TwoAndFour

3.1K posts

TwoAndFour

TwoAndFour

@TwoAndFour1

Professor, Dad, Doomscroller, Aspiring Normie

Beigetreten Nisan 2020
823 Folgt140 Follower
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TwoAndFour
TwoAndFour@TwoAndFour1·
Now, less than ever...
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Lisa Britton
Lisa Britton@LisaBritton·
I believe more male teachers could help fix so many problems… We need more male teachers! How can we do this?
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TwoAndFour
TwoAndFour@TwoAndFour1·
@EvilKeaton I worked in an ice cream parlor in the 90s. Our milkshakes were 1.83 with tax. This was soft serve. If you wanted hand dipped, it was more like 2.50. Adding whipped cream and a cherry you would be pushing 3.
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doomer
doomer@uncledoomer·
am i the only one who feels like "you can rent a shed in someones backyard" is less of a big win as far as housing affordability goes, and more of an unsettling harbinger of our backslide out of prosperity?
Mark D. Levine@MarkLevineNYC

One of the hardest fought wins in the big City of Yes zoning change was the legalization of “Ancillary Dwelling Units” (ADUs)—a tiny house in the back yard, home over a garage, basement apartment etc. This zoning change could unlock as much as 25k desperately needed new homes in NYC’s low-density neighborhoods…but only if homeowners take advantage it. Now @NYCHousing is launching new tools to help: find out if your address qualifies, access low-interest financing, see pre-made designs etc. All here: nyc.gov/aduforyou This is just one more way housing creation in NYC is entering a whole new era. Thanks to all who fought hard for this.

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TwoAndFour
TwoAndFour@TwoAndFour1·
@ARmastrangelo When Jerry Stiller is a pillar of dignity in comparison, you have really done something.
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Alana Mastrangelo
Alana Mastrangelo@ARmastrangelo·
Ben Stiller is one of those comedic actors from your childhood that you think are hilarious as a kid, only to reach adulthood and realize he never was, you were just eight.
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TwoAndFour
TwoAndFour@TwoAndFour1·
@walterkirn But where? Where are the humanities not compromised?
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Walter Kirn
Walter Kirn@walterkirn·
Skip the CS Degree. Major in English. | by Tim O'Brien | Mar, 2026 | Medium @tobrien/skip-the-cs-degree-major-in-english-a5b137375697" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">medium.com/@tobrien/skip-…
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alco ⊢ ꙮ
alco ⊢ ꙮ@qualiascript·
being right-leaning and high openness is so funny. "this is one of my favorite musicians, i disagree with everything they stand for, highly recommend"
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TwoAndFour
TwoAndFour@TwoAndFour1·
@St_Rev Wow, that is a lot more fishy than dating a student. Looks like he picked the right field eventually.
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St. Rev. Dr. Rev ⏭️☯️🏴😻
I don't care about the metoo stuff but Biss's academic career was pretty fishy. He had several papers retracted, including one in Annals. Went from a postdoc at IAS and a professorship at Chicago to dropping out of the field entirely. #Academic_career" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Daniel_Bi…
Benjamin Ryan@benryanwriter

Analysis on the Illinois congressional district MeToo accusations: *Everyone on Bluesky sympathizes with Megan Wachspress, the 42-year-old accuser, who is a lecturer at Stanford Law School. They call her brave for coming forward and talking about how she was harmed. *Everyone on X is exasperated by what they see as MeToo over-reach and sympathizes with Daniel Biss, the 48-year-old mayor of Evanston, Illinois, and a leading candidate in today's congressional primary in the Chicago area. Wachspress wrote on Bluesky and in a Substack that when she was a 20-year-old junior at U. of Chicago, Biss was her professor in a math course. He was then an assistant professor a the university and was 26. He was very friendly to her during office hours and then, after the term ended, sough a romantic course of action with Wachspress. The two dated for a little while and did some making out, she asserts. But then each of them decided this wasn't appropriate and they cut it off. Biss' campaign has since confirmed this account. Neither has reported that there was any sex between them. Wachspress says she found this, among other elements of what she described as demeaning sexism, so demoralizing that despite her mathematical prowess, she pursued a different field in her graduate studies.

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TwoAndFour
TwoAndFour@TwoAndFour1·
@moorehn That is for expensive private schools. For mid priced ones the purpose is to keep your child from poor peers.
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Heidi N. Moore
Heidi N. Moore@moorehn·
This is a common, very bourgeois error about the purpose of private school. The purpose of private school is not academic achievement. It is to establish a child within a social network of contacts that will help their career and marriage prospects for life.
Nick Maggiulli@dollarsanddata

Private schools are the most expensive placebo in America. Nowhere else will you pay $250k+ for something that has so little impact on school achievement. My latest on why private school isn't worth the cost: ofdollarsanddata.com/why-private-sc…

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TwoAndFour
TwoAndFour@TwoAndFour1·
@Chris_arnade @JerusalemDemsas The downsides of meritocracy. Elites who believe they are there because of something unique inside them, instead of being bred as a conscious elite. Elites are not rewarded with cash, but good person gold stars.
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Chris Arnade 🐢🐱🚌
Chris Arnade 🐢🐱🚌@Chris_arnade·
I tagged them "front-row" over a decade ago, when writing exactly about the opioid crisis they were missing/downplaying (including a lot of people you are professionally close to) -- It's not new, everyone who does a sociological study of societies comes to some term (Guardian class, etc) but what is relatively new is a lack of awareness by this class that they have any privilege, much less agenda setting one, and they also have a worldview of moral certainty that clashes with the masses. The nastiest pushback I got back then was from a struggling PhD in X, who refused to believe (Look at my salary!) that they were on the "more influential, powerful" side of the ledger and were not the man of the people they imagined themselves to be. They still are that way
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Jerusalem
Jerusalem@JerusalemDemsas·
I wrote about the “messenger class”—the journalists, academics, tech workers, nonprofit leaders, and political professionals who set the boundaries of public debate. The problem with media bias is often oversimplified to "they're too left wing" but the real problem is far more difficult to counteract. theargumentmag.com/p/shoot-the-me…
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TwoAndFour
TwoAndFour@TwoAndFour1·
@megbasham People don't really understand that that is what the freedom of speech/religion is for. Protestantism.
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Megan Basham
Megan Basham@megbasham·
Look, I have and love friends of other faiths, but the United States was built upon a Protestant ethic and outlook. Others have come and contributed to our culture, and I do not deny that. But to claim that America’s founding, its self-understood identity for the vast majority of its existence, had been anything other than Protestant is a lie.
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Crémieux
Crémieux@cremieuxrecueil·
State-level EdTech adoption does not seem to be bad for NAEP scores. States that adopted earlier and states that adopted later all follow similar score trajectories, with no evidence of an inflection point when they adopted EdTech.
Crémieux tweet media
Crémieux@cremieuxrecueil

I *think* I've figured out most of what Horvath did to get his results that he didn't explain. I'll explain by using his Grade 4 Mathematics scores. I took his graph and digitized it, which introduces a small amount of error because his graph's resolution was a bit low. The amount of error here is small. Then, I programmatically searched for his specification. I got pretty close by cycling through possibilities. I matched the slope and my RMSE on the points was small before the alleged digital inflection point. Afterwards, it was a bit larger, because it's less clear what he did exactly. But to get as close as I did, I had to: - Bin scores by 2-year event-time relative to his stated inflection years - Exclude 2022 (which he only theoretically, but not statistically justified) - Cut Florida's outmost bins - Use event-time as x instead of bin midpoint This delivers his exact slope: 1.08 before digital inflection and -0.28 after. But what if we undo all of the arbitrary decisions we had to use to get here? If we use bin midpoints instead of mean event-time, we move to 1.06/-0.27. Not a big effect. If we include Florida post bins in the slope, we go to +1.08/-0.33. If we include 2022, we go to +1.08/-0.76. If we include Florida 1992/1996, we get +1.08/-0.28. If we keep N = 1 bins instead of dropping them (which we shouldn't do, because they are reliable since they're whole states!), we get to +1.05/-0.25. And if we bin midpoints and all post bins, we get +1.06/-0.33. If we combine these things and conduct the most sensible analysis available to us given the data, we get +1.04/+0.10, a reduction in slope for sure, but what were we expecting anyway? If the pre-trend had held, the extrapolation would be to 256.3 points, which is higher than any individual state has ever scored. The pre-trend of +1.08/year is not a plausible counterfactual. Rather, it's a catch-up trend from the 1990s-2000s that was already decelerating (just look!) before any state had adopted digital teaching. Extrapolating it forward and treating that as real evidence of a gap or a 'loss' is attributing a ceiling effect to EdTech. Moreover, the real key to Horvath's error is this: He fumbled around with his data until he found a design that just recapitulates national trends, regardless of causality! 76% of states have inflection years in 2014-16, and he cut out the furthest entries (FL/TX), so centering on the inflection year and averaging across states is nearly-identical to centering on 2015 and averaging. The pre-trend is the national NAEP improvement from the 1990s through the mid-2010s, and the post-trend is the national stagnation and decline, and the permutation tests confirm this: randomly shuffling inflection years across states give the same pattern! In fact, Horvath made decisions that effectively guaranteed that his result would just end up being a replot of the national trends by cutting down on his power with the exclusion of FL and TX, and the consequent elimination of 36% of the variance in inflection dates. This is not a credible analysis by any means. The only really credible analysis is the synthetic control study of Florida. It's the only analysis with identifying variation because Florida adopted in 2011, four years before the bulk of the nation. And Florida *outscored* its synthetic control post-adoption! Every other analysis you can do here, from a TWFE, to permutation tests, to dose-response analyses of all kinds, is fundamentally limited by having just 49/51 jurisdictions within a 4-year window. (This is a big issue for all sorts of analyses that just use America's 50 states + D.C. They're very underpowered!) The non-fiddly construction I ran, where everything is sensible and up-front and not ad hoc (always test!) returns nulls and possibly even positive results. And Horvath's analytic methods? Well, they just weren't able to support his conclusions even if he hadn't fiddled. Advice for other analysts: never construct your way to a result. Just stick to basic data cleaning and the simplest tests you can run. You don't need to get fancy, or you might end up so confused you replot a transformed version of your observed data and call illusory trend-changes 'causal evidence.'

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TwoAndFour
TwoAndFour@TwoAndFour1·
@TheStalwart Fourier Series are an example of an infinite dimesional space having consequences for 2 dimensional objects.
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Joe Weisenthal
Joe Weisenthal@TheStalwart·
I still don’t get extreme multidimensional space. How could there be more than three dimensions. Ok time. Fine that’s four. But more than that? Come on.
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TwoAndFour
TwoAndFour@TwoAndFour1·
@eugyppius1 I think you know why the psycho kill dogs are there. C'mon
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eugyppius
eugyppius@eugyppius1·
When i lived in America I was a serious distance runner, routinely knocked back 90 or 100-mile weeks. This mostly in rural VT/MA, where it ought to be idyllic and wonderful to run through beautiful forests, except everyone owns psycho death kill dogs for some reason.
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eigenrobot
eigenrobot@eigenrobot·
im the kind of sick where im just awake all night because i cant stop coughing utterly cursed
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TwoAndFour
TwoAndFour@TwoAndFour1·
@JohnWakefieId They still exist, your insurance isn't good enough to give you access to them.
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John Wakefield
John Wakefield@JohnWakefieId·
I remember when every other doctor's or dentist's office had a massive fish tank. Beautiful diverse fish and tastefully decorated. Now you never see them. What happened?
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