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Current and stale affairs, hot and cold takes: -


Good News:


Longer political analysis


Longer other - cultural, historical, miscellaneous
  • Simons, Sullivan, and Johnson (The Conversation AU), Fewer casual positions and less out-of-hours work could help retain early career teachers.
  • Tuohy and Edwards (SMH), The four-day fallacy: busting the myth of part-time working mums.
  • Jen Gunter, Why does the department of ob-gyn at the University of Utah offer a premarital exam for women?
  • Jane C. Hu, Woman frustrated by dick pics makes her own filter.
  • Lara Soneschein (Overland), What we mean when we say Never Again.
  • Holly Barrow (Electric Lit), How Brexit Could Destroy the UK Publishing Industry:
    In a briefing on Brexit, the Society of Authors argues against the visa salary requirements of £30,000 for long-term migrant workers and £35,000 for indefinite leave to remain: “Authors in the UK earn an average of just £10,500 per year. The proposed threshold therefore does not reflect the ‘skills’ of writers or the cultural sector at large. Salary level is not an appropriate measure of skill or wider contribution to the UK’s social and economic life.” This emphasis on salary failing to represent skill highlights the necessity of reviewing the visa routes and the failure of immigration policy to consider vast cultural benefits—benefits that far exceed financial input. Reducing migrants to their salary not only diminishes their talent but also insults British authors who fall significantly below the warped perception of what it is to be “skilled.”

  • Jennifer Ouellette (Ars Technica), Cubed wombat poop, why your left nut runs hot, among Ig Nobel winners. Possibly my favourite:
    Medical Education

    Citation: Karen Pryor and Theresa McKeon, "for using a simple animal-training technique— called 'clicker training'—to train surgeons to perform orthopedic surgery."

    This 2016 study focused on two specific surgical tasks: "tying the locking, sliding knot" and "making a low-angle drill hole." The authors wanted to test the effectiveness of "acoustic feedback" on the learning process—typically used by animal trainers—which prior studies indicated might also work on human behavior and could be superior to traditional demonstration techniques. "The clicker serves as a conditioned reinforcer that communicates in a way that is language- and judgment-free," they observed. The result: the clicker-trained group of medical students took more time to learn the tasks than the control group, but they were better at performing the tasks precisely. And when it comes to surgery, precision is paramount.


  • Specific cluster on age of puberty:
    • Mona Chalabi (Guardian UK, 2013): Why is puberty starting younger?. Key data (from 'the study published today', which is infuriatingly not actually cited in this article) is that in a 2013 study of American girls, age of puberty measured by breast tissue development was only a few months earlier than in the 1990s. Also cites the German study c. 2010 which is responsible for the long-range stats from 1860 to 2010.
    • Mary Lewis (The Conversation UK, 2018): Children aren't starting puberty younger, medieval skeletons reveal. Osteoarcheological evidence suggests children between 990-1550 entered puberty between ages of 10 and 12, same as today (as far as I can tell, this is based on skeletons of children who *died* as adolsecents - the piece doesn't address whether that skews the data). Although the onset of puberty was relatively young, it took much longer for the process of maturation to complete than it does now, probably due to environmental factors such as nutrition.
    • Jayashri Kulkarni (The Conversation UK, 2011): Twelve going on 20: are girls reaching puberty earlier. Summarises research to the effect that age of menarch has fluctuated a lot over time; studies as of 2011 suggested that some aspects of puberty, such as breast tissue development, were happening earlier, but the age of menarche had stabilised at around 13, based on UK / NZ research.

  • Sarah Rowe (Archer), Vaginismus and breakups: owning my sexuality.
  • Lexi Beach (Electric Lit), Why it matters that Amazon shipped The Testamens early. What confuses me about this debacle is that people seem *surprised*? I think I remember something similar with the HP books?


Standard disclaimer: list subdivisions are arbitrary and not reflective of the worth of any particular piece in my mind.

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