Recent Posts - page 94
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Rubrics
We’re all being pressed to use rubrics. For those of you not in the ed biz, a rubric is described pretty well in Wikipedia: A rubric is a scoring tool for subjective assessments. It is a set of criteria and… Read More ›
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Holmes lives.
I’m currently reading my third Sherlock Holmes pastiche of the month, and I have one more in audiobook format that I still need to listen to. All four are set entirely or in part after the Conan Doyle canon. We’ll… Read More ›
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OK
I recently read OK: The Improbable Story of America’s Greatest Word, by Allan Metcalf. For some unaccountable reason this book has only two customer reviews on Amazon; there must be some good reason for that. Anyway, Metcalf tells you everything… Read More ›
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A test should tell a story.
A colleague who does not teach in our Math Department was tutoring one of my students. Not being familiar with our mildly unusual Honors Geometry course, she found that she herself did not know how to do the last problem… Read More ›
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English literature, “foreign literature,” and poetry month
When I was talking with a Weston English teacher the other day, I realized that my own high-school experience with literature as assigned by English teachers was badly skewed. “This is an English department, not an American department” was one… Read More ›
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Math should be useful, or fun, or beautiful…
The great Art Benjamin, whom we’ve had the pleasure of listening to twice at Weston High School, made the following remarks in his TED talk: If I had an extra minute, I’d also talk about how we shouldn’t only show the mathematics… Read More ›
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Professional development/Race to Nowhere
Today we participated in an intense professional development (PD) program and worked on our preparation for NEASC accreditation. NEASC work is often frustrating but often useful as well (more on that later). Today’s PD was quite interesting. The main part of… Read More ›
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Suing your child’s preschool
Strange but true (like many of the other news reports heard on Wait Wait…Don’t Tell Me): A Manhattan mom is suing a $19,000-a-year preschool, claiming it jeopardized her daughter’s chances of getting into an elite private school…. and the elite… Read More ›
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Diversity at dim sum
Once again we had delicious dim sum at Chau Chow in Dorchester…but one thing was different this time. Usually it happens that either Barbara and I are the only non-Asians in the place or else maybe there are one or… Read More ›
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Pi Day — or Tau Day???
This is a few days late, but… We held our annual observation of Pi Day on Monday in two of my classes and on Tuesday in the other two (since they didn’t meet on Monday). But one of my students… Read More ›
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Bob Devaney’s talks and the Weston Fractal Fair
Professor Robert Devaney of Boston University gave two excellent talks to our precalculus classes (consisting mostly of juniors, with a sprinkling of advanced sophomores and freshmen) on Tuesday. His talk to the college-prep classes (”Precalculus Part One”) focused on the… Read More ›
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Something new every ten years
“We should all embark on something completely new every ten years,” said Roy Strong, as quoted by Susan Hill in Howard’s End is on the Landing. When I read this opinion, I paused, closed the book, and thought for a… Read More ›
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Taste of Dorchester
Come to the Taste of Dorchester on April 28! The food is from Ashmont Grill, Big Moe’s M&M Ribs, Blarney Stone, Butcher Shop Market, Inc., Dot 2 Dot Café, Down Home Delivery & Catering, Flat Black Coffee, Freeport Tavern, Gerard’s Restaurant,… Read More ›
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Fractal Fair preview and invitation
If you’re in or around Weston on Wednesday, come to our Ninth Annual Fractal Fair! It’s from 10:00 to 12:15 in the Weston High School Library. The exhibits and presentations, by 50 Honors Precalculus students (mostly juniors), will focus on… Read More ›
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High School Quiz Show
Be sure to watch High School Quiz Show tonight: Channel 2 at 7:00! The match is between Weston and Woburn, starring Mir Bokhari, Grace Huckins, Jon Birjiniuk, and Matthew Chernick, as seen left-to-right in this brief promotional video.
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Howard’s End is on the Landing
What an unusual title for a book! What on earth can it mean? Well, part of the problem is an intentional ambiguity in how book titles are traditionally indicated. One rule states that a book title that is mentioned inline… Read More ›
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Bartok, Dvorak, and the “Top Ten Composers”
About seven weeks ago, music critic Anthony Tommasini took on the thankless task of listing the “the top 10 classical music composers in history, not including those still with us.” Of course this task is impossible; no matter whom he… Read More ›
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An epic chess match: Geeking out at WHS
Weston High School is a great place! With a student body of only 748 students, we had about 150 show up for a chess match of all things! What a delightfully geeky experience. The context was a fund-raiser for the… Read More ›
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Slides from my talk on linguistics
I have posted the slides from my linguistics talk, but I’m not sure how useful they are without audio. The talk, after all, was an oral presentation accompanied by slides, not a visual presentation accompanied by audio. So I’m going… Read More ›
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Freedom
Last year I listened to the audiobook version of Jonathan Franzen’s The Corrections and reviewed it in this blog, so I figured that I would follow it up with Franzen’s fourth and latest novel, Freedom. While Freedom held my interest all… Read More ›
Featured Categories
Books ›
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The story of classic crime in 100 books
March 27, 2026
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First do no harm.
March 24, 2026
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At Midnight Comes the Cry
March 21, 2026
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Vance and Moore… back when both of them were younger
March 11, 2026
Dorchester/Boston ›
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Dot Block Diner
April 21, 2026
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My front yard says that it must finally be spring!
April 5, 2026
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Happy spring! Happy buck-a-shuck!
March 20, 2026
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A special brunch at Tavolo
March 1, 2026
Food & Restaurants ›
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Milkweed
January 16, 2026
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Thai Oishii
November 16, 2025
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Chinese food in Greater Boston, then and now
November 1, 2025
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Dumpling Kitchen
October 11, 2025
Life ›
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Interesting address
April 8, 2026
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Taunton vs. Colmar?
March 4, 2026
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Streets of Minneapolis
January 28, 2026
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They understand us across the pond.
January 11, 2026
Linguistics ›
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Picard: Welcome to the Sticks!
March 6, 2026
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Everything you wanted to know about the Great Vowel Shift but were afraid to ask
February 8, 2026
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Who’s better at understanding written English — you or some random teen in South Korea?
January 22, 2026
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Will the real John McWhorter please stand up? (No, no, that’s not the real one; that’s the AI John McWhorter!)
January 18, 2026
Math ›
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Very sad news
October 17, 2025
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The metric system has gotten an update!
July 14, 2025
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As Tom Lehrer says, that’s mathematics!
July 9, 2025
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The Plinko Bounce
June 28, 2025
Model Railroading ›
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Where are the women?
April 13, 2026
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Famous railway modellers
March 16, 2026
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“So you want a model railroad” — a well-known… okay… not-so-well-known Warner Bros. film from 1955
November 22, 2025
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Three cheers for Jason Jensen — not only a model railroader but also a true American artist!
November 17, 2025
Movies & (occasionally) TV ›
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The new Springsteen bio-pic
November 11, 2025
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Breaking Silence: a truly outstanding documentary!
July 29, 2025
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The Social Network
May 11, 2025
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Dylan
January 8, 2025
Teaching & Learning ›
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Triple threat: Carl Sagan, critical thinking, and an exam
October 13, 2025
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Truly these are oldies but goodies — songs from… wait for it… two millennia ago!
September 28, 2025
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Measles and polio down in the schoolyard
September 8, 2025
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A former student’s PhD defense
August 15, 2025
Technology ›
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Not the other Wes Moore
June 22, 2025
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Bye bye Mark Z.
February 6, 2025
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Posts you may have missed
March 15, 2024
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I’m back!
February 28, 2024
Travel ›
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Written in the South Pacific during World War II
February 17, 2025
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Globle
February 15, 2023
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No pirates. And it’s not in Penzance. But it’s nearby: It’s Death in Cornwall.
August 9, 2022
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Miriam and Alan explore Scotland.
July 6, 2022
Weston ›
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“Dear parents of math geniuses…,” writes Tanya Khovanova
December 6, 2022
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How can girls succeed at the highest level of high-school debate?
November 20, 2022
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Reading Latin and Ancient Greek for fun and profit. For what? Fun? Yes, fun. Really. And the profit was purely intellectual, not financial.
October 19, 2022
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Trust what you read! (On second thought…)
September 2, 2022