Archive for July, 2009

Cogitate: intriguing puzzle for young engineers

Friday, July 31st, 2009

I saw this online game or puzzle first mentioned on Dug North’s FaceBook feed. Dug is a friend, an artist, a blogger, a maker of automata, and a smartcogitate-online-game guy.

So I tried it. Cogitate is well named. It’s a strategy and brainpower game — just about the opposite of a shoot ‘em up. And yeah, OK, it is educational. But it’s fun! If this is aimed at kids (is it? I think, perhaps teens) it’s for perspicacious, persistent ones.

Using virtual pieces of Lego Teknik, you create and manipulate beams, conveyor belts, gears, and motors on a stage in such a way as to direct the golden cog to the final target. And here’s one of the things I appreciate about this game: every piece you use has a cost, so in order to truly triumph, your solution must be cost effective as well. How’s that for good training?

Play around with Cogitate, and tell us how you like it.

The summer of rain

Sunday, July 26th, 2009

younglemons In New England, this has been the summer of rain. We’re entering the final week of July and it’s still raining. It feels relentless. The back to school ads have begun, and yet we are still expectantly waiting for summer. I mean the real summer. The one with lots of beach days and cookouts and iced tea in the back yard. Frustration is in the air.

The poem below by Denise Levertov is a youthful one, bursting with the desire to act, to shake things up, to break out of a passive acceptance of things as they are.

I studied with Denise Levertov in the 1970s, when she was living near Davis Square in Somerville, Mass. What I learned about the reading and writing of poetry in those 20 months has been a lifelong boon. Levertov was a live wire: wickedly funny, deeply passionate, emotionally expressive but never sentimental, and so full of vitality that the room could barely contain her vivid personality. As a teacher she spoke to the seven of us in the group so directly and piercingly that sometimes it stung, but it was almost always exhilarating. I remember the shock when she dismissed one man’s poem as, “Doggerell. Sorry, it’s doggerel. Not a poem. We can’t waste our time on this one. Let’s move on.”

THE FIVE -DAY RAIN

by Denise Levertov

The washing hanging from the lemon tree
in the rain
and the grass long and coarse.

Sequence broken, tension
of sunlight broken.
So light a rain

fine shreds
pending above the rigid leaves.

Wear scarlet! Tear the green lemons
off the tree! I don’t want
to forget who I am, what has burned in me
and hang limp and clean, an empty dress —

When St. Joe’s boys lost to St. Ann’s poise

Monday, July 20th, 2009
Three of the the 8th grade girls who changed Edward Littler's mind.

Three of the 8th grade girls of West Milford, New Jersey, who taught Edward Littler a thing or two about the power of girls' schools — over 40 years ago

It happened in 1966, but Edward Littler has never forgotten it. Recently he told me how his view of girls’ schools, and of women in general was strongly affected by one basketball game. He sent me a link to this story and added some further comments.

“They were the best team I had ever played against,and I played basketball from sixth grade thru my junior year in high school. The girls of St. Ann’s would have defeated literally dozens of boys teams. You would have had to see them to believe how good they were. Kathy Klink scored 14 points against us, Eileen Reilly had 11, Lois Pirog scored 8 points with 12 rebounds. Incredible.

It sure was different, especially when the game started! Of course we immediately thought we could take the ball from them at anytime, but when they showed the skills of dribbling and passing and we couldn’t, that immediately was a psychological victory for them!

There was also a question as to how “aggressive” we should be, but it wouldn’t have mattered. They were skilled enough to keep the ball away from us.

I remember one moment that really sort of made my jaw drop.
Three of us surrounded Kathy Klink, who had the ball. She held it high above her head. She was taller than any of us, so we couldn’t get it from her.

Even though three boys were literally inches from her face, all trying to stop her, I’ll never forget how calm she was. She acted as if she were standing alone–with no one guarding her!!! No expression on her face, no sense of panic or anxiety at all! She zipped a pass to Eileen Reilly for a layup.

She played defense against me “with her feet” and was everywhere where I went!

I thought “wow”-a girl can really do this? Lois also smiled at me after she blocked one of my shots, and that never happened before, so it really felt different and I sort of panicked when I found out they were this good.

St. Ann’s also had 4 taller girls who switched guarding our two leading scorers and because of that, we couldn’t get used to one and that kept me off balance the whole game. Lois, Kathy and Mary Klink, and Carol Brown all took turns guarding each of us.

Before the game, I had a feeling St. Ann’s would give us all we could handle because of their height. Then, during warm-up, I saw one of their girls, Eileen Reilly, dribble the ball between her legs and behind her back. I had been trying to do that for quite some time and had not been able to! I knew then they really knew what they were doing.

After the game, I just couldn’t believe how they had developed their skills far beyond any of the boys teams we played! It took awhile to figure out how dedicated they were to basketball. One big difference for St. Ann’s is that ALL of their players were good, whereas boys teams had maybe 3 good players and those on the bench weren’t very good, even among the best boys teams. It took awhile longer to figure out the single gender experience laid the groundwork for the girls of St. Ann’s to defeat one of the best boys teams.

They definitely had their “Black Belts” in basketball.”

Edward Little is in the process of writing an article titled The Girls’ School Advantage: Proving it on the Court.

Just for fun: yankee doodle dancers

Friday, July 3rd, 2009
Born on the fourth of July  . . .

Born on the fourth of July . . .

In honor of the Fabulous Fourth, check out the spirited tap dancing by James Cagney, plus Mickey Rooney and Judy Garland in Yankee Doodle Dandy, 1942 musical about the life of George M. Cohan. I would like to borrow a phrase from Susanne Beck, new Executive Director of NCGS, and encourage you all to commit “random acts of patriotism,” and enjoy the celebration.