"Critical thinking is defined as both a skill, which can be trained and developed, and as a disposition, which refers to the inclination to apply the skill in a given situation. Much teaching focuses on the skill dimension, but perhaps we need to shift our attention to the disposition." I wouldn't say it exactly this way ('dispositions' make me think of Ryle which makes me think of behaviourism) but I think there's something right here. First I would shift the context: forget about what happens in the classroom; why do we want people to think critically at all? Second, think of critical thinking as a way of seeing the world. I don't go out looking for logical fallacies or category errors (or trees or rocks) - I just see them when they're there.
Today: Total: Stefani Goga, BERA Blog, 2026/05/22 [Direct Link]Please select a newsletter and enter your email to subscribe.
Stephen Downes spent 25 years as an expert researcher at the National Research Council of Canada, specializing in new instructional media and personal learning technology. With degrees in Philosophy and a background in journalism and media, he is one of the originators of the first Massive Open Online Course, has published frequently about online and networked learning, and is the author of the widely read e-learning newsletter OLDaily. He is a popular keynote speaker and has presented at conferences around the world. [More]
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This is actually pretty interesting. "Web Serial is a web API that allows a website to read and write to serial devices using JavaScript... While modern computers don't typically include serial ports, serial devices connected to a USB port or paired via Bluetooth can advertise themselves as serial-capable devices so they appear as serial ports in the operating system." So, for example, "Web Serial could be used to read power data from an off-the-shelf USB power meter and display it in Firefox." This opens up all sorts of possibilities for remote labs and sensors.
Today: Total: Haik Aftandilian, Greg Stoll, Mozilla Hacks, 2026/05/22 [Direct Link]On the one hand, I don't really care what Harvard does with its grading policy. Articles like this tend to confuse 'prestige' with 'wealthy and connected'. By the same token, I think it's worth pointing out that a policy such as this reinforces the idea that the university isn't actually measuring skills or achievement, but rather, is acting as a social filter, sorting people into classes and classifications. It's all about the competition, not the learning. We don't need that in a democratic society.
Today: Total: Edward Helmore, The Guardian, 2026/05/22 [Direct Link]We may as well start here, so people can't say we're just imagining a worst-case scenario. From the searchbot's mouth: "Google is introducing new ad formats built with Gemini in Search and expanding the Direct Offers pilot for shoppers." I can't tell you how little I want that, especially given that advertising is the original fake news. I personally use Kagi when I search the web, but by far the majority of what I find comes from networks of connections. How bad is the news? Even Business Insider is saying Google is going to ruin the internet. Pundits are saying Google has "declared war on the remnants of the Web." Now let me be clear: the problem isn't the AI, it's the advertising (and hence, deliberately introduced falsehoods).
Today: Total: Google, 2026/05/22 [Direct Link]This article summarizes Evaluating Commercial AI Chatbots as News Intermediaries by Mirac Suzgun, et al. According to the paper, generative AI chatbots can be as high as 95% accurate when describing the daily news (which is rather better than Fox) but accuracy can drop to 19% after interactions where a user misremembers a detail. "Users who ask AI chatbots about news while misremembering details will frequently get confident answers that reinforce the error." It also found systematic inaccuracies in Hindi language interactions. As the paper authors say, "these results suggest that evaluating AI news intermediaries on aggregate accuracy alone is insufficient." This is important, of course, in the light of plans to replace search results with chatbot interactions. I don't know whether this summary was AI-generated, but I read the original paper as well (53 page PDF, but only 15 pages of actual paper) to verify it is at least accurate; we'd want more than a "fourteen-day real-time evaluation of six commercial AI chatbots" before drawing full conclusions.
Today: Total: Hacks/Hackers, 2026/05/22 [Direct Link]Readers will recognize this theme, and this page from Journal of Open, Distance, and Digital Education leads with my article, On ethical AI principles, and then follows up with criticisms from Jon Dron, Stella George, and another from Dagmar Monett. My target is work by Luciano Floridi (such as) suggesting there is a global consensus on ethical principles, and also the many policy statements, guidelines, and even laws, entrenching them into practice. A closer look reveals no such principles are anything like universal, and some (like explainability and accountability) aren't even ethical principles at all. The Dron and George response is (on my reading) essentially the assertion that, yes, principles aren;t universal; "principles are foundational guidelines, starting points, and orientations that are used to frame understanding and assist with decisions." Monett criticizes my characterization of AI: "when defining AI, introducing a new definition and not considering at least one of the many that already exist... is a questionable omission.... "reviewing, summarizing, translating and composing" are overstatements of the capabilities of AI algorithms." Image: Cogent Infotech.
Today: Total: Stephen Downes, Jon Dron, Stella George, Dagmar Monett., Journal of Open, Distance, and Digital Education, 2026/05/22 [Direct Link]Web - Today's OLDaily
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Last Updated: May 24, 2026 1:37 p.m.


