2013년 12월 31일 화요일

Why men should advocate gender equity


Why men should advocate gender equity




Recently I was asked to speak about gender equity at the Institute for Theory and Computation at Harvard. I chose to elaborate a theme that has been on my mind lately. In three brief parts:I. Why men should advocate gender equityWomen are half the potential talent pool for any organization. Broadening the talent pool increases the talent. Conversely, excluding or discouraging women can only weaken an organization whose mission is not exclusionary. This applies to individual faculty research groups, academic departments, universities and the entire scientific enterprise.
The same practices that improve gender equity improve success and satisfaction for everyone. A good climate for women is a good climate. Your competitors will be happy to absorb the talent you can't retain.
An example: By working hard to improve the climate and to more effectively recruit women who previously were preferentially declining our offers in favor of the competition, MIT successfully increased the percentage of women graduate students in physics from 13.7% in 2007 to 19.8% in 2013. We now exceed the national average and our students are better than ever. This is a good beginning, but significant progress towards full representation requires encouragement and support of women in physics more widely, including at the undergraduate level.
Other reasons I've heard why men should advocate gender equity:It's more fun to have a balanced, diverse group of students and colleagues.
Our daughters, sisters, mothers and partners deserve equity.
Meritocracy can not tolerate exclusion.
It's their job!II. How men should advocate gender equity
My modest proposal for all leaders, including everyone who supervises students, is toListen
Question your assumptions
Don't talk over women or others
Learn from your mistakes
There are lots of details here, including understanding unconscious bias, implementing effective mentoring, and being proactive in recruiting. However, the first step is to cultivate a desire for self-improvement, with an understanding that your success depends on others' success. If you are looking for 3 simple steps to gender equity, you're looking the wrong way. For further ideas, see my article in the January/February 2013 AAS Newsletter.III. Beyond gender equityScience flourishes best when everyone has the opportunity to fully participate and the encouragement and support to do their best. Women are the largest group whose talents are underutilized in science, but they are far from the only ones. Underrepresented minorities, LBGT scientists, those with disabilities, and others often face challenges that others often do not understand. Organizations that understand and support them attract and retain talent.Sometimes there is a perceived conflict between excellence and diversity. Statements like "We would hire more minorities if we could find qualified ones" often say more about the speaker than about the applicant pool. Scientists are used to analyzing and solving problems; they can apply their talents to this problem, too.Diversity without excellence is destitute; excellence without diversity is an orphan.If we accept this premise, then how can we increase diversity and excellence in academia? Here are a few ideas:Share the value and excitement of your field to attract more students to science.
Tap all available talent; recruit more female and underrepresented minority students.
Improve the climate and community of your organization.
A good first step is to conduct a climate survey. The American Physical Society conducts them for physics (and joint physics and astronomy) departments; the American Astronomical Society will soon be announcing a similar effort. We'll be sharing details soon.


The Peerless Prognosticator is ON THE AIR!!! - Game 23 Canadiens at Capitals, November 22nd


The Peerless Prognosticator is ON THE AIR!!! - Game 23 Canadiens at Capitals, November 22nd

Le Peerless Prognosticator est EN DIRECT!!!The Washington Capitals, no doubt eager to wash, scrub,
bleach, or apply steel wool pads scrape to away the rotten taste of Wednesdays
4-0 loss to Pittsburgh from their mouths, take to the ice on Friday once more
to face the Montreal Canadiens at Verizon Center.While the Capitals pretty much wasted a weeks worth of good
will among its fans with the stinker against the Penguins, the Canadiens are
lurching from pillar to post trying to find their footing in November.After closing October with three wins in four games to go a
season-high three games over .500, Montreal is only 3-4-2 in November,
alternating wins and losses in their last five games after starting the month
with four straight losses.

Here is how the clubs compare in their numbers through Wednesday's games...





1. While the
Canadiens have had their issues about consistency, one position in which it has
not been a problem is at goaltender. Although
Carey Price is just 2-2-0 in November, he has a 1.79 goals-against average and
a .941 save percentage. Peter Budaj has
not been as impressive in his two appearances for the month, but he is 1-1-0,
2.40, .909. Given that the Canadiens
have not played since Tuesday, Price would appear the candidate to get this
game. Despite his sterling season
numbers – eighth in GAA (2.05) and save percentage (.935) – he has had problems
against the Caps. In 15 career
appearances against Washington he is 4-8-3, 3.09, .897.2. In alternating
wins and losses over their last five games (3-1-1) the Canadiens have not lit
up the scoreboard (13 goals), but they are likely pleased with the performance
of Alex Galchenyuk. The sophomore out of
Milwaukee, Wisconsin (with stops in Belarus, Germany, Italy, and Russia in
between – his father, Alexander, had a hockey career in North America and
Europe), is the Habs leading goal scorer (three) and point getter (five) over
those five games. In three career games
against the Caps he is 0-2-2, even.3. Only the Colorado
Avalanche have allowed fewer goals in the first period (9) than have the
Canadiens this season (10).4. One of the ways a
team gets good goaltending performance but lousy win-loss results is to do
poorly in one-goal games. Montreal has
done just that. They have a
worst-in-the-league 2-6-2 record in games decided by one goal.5. Only five teams in
the NHL have yet to win a game when trailing at the end of the second
period. The Canadiens are one of
them. They are not 0-15-0 bad, like
Buffalo, but 0-7-1 is not something they want to put on the banner of their web
site.


1. Lets look at the positive. The Caps are 7-2-1 in November. In those ten games they outscored their
opponents by a 32-24 margin. Four times
they scored four or more goals (not including trick shots), only three times
did they allow as many as four goals.
The Caps power play was 10-for-44 (22.7 percent), the penalty kill
36-for-44 (81.8 percent) over those ten games.2. Odd numbers. Over the last ten games the Caps have had fine
production from the players who are now reunited on the top line – Nicklas
Backstrom (3-9-12), Alex Ovechkin (7-2-9), and Marcus Johansson (2-6-8). The third line has done well, too – Joel Ward
(6-1-7), Mikhail Grabovski (2-6-8), and Jason Chimera (1-6-7).3. John Carlson has
five goals in ten games this month. He has scored a goal in every other game
his last six contests, which makes him a player to watch in this game, since he
did not get a goal against Pittsburgh.4. In eight appearances
in November, Braden Holtby is 6-2-0, 2.32, .934.5. The Caps outscored
teams by a 17-7 margin in the second period of these last ten games. They lead the league in second period goals
scored and are tied with St. Louis in the largest second period goal
differential (plus-13).The Peerless Players to PonderMontreal: Andrei MarkovP.K. Subban gets the attention, and it is deserved. He is a talented player who is exciting to
watch. But Andrei Markov seems to be the
glue that holds the defense, especially the blue line, together. He has the best 5-on-5 Corsi on ice to when
he is off ice (source: extraskater.com). His Corsi-for percentages are above 50 percent in 14 of the 22 games in which he has played, and they are above 60 percent
in eight of them. Markov does not seem to get much attention in the media, but if the Caps are
not paying attention to him, they do so at their peril. He is 1-18-19, plus-12 in 35 career games
against the Caps.Washington: Mike GreenThere might be no better opponent against which Mike Green
could return from injury than the Canadiens.
In 21 career games against Montreal he is 3-15-18, plus-8. More important, though, Green has to avoid
spending more time on the shelf with an injury.
Missing three games would not normally be cause for alarm, but this is
part of a continuing pattern. The Caps
do not have the best of depth on the blue line when Green is healthy. When he is out, too much of the burden
devolves to Karl Alzner and John Carlson to chew up minutes.Keys:1. Score early. Its a good thing Montreal has only those ten
goals allowed in the first period this season.
Only four teams have a worse winning percentage when allowing the first
goal than Montreal, with their record of 2-7-2 in those situations.2. Volume. Carey Price does not handle volume well, even
with his superb overall record. Eleven
times this season Price has faced more than 30 shots on goal. And, its frustrating, because he is
certainly doing his part. His record in
those contests might be 4-5-2, but his goals-against average is 1.89, and his
save percentage is .947. The shots
might, however, occupy the relatively anemic Canadiens offense and prevent them from mounting
any pressure at the other end. In those
11 games the Canadiens allowed only 20 goals, but scored only 24 themselves
and were held to two or fewer seven times.3. Knock their top
off. If not for Max Paciorettys natural
hat trick in the second period of Tuesdays game against Minnesota, the
Canadiens would have a truly meager offensive output over their last five
games. Take away the Pacioretty goals,
and the Canadiens have ten goals in five games.
Of that total, four come from the pair of linemates Alex Galchenyuk and
Brendan Gallagher. Knock them off the
score sheet, the Habs would not appear to have enough secondary scoring to make
a game of this.In the end…The loss to Pittsburgh leaves one with the question of
whether the 4-0 loss was merely a bump in the road for the Caps (one that hurts more only
for the opponent), or whether the Caps' string of success in November is the
outlier. Despite the sparse offense
Montreal brings to this game, they are only a Caps shootout win behind them in
the standings (25 to 24). More to that
point, Montreal has ten regulation and overtime wins to seven for the
Caps. The Canadiens could make this an
unpleasantly low scoring affair for Washington, and that is where the success lies
for the visitors. After being shutout,
one would hope the Caps bring the big boy pants (no, not the ones Carey Price
wears) and make things unpleasant for the visitors.Capitals 3 – Canadiens 1


Rules For The Day At My Bay!


Rules For The Day At My Bay!


You know there are rules for this and there are rules for that. But all are ignored by the cat. Yet there are some that just come anyway. I'll let you in on them today.

The rule of the cat,
The rule of the dog.
One will squash you flat,
The other, eat a brown log.

The rule of the truck,
The rule of the car.
One can be out of luck,
The other can go far.

The rule of the male,
The rule of the female.
One will always fail,
The other will need bail.

The rule of the house,
The rule of the alley.
One will eat the mouse,
The other set it free in the valley.

The rule of the movie,
The rule of TV.
One pretends to be groovy,
The other claims to be reality.

The rule of the sea,
The rule of the land.
One will drown thee,
The other pounds sand.

The rule of the tune,
The rule of the quiet.
One leads to swoon,
The other stops a Ghostbuster riot.

The rule of the hand,
The rule of the foot.
One helps you stand,
The other never stays put.

The rule of love,
The rule of hate.
Both make you wear a glove,
Just some at a different rate.

The rule of this,
The rule of that.
You do not want to miss,
What comes from the cat.

How were those for the rules of the day? Did you already know them at your bay? I just had to make them come to pass. I guess there are a few I follow with my little rhyming ass.

Later all, have a nice fall.


NEW DT announcement


NEW DT announcement

Hello wonderful Purple Pumpkin friends!!!
Well, it's the moment you've all been waiting for!! We've decided on our new design team, and it was no easy task. The level of talent was so high, and it was such a hard decision to make. Thank you so much to everyone who applied, we absolutely loved seeing your beautiful work, and visiting all your blogs and galleries.

Now first up, we are sadly saying goodbye to 3 of our design team members. Debbie Burns, Judith Armstrong and Karen Grose finish up this month on the Purple Pumpkin design team, and we will definitely miss seeing their beautiful work on the blog.Our returning design team members are...Vicky Varvadouka (DT Coordinator)
Yvonne Yam
Arnlaug Koppang
Jess Mackenzie

and our new designers are...
Monique Liedtke
Lizzy Hill
Kylie SymonsCongratulations ladies!***And let's continue to our sketch challenge!!!

New month, new sketch, new inspiration by our wonderful design team!!!We continue with another romantic sketch byDebbie Burns!!!
IrinaR
(our talented guest designer, October winner)
Light blue twine Washi tape.Yvonne Yam
I used crochet doilies, ticket, XL fabric button and flair button.Judith Armstrong
I have used a crocheted doily, washi tape, some star buttons and a bookpaper round - red, and some red bakers twine.Jess Mackenzie
I have used a red heart button, kraft tag some twine xox

Arnlaug Koppang

I have used a orange felt heart, a fabric button and a big flower
Karen Grose

I've used washi tape, a kraft tag, a red satin flower and a script flair

****You have until the end of the month to complete thisSketch Challengeand link it up in our sidebar by midnight 31st of December 2013. There will be two fabulous Purple Pumpkin prizes!$2515$to spend in thePurple Pumpkin shop- one winner will be chosen by the design team, and the second will be a random prize draw.Winner gets to Guest Design in a future month - once they have received their Purple Pumpkin product of course!Please check out ourRULES:
*This is an international blog so anyone in the world can enter.*You may combine challenges as long as you follow our sketch (only and not other similar to ours) witha link back to our blog and a picture of the sketch.
* No digital projects are accepted.* The winner will be chosen by our design team after voting and can be the guest designer for next month. There will also be asecond random winner!!!NO NEED TO USE OUR PRODUCTS TO PARTICIPATE.*Projects must be linked up to our linky toolin the sidebar, using the URL of theACTUAL POSTnot your entire blog.* We would love to comment on your entry! Please make it easier for as byturning OFF your word verification. If spam is a problem you can enable comment moderation.
We would love to see your pages on ourFACEBOOKwall whenever you use our products too!!





Keiser Report Elite Overdose (E529) [VIDEO]


Keiser Report Elite Overdose (E529) [VIDEO]




The elite and the onepercenters worry there are too many elite-wanna-be's turning them into the two-percenters (VIDEO)







In this episode of the Keiser Report, Max Keiser and Stacy Herbert discuss elite overproduction as oligarchs, billionaires and multi-millionaires fight over the finite number of thrones available.

They predict a near future in which a thousand billionaires disappear and in which too many 'elite hemorrhoids,' like Tony Blair, lead to revolution.


In the second half, Max interviews James Howard Kunstler of Kunstler.com about the financial hypertrophy of swindles and fraud in an economy in which the Strasbourg goose has Crohn's disease and markets have a whack attack on taper talk.



Friday Memes


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