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Posts by C. Thi Nguyen

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Games Can Save Us from the Hell of Silicon Valley Optimization Gamification culture was a mistake.

If you read one book about games this year, make it The Score. Here’s my interview with its author, the brilliant philosopher @add-hawk.bsky.social

1 month ago 101 18 5 4

Mel sez: “The nice thing about daylight savings time now is that everything clicks over automatically and you don’t even need to think about it. Only the oven remembers.”

ONLY THE OVEN REMEMBERS

1 month ago 29 0 0 0

I got to chat with Sam Anderson while I was writing, and he gave me the most important advice I got: which was to trust your reader, because they're smart, they're generous, and they want to be there.

1 month ago 5 0 1 0

The final live book launch event for THE SCORE is tomorrow, in NYC: a New School/NYU. I'll be in conversation with Sam Anderson, author of Boomtown - which was one of my soul-inspirations for my book.

Free, but you need to register.

thescorebooktalk.splashthat.com

1 month ago 14 2 1 0

ABSOLUTELY

1 month ago 3 0 1 0

My buddy, who loved boxing, explains his new love of tango:

“It’s like cooperative boxing.”

1 month ago 44 5 5 0

That’s it! She also returns to the idea in her new book, AI Mirror.

2 months ago 5 0 0 0

About 30, and I doubt it would work nearly as well much larger. Ironically, we were also reading stuff about how size and scale limits real democratic conversation.

2 months ago 49 0 3 0
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That’s it!

2 months ago 5 1 0 0

Ironically - or perhaps appropriately - we did this exercise as we were simultaneously reading about open democracy and citizen assemblies and various alternative democratic proposals.

2 months ago 5 1 1 0

Anyway: here's to my students. They took it seriously, they argued it out, and they came up with something that I doubted at first, but ended admiring more than any system I've designed on my own.

2 months ago 1115 29 18 3

At least, it was better than anything else I've thought of and tried on my own.

2 months ago 364 5 1 0

And I think... it mostly worked? I mean, I'm sure the system is cheatable to somebody who was trying to break it. But for a system designed to mostly get students actually engaged in the critical act of thinking, without a punitive ChatGPT detection system... it was... really good?

2 months ago 510 12 5 0

In general the class vibe was: that they knew they were going into a work environment in which AI would be a tempting tool, and that some of them would want to use it in various ways, but that they also wanted to have systems to keep them honest about actually developing real thinking skills.

2 months ago 406 18 1 0

We decided I should do a default light-commenting, and hopefully anybody that AI-wrote the final paper wouldn't request heavier commenting, and it would save me from heavily commenting on an AI paper.)

2 months ago 323 5 1 0
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(PS, we also stole a thing I've been doing for other reasons as protection for my soul. I have traditionally said I will default give students medium-intensity comments, but students can request lighter commenting or heavier commenting.

2 months ago 374 7 1 1

Their idea and goal was to keep each other honest about actually understanding the material by demanding repeated presentations to each other in class.... and it mostly worked?

2 months ago 440 17 1 0

And it was... amazing? Like, the quality of discussion was extremely high, students ended up doing a ton of live thinking and live tweaking and pushing on each other. It wasn't the same as writing, but it most of the students were seriously thinking, and pushing, and applying.

2 months ago 579 17 5 0

And the third workshop was going to be a presentation of their ideas in outline, and the fourth workshop was a simple draft reading workshop.

2 months ago 335 6 1 0

The second workshop was one in which they wanted me to break them into working groups based around similar topics, where they would continue to workshop, refine, and throw ideas at each other.

2 months ago 347 6 1 0

They hammered out a much more complicated set of group workshops, participation in which would constitute the majority of their final project grade. The first workshop was a "brainstorming" workshop, where they mixed up cases they were interested with theories, and helped each other design papers.

2 months ago 380 8 2 0

I often run, in the past, a kind of traditional workshop structure. They come in with an outline of their paper, and workshop it. Then a draft, then workshop it. Etc.

2 months ago 326 5 1 0

And then we did their assignment structure they built, and it was fantastic.

Like, way better than anything I've designed on my own.

2 months ago 504 11 1 2

By the midpoint of the class, I was pretty bitter. It actually started looking like a counterexample to the ideal of inclusive democracy. That maybe I should go back to being the authoritarian technocrat, that my teaching experience was much more important.

2 months ago 389 11 1 0
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Then they presented - and the miserable compromises came. A lot of them hated each others' suggestions and they ended up cobbling together what looked to me like a terrible, misshapen assignment structure of what looked to me like BS-filled group participation assignments, at cross-purposes.

2 months ago 372 10 1 0

A majority of the groups came up with some kind of process that emphasized live, in-class interactions, and non-AI-usable live interaction. Since I gave them the constraint that I didn't have time to orally examine each one separately, they came up with various group in-class exercises.

2 months ago 428 11 1 1

The discussion process was amazing. It created some of the best and most engaged conversations in class I've had. My theory is that I *staked* the conversation - I made it important, and put my money where my mouth was by giving them real power, and real consequences.

2 months ago 610 21 3 2

Two general themes they agreed on immediately:

1. If they used AI for everything, they would learn nothing, and come out of college with no valuable skills, and be replaceable by an AI.

2. All available AI detection software was unreliable and unjust. (I agree with this.)

2 months ago 849 60 3 2

Students seemed to take it super seriously. A few wanted to abuse the power to design an easy class, but the vast majority seemed invested in thinking about what they wanted out of education, what skills they needed in the new era, and what assignments were *for*.

2 months ago 608 22 2 2

I told them they needed to give me a ChatGPT policy, and if there was a ban, they needed to give me a method of detection and enforcement.

I also told them if this ended up with me carefully commenting on mostly AI-written papers, I would probably quit the profession.

2 months ago 568 14 2 1