Categories
Chillin Quotes

Pros and Cons of Metrics

I ran into this episode of Science Friday and I loved how the guest, Philosopher C. Thi Nguyen, spoke about metrics. I am not typically a fan of metrics, I feel they often do a disservice to understanding whole stories. This guest explained this nature of metrics as a weakness that gives it its strength – a strength and weakness that go hand-in-hand – which is that metrics allow information to be shared across contexts (strength), but to do that the information has to be decontextualized (weakness):

“…metrics are both incredibly powerful and incredibly limited and that their power and their limitations are part and parcel of their core function. They offer us clear, simple, objective, unbiased counts, but that there’s also an incredible price to that.

One way to put it is that metrics are incredibly good at capturing the kinds of things that we can all count together easily. And I think the kinds of things they miss systematically are the kinds of things that people are going to count differently, that require some kind of discretion, some kind of judgment, some kind of sensitivity….

Theodore Porter puts it this way…qualitative knowledge is rich and sensitive and open ended and dynamic, but it travels really badly between contexts….

So my favorite example, as a professor and a teacher, is the evaluations I write on my students’ essays. But what I write is not going to be comprehensible to a business school professor or a CS professor. And what they write on their students won’t be comprehensible to me. So what Porter says is that when we make quantitative data, we pick a chunk that’s going to be steady and stable across contexts. We find a chunk that everyone can understand, no matter their background, across the institution or across the world.

So in education, that’s letter grades, GPA. And I think you can get a glimpse of what’s going on here by just thinking about how different and how rich a qualitative evaluation is and how hard it is to understand at a distance, and how quick and easy a letter grade is to understand and how thin and simplified it needs to be.

I felt like this was my, like, Matrix, ‘the veil is ripped from my eyes’ moment, was that metrics are powerful because they’re designed to be stable across contexts so we can all understand them and we can all collect into them. And that’s what creates this kind of cross-cutting, massive, shareable piece of information. But to make that, we had to cut out the context. That is actually the design feature and the design bug in one. They are powerful because they’re decontextualized.”

-C. Thi Nguyen

Categories
Inserts Interconnectivity Relationships

Rest in Peace Charlie Kirk

Rest in Peace Charlie Kirk.

A man with a family. I believe it when they say he was a loving father and husband.

I disagreed with him for much or most of what I’ve seen him say. But, maybe it was his appearance on Jubilee, where I saw the entire 1-hour or so episode, or maybe it was somewhere else, I felt I saw his human side. I was touched by it. I felt like I knew him, I don’t know why.

I created a video about this but I took it down because the night of his death I was shown many clips where he had said negative things, and I don’t want to support those negative things he said that caused pain in other people, and I don’t want to support things he said that were dangerous or de-valuing of human life.

I don’t normally post on current events or divisive topics but I’m posting because I feel this moment needs us to see the humanity in each other.

We all have humanity. Charlie Kirk had a beautiful side, just like us all. We should bring beauty into this moment by preaching love and acceptance.

When we disagree, it is better that we do it with a love and compassion for all. Every person out there deserves to be treated as a human, with respect and humanity.

Rest in Peace Charlie Kirk, and all who have died. And may the greatest human compassion be brought to all who are suffering.