Tuesday, August 27, 2013
Lesson from Freakonomics
Summer Surprises
I was personally ever surprised at how much I enjoyed Freakonomics. I had expected a boring book about basic economics, but instead what I received was an interesting book about hidden things that influence our lives. The book was easy to get into, it was entertaining, it didn't feel like a burning professor talking to an inattentive class, and the little anecdotes made it funny and a little but personal. It was a pleasant surprise for me. It just goes to show that shouldn't judge a book by its cover (literally in this case). The book was very good and made me want to pick up the sequel.
Monday, August 26, 2013
The Economics of Behavior
In chapter 1: the overall controversy/topic is how teachers cheat on their own students state exams to gain better reputation or get more money. To me, this is still incredibly ironic, since teachers have always been saying that cheating does no good in school and in life. But if that's actually true then why DO teachers cheat? Or what made them make this decision to cheat? Their action to do this lead those teachers to some dire consequences, like being fired, which completed altered their lives for not only that moment but for the future of any other job they get, their reputation has permanently been stained.
On the other hand, in chapters 5 and 6: the topic is the overall role and effects of parents on their children. what I found most interesting about this was the fact that even when parents (and most others) think they are doing the right thing to help or benefit their children, but in reality they might actually be hurting their future reputation. Even with something as little as a name; Levitt and Dubner explored how the different variations of names can affect their total years of school education. I had never actually thought about how two people with the same name, but different spelling, differed in lifestyles, or how the parents settled on a variation of a name and not the original. Also, Levitt and Dubner claimed that books in the home played a key role in the future of a child's success; if there are books in the house the child grows up in then they will have better test scores latter on. This is just another decision a parent would have to make if they wanted to create a better future for their child.
Heritage
He showed just how large the impact could be through the example of the first officers and flight engineers, who came from a culture that had great emphasis on respect for people who are considered your superior, which ultimately caused several plane crashes. At first it may seem a bit ridiculous that they didn't just speak up when they realized that the plane was going to crash, but then I thought about it, and how I could see a little bit of myself in that. Vietnam's culture also has emphasis in respect for superiors, specifically elders. I realized that when I greet elders in the Vietnamese community and my grandma I bow to them as a sign of respect, an say a very formal greeting. This is something that I was raised to do, and something that I have done for so long that I don't even notice that I do it anymore. So you never really know just how deeply your heritage impacts who you are.
You can't choose you heritage, but you can go against it like the first officers and flight engineers from Korean Air, and change your habits, you just have to work at it. This is reassuring news since its a nice though that you can decide to change and be something other than what your heritage has, in part, made you.
The Power of Information
Summary of Dark Tide
Molasses was very important during the early 1900s as it was not only a food but was a ingredient was used to make weapons and ammunition, which was very important during the time as World War I was going on in Europe. It was also used in the slave trade as a way for the U.S. to get slaves from Africa in exchange for molasses. This tank was very important to big businesses including its supplier USIA or the United States Industrial Alcohol as it made them a lot of money.
Since the tank was so important for making money the USIA wanted it built as soon as possible even if it meant that not all of the safety requirements were made. Everyone liked the idea of building a molasses tank except anarchists. They hated the tank because it supplied soldiers fighting in the war with weapons and ammunition and anarchists hated the war itself. The tank was built and it instantly made tons of money. The tank did not last very long as it eventually collapsed. The disaster caused 2.3 million pounds of molasses to spread all over the city of Boston in all directions. The wave of molasses killed 21 and injured many more. It destroyed buildings and the railroad system leaving wreckage everywhere.
The cause of the collapsed tank remained a debate for several years. Some believed that it collapsed because it was built incorrectly from the day it was built. Others believed that it collapsed because an anarchists put a bomb into the tank which caused the tank to explode. Eventually the debate went to court and after years of argument a final decision was reached that the tank collapsed because the tank was not built correctly. The rivets were built wrong, the steel plates were not the right size, and the "factor of safety" was too low. Eventually USIA was held responsible for the disaster.
Dark Tide vs the other books
Ignorance is Not Always Bliss
If the USIA had just admitted to the faulty tank, they could have temporarily shut down the tank to rebuild it, and still remained a credible company. They probably still would not lost as much money and they would have been able to keep the tank on the harbor. They would have made even more money before prohibition started. Ignorance may be bliss in some cases, but in the case of the USIA, their ignorance cost them their credibility as a supplier and a lot of money on top of that.
Techniques of the Author
My Opinion of Dark Tide
After the disaster, I expected a lot of people to die in the disaster, but only 21 people died. I thought I was going to see numbers in the hundreds, but that was not the case, becuase when the tank fell apart, everyone in the immediate area had gone to lunch, so there weren't a lot of people around. The effects it had on Boston and the rest of the country did not surprise me becuase that was really the first national disaster to happen.
The four year court was amazing. I can't believe it took them four years to come to the conclusion that USIA was at fault for the tank disaster. The amount of witnesses and the amount of information that was collected was surreal. It took Ogden another 10 months after the case ended to state his final say of the case. Also, the amount of money USIA had to pay (which was about 650,000 dollars) was such an immense amount of money. In today's standards, that number would be in the millions. This book was a decent and accurate representation of the molasses disaster of 1919.
Comparing Levitt and Dubner to Gladwell, my response to Outliers and Freakonomics
Gladwell displayed his idea of the road to success through software innovators like Bill Gates and Bill Joy, along with industrial entrepreneurs like Rockefeller and Carnegie. Gladwell almost entirely shot down the idea of rags to riches besides few cases like Andrew Carnegie. It is encouraging that people do not need to be geniuses to be successful. Outliers showed that one must be an opportunist (among other things) to be successful. If you don’t enjoy what you’re doing then you will not have the motivation to practice for 10,000 hours in order to achieve success. One also needs the motivation from others in order to push to continue to make strides toward a goal. What if Bill Gates had never met Paul Allen? Would he still have enough motivation and support to work those long evenings in the computer labs?
What Makes a Perfect Parent?
Sunday, August 25, 2013
The Trouble With Geniuses: IQ's
By chapter four Gladwell talked about how the one thing that affected the IQ’s were family background. In my life I think that is true for me because of the kind of household I grew up in, my family would make sure I got my homework done and got good grades. When I got older I hit a point where I would do that on my own, but I learned from my parents. I also think that for someone who doesn’t have a great background they might not have the highest IQ, or it could be the opposite and they would try to learn from their parents mistakes. Malcolm also talks about the community and environment and how it can affect intelligence, and I think that it is by a chance that you will grow up somewhere, but it is what you do with the opportunities. I’m still not sure if I feel that success comes from hard work or opportunities, I think that it is a combination or both that is needed.
Dark Tide: A Reflection
Going into Stephen Puleo's Dark Tide, I was expecting the justification for calling this event a disaster to be a high number of deaths resulting from the 2.3 million gallon molasses tank failing and flooding the streets of Boston's north end. So for that reason I was surprised to see the total number of deceased civilians was 21. This is not to say their deaths were insignificant, but after the 86-page preamble to the tank bursting during which the rampant overcrowding in the north end was described, I predicted the death toll to be in the hundreds.
After reading that a major contributor to USIA's success branched from producing munitions during World War I and alcohol prior to that, I figured that perhaps the disaster would be an economic fallout for the city after such a tremendous loss of product. Yet again though, I concluded this was not likely to be the reason due to the end of the war and the passing of the 18th amendment, prohibition.
Later in the book, I encountered what I thought was the most likely contender for why this flood reached disaster status. Following the tank's failure, there seemed to be a spike in anarchist related terrorism that followed. There were bombs planted and detonated in, "Boston, Washington, New York, Cleveland, Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, and Patterson, New Jersey" (Puleo 150). In addition, there were strikes in several different trades ... even the police struck in some cities.
Then of course there is the culmination of all these factors wrapped into one. The deaths, injuries, damages (which cost over a million dollars, a fact revealed during the four year trial which eventually held USIA liable. The trial was a massive expense to the city as well), anarchist activity, and economic impact all together are certainly more than enough to qualify this molasses flood as a terrible disaster in Boston's north end.
Concerted Cultivation vs. Natural Growth
I think the concerted cultivation, as much as I hate to say it, sees more success in their children. These are the parents who as Gladwell explained plan their child's birth date in order to give them an advantage at becoming a professional athlete or force them to practice their instrument for hours until they master it. Usually those who practice concerted cultivation are the ones who were successful in their own life or careers and they want their children to shadow that. Although its been said that sometimes the children of these type of parents are the ones to rebel, trends have also proved that they have been the most successful. This is because they are given opportunities to succeed unlike those who experience the parenting style of natural growth.
Saturday, August 24, 2013
Athletes and Their Birth Dates
Character analysis: Martin Clougherty from Dark Tide
Friday, August 23, 2013
The Matthew Effect
Thursday, August 22, 2013
Responsibilities of the People
Ethnicity and Effort
Tuesday, August 20, 2013
Home Stretch
Over the final week, I would like you to do one last assignment. It will be a post only. You are not required to comment on other people's post. However, you are certainly not banned from doing so. There have been many strong conversations throughout the summer, there's no reason why it should stop now.
Your final post is your own creation to make. I only require that it be original and that it be inspired by any one or multiple of the summer reading choices or the summer reading experience. This should be completed before the beginning of school.
Take care and see you all first period Tuesday.
Thursday, August 15, 2013
"Magazine Looks at the Science Behind 1919 Molasses Disaster"
Thursday, August 1, 2013
Controversies of Life
The authors of Freakonomics, Steven Levitt and Stephen Dubner, are likely to have included the topic of abortion in their book because they wanted to show the long term effects of the controversial court case Roe v. Wade. Like they said in the book, no one has ever blamed the crime decrease on the legalization of abortion and they wanted to show the link between the two. Maybe, they thought including something controversial would get more people to read and buy the book, or maybe they just stumbled upon it in their studies.
I, myself, have no preference on abortion. As much as I hate humanity, there are some aspects of abortion that I am able to disagree with. The world is over populated, and without abortion, it would be even more crowded and aggravating, but on the flip side, I always love to see what could-have-been. For example, what if one of my friends or someone in my family was supposed to be aborted? What if an aborted child could have been the next Einstein? But what if an aborted child could have been the next Hitler? No one knows what could have been; we only know what is. I am a big supporter of women's rights and I believe they have the right to swing which ever way they please concerning the abortion controversy, but they should keep in mind what could happen in both sides of the argument. Their child could end up contributing to the crime rate in America, or they could turn their life around and become a self-made millionaire. Aborted or not, the thing will impact someone's life greatly.
Bagel Crimes and Honesty
We all like to think that we are good and honest people, but when we are given the chance to do we sometimes cut corners, or do dishonest things when the situation is considered trivial or others might not notice our actions?
The author discusses this because something like not paying for a bagel is a crime that usually goes unnoticed, because it's not the type of thing we think of when we think of crime like burglary or murder. It's one of those unrecorded middle class crimes in the daily life of the working man.
This is presented by the story of Paul Feldman the "Bagel Guy", who started the business of leaving bagels in offices with a box with a suggested price on it. He collected data on what his collection rate was, and with that data he was able to see many trends on how different aspects of life correlated with bagel collection money.
He saw how their moods could effect their generosity and honesty in giving money to the bagel guy. The stress of holidays such as Christmas caused some people to pay less or not at all for their bagels.
There's also morals to the bagels since Paul isn't there when the bagels are taken or when the money is put in the basket, so people may see this as a way around their morals since they can't actually see the face of the person that they are cheating out of money, and there is no way for him to find out exactly who took a bagel without paying. And since bagels are relatively cheap the cheater may see this as just a trivial thing, and not worth the guilt that would be reserved for bigger offenses.
A similar thing was done at a church that I attend where after mass there would be baskets of donuts with a donation box beside it. Even though the setup is very similar to the bagels, the situation is different as the people who are taking these donuts had just come from church, and morals after church are much more high than any other time.