Maya
689 posts

Maya
@supes0
61 year old mother and electrical engineer.







The least competent people are often the most confident. This is known as the Dunning-Kruger Effect. The Dunning-Kruger effect is a cognitive bias where people with limited skill or knowledge in a particular area dramatically overestimate their own abilities. The reason is simple yet paradoxical: the same skills needed to do something well are also the skills needed to accurately judge how well you’re doing it. Without that self-awareness, incompetent individuals remain blissfully unaware of their shortcomings — and become overly confident as a result. As Charles Darwin noted: “Ignorance more frequently begets confidence than does knowledge.” On the flip side, truly skilled people often fall into the opposite trap. Because a task feels easy to them, they assume it must be easy for everyone else. As a result, experts tend to underestimate their own abilities relative to others, while the least competent loudly overestimate theirs. This creates a striking gap: the people who know the least are often the most sure of themselves, while the most competent frequently doubt their own superiority.

Join us for an official Earth Day Party Walk from April 22–27 🌎 This time, it’s not about how far you go, but the flowers you leave behind 💐 Based on how many flowers we plant together, participants will receive Huge Seedlings for weather-themed Decor Pikmin after the event 🌱 Join via the URL below or by scanning the QR code ✅ 🔗 pikminbloom.onelink.me/pWSt/utoadb3g

Just Ahead! Our Program at a Glance for researchED Canada Calgary ( Sat May 9, 2026) is now posted docs.google.com/document/d/1If… Here's the complete program with all the sessions: sites.google.com/view/researche… Just 2 weeks from today!



The NY Equity Coalition is right. Denying access to 8th grade Algebra I to advanced students is deplorable. It is usually done to avoid tracking. Unless all 8th graders are prepared to take Alg I, schools are hesitant to offer Alg I to only those who are ready. Advantaged families will get Alg I in the marketplace. chalkbeat.org/newyork/2026/0…





.@GovKathyHochul and I worked together on a “Back to Basics” literacy overhaul rooted in the science of reading. So it’s shocking to see outdated, debunked balanced literacy creeping back into teacher training—after $10M was spent. That’s not what we envisioned. Reading scores are falling. Kids are falling behind. That’s why I introduced A.78, the Right to Read Act—to set statewide standards for evidence-based literacy, ensure real teacher training, and end the patchwork that’s failing our students. No more grey area. We know what works. Structured, sequential, cumulative literacy—grounded in the five pillars—works for all students. Guessing from pictures and context clues works for no one. Literacy is foundational. We must get this right. hechingerreport.org/new-york-ten-m…

NEW FREE POST Jo Boaler and the state of education research A garden full of weeds Link 👇👇👇


Join us for an official Earth Day Party Walk from April 22–27 🌎 This time, it’s not about how far you go, but the flowers you leave behind 💐 Based on how many flowers we plant together, participants will receive Huge Seedlings for weather-themed Decor Pikmin after the event 🌱 Join via the URL below or by scanning the QR code ✅ 🔗 pikminbloom.onelink.me/pWSt/utoadb3g






