It's drawn 3 Presidents to speak at commencement.
With an enrollment of 170,000, Miami Dade is the country’s largest college (not including online universities). Ninety percent of its students are minorities, and it graduates more black and Hispanic students than any other college. This is no small accomplishment in light of the country’s stubbornly low college attendance and graduation rates among minorities.
Blogging on bureaucracy, organizations, USDA, agriculture programs, American history, the food movement, and other interests. Often contrarian, usually optimistic, sometimes didactic, occasionally funny, rarely wrong, always a nitpicker.
Saturday, April 30, 2011
Biggest U.S. College?
According to this NYTimes article, Miami-Dade is:
Friday, April 29, 2011
US and India on Food
Ajay Shah's blog has a post discussing a new CPI (consumer price index) for India. What's interesting is the weighting
Don't know what the weights are for the U.S. but wikipedia gives this: They are weighted this way: Housing: 41.4%, Food and Beverage: 17.4%, Transport: 17.0%, Medical Care: 6.9%, Other: 6.9%, Apparel: 6.0%, Entertainment: 4.4%
Sub Group | New CPI | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Rural | Urban | All India | CPI IW | ||
Food, beverages and tobacco | 59.31 | 37.15 | 49.71 | 50.20 | |
Fuel and Light | 10.42 | 8.40 | 9.49 | 6.25 | |
Clothing, bedding and footwear | 5.36 | 3.91 | 4.73 | 13.28 | |
Housing | 0.00 | 22.53 | 9.77 | 5.33 | |
Miscellaneous | 24.91 | 28.00 | 26.31 | 24.94 |
Don't know what the weights are for the U.S. but wikipedia gives this: They are weighted this way: Housing: 41.4%, Food and Beverage: 17.4%, Transport: 17.0%, Medical Care: 6.9%, Other: 6.9%, Apparel: 6.0%, Entertainment: 4.4%
Thursday, April 28, 2011
The Trump Game: "I Am So Proud of Myself Because..."
All you need to do to play the game is to complete the sentence made notorious by the Donald:
"I am so proud of myself because...."
Extra credit if you complete "I am so proud of myself because I've accomplished something that nobody else has been able to accomplish...."
"I am so proud of myself because...."
Extra credit if you complete "I am so proud of myself because I've accomplished something that nobody else has been able to accomplish...."
Wednesday, April 27, 2011
Why Do Things Go to Hell in High School
I've been distracted by a plumbing crisis, but I saw a favorable piece on Jeb Bush mention that Florida scores under him did great, except they fell off when tested in high school. Matt Yglesias has a piece on Milwaukee, comparing scores of different systems, but they all fall down in high school. I suspect it's a tribute to one three-letter word: sex.
Tuesday, April 26, 2011
Bureaucrats and Experts
What's the difference between a bureaucrat and an expert? Here's a NYTimes science essay in which a doctor compares his relationship with plumbers over a puzzling problem with his dishwasher to the relationship between patients who have their own theories of their illnesses and a doctor. He ends:
When matters of personal health (or home appliances) are at stake, we want a lot more than expertise from our experts. The rational world suddenly loses its appeal; dull, steady scientific observation seems only dull and steady. We want some pixie dust, a little magic, an eccentric genius who can see through the usual mumbo-jumbo to the core of the problem (paging Dr. House).So what distinguishes a bureaucrat dealing with the public from a plumber dealing with a homeowner or a doctor dealing with a patient? I suspect in some cases, perhaps many, an FSA technician at the desk in a county office is seen as an "expert" by the farmer she's serving, rather than being viewed as a "bureaucrat". One thing which strikes me is: in the doctor/patient, plumber/homeowner scenarios both parties share the same goal, curing the illness or fixing the appliance. When the relationship is viewed as bureaucrat and customer/client there's little or no assumption of a shared goal.
But until our prince comes, we are left with the most basic, bare-bones determination: do we trust this guy or not? And this decision, rather than following along a perfectly manicured line of reasoning and evidence, relies on that least scientific of all human inclinations — the simple leap of faith.
The Ultimate in Customization of Farm Programs
The Rural Blog has a piece reporting a suggestion southern farmers will push for an individual option: the ability to choose between direct payments and the ACRE program. I guess it's not the first time farmers have had a choice: the SURE program was also an option. I understand the logic: northern farmers like crop insurance, southerners don't, so you make both sides happy by giving them a choice. It's logical, but it's confusing to explain and hard to administer. I hope someone is asking GAO to look at the tradeoffs of offering options.
Monday, April 25, 2011
Form and Reality: Binding Signatures and Notaries Public
Our legal system tends to operate on notarized signatures: you take a document to a notary public, present proof of identity, sign the document and the notary impresses her seal. But these days it seems one could document a signing by technology: use a video camera to record the proof of identity and the person signing. Of course, it's likely it will take a century or two to change the rules to use the new technology.
The Military Bureaucracy
The Project on Government Oversight cites a Sen. McCaskill oversight hearing with reference to "brass creep", then includes some stuff on the Air Force's bureaucracy:
- “In the last seven years alone, the service has shed nearly 43,000 airmen while adding 44 generals.”
Sunday, April 24, 2011
The Importance of Statistics
Via Marginal Revolution, a post which explains why the housing bubble never showed up in the cost of living index.
And Yglesias wonders whether finance really adds to the GDP.
The bottom line to me: there's the set of activities which are paid for; the set of activities which are reflected in various indices, the set of activities which provide real value to people. The three sets overlap, but don't coincide.
And Yglesias wonders whether finance really adds to the GDP.
The bottom line to me: there's the set of activities which are paid for; the set of activities which are reflected in various indices, the set of activities which provide real value to people. The three sets overlap, but don't coincide.
Food Movement Meets the Tea Party
Partly due to the rise of the tea party, there have been a number of laws passed and more bills proposed which have the effect of exempting a state from some sort of federal regulation, whether or immigration, health care, or whatever. Now the food movement has gotten into the action, passing local ordinances exempting locally grown food from state and federal regulation, as in this Maine case
On the anniversary of the start of the Civil War, it's a good reminder that Americans have a deep rooted impulse to secede from government, whether the subject is slavery or food.
On the anniversary of the start of the Civil War, it's a good reminder that Americans have a deep rooted impulse to secede from government, whether the subject is slavery or food.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)