5
   

How Does One (or Many) Fix a Broken Culture?

 
 
Reply Fri 24 May, 2013 09:19 am
Robert G. Kaiser at WP says

Quote:
The culture of Congress is the problem. It took more than three decades for this culture to evolve, and it is now deeply entrenched. That is why the current Congress is unable to function. It is revealing that the only issue now offering any hope for compromise is immigration — because many Republicans fear the political consequences of failing to act. Once again, politics trumps policy.

This dysfunctional culture won’t be altered in an election cycle or two. Because of it, our Congress is broken.


I have long believed that the major reason our education produces such a poor result is that the culture in our high schools is hostile to education.

A2K is dying because the culture here has gone sour.


If we wanted to fix the culture then what would we do?
 
maxdancona
 
  2  
Reply Fri 24 May, 2013 09:24 am
@hawkeye10,
What are you talking about?

Our education system has been exceptionally successful over the past 50 years, and our culture keep progressing. We have a strong vibrant economy, we continue to make social progress and we remain at the forefront of technological innovation.

I hope you don't intend to "fix" that.

hawkeye10
 
  1  
Reply Fri 24 May, 2013 09:32 am
@maxdancona,
Quote:
Our education system has been exceptionally successful over the past 50 years

we spend gobs of money and get little for it, which is why education has been under going endless reform efforts. but we have never tried to change the culture in our High Schools beyond instituting high stakes testing, which was an attempt to force the schools to teach and to force kids to care about learning.
maxdancona
 
  2  
Reply Fri 24 May, 2013 09:45 am
@hawkeye10,
That isn't true at all. We get quite a lot for it.

We continue to be a leader in productivity and technical innovation, American art and literature is consumed and appreciated worldwide, and we are making social progress.

If this isn't success, I don't know what you are looking for.
hawkeye10
 
  1  
Reply Fri 24 May, 2013 09:53 am
@maxdancona,
and there are still a few people who believe that Congress is not broken, but I doubt they can or will advance this thread.
0 Replies
 
Foofie
 
  1  
Reply Fri 24 May, 2013 10:06 am
@hawkeye10,
The country has different cultures in different regions. For example, in some parts of the country, Friday night high school football games are the most exciting part of the week. Not so in many other locales.

Perhaps, you need to advise the forum what region of the country you live, since your high school system might not be comparable to other locales?

There are seniors in college, in some locales, that learn what I learned in a NYC public high school. All diplomas do not reflect equal learning.
hawkeye10
 
  1  
Reply Fri 24 May, 2013 10:12 am
@Foofie,
there are some healthy trees in this forest but I dont think they will be much help in bringing the rest of the diseased forest back to good health. for damn sure I am not going to indulge in the fantasy of looking at a healthy tree and concluding that the forest is fine.
BillRM
 
  1  
Reply Fri 24 May, 2013 10:26 am
@hawkeye10,
A tree? Some damn big tree as we lead the world in so many aspects it is amazing with special note of technology.

Hell you could not be knocking the American culture on a world wide computer network using personal computers if it was not for Americans.

Your HD TV and movies came from American center research not for example the Japanese government funded analog system.





hawkeye10
 
  1  
Reply Fri 24 May, 2013 11:34 am
@BillRM,
on the other hand we are accumulating a rather alarming folder of evidence that all this technology is making us stupid and anti-social. maybe what you label progress is actually the driver of regression.
BillRM
 
  1  
Reply Fri 24 May, 2013 11:52 am
@hawkeye10,
Quote:
on the other hand we are accumulating a rather alarming folder of evidence that all this technology is making us stupid and anti-social. maybe what you label progress is actually the driver of regression.


You mean the ability for individuals at almost no cost to not only to communicate with anyone else in the world in real time forming communities of common interests as they do so and also to express their ideas and their opinions to a worldwide audience is a bad thing?

That anyone can set up an internet radio or tv show for that matter for a thousand dollars where before only people with access to millions of dollars could do so on a local scale is also a bad thing?

That a large percent of the total knowledge base of the human race can be found in moments with a simple google search is a bad thing?

Off hand technology seems not to be harming our human interactions or our understanding of the universe we live in.
farmerman
 
  1  
Reply Fri 24 May, 2013 06:35 pm
@BillRM,
IMO,the internet is robbing our youngsters of creativity and the oldsters are congregating about sites and programs only with which they agree.
BillRM
 
  1  
Reply Fri 24 May, 2013 06:56 pm
@farmerman,
Quote:
and the oldsters are congregating about sites and programs only with which they agree.


Considering the disagreements we have on this very website I do not think that we are all [as in old folks] are just going to like minded websites!!!!!!!!!

Quote:
IMO,the internet is robbing our youngsters of creativity


Let see we have facebook created by college kids at the time and all kind of useful programs/websites/companies being created by even high school students that ended up being worth millions.

Quote:


http://www.nytimes.com/2013/03/26/business/media/nick-daloisio-17-sells-summly-app-to-yahoo.html?_r=0


He Has Millions and a New Job at Yahoo. Soon, He’ll Be 18. Nadine Rupp/Getty Images
Nick D’Aloisio, 17, of Britain, developed his news-reading app when he was only 15.
By BRIAN STELTER
One of Yahoo’s newest employees is a 17-year-old high school student in Britain. As of Monday, he is one of its richest, too.

That student, Nick D’Aloisio, a programming whiz who wasn’t even born when Yahoo was founded in 1994, sold his news-reading app, Summly, to the company on Monday for a sum said to be in the tens of millions of dollars. Yahoo said it would incorporate his algorithmic invention, which takes long-form stories and shortens them for readers using smartphones, in its own mobile apps, with Mr. D’Aloisio’s help.

“I’ve still got a year and a half left at my high school,” he said in a telephone interview on Monday. But he will make arrangements to test out of his classes and work from the Yahoo office in London, partly to abide by the company’s new and much-debated policy that prohibits working from home.

Mr. D’Aloisio, who declined to comment on the price paid by Yahoo (the technology news site AllThingsD pegged the purchase price at about $30 million), was Summly’s largest shareholder.

Summly’s other investors, improbably enough, included Wendi Murdoch, Ashton Kutcher and Yoko Ono. The most important one was Li Ka-shing, the Hong Kong billionaire, whose investment fund supported Mr. D’Aloisio’s idea early on, before it was even called Summly.

“They took a gamble on me when I was a 15-year-old,” Mr. D’Aloisio said, by providing seed financing that let him hire employees and lease office space.

The fund read about Mr. D’Aloisio’s early-stage app on TechCrunch, the Silicon Valley blog of record, found his e-mail address and startled him with a message expressing interest.

The others signed up later. “Because it was my first time around, people just wanted to help,” he said.

For teenagers who fancy themselves entrepreneurs — and their parents, too — the news of the sale conjured up some feelings of inadequacy, but also awe. For Brian Wong, the 21-year-old founder of Kiip, a mobile rewards company, the reaction was downright laughable: “I feel old!”

A few years ago, Mr. Wong was described in the news media as the youngest person ever to receive venture capital funding. But a couple of younger founders came along — “and then Nick broke all of our records,” Mr. Wong said on Monday.

Among the attributes that helped Mr. D’Aloisio, he said, was a preternatural ability to articulate exactly what he wanted Summly to be. “There were no umms, no uhhs, no hesitations, no insecurities,” Mr. Wong said.

Mr. D’Aloisio, for his part, sounded somewhat uninterested in answering questions about his age on Monday. He acknowledged that it was an advantage in some pitch meetings, and certainly in the news media, “but so was the strength of the idea.” He was more eager to talk about his new employer, Yahoo, which is trying to reinvent itself as a mobile-first technology company (having dropped the digital media tagline it used before Marissa Mayer became chief executive last year).

“People are kind of underestimating how powerful it’s going to become and how much opportunity is there,” he said.

For a company that badly wants to be labeled innovative, those words are worth a lot.

Mr. D’Aloisio’s father, who works at Morgan Stanley, and his mother, a lawyer, had no special knowledge of technology. But they nurtured their son’s fascination with it and he started coding at age 12. Eventually he decided to develop an app with what he calls an “automatic summarization algorithm,” one that “can take pre-existing long-form content and summarize it.” In other words, it tries to solve a problem that is often summed up with the abbreviation tl;dr: “too long; didn’t read.”

Summly officially came online last November. By December, Mr. D’Aloisio was talking to Yahoo and other suitors.

Yahoo said in a statement that while the Summly app would be shut down, “we will acquire the technology and you’ll see it come to life throughout Yahoo’s mobile experiences soon.”

Other news-reading apps have attracted corporate attention as of late, reflecting the scramble by media companies to adapt to skyrocketing traffic from mobile devices. The social network LinkedIn was said to be pursuing an app called Pulse earlier this month. Still, the eight-figure payday for a teenage entrepreneur on Monday struck some as outlandish and set off speculation that Yahoo was willing to pay almost any price for “cool.”

Mr. D’Aloisio, though, will have plenty of time to prove his and his algorithm’s worth. As for the sizable paycheck from Yahoo, he said he did not have any specific plans for the sudden windfall. “It’s going to be put into a trust fund and my parents will help manage it,” he said.

He did say, however, that “angel investing could be really fun.” When not working at Yahoo, he will keep up with his hobbies — cricket in particular — and set his sights on attending college at Oxford. His intended major is philosophy.

A version of this article appeared in print on March 26, 2013, on page A1 of the New York edition with the headline: He Has Millions and a New Job at Yahoo. And Soon He’ll Be 18...
hawkeye10
 
  0  
Reply Fri 24 May, 2013 07:06 pm
@farmerman,
unless technology is either the cause or the fix for broken culture I am not much caring at the moment.
farmerman
 
  2  
Reply Fri 24 May, 2013 07:14 pm
@BillRM,
If you look at the polr political views shown herein, you should be able to see that this site is predominantly left of cebter and those of the right seem only to mine their data from right wing sites. They just post to annoy,

As far as the creativity, statistically, the kids who created their technology toys were a very small portion of the kids their ages. Studies are revealing that normal problem solving (and problem REDEFINING skills are sorely lacking compared to even 30 years ago kids)
BillRM
 
  1  
Reply Fri 24 May, 2013 07:15 pm
@hawkeye10,
Quote:
unless technology is either the cause or the fix for broken culture I am not much caring at the moment.


You had yet in my opinion shown that even with all the ongoing problems in the American culture we are anywhere near broken.

Hell we are about the healthy major society on the planet at the moment in my opinion.

0 Replies
 
farmerman
 
  2  
Reply Fri 24 May, 2013 07:16 pm
@hawkeye10,
Often we need to better define a problem (as you seem to assert exists) and envisage many ways to solve it.

The "box" is only for reference
hawkeye10
 
  0  
Reply Fri 24 May, 2013 07:24 pm
@farmerman,
farmerman wrote:

Often we need to better define a problem (as you seem to assert exists) and envisage many ways to solve it.

The "box" is only for reference

unless your assertion is that culture is never broken then that is irrelevant. I gave ideas for culture that might be broken right now but the question is if culture is broken and you want to fix it then how would we get that done?
0 Replies
 
BillRM
 
  0  
Reply Fri 24 May, 2013 07:35 pm
@farmerman,
Quote:
As far as the creativity, statistically, the kids who created their technology toys were a very small portion of the kids their ages


The drivers of the society in the area of technology or any other area happen to alway be a small subset of the population however the society is allowing that subset even as teenagers to produce not toys but useful devices and businesses as no other nation on this earth does.

Quote:
Studies are revealing that normal problem solving (and problem REDEFINING skills are sorely lacking compared to even 30 years ago kids)


Strange thirty years ago a large percent of the major companies that are now creating most of the wealth in this nation did not even exist and a large percent of them was created by very young people.

Name me one foreign company of the order of Apple or Microsoft that had come into being over that 30 years time period.

A few kids in a damn garage have yet to put out the apple one, Bill Gate had not yet got an os for the Altair 8800 working and so on.

Studies can be done to produce almost any result that the study designer wish for however in the real universe the US is the engine that is driving the whole human race forward.
BillRM
 
  2  
Reply Fri 24 May, 2013 08:19 pm
@farmerman,
By the way going away from technology let look at how damn far we had come in both our lifetimes in relationship to race relations and using all of our citizens abilities no matter what the sex or what the color of the skin happen to be.

When I was growing up federal troops with fit bayonets were needed to be used to get some black teenagers into a white high school and now we have a second term black president.

This society have large ongoing problems but we are once more still the powerhouse of the planet.
0 Replies
 
farmerman
 
  2  
Reply Sat 25 May, 2013 06:36 am
@BillRM,
Quote:

Strange thirty years ago a large percent of the major companies that are now creating most of the wealth in this nation did not even exist
If you recall, the entire industry was based upon series of electronic gizmos that were ideas of the 50's .
Wozniak and Jobs were playing with their little toy in the 70's. ANyway, creativity is a way of problem solving. If you want it to be only invested in a few, then we are gonna have a country with few idea people.

When we need to TEACH kids creaticity because their normal maturation process has taken it away, you may like to focus on the 0.000000001% of kids. I have to teach the 99.999999% in problem solving. Don't wallow in some useless individual accomplishments (BTW Wozniak, Jobs, Gates and Jones are products of the Baby Boom when play involved "make believe " and making do and making up stuff)
The losing o creativity is an international phenomenon as well.



 

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