Serendip is an independent site partnering with faculty at multiple colleges and universities around the world. Happy exploring!
Reply to comment
Remote Ready Biology Learning Activities
Remote Ready Biology Learning Activities has 50 remote-ready activities, which work for either your classroom or remote teaching.
Narrative is determined not by a desire to narrate but by a desire to exchange. (Roland Barthes, S/Z)
What's New? Subscribe to Serendip Studio
Recent Group Comments
-
alesnick
-
Richard L Stover (guest)
-
alesnick
-
Anne Dalke
-
alesnick
-
Paul Grobstein
-
Paul Grobstein
-
Paul Grobstein
-
alesnick
-
bolshin
Recent Group Posts
A Random Walk
Play Chance in Life and the World for a new perspective on randomness and order.
New Topics
-
3 weeks 6 days ago
-
4 weeks 2 days ago
-
4 weeks 2 days ago
-
4 weeks 2 days ago
-
4 weeks 2 days ago
about scale and evolving systems
Yes! (And thanks for asking :) What you write about students' feeling alternatively diminished and enlarged reminds me of what it felt like to me to live in Manhattan when I was a young adult. I walked around a lot -- often from my apartment at 44th and 9th and my school at 70th and Lex. Or all the way down 5th Avenue to Washington Square Park. I loved it, and still do. I would feel so much part of something big and vibrant, and endlessly interesting, and often loved the feeling of anonymity-and-possibility, and also a satisfying connection to people and buildings, scenes, traffic around me -- not personal, but not impersonal, either. At the same time, I do think it was daunting, and sometimes made me feel small and insignificant not in a freeing but more in a cowing way.
I appreciate your recalling me to Arlo's important session last year. This reminds me that an idea I have for our group this year is to investigate the meaning, import, and possible transformation of the idea/issue of scale. What is it? Could we come up with a new mathematics for it, one that would somehow integrate particularity with magnitude?