Monday, May 31, 2010
When the Boss Feels Inadequate
When and why do power holders seek to harm other people? The present research examined the idea that aggression among the powerful is often the result of a threatened ego. Four studies demonstrated that individuals with power become aggressive when they feel incompetent in the domain of power. Regardless of whether power was measured in the workplace (Studies 1 and 4), manipulated via role recall (Study 2), or assigned in the laboratory (Study 3), it was associated with heightened aggression when paired with a lack of self-perceived competence. As hypothesized, this aggression appeared to be driven by ego threat: Aggressiveness was eliminated among participants whose sense of self-worth was boosted (Studies 3 and 4). Taken together, these findings suggest that (a) power paired with self-perceived incompetence leads to aggression, and (b) this aggressive response is driven by feelings of ego defensiveness. Implications for research on power, competence, and aggression are discussed...
CONCLUSION
The present findings highlight the importance of perceiving personal competence when holding a position of power. Power holders who do not feel personally competent are more likely than those who feel competent to lash out against other people. Additionally, the finding that self-worth boosts assuage the aggressive tendencies of such power holders implies the effectiveness of a strategy commonly employed by underlings: excessive flattery. It is both interesting and ironic to note that such flattery, although perhaps affirming to the ego, may contribute to the incompetent power holder’s ultimate demise—by causing the power holder to lose touch with reality.
Full paper at: http://www-rcf.usc.edu/~nathanaf/power_incompetence_and_aggresssion.pdf
Llama Love Spit
right before we got in trouble for taking pictures in the VAG
right after I wiped the air-spit from my cheek. I miss you even before I leave, Elle Bow!
Football office
And there is a video of the shoot here.
Sunday, May 30, 2010
You are supposed to like it because it's Hitchcock
Saturday, May 29, 2010
Bye, bye, baby bye, bye...

Sir Peter Scott is stepping down as vice-chancellor of Kingston University to take up a post at another institution, it was announced... More info at: http://www.timeshighereducation.co.uk
Check also: http://www.sirpeterscott.com/
Friday, May 28, 2010
Legal costs of university in St Andrews v Quigley
I refer to your request dated 3 May, 2010 under the Freedom of Information (Scotland) Act 2002 for "How much money did the University of St Andrews spend on legal representation in the case of Dr D Quigley v The University of St Andrews during 2002/3/4/5? I can confirm that the total cost inclusive of VAT was £204,192.36.
Yours sincerely,
June Weir
Freedom of Information Officer
University of St Andrews
------------------
For legal costs involving different universities, check: http://www.academicfoi.com/untoldstories/
One hopes that the new government will try to put an end to this waste of public money.
Monday, May 24, 2010
Creative Art Rules!

I have continued to get feedback for my blog entry a couple of months ago about disliking coloring books or pre-printed pages. I have been told there is a time and a place, but I'm still not on board with using such creativity-killing materials. I was reminded again this weekend when I was watching my grandchildren paint with tempera paint cakes. I watched the process unfold as I have many times. Creating their own pictures allow children to:
- develop organizational skills
- test experimentation skills
- explore decision-making skills
- be supported in creativity
Children that are immersed in these types of activities jump right into the project when they see what materials are available. Compare these children to those who wait to be encouraged and to see what the adult wants them to do. There is no comparison. Children who can organize, experiment, make decisions and create will always be more successful. They have the ability to think. Thinking is a good thing!
For some great creative activities, check out the following blog:
Art and Creativity.
Saturday, May 22, 2010
Egads! Feathertale Contest
Feathertale invites writers and poets to pen one of Shakespeare's plays as if it were originally conceived on a Twitter feed. Winning submissions will be published on Feathertale.com and in The Feathertale Review. Deadline May 31, 2010.
Feathertale presents: the Twittering Bard Contest
Act 3, Scene 5:
Romeo @Jules: That’s no nightingale. Must hop. Popped your cuz ystrday. Prince on my ass. I call later. Promises.
Jules @Romeo: methinks you gonna die
Romeo @Jules: I h8 when u 4shadow
Jules @Romeo: be gone, away!
Send your submissions to submissions@feathertale.com with Twittering Bard Contest in the subject line. Submissions should be conceived with attention to the rules of Twitter (no lines can be longer than 140 characters; proper spelling will be frowned upon). The more creative and original, the better. Writers are free to pick any Shakespeare play they wish to mess with. Winning submissions will be published online and will most definitely be considered for publication in The Feathertale Review.
Friday, May 21, 2010
Does this constitute a breach of freedom of expression?
I have been instructed by the University that if I do not remove the comments then I will be suspended.
Does this constitute a breach of freedom of expression? I think so!
Check out my blog:
http://jay-bsccomputerscience.blogspot.com/
Minority Taste
okay that's impossible to read, so here is what is says, c/o Ruskin:
"The opinion of a majority is right only when it is more probable with each individual that he should be right than that he should be wrong, as in the case of a jury. Where is is more probable, with respect to each individual, that he should be wrong than right, the opinion of the minority it the true one. Thus it is in art"
we are presupposing a little hierarchy of taste, hmm?
in which case, it is time to invoke Fake Karl, and also for a little joke:
Q: Why did the formerly rich bourgeois person cross the road?
A: Because TIME magazine did an article on it, and the New Yorker also did an article on it, and their neighbors were doing it, so they wanted to see what it was all about and they heard it'd won an Oscar too...and one of those Nobel prizes, whatever they are. It seemed pretty reputable and they have a greatest hits album coming out.
Sunday, May 16, 2010
Another Love, Indeed.
Feeling Summer
The Sartorialist often puts up vintage photos, intended as inspiration for fashion of the present moment. This bikini, for example. Amazing.
More than simple fashion shots, these photos are so poignant and arresting, however, because they depict youth and beauty that is necessarily past.
In Defense of Poetry, P.B. Shelley writes
"The social sympathies, or those laws from which, as from its
elements, society results, begin to develop themselves from the moment that two human
beings coexist; the future is contained within the present, as the plant within the seed".
I know, right.
Saturday, May 15, 2010
I Wish Byron Were Around: to appreciate these STATEments




Friday, May 14, 2010
The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo, I read it, I read it!
2) A new editor, with brevity in mind, needs to chop a significant portion of the repetitive plot-summaries. (More noticeable in the second and third books).
3) I don't know. The rape/violence against women scenes are *this close* to being titillating and not instructive of violence against women. Also the repetitions of the events of the scenes, again and again, deaden their effects (affect!) on the reader. Uh.. "I don't have a definition of porn but I know it when I see it".. well, I don't have a definition of sado-masochistic softcore pornography (is that even possible?! a contradiction in terms?) but I feel like it might be happening before my readerly eyes.
4) I'm pretty sure lil' Stieg does not hate, in fact probably loves, women, but he is also very interested in what it would be like, imaginatively at least, to be involved in sexually charged violent behavior.
5) THE IMPLANTS*
*will have to wait until I know how far you've read.
Thursday, May 13, 2010
Too Blue? Seriously, Wordsworth.
between such objects as are beautiful, andsuch as are picturesque – between those, which please the eye in their natural state;
and those, which please from some quality, capable of being illustrated by painting.
What is this violence, then, that Wordsworth does to the inherent beauty of nature by making such a statement! "The chief DEFECT in the colouring of the Country of the Lakes is an over-prevalence of a BLUISH TINGE" ?!
Stressed staff can't get no satisfaction
Academics from The Open University, the University of Portsmouth and the University of Bedfordshire quizzed more than 2,500 people from four universities for the paper, "The work-related quality of life scale for higher education employees", published by the journal Quality in Higher Education.
Staff were asked questions about job satisfaction, well-being, work-life balance, stress at work, control at work and working conditions using a Work-related Quality of Life (WrQoL) scale devised by Darren Van Laar, a Portsmouth psychologist.
"Overall, higher education employees in the sample are dissatisfied with their jobs and careers, are generally dissatisfied with working conditions and control at work, and report that they are stressed at work," the authors write.
The paper says the WrQoL scale has "psychometric properties" that would be useful to institutions "throughout the UK to evaluate employees' quality of working life".
The authors argue that issues such as career satisfaction, stress and work-life balance must be looked at as a whole.
Increasing well-being would "enhance the delivery of education to students and improve working relationships among work colleagues", they write.
Simon Easton, senior lecturer in psychology at Portsmouth and one of the authors, said: "Studies around the world show work-related stress is widespread in higher education.
"University staff in the UK tend to report that demands are increasing, while support and a sense of having control at work have fallen. Many complain about the rushed pace of work, the lack of respect and esteem, having too much administrative work to do, inadequate support and lack of opportunity for promotion. The psychological stress among university employees appears to be much higher than in other professional groups and the general population."
From: http://www.timeshighereducation.co.uk
Wednesday, May 12, 2010
Wordsworth v. Kant
Tuesday, May 11, 2010
Beautiful Snake....is that an Oxymoron?
As an early childhood educator, I want my students to discover everything they can about our natural world. I always prefer taking children to the zoo to see live animals as opposed to the natural history museum filled with the stuffed version. But, I always drew the line at snakes. I assigned that to another adult to supervise. Sheesh...they give me the creeps. I will continue to encourage and assist children in finding out about the natural world. But, for snakes, they can go to my relative's house. Their snake is beau.... OK.