Saturday, January 21, 2006 

Musical goodness

Joe over at My God...it's full of stars! sez:
Pandora.com is my favorite new website. You enter a song or band that you like and then they begin streaming songs to you that they have identified as being in the same genre. You give them the thumbs up or thumbs down and this helps the algorythim decide what to send you next. I've heard some really great music that I didn't know about. Check it out, peeps.

Ain't them Internets grand?

 

Well, duh.

For a long time, I have believed that the cause of most problems in America today can be boiled down to the sheer dumbassery of a large percentage of the public. According to this study, it's only going to get worse.
WASHINGTON (AP) -- More than half of students at four-year colleges -- and at least 75 percent at two-year colleges -- lack the literacy to handle complex, real-life tasks such as understanding credit card offers, a study found.

The literacy study funded by the Pew Charitable Trusts, the first to target the skills of graduating students, finds that students fail to lock in key skills -- no matter their field of study.

The results cut across three types of literacy: analyzing news stories and other prose, understanding documents and having math skills needed for checkbooks or restaurant tips.

Without "proficient" skills, or those needed to perform more complex tasks, students fall behind. They cannot interpret a table about exercise and blood pressure, understand the arguments of newspaper editorials, compare credit card offers with different interest rates and annual fees or summarize results of a survey about parental involvement in school.

"It is kind of disturbing that a lot of folks are graduating with a degree and they're not going to be able to do those things," said Stephane Baldi, the study's director at the American Institutes for Research, a behavioral and social science research organization.

Disturbing, indeed.