January 27, 2014

Think optimal, not just possible

We live in amazing times. You can find out any fact or connect with almost anyone in the world on the device in your pocket. People then go out of their way to "prove" they do anything on their little screens. "I have a startup focusing on mobile strategy for Big Data analysis." Really? Just because you can doesn't mean you should.

Complex, creative work is faster and better on a big screen (preferable multiple).

January 20, 2014

Programming instead of math; statistics instead of calculus

Schools should be teaching computer programming instead of math[1]. Math is a systematic, rigorous thought system that builds quantitative reasoning and problem solving skills. Programming taps into a similar set of skills but is more practical. The ability to write functional code will take the most people further than factoring polynomials. It could be as simple as Automator or Visual Basic for Applications (VBA) in Excel.

Schools should be teaching statistics instead of calculus. Very few people use the calculus taught in school. However probability, the fundamental basis of statistics, is a general life skill. Thinking probabilistically cracks open the door of possibility that our typical deterministic thoughts leave closed. With the increasing amount and power of data, a basic data analysis toolbox is more valuable than infinitesimals.

School should be preparing students for the world as it is and how it will mostly likely be. Far more people are programming than using math, and far more people are applying statistics than calculus.

  1. By math, I mean algebra, geometry, and trigonometry. Basic arithmetic is a necessary skill for every functional citizen.  ↩

January 13, 2014

Fear-driven professional development

Knowledge workers are susceptible to nonclinical impostor syndrome, a lurking fear that they will be found out as a fraud and haven't earned what they have. Those feelings are heightened with streaming access to the best people in the field. It is easy to find someone who is more clever, more accomplished, a little more everything.

In turn, driving a frantic obsession with self improvement at work (with residual guilt for not doing enough). Instead ask, "How much better can I be in order to give back to the world?" - love-driven professional development.

January 6, 2014

On Writing (Science) Well

I'm working my way through On Writing Well by William Zinsser (hat tip to Merlin Mann). It is a simple, but not easy, approach to better nonfiction writing. It advocates boldness. Directly stating is better than obliquely suggesting. Active is better than passive.

This is very different from my default writing style for science and statistics. Standard science and statistics language is too often passive and awkward. While revising one of my current manuscripts, I have found the following peccadillos:
  • “This can be seen when”
  • “All procedures were approved by”
  • “could potentially have”
  • “can be described as”
Mindfulness is the first step towards change.