

Corey Moss-Pech
1.3K posts

@CoreyPech
Assistant Professor @FSUSociology. Formerly @UMSociology and @osusoc. Labor/Ed/Inequality. Book, Major Trade-Offs, with @UChicagoPress #LGM




I am concerned all the doom about young college grads is going to convince many that non-college is a better path to prosperity. While obviously true sometimes, the data is clear that college grads are still doing better. nationalreview.com/2026/03/ais-ov…

I wrote last week @chronicle about the Oklahoma executive order to "phase out" tenure, and what it might mean for the rest of higher ed. It's the most sweeping attempt at eliminating tenure to date, and likely the first to come via EO, one expert told me. chronicle.com/article/oklaho…

With property taxes going up year after year, Michigan seniors deserve stability. They’ve worked hard and earned the right to relief in their golden years. freep.com/story/news/pol…



Democratic Party = permanent minority party without something more than Obamacare tweaks, supply side tinkering, AI wonders, or abundance-by-deregulation. @BostonReview bostonreview.net/forum/how-not-…

🦔 Microsoft is pulling engineers off new features to stabilize Windows 11 after months of patch failures. January brought emergency fixes for systems that couldn't shut down, OneDrive and Dropbox freezing, and machines stuck on black screens at boot. Windows chief Pavan Davuluri says reliability will be the focus for much of the year. Microsoft's stock dropped 12% this week on AI spending concerns. My Take I wrote about this recently. Nadella says 20-30% of Microsoft's code is now AI-written. A GitClear study found code churn doubled after AI tools became widespread. Microsoft's own researchers found developers miss 40% more bugs reviewing AI-generated code because it "looks clean." I can't prove the connection, but when the company bragging about AI-written code has to stop building new features just to fix what's broken, the question keeps asking itself. They're still pushing Recall, which screenshots everything on your desktop. Still shoving Copilot and OneDrive prompts at users. Still overriding browser choices to route traffic through Edge. Users are dealing with broken updates and aggressive upsells at the same time. Trust erodes fast when your operating system feels like it's working against you while also failing to work at all. Hedgie🤗



‘Although ed-tech companies tout huge learning gains, independent research has made clear that technology rarely boosts learning in schools—and often impairs it. A 2024 meta-analysis of 119 studies of early-literacy tech interventions, led by Rebecca Silverman of Stanford University, found the studies described programmes that delivered at best only marginal gains on standardised tests. The majority had little effect, no effect or harmful ones. Jared Horvath, a neuroscientist and author of a book called “The Digital Delusion”, has reviewed meta-analyses covering tens of thousands of studies. His verdict: “In nearly every context, ed tech doesn’t come close to the minimum threshold for meaningful learning impact.”’


Apps to “share photos and updates with friends” always behave like unstable elements. They exist for a few years before the product inevitably decays into something else (like we’ve seen with both IG and Facebook). Interesting reflection here from the Head of IG.

holy fucking shit


@LocasaleLab Academic life would improve if universities would dispose the 19th century decorum and be run like a business with clear roles: pure administration, pure research, pure teaching. Administration needs actual MBAs not theoretical physics PhDs


