Archive for January, 2019

Nollaig na mBan

Posted in Uncategorized on January 6, 2019 by telescoper

In the Liturgical Calendar today (6th January) is the date of Epiphany, when according to tradition Three Wise Men (Magi) arrived bearing gifts for the infant Jesus.

A bit under the weather today I’ve been taking it easy and listening to the radio, in the course of which I discovered that today is also Nollaig na mBan (Women’s Christmas).

Nollaig na mBan is a day in Ireland on which it is traditional for women to get together and enjoy their own Christmas, while the menfolk stay at home and handle the chores.

Although an old tradition, emanating from the West of Ireland, Nollaig na mBan tradition has apparently had a bit of a resurgence in recent years. In particular the radio station RTÉ Lyric FM has been marking the occasion with lots of very fine music written and/or performed by women.

It seems that hardly a day goes by without me learning something new about Ireland!

Nollaig na mBan Shona Daoibh!

Waves Breaking on the Rocks at Kilkee

Posted in Art with tags , , , on January 5, 2019 by telescoper

Back in Ireland on Thursday I was pottering about in my flat listening to the radio when I heard an interesting discussion about the work of art shown above, by Nathaniel Hone the Younger. It’s not a finished painting, but a small sketch made in watercolours, probably a study for a larger work. Hone made lots of these sketches over the years; this one was made in about 1890 at Kilkee and is in the National Gallery of Ireland. The dark palette and rough texture created by very thick application of the paint is unusual for a watercolour. No doubt all that is at least partly because of the windswept location in which the artist was working!

Back to Exams

Posted in Education on January 4, 2019 by telescoper

Well here I am, back in my office at Maynooth University, although I wish I could say the same about the heating. The Christmas closure officially ended yesterday (3rd January) but there are very few people about today and no heating in my office. I doubt there will be anywhere open to get lunch later, either. And did I mention there’s no heating?

We have a short hiatus between now and Friday 11th January in advance of the start of the examination period, during which I plan to try to finish off a few papers that I failed to complete over the holiday. As it happens, my examination on Astrology Astrophysics & Cosmetics Cosmology is one of the first, next Friday morning. No doubt I’ll get more than a few inquiries from students between now and then.

I’ll actually be in London next Friday when the examination takes place, as I’m giving the closing keynote talk at the annual LGBT Steminar which this year takes place at the brand new IOP Building in King’s Cross. I’m looking forward to that, but have no idea what I’m going to talk about.

Anyway, back to the topic of examinations, I noticed a piece in the Irish Times a few days ago concerning the fact that the proportion of First and Upper-Second Class degrees awarded by Irish universities has increased. The same thing has happened in the UK recently too.

Responses to this from most media pundits have generally been to accuse universities of `dumbing down’ their examinations. Responses from university staff, on the other hand, have included complaints that they are being forced by senior management to inflate grades awarded to students. All I can say to the latter is that I’ve never experienced, at any University I’ve ever worked in, even as a Head of School, any pressure whatsoever to increase the grades for any category of student in any course. That’s not to say that it doesn’t happen anywwhere. I just don’t know. I just say I’ve no experience of it happening.

I would like to say to those who jump to conclusion that universities are making it easier for students to get high grades by lowering standards is to set aside your prior prejudice and imagine, for the sake of argument, that universities are actually getting better at teaching students. How would that improvement manifest itself in the proportion of students awarded 1st and 2.1 degrees?

The answer to that question is that the proportion of good degrees would increase. One can’t therefore argue on that evidence alone whether examinations are being made easier or teaching is getting better (or indeed that students find examinations easier because they are better taught). In other words, the assumption that it’s all about dumbing down, is based on something other than the grade award data. If you have other evidence, that’s fine. Let’s hear it.

What I have seen is better training for teaching staff, better facilities for studying, and (yes) more motivated students. Given all that, why would you not expect students to get better results?

Turning a Corner after Brexit

Posted in Politics on January 3, 2019 by telescoper

As I wait at Cardiff Airport for my flight back to Ireland, I see Theresa May has said that the UK ‘can turn a corner’ if MPs back her Brexit plan.

I’ve found a helpful graphic to show how that would work.

Turning a Blind Eye

Posted in History, Politics with tags , , on January 2, 2019 by telescoper

As my little festive sojourn in Wales draws to a close, there’s no sign of the Brexit Pantomime season doing likewise. The latest episode of this tragicomedy saw Transport Secretary Chris Grayling dishing out £14 million of taxpayers’ money to a ‘company’ called Seaborne Freight to operate ferries between Ramsgate and Ostend when, in less than 90 days, the UK leaves the EU.

As his name suggests, there’s something very fishy about Grayling’s decision to hand out a lucrative contract, without any proper procurement process, to a company that has only existed for a few months, has never operated a ferry, has no trained staff and, above all, has no ships!

Is this lawful? I doubt it. Is it ethical? Certainly not. Will Grayling get away with it? Almost certainly. Recent events have shown that illegality, fraud and corruption are all part of the job description for a Brexiter.

Perhaps Grayling is trying to channel Lord Nelson who, in legend anyway, at the Battle of Copenhagen in 1801, held a telescope to his blind eye when ordered to retreat, saying “I see no ships”. The difference here is of course that the ships can’t be seen because they don’t exist.

“I see no ships” is actually a misquote: what Nelson said was something like “I have a right to be blind sometimes. I really do not see the signal”. This event is not the origin of the phrase ‘to turn a blind eye’, either: the OED gives an example of its usage from 1698..

Anyway I think we can all see what the signal is in this case, a desperate government throwing public money down the drain without a shred of accountability. Get used to it. There will be a lot more of that in Brexit Britain. It’s what you voted for, isn’t it?

The Old Year’s Blog Statistics

Posted in Biographical on January 1, 2019 by telescoper

Here we are then, in 2019. I’ve been vegetating most of the day but now, before I try to figure out which assortment of bins to put out for tomorrow, I thought I’d do a quick blog about this blog.

Once upon a time, in the good old days, in the dim and distant past, WordPress used to publish an annual statistical summary page for its bloggers, but it has discontinued that practice so now I’ll just write my own brief summary based on the data available via the usual dashboard.

For those interested I got about 425K hits this year, just over 1160 a day, with about 221K unique views. That’s up a bit since last year. In fact 2018 has been the busiest year on here since 2014. Interestingly, a much larger proportion of traffic was from the USA in 2018 than in any previous year.

In 2018 there were 2625 comments on this blog, similar to 2017. No prizes for guessing who wrote the most comments. Posts received 1153 ‘likes’ during the course of the year.

Altogether, since this blog started in 2008 to the end of 2018, it has been viewed 3,795,323 times by a total of 1, 315,185 unique visitors (though, obviously, all my visitors are unique). On this basis I’d expect my 4,000,000th read sometime during 2019.

It just remains for me to pass on a message from my employer.

I’ll be back at work on Friday!