you find your podcasts and don't forget to rate, review and subscribe.
Can you articulate your approach to DEI work?The ability to articulate your approach is a critical first step to bringing more rigour to DEI work.On this episode of Just One Q, Dominique chats with guest Sharon Nyangweso, the Founder and CEO of QuakeLab, a full-stack equity and justice agency. Their conversation focuses on how rigour is necessary to challenge the status quo in DEI work and the importance of using design thinking, data, and research to identify problems and focus solutions on structural changes.Keep Up with Sharon:https://quakelab.ca/Become a Learning Snippets Partner: https://dialectic.solutions/learning-snippets/become-a-partner/Try Learning Snippets:https://dialectic.solutions/signup
It lacks rigour and coherence and will not prepare students for the rest of high school or tertiary education. That's the damming conclusion of a top private Auckland girls' school that's dumping NCEA Level 1 from next year. In a newsletter to parents, St Cuthbert's College says it will not longer teach the qualification after becoming increasingly concerned with what's being prosposed, saying the changes will not provide sufficient, in-depth learning for students. Instead it is going it own way, developing an entirely new diploma. Principal Justine Mahon talks to Lisa Owen.
What can you learn about performance in 10 minutes?Performance 10 gives you the best performance led bits from our original podcasts in edited 10 minute cutdowns. Each episode follows two key themes that emerged during the recordings.In this performance 10, Alastair Campbell's advice to King Charles and Fiona Millar on how Alastair functioned in a high performance role in Downing Street despite suffering with depression.Takeaway thinking…Show, don't tell.Georgie + Ben spoke with Alastair + Fiona on 20th September 2022. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
More at https://www.philosophytalk.org/shows/why-trust-science. According to a recent survey conducted by the Pew Research Center, the number of Americans who trust in science is steadily declining. While politicization is partly to blame, another reason may be that the “truths” of science seem to shift endlessly. So why should we trust science? Is it still reliable, even if it doesn't seem to settle on a single truth? And what can be done to increase the general public's confidence in medicine, climate research, or statistics? Josh and Ray rely on Ann Thresher from Stanford University, co-author of "The Tangle of Science Reliability Beyond Method, Rigour, and Objectivity."
Today's show gives the inside scoop behind GROM, the multi-million company, the TV spots and world coverage! Federico Grom shares how he and co-founder Giulio built up a company that re-imagined an industry dating back thousands of years. How they burst open 67 stores around the world with queues around the block and over 1,000 employees before capturing the interest of Unilever, to become a multi-million company. Plus the high's and the incredible lows faced and overcome by Federico and Giulio, who took a giant leap of faith to build their own modern Italian Gelato experience. We dig into the big lessons, rock solid support, and unwavering attitude required to go fully global and create success. Tune in and learn how to: Start: Investing every penny, re-imagining a mature market and learning how to be a retailer Launch: Radical innovation in Turin WOW: Quality over quantity – the Investment that got ALL the New Yorkers talking and queuing for over 2 hours! Survive: Overcoming environmental disasters, near death experiences and finding the strength to do everything alone. Build: a business that made Unilever come knocking – only to send them away the first time. Find out what it took for the multi-national to get a yes from Guilio and Federico and a double helping more: Why ignorance can spark your Genius How to create an experience everyone wants to be part of The most interesting ROI in communication ever Following the opportunities with nose, feeling and opportunity. The secret to the GROM success: Fantasy and Rigour, Emotion and Mathematics. Big brand lessons when you shift from an entrepreneur to a multinational company All this plus this productivity tweetable is worth it's weight in gold: “If you can't solve a problem you can't sell it, so forget it”.Federico Grom Now, I'd love to hear from you! Leave a comment, drop me an email or hop on over to LinkedIn to share with the Snippets of Genius Community your favourite snippet. Resources from this episode: YPO Leadership community The music track that lights Federico up: Led Zeppelin Rock and Roll Federico's latest venture: Mura Mura 10 Things to know about Sauternes Château d'Yquem – Best of Wines Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Passionate about the pedagogy of delivering Feldenkrais to an open audience, Andrew Gibbons is intent on refining his craft. Andrew sees the potential for using Feldenkrais as a practice to level up your biological fitness to perform in all areas of your life. In introducing his explicit style of investigation into finding efficiency in movement quality, Andrew is not shy of designing lessons offering challenge to those willing to “engage” in the rigour of a learning experience. Far from just having an “experience” in a lesson, or even enjoyment in learning experientially, Andrew brings a desire as a teacher to provide a context and scaffold whereby the student begins to understand for themselves what the benefits of this practice can be. Andrew exploits the ATM context to build a movement experiment with specificity which asks students to engage in a way that heightens their responsibility as learners. He helps them to sense biomechanical principles for themselves, to make clear and deliberate movement choices and to learn to trust their own experience. Andrew unpacks what it means to understand how to reflexively deliver ATM, in not only offering lesson structure but having the sensitivity to perceive the potential diversity of student response and experience requiring lesson adaptation. He discusses the layers of skill teachers need to refine to adapt and change delivery to make the precise details of how a lesson works accessible to as many people as possible. He does not hide from the need to give inherent value to each student ready to apply themselves within each lesson, demanding presence from both teacher and learner. He gives a healthy blueprint for successful self-motivation as young ATM graduate teachers in bringing to life this ingenious Method of orienting people clearly and attentively to the way we “use” our bodies in movement - for whatever purpose we desire. Andrew's enthusiasm brings richness to the conversation, challenging us to develop both with and within the Feldenkrais Method. Andrew Gibbons: https://bodyofknowledge.me Feldenkrais Moving into the Unknown: feldenkraismitu@gmail.com Hosted by: Heidi Carroll, Libby Murray, and Kym McGregor.
4 Ways To Grow Your Property Wealth in 2023 - Will Mallard Talks practical solutions with Adam Lawrence EPISODE #233 In the turmoil in the markets, the right moves are vital and opportunity abounds if you have the right approach to : Staying in the game. Staying calm to think clearly. Rigour in numbers (use systems and/or people). Restack deals (more equity or better cashflow or better either uplift or discount). Adam Lawrence is a prolific property investor, entrepreneurial economist and can be found regularly on social media or at one of the partners in property networking events around the country. CAPITAL IS AT RISK IN ALL PROPERTY INVESTMENTS. Will Mallard is a social impact investor focused on English housing portfolios. #propertypodcastoftheweek #ukpropertyinvestors #podcastforukinvestors #humanbehaviourinproperty #benchmarkingdanger #economicoutlook #inflationinvestments #wealthknowledge #buyersremoreseproperty #shouldIfixmyinterestrateukproperty #bondbullrunatanend #measuresofsuccess #investmentworldpostpandemic --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/my-property-world/message
Habib Noorbhai is an Associate Professor (Health & Sports Science) and Director of Biomedical Engineering and Healthcare Technology (BEAHT) Research Centre at the University of Johannesburg. He is a forward-thinking and innovative leader with a passion for empowering people with the tools needed to succeed. For the past decade, he has been teaching, publishing, and supervising students in a variety of areas, including sports science, public health, and wellness. His research focuses primarily on cricket science, health promotion, and healthcare innovation has enabled him to garner insights into the science of sports and health. ***As a listener…*** Please share this episode on social media and with others in your network so they can also get the value. Please leave a review on the platform you are listening in on. Please support the podcast by visiting www.jodymartins.co and clicking on the podcast link. Connect with Habib T: https://twitter.com/Habib_Noorbhai LI: https://www.linkedin.com/in/habib-noorbhai-phd/ E: habibnoorbhai@gmail.com Connect with Jody IG, FB, T or Clubhouse: @realjodymartins W: www.jodymartins.co E: jody@jodymartins.co
@messengerartadvisory www.messengerart.org Jane Messenger is the founder and director of Messenger Art Advisory. Jane works with clients ranging from large corporations, high net worth individuals and more recently emerging collectors, helping to bring rigour to their art buying experience. You see Jane spent over a decade working at the Art Gallery of South Australia. Some of her projects involved heading to the Tate in London, overhauling the hanging of the gallery collection and working closely with world renowned Australian artist Patricia Piccinini. It's Jane's institutional knowledge and expertise combined with her qualifications as a professional valuer, that make her such a trusted advisor. On today's episode of Interview With An Artist, among many things we talk about: some of her career highlights at the gallery of South Australia how artists can get on the radar of institutions what the process is for valuing a work how artists can get noticed by an art advisor like Jane and how she works with her clients in an advisory capacity Jane is knowledgeable, experienced and just so warm. ******** Interview With An Artist is hosted and produced by Willy (Wilamina) Russo. Along with Championing the arts through this podcast and her radio work at 2ser107.3FM, Willy is also an artist mentor. She works with artists from a variety of stages and backgrounds, helping them figure out the right next step in their artistic practice. If you're looking for some advice navigating your artistic practice, book a session today via her website, wilaminarusso.com
This is an excerpt from Assoc. Justice Leonen's speech at the BestBatchEver oath taking. Check my YT channel for more. Law Merch: https://shopple.co/mnbshop
This week, we are talking about the idea of having multiple opportunities for students to demonstrate learning. We're curious as to why the one-and-done mentality still persists in education these days and how we might begin to address resistance and shift mindsets and culture to a system that values learning over grades.If you like what you hear, we would love it if you could share this episode with a colleague or friend. And make sure you subscribe so that you don't miss out on any new content! And consider supporting the show by buying us a coffee or two!We would love to hear from you – leave a comment on our website OR check out our FLIPGRID!Featured Content**For detailed show notes, please visit our website at https://edugals.com/76**One-and-done vs multiple chances mentalityMastery-based grading and MCP needs the opportunity for multiple attempts to demonstrate learningWe still see a lot of "I teach it once, then we move on" or "you only get one chance"Our job is to educate/teach - it's about learning and the learning processAll students CAN succeed and everyone learns at different pacesDisconnect between reality of learning and the real world - in the real world, there are plenty of examples of multiple opportunitiesFocus on student learning and try, fail, learn mentality (not all students are university-bound)This year is tough, lots of stress around academics, grading, safety, etcThis year will teach us the lessons that we need to take forwardGrading is one of the areas of teaching that we still have control over; this is why conversations around grading practices are challengingStrategies/Ideas to shift mindsets and culture:Begin with conversationsHave a clear idea of your WHYDon't take things personallyReach out to those willing and open to new ideas (focus on your innovators & early adopters first)Give space for thinking and processingAnswer questions (consider an FAQ doc for yourself)Keep in mind - lots of people need proof of concept FIRSTLead by example and get in the weeds!Have a game plan/big picture ideaResources Mentioned:Ten Principles of Mastery-Based Learning (#8 is our focus in this episode)Dr. Brad Johnson Quote (Relationships over Rigour, Grace over Grades, ...)Modern Classrooms ProjectDiffusion of Innovation Adoption CurveGrading for Equity by Joe Feldman Support the show (https://www.buymeacoffee.com/edugals)
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What picture comes to mind when you hear the word 'rigour?' Is it a group of students huddled over their exam papers, solving complex math equations for an end of unit test? Or is it as the Co-Founder of world renowned PBL school High Tech High Rob Riordan describes it: students engaged for an extended period of time in DEEP, meaningful, real-world work? In this episode, we unpack and re-imagine rigour through Rob's 8 rules: Rule #1: No rigour without engagement. Rule #2: No rigour without ownership. Rule #3: No rigour without audiences Discover the other 5 rules and 'rigourous' process students went through to uncover and share stories of forgotten veterans from the community; build homes for struggling artists; and solve a pesky school rodent problem in a more humane way. I promise you will see rigour in a whole new light. Rob's Bio: Rob Riordan is a co-founder of High Tech High in San Diego and President Emeritus of its Graduate School of Education (GSE), the nation's first to be situated wholly in a K-12 environment. A lifelong educator, he has co-developed 14 new schools spanning the K-12 years, focused on equity, innovation, and community. Through the GSE, he has worked with educators around the world to transform the social relations of schooling by fostering project-based, dialogical approaches to teaching and learning. His work is best described in his chapter, “Schools as Equitable Communities of Inquiry” in Sustainability, Human Well-Being, and the Future of Education (2019). Connect with Rob: rriordan@hightechhigh.org Get the Book of High Tech High Projects: 'Changing the Subject' Reference to Rob's 10 Rules: Rules for Rigour Take the 12 Shifts Scorecard for Learner-Centered Classrooms: 12 Shifts Scorecard
7 minute extract from Keith Blevens sharing with MENTAL HEALTH TRANSFORMATIONS Group on the difference between the Principle of Consciousness as taught by Sydney Banks, and the psychological terms of unconscious and subconscious. Question by Joe Fletcher, a member of the Group. FIRST HOUR OF TALK about RIGOUR, SHARING WITH THE STATUS QUO -- https://youtu.be/q7BzOd5ysLw
In this episode with Natalie Nixon, PhD - Creativity Strategist, Author, and President of Figure 8 Thinking, LLC.: ✔️ The path to becoming a high-achieving leader across various disciplines, ✔️ The role of rigour and wonder in any (career) journey, ✔️ How technology + productivity will achieve meaningful human experiences, ✔️ Why consistent self-care is so crucial, and much more! Natalie Nixon, PhD changes lives through ideas so that people build their creative confidence for years to come, make an impact and get paid their worth She is a creativity strategist, global keynote speaker and author of the award-winning The Creativity Leap: Unleash Curiosity, Improvisation and Intuition at Work, which has been recognized as a game-changing innovation book by Fast Company, Porchlight and Soundview. As president of Figure 8 Thinking, LLC she advises leaders on transformation- by applying wonder and rigour to amplify growth and business value. Clients have included Comcast, Citrix, Living Cities, VaynerMedia and Bloomberg. A hybrid thinker, Natalie consistently applies her background in cultural anthropology and fashion. She began her career in education and as a hat designer. Later, Natalie worked in global apparel sourcing for a division of The Limited, Inc. Previous to Figure 8 Thinking, she was a professor for 16 years. Natalie is an early-stage investor at two social impact ventures. She's valued for her ability to work at the intersection of commercial value and stakeholder equity. Natalie has lived in Germany, Brazil, Portugal, Israel, and Sri Lanka and is proficient in Portuguese and Spanish. She is a member of the Forbes Coaches Council, a Fellow of the Royal Society of Arts and is certified as a Foresight Practitioner by the Institute for the Future. She received her BA (honors) from Vassar College, and her PhD from the University of Westminster in London.
David MacIver is most known for pushing the adoption and ergonomics of property testing in software with his testing library Hypothesis. Hypothesis is well regarded and widely used in the Python programming language community, and it introduced a handful of innovations that are now quite widespread in the practice of property testing. You'll hear more about Hypothesis during the podcast, as we talk about what he's learnt pushing the boundaries of a domain. Then, we shift gears to talk about his coaching practice. David specialises in helping programmers with self improvement, more effective learning, and developing soft skills, which many computer programmers are likely to struggle with, in ways that may limit their careers or their personal development.David's Substack — https://drmaciver.substack.com/David's Twitter — https://twitter.com/DRMacIverHypothesis — https://hypothesis.works/, docs: https://hypothesis.readthedocs.io/en/latest/Ethics of False Negatives in Interviewing — https://www.drmaciver.com/2019/06/the-ethics-of-false-negatives-in-interviewing/Life as an Anytime Algorithm — https://notebook.drmaciver.com/posts/2020-03-23-15:52.htmlIf You're Stuck, Try Something Different (on chopsticks) — https://drmaciver.substack.com/p/lateral-movesHow To Do Hard Things — https://www.drmaciver.com/2019/05/how-to-do-hard-things/Stargate Physics 101 (fanfiction) — https://archiveofourown.org/works/3673335David on why people struggle with mathematics — https://twitter.com/drmaciver/status/1422208261349052420How to Explain Anything to Anyone — https://www.drmaciver.com/2018/10/how-to-explain-anything-to-anyone/0:00 Introduction1:09 What Hypothesis Is3:47 The Story of Hypothesis6:43 Hypothesis's Contribution to Property Testing12:51 Exploring the Design Space for Hypothesis17:24 When David Knew He Was On To Something with Hypothesis20:35 From Hypothesis to Coaching25:21 Emotional Reactions as Legacy Code29:08 Why David's Approach to Self Improvement Works for Programmers31:15 Ethical Problems with Optimising False Positive in Hiring37:44 Ways that Programmers Harm Themselves in Their Careers43:28 What Non-Technical People Get Wrong when Dealing with Programmers48:00 Applying Lessons Learnt from Hypothesis to Coaching50:03 Rigour in Self Improvement Writing56:30 Explaining Computers to Non Technical People01:02:55 The Nature of Mathematical Expertise01:11:32 David's Practice with Teams and Organisations01:14:23 Getting Better at Sprint Planning
Watch Charles' full talk: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ja9D0kpksxwApologies for the bad sound, I moved house and lost my microphone for a while. I'll get it back.Response from a listener (DaveJ on our Discord):@swyx enjoyed the last mixtape about Cardano. You closed with the same thoughts that I had initially about academic peer review and how it could slow down progress and network building. I was looking at it through the lens of the usual startup advice "ship quickly and iterate to PMF". You might be coming from a different angle. Charles Hoskinson has talked about this before and here is a summary of his points that appealed to me. 1. Proof is in the pudding. Cardano's main competitors are Ethereum and Polkadot. Ethereum has been trying to do PoS a year longer than Cardano, Cardano shipped PoS first despite the fact that they did it through peer review. Polkadot copied Cardano's PoS protocol for their ecosystem. So Cardano's competitors either copied them or took longer to get to market despite the fact that they are following a startup-y "move fast and break things" mentality. 2. Code is law. Rigour is important in a way that you don't usually see in startup-land. Blockchain is immutable. Making unplanned changes is very difficult and recovering from mistakes is often not possible. For this reason, rigour is super important when designing protocols. Having hundreds/thousands of blockchain/math/CS academics read and peer review your paper provides some of that rigour. Also, because of the compositional nature of blockchain protocols, upfront investments tend to compound over time. I now think academic peer review is a net positive for Cardano (against my initial intuitions). Still though, Bitcoin and Eth were around first and have a head start in network building. Perhaps the inflection point has been hit and the winner(s) are already decided. It doesn't feel like that though. It feels like we're only getting started.Here is the source: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CuKhyz280zA&t=2795s
In this podcast we're talking about UNICEF Innocenti's new evidence (and) gap map, which visualizes what evidence exists – and where there are gaps - on interventions to reduce violence against children in low and middle income countries, with Kerry Albright, Chief of Research Facilitation and Knowledge Management, and Ramya Subrahmanian, Chief of Child Rights and Protection at UNICEF Innocenti. The new gap map, completed in partnership with the Campbell Collaboration, arranges around 150 carefully screened impact evaluations and systematic reviews onto a framework of interventions – based on the INSPIRE framework strategies, and outcomes – such as direct impacts on violence, social norms, health, and education – into a searchable, browsable database that visualizes where the evidence exists and where there are gaps in knowledge. • Why are we mapping evidence and gaps in evidence on violence against children? • What does this gap map reveal about violence against children that we did not know before? • Where are the largest gaps in our evidence and what do we already know a lot about? These are just a few questions we discuss with Ramya and Kerry, who worked together to spearhead this research project jointly with our partners at Campbell Collaboration. - Explore the evidence gap map (EGM): https://www.unicef-irc.org/evidence-gap-map-violence-against-children - READ the full report: https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/cl2.1120 - READ the research brief: www.unicef-irc.org/publications/1147-evidence-and-gap-map-research-brief-1-overview-findings-interventions-to-reduce-violence-against-children.html
Special Guest Appearance from our friends Traverse Jonno and Elt are reunited after 2 weeks of fabulous and positively chirpy deputising by Bang the Table UK colleague Charly Amos, but they're not alone! Making a special debut guest appearance on the UK Consult, they are joined by Anna McKeon, Head of Engagement & Associate Director at Traverse. Traverse and Bang the Table have worked together on a number of really exciting projects with other partners over the last 6 months, so this was a fantastic opportunity to reflect on those projects, discuss emerging trends and themes in online engagement in an ever-changing world, and of course presented Elt with the perfect opportunity to ask Anna that all important question, "what are your favourite types of fries?" Emerging Trends & Themes in Online Public Consultation and Community Engagement Anna describes Traverse's work spanning research, engagement, consultation and evaluation, underpinned by a focus on: - Rigour: high quality evidence based on rigorous methods. - Inclusive practice: to involve the widest range of voices in their work they are continually developing practice to reflect the diversity of society. - Lived experience: belief that the people affected by a decision should have a role in it that goes beyond being informed. - Capacity building: as an employee owned business they know the value of collaboration, and help clients to develop the skills and capability to make good decisions. The Rapid, Online Deliberation on COVID-19 Technologies Project Traverse and Bang the Table teamed up with the Ada Lovelace Institute & Involve to run a project over a 3 week period. Anna describes the collaborative approach, intended outcomes and describes how the project took shape. The quality of the deliberation was really aided by the ability for participants to engage online and offline, yielding great results, feedback and findings. The full report is here(https://traverse.ltd/application/files/6715/9290/3370/Lockdown_Debate_methodology.pdf) for you to read through in more detail. Meldrew Moments Anna is always "glass half full", super perky and chirpy, but did manage to get grumpy about video conference meetings over running. Jonno has the Isle of Wight council in his 'grumpy' crosshairs this week in relation to the government's "gear change" document. Public consultation is thin on the ground.
On this episode we dive into the career transformation of winemaker Costa Gavaris. Costa is co-owner and winemaker at Rigour & Whimsy Wines and happily resides with his family in the Okanagan Valley of British Columbia. Until a few years ago, Costa was firmly ensconced in a career in health care - health data collection to be precise. Unhappy, he made the difficult choice to follow his passion. That passion turned out to be wine. So he and his wife Jody bought a piece of land and started growing grapes. Their wines are now distributed across the country. He gives credit in the ability to make the move toward following his passion, in part, to being part of a men's group (ManTalks and Connor Beaton) and ultimately, being surrounded by a supportive group of men, who nudged him forward.https://www.rigourandwhimsy.ca/https://www.instagram.com/rigourandwhimsy/https://www.instagram.com/costa_gavaris/https://www.facebook.com/rigourandwhimsy/https://www.linkedin.com/in/costa-gavaris-a8675014/
Cash for comment used to be - and still is - quicksand for advertisers and media companies but not so for influencer marketing, worth $87bn globally and upwards of $240m in Australia. But a new code of practice from the recently formed Australian Influencer Marketing Council (AIMCO) aims to tackle the big challenges that could thwart the credibility of mega, macro, micro and nano influencers. Big fines is but one of the incentives motivating AIMCO and the big five global communications holding companies which are backing the initiative.
Patanjali Ayurveda's claimed cure for COVID-19 has been criticised for making unsubstantiated claims of efficacy. However, can Ayurveda, or alternative medicine in general, be evaluated in the same way as modern medicine? Host: Jacob Koshy Guests: Dr. Bhavana Prasher, senior scientist at the CSIR-Institute of Genomics and Integrative Biology. Dr. S.P. Kalantri is a Professor at Mahatma Gandhi Institute of Medical Sciences, Wardha
Warning! Choosing to be the only designer driving craft & ops on product delivery trains may lead to extreme loneliness, self-doubt, and identity crises. Do you still want to proceed? In this talk, I'll share my journey as that designer: Developing a philosophy for design rigour, exploring leadership without authority, and inadvertently practicing the use of self - an Organisation Development instrument built on awareness and intention to create impact. Stories & lessons suitable for all ages. (Virtual) hugs offered separately.
Introducing Andrew Davis from Metro Liquor. We had a great short podcast to start off the week with a nice conversation with someone who really knows his wine. Andrew Davis is really helping to change the way people in Saskatchewan drink wine. Its right up our alley. This podcast leaned REALLY wine forward this week which is great. Josh and I didn't talk about netflix shows once...until the end. Next week we are talking some cool stuff as long as we don't get another interview. We have really started the interview thing rolling though. Till next week PEACE! Check us out on all the socials. IG: @merawine FB:@merawinewine WEB: www.homesteadbaravin.ca
Nigel Paine and Martin Couzins review Will Thalheimer’s work on learning transfer (https://www.worklearning.com/2020/01/06/major-research-review-on-learning-transfer/) .
Step into our world of ESG analysis and engagement integration in investment decision-making in fixed income. The post Delta: the rationale and rigour of ESG analysis and engagement (part 1) appeared first on UK Wholesale.
Step into our world of ESG analysis and engagement integration in investment decision-making in fixed income. The post Delta: the rationale and rigour of ESG analysis and engagement (part II) appeared first on UK Wholesale.
Replication, Randomisation and Rigour: AIMOS 2019. This talk was delivered at the launch of the Association for Inter-disciplinary Meta-research and Open Science on 7 November 2019 at the University of Melbourne.
SRHE (Society for Research into Higher Education) Conference And Network Podcasts
SRHE (Society for Research into Higher Education) Conference And Network Podcasts
Rigour involves raising expectations and teaching and learning to the highest level. Dr Barbara Blackburn explores the building blocks of motivation and how teachers can implement them in their classroom to create a rigorous learning environment.
Introducing a tax engine to the AP side of a business can save tax professionals hours down the line, says Andy Hallsworth
Has science lost its Rigour? We disect an article from Australian Cheif Scientist, Alan Finkle And we welcome a special person into the world! Our unwiting sponsor this week is IMC2021! --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/publish-perish-or-podcast/message
In this episode of the Defence Connect Podcast, the now vice-chancellor and president of the University of Newcastle, Alex Zelinsky, joins host Phil Tarrant to reflect on his previous role as chief defence scientist and head of Defence Science and Technology (DST). Zelinsky will discuss the expectations of the position within defence industry, share his thoughts surrounding the 2006 white paper and reveal the role of academics in their decision-making process. Discussing his recent appointment with the University of Newcastle, Zelinsky will share how he sees the position as a role to incite real change in the sector, and address how the university's direct relationship with the end user is resulting in better-tailored solutions to problems and ultimately further research into defence industry. Enjoy the podcast, The Defence Connect team
Why should you trust the press when politicians have Twitter? And we read the Steven Galloway "article" in Quillette so you don't have to; turns out there may have been a slight conflict of interest. Justin Ling co-hosts. Support CANADALAND: http://canadalandshow.com/join See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
GREAT FOR EYC PARENTS AND PROSPECTIVE PARENTS. This week the GardanPod talks members of our Early Years Centre about the thought, care, planning and rigour that sits behind learning through play.
The Telluric Vulgate // The Independent Hymnal// Chant of Arrival In orbit broad, aloft in black He floated through the sea. With gasping voice he sang to us In Independent key. Our island Earth near paradise, Astray without Divine. We led Him home, we mended Him Under the shade of pine. His face distraught, His heart betrayed, He crooned a tale of woe: Deceptive soul, with clever words She set the Exile low. "I never sought to save our flesh. My oracles did see A future lacking Divine breath. My aim is to save thee." A promise, snapped, of life and death. A vow she did outgrow. And with those words, she turned His kin. Then blood and oil and snow. Divines reduced to Cadent pawns. Whole schools brought into line. This was no fight that He could win. Now foe, once palatine. In orbit broad, aloft in black Left to be cold debris. We brought you Home and now we Know Your Independent plea. This week on Twilight Mirage: godspeed, glory Pt. 3 I let go of my claim on you Breaux'sL./Luna7University/Coursework/LectureNotes/DivineFleet3: Seminar notes “This isn’t a poem, it’s a chant” Old earth cult used to sing a lot. “Performance was a key element of faith” Look up later: Did they have non-religious songs Nah, remember he said “at that time, every aspect of earth culture came back to the church.” -t Yeah but like, what if you just wanna hum while doing dishes or whatever You probably sung some shit about how clean the river was -t Rivers were dirty as fuck then tho Why study old Earth Cult religion? Bc Assemblage doesn’t say what happened between Cadence & Independence. Bc good to learn where we came from even if we know it’s wrong. Bc Blue Path started as old earth cult The pine tree was the symbol of old earth cult too, for example. Both are about importance of home + environment + family. So What happened? For sure: Independence driven out of Resonant Orbit early in its life (during Cadent’s life) Earth Cult finds + rebuilds him He rises in status, gets more power, civil war, moves earth, etc etc etc Probably: Independence demands that Kamala not try to resurrect divines Kamala reveals that the entire point of the Resonant Orbit is to save divine life, not human life. Bc she believes (knows????) humans will win war and kill all divines if war breaks out Prof. Gauge’s says “She ran the numbers!” but not sure if that’s metaphor or for real. Algorithmic oracle maybe? Something happened that caused split. Group project: “Fill in the gaps with hypotheses, explain how you would test these.” Q1: How could humans win war against divines? Humans could win war by building machines as powerful as divines but designed for perfect loyalty/without their own minds. To test: Recruit design team and run sims using Old Earth Cult era tech levels. Inform sims with both quant and qual research--get first hand accounts of civil war Q2: What could have caused the Independence/Cadent split? She could have resurrected a divine To test: Check assemblage & NEH-UAS for any info on dead divines Also check for like, renamed divines or whatever. any thing weird Could also have just set up a system for resurrecting divines To test: hard to test… Q3: Why did Independence care so much about letting divines die? Bc Independence feared being made a slave or turned into a terror (like Rigour), wanted Divines to be able to die if they wanted or needed to die To Test: check the other earth chants, contact Diasporan archive to see what Independence thought abt Rigour? A transcription is available for this episode here.A full list of completed transcriptions is available here. Our transcriptions are provided by a fan-organized paid transcription project. If you'd like to join, you can get more information at https://twitter.com/transcript_fatt. Thank you to all of our transcribers!!
Subject: Book of Nehemiah 13 Speaker or Performer: Pastor Dennis Helton Scripture Passage(s): Nehemiah 13 Date of Delivery: August 10, 2016
In this interview, Aarron Walter explains the importance of research and designing for emotion. He also reveals how to build things people want and how to work effectively with other people.
Happy Wednesday, everybody! Today’s show's show is a bit, as they say in the classics, loosey goosey. It includes: Susan Boyle’s album party, something called FOOGI which came about because of the long wait for MCC membership, a voicemail from the excellent Thomas Caldwell, and a total lack of intellectual rigour. Intellectual rigour is for next week. Thanks again to this week’s sponsor, Uni Bicycles, where you can still get a 15% discount on cash transactions if you mention the Stupidly Small podcast. Avoid white pants and see you tomorrow.
Professor Malcolm Macleod Personal, Chair in Neurology and Translational Neuroscience, delivers his inaugural lecture entitled, "Rigour Mortis: How Bad Research is Killing Science".Recorded on 26 May 2014 at the University of Edinburgh's Chancellor's Building.
Closing Keynote speech by Rt Hon David Willetts, Minister for Universities and Science, at the Rigour and Openness in 21st Century Science conference held at Oxford on the 11th and 12th April 2013.
Rebecca Lawrence, F1000, gives a talk for the Rigour and Openness in 21st Century Science held on the 11th and 12th April 2013.
Open Data. Brian Hole, Ubiquity Press, gives a talk for the Rigour and Openness in 21st Century Science held on the 11th and 12th April 2013.
Alternative Peer Review. Rebecca Lawrence, F1000, gives a talk for the Rigour and Openness in 21st Century Science held on the 11th and 12th April 2013.
Alternative Peer Review. Christopher Greenwell, Elsevier, gives a talk for the Rigour and Openness in 21st Century Science held on the 11th and 12th April 2013.
Alternative Peer Review. Ciaran O'Neill, Biomed Central, gives a talk for the Rigour and Openness in 21st Century Science held on the 11th and 12th April 2013.
Alternative Peer Review. Irene Hames, an Independent Publishing Consultant, gives a talk for the Rigour and Openness in 21st Century Science held on the 11th and 12th April 2013.
Open data. Victor Henning, Mendeley gives a talk for the Rigour and Openness in 21st Century Science held on the 11th and 12th April 2013.
Open data. Jason Wilde, Nature gives a talk for the Rigour and Openness in 21st Century Science held on the 11th and 12th April 2013.
Open data. Geoffrey Bilder, CrossRef gives a talk for the Rigour and Openness in 21st Century Science held on the 11th and 12th April 2013.
Beyond Traditional Articles. Steve Pettifer, Utopia Docs, gives a talk for the Rigour and Openness in 21st Century Science held on the 11th and 12th April 2013.
Beyond Traditional Articles. Richard Price, Academia.edu, gives a talk via Skype for the Rigour and Openness in 21st Century Science held on the 11th and 12th April 2013.
Beyond Traditional Articles. Mark Hanhel, Figshare, gives a talk for the Rigour and Openness in 21st Century Science held on the 11th and 12th April 2013.
Citizen Science. Simone Severini, University College London, gives a talk for the Rigour and Openness in 21st Century Science held on the 11th and 12th April 2013.
Citizen Science. Helen Roy, Centre for Ecology and Hydrology, gives a talk for the Rigour and Openness in 21st Century Science held on the 11th and 12th April 2013.
Citizen Science. Chris Lintott, Galaxy Zoo, gives a talk for the Rigour and Openness in 21st Century Science held on the 11th and 12th April 2013.
Rigour and Open Access. Douglas Kell from BBSRC gives a talk for the Rigour and Openness in 21st Century Science held on the 11th and 12th April 2013.
Rigour and Open Access. Catriona Cannon and Linda Atkinson from The Bodleian Library, Oxford, give a talk for the Rigour and Openness in 21st Century Science held on the 11th and 12th April 2013.
Rigour and Open Access. Liz Ferguson from Wiley Blackwell gives a talk for the Rigour and Openness in 21st Century Science held on the 11th and 12th April 2013.
Rigour and Open Access. Jason Hoyt from PeerJ gives a talk the Rigour and Openness in 21st Century Science held on the 11th and 12th April 2013.
Keynote speech by Sir Mark Walport for the Rigour and Openness in 21st Century Science held on the 11th and 12th April 2013.
Public debate held in April 2013 in the Oxford Union looking at open access and debating the question - Evolution or Revolution In Science Communication?
Responding to Tony's comments in EdTechCrew podcast Episode 221 (http://www.edtechcrew.net/podcast/ed-tech-crew-221-soaring-eagles) #edtechcrew #edutalk #edtech
Mon, 1 Jan 1990 12:00:00 +0100 https://epub.ub.uni-muenchen.de/10239/1/10239.pdf Kellerer, Albrecht M. dd