Typo of the day
Nov 5th, 2009 | By Stephanie CampisiFrom ‘Towards an action-oriented science curriculum’, by Hodson, D, Journal for Activist Science and Technology Education:
‘We certainly need to rake steps to counter the somewhat bleak view of technological determinism’
It actually took me several reads to realise that anything was wrong here.
Oh, and in other news, WQ, a writing magazine out of Queensland, will publish [...]
Ambiguity of the day
Nov 2nd, 2009 | By Stephanie CampisiFrom today’s Age:
Frozen Chicken Fire Blocks Freeway
Principals are like slow-growing wheat!
Oct 29th, 2009 | By Stephanie CampisiWeird sentence of the day:
‘Longevity of tenure is further supported by Southworth (2006) who cite a traditional period of 20 years to harvest a headteacher’
in D Barrett-Baxendale, and D Burton, ‘Twenty-First Century Headteacher: pedagogue, visionary leader or both?’ In School Leadership and Management
Ambiguity of the day
Oct 27th, 2009 | By Stephanie Campisi(also known as ‘crash blossoms‘, as Lauren the Linguist tells me)
From The Age:
Anger over release of man convicted of murdering doctor shot dead on footpath.
Hmm. Can you murder someone who’s already been shot dead?
Ambiguity of the day
Oct 25th, 2009 | By Stephanie CampisiTaken from Toby Litt’s Hospital:
The boy stumbled out of the shower of the 14th floor stairwell, now thick with panicking, escaping people.
(Why yes, apparently I do only read books with red and white covers)
Ambiguity of the day
Oct 20th, 2009 | By Stephanie CampisiFrom The Age:
Police hunt knife-wielding milk bar bandit
I guess there’s always a bad egg — even amongst milk bars.
Ambiguity of the day
Oct 15th, 2009 | By Stephanie CampisiI guess the young woman in this picture is called 99% Fat Free Special K? With a name like that, I bet she got teased at school. . .
Ambiguity of the day
Oct 14th, 2009 | By Stephanie CampisiFrom, as usual, The Age:
A Paris laboratory found the left-hand fingerprint on the work drawn in ink and chalk in January and established that it was “very similar” to one found on a da Vinci work in the Vatican, said laboratory director Jean Penicault on Tuesday.
Well, given that it was apparently only drawn in January, [...]
Definitions turn children into Japanese monsters!
Oct 13th, 2009 | By Stephanie CampisiSentence of the day:
‘In the present study, inter-scorer reliability based on 28 definitions, 2 definitions per word randomly chosen from all children in our sample, resulted in a kappa of .96’
I realised I wasn’t the target audience for this article when I read ‘kappa’ and thought instantly of the open-skulled Japanese monster.
Paper Cities ebook edition available on Amazon
Oct 10th, 2009 | By Stephanie CampisiThe ebook version of Paper Cities (through Senses Five Press) has gone live on Amazon. It’s a great collection containing short stories by authors such as Kaaron Warren, Ben Peek, Jay Lake, Cat Sparks, and, er, me.