alexr_rwx: (condescending unix users)
Alex R ([personal profile] alexr_rwx) wrote2006-10-31 06:08 pm

Planning on learning something critical to my academic happiness...

One of these years -- one of these years, I'm probably going to learn that the whole social-sciences-y side of computer science is a lot more interesting in the abstract than in practice. In practice, classes like "HCI" or "Educational Technolgy" or even the cog-sci classes... just end up pissing me off.

It's not that it's "interdisciplinary" between AI and philosophy and psychology... it's that it's at the tipping point of interesting-ness between all of these and it ends up sounding like noise. To me, anyway.

Let's just go write some code or open up some brains or something.

learning smoothies!

[identity profile] laurapatt.livejournal.com 2006-10-31 07:46 pm (UTC)(link)
what's the big deal with interdisciplinary classes anyway? was there something fundamentally boring with pure disciplines and they had to be mixed with other pure-but-boring disciplines to hopefully come with a slightly tastier smoothy of a subject?
interestingly enough, while "educational technology" may be not so interesting, education classes by themselves are fairly interesting, pending a good teacher. one can only reasonably assume then that it's the technology that makes the class dull. Liberal Arts Win Again!
ext_110843: (coffee)

Re: learning smoothies!

[identity profile] oniugnip.livejournal.com 2006-11-01 03:00 am (UTC)(link)
Most things are probably interesting, given a good teacher. Or at least that goes a long way!

Once, I had an upsetting HCI class, with our friend Sean [livejournal.com profile] schizobovine suffering alongside -- but it wasn't nearly so upsetting when a very good teacher (Mr. Dr. Jeff Pierce (http://www.almaden.ibm.com/cs/people/jspierce/)) talked about usability issues in our "using AIs to build programs your mom would use" class.

(also: and it might turn out that disciplines come out of interdisciplines...)