SculptorIthas rated Information Doesn't Want to Be Free: 5 stars
Information Doesn't Want to Be Free by Cory Doctorow
Information Doesn't Want to Be Free takes on the state of copyright and creative success in the digital age. Can …
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Information Doesn't Want to Be Free takes on the state of copyright and creative success in the digital age. Can …
"A current, constructive, and actionable exploration of today's racial landscape, offering straightforward clarity that readers of all races need to …
This book addresses many topics within the philosophy of science that other books ignore.
However, it is written in needlessly complicated language. I read several scientific papers every week, and I have read several other philosophy texts. This one was more flowery. I found myself looking up rare words several times a chapter.
It is definitely worth a read anyway but I am open to the possibility that there are better texts out there.
Short, journal format story of a 10 year old girl living through the Tet Offensive and fleeing Saigon.
Very important, especially for anyone who works with refugees.
If you like this, you'll like Kite Runner by Khaled Hosseini, and vice versa. That one is a normal novel though.
Authoritarian, old-fashioned, outdated, and inefficient. I find myself wanting to yell, "Shut the hell up, Harry!" and many other epithets.q
There were some good ideas and quotes in here, but frankly I think Harry is a complete jerk and I would never want to work with him. He is quick to degrade other teachers, other people, and other cultures. I find his attitude toward other teachers highly offensive--there are very good reasons to participate in union activities and ask for better wages. Very reactionary. I can see why this book was popular in the late 90s.
Even if his general philosophies of education were good (and they aren't), you'd do better to read a more up-to-date book on them. I only finished it because someone recommended I read it.
That said, there were nuggets of wisdom. The advice on not wasting time taking role "traditionally" seems obvious but many teachers …
Authoritarian, old-fashioned, outdated, and inefficient. I find myself wanting to yell, "Shut the hell up, Harry!" and many other epithets.q
There were some good ideas and quotes in here, but frankly I think Harry is a complete jerk and I would never want to work with him. He is quick to degrade other teachers, other people, and other cultures. I find his attitude toward other teachers highly offensive--there are very good reasons to participate in union activities and ask for better wages. Very reactionary. I can see why this book was popular in the late 90s.
Even if his general philosophies of education were good (and they aren't), you'd do better to read a more up-to-date book on them. I only finished it because someone recommended I read it.
That said, there were nuggets of wisdom. The advice on not wasting time taking role "traditionally" seems obvious but many teachers still do that. Some of the book is more or less sound career advice.
But frankly, I think Harry lived in his own little world when he wrote this. He is the best teacher in the world, his students are successful, everything is perfect, and everyone likes him.
Teaching is hard. You cannot reduce it to a bunch of platitudes and, as other reviewers have put so well, "motivational posters."
And yes, if you are clever you can adapt this book to high school, but that's clearly NOT what Harry taught. Why do all the work of reading this and trying to make it work for high school when you could just....read a book about high school instead?
I give this book a four because of how it is written. Chomsky evidently went on a number of radio stations for interviews right in a row, they all asked him a bunch of the same questions, and he gave them all similar answers. That made a lot of sense at the time, I'm sure, but it doesn't make for the best read.
If you have ever wondered how this guy has managed to write so damn many books, this is how: he gets editors to transcribe pretty much everything he says publicly and republishes it. He's still a ridiculously prolific reader and writer, even given that tactic. But that pads out a lot of his books and makes it seem like he writes a bit more than he really does.
Read the beginning and the first 2 answers to each subsequent section carefully, then go ahead and skim a …
I give this book a four because of how it is written. Chomsky evidently went on a number of radio stations for interviews right in a row, they all asked him a bunch of the same questions, and he gave them all similar answers. That made a lot of sense at the time, I'm sure, but it doesn't make for the best read.
If you have ever wondered how this guy has managed to write so damn many books, this is how: he gets editors to transcribe pretty much everything he says publicly and republishes it. He's still a ridiculously prolific reader and writer, even given that tactic. But that pads out a lot of his books and makes it seem like he writes a bit more than he really does.
Read the beginning and the first 2 answers to each subsequent section carefully, then go ahead and skim a little for the rest of each section.
Worth a read, but not worth a careful read of every single repetitive word. That's more his editor's fault, not his.
A mission to Mars.
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One man's struggle to survive.
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[The Dark Tower][1] VII
Roland’s ka-tet is reunited, but not without cost. The last episode of the story takes them …
Wonderful character-building. I really cared about some of the characters.
I also appreciated that the book, while open to sequels, could stand on its own. So many questions were answered, and I felt like every loose end and foreshadowed idea came to fruition in some way or another.