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Grand Old Stage

Tue, 23 Sep 2025, 08:00 PM (-06:00) Creative Commons License

1939

2025
(Photo by Patrick T. Fallon / AFP)

Make Cancer Great Again

Sun, 21 Sep 2025, 08:53 AM (-06:00) Creative Commons License

1. Background

Years ago after I returned to work following surgery and lymphangiograms and more surgery and radiation therapy and chemotherapy for cancer, a colleague sat with me at lunch.

“You know, chemotherapy isn’t natural,” he said.

There just wasn’t much further that conversation could have gone. It was clear what he was implying — I was corrupting the gene pool.

Fast forward to today, and we have billionaire tech bro masters-of-the-universe breathing new life into eugenics.

2. Canceling Cancer Funding

I claim that bro-rebranded eugenics is hard at work. For example, Google around a bit. You’ll find articles about the Trump administrations cuts to cancer funding.

Admittedly, the story is a bit more complex than sensationalist headlines let on (link: snopes), but there is a reality on the ground that makes the full truth of the matter misleading — funds were just temporarily delayed and meetings temporarily suspended. Yet temporary or not, the actions have had consequences. Clinical trials got canceled in the temporary absence of dollars to pay salaries. Fundamental research projects got shut down in the temporary absence of approvals from review boards who are forbidden from collaborating with researchers.

Some cancer work was canceled.

Make Hunger Great Again

Sun, 21 Sep 2025, 08:12 AM (-06:00) Creative Commons License

You can’t manage what you don’t measure.

Don’t like public policies that address food insecurity? Then just stop measuring food insecurity.

Teaching Organizational Skills

Sat, 20 Sep 2025, 12:00 PM (-06:00) Creative Commons License

1. Read the Instructions

I walked over to their desk when they raised their hands.

“Mr. Hasan,” one of them asked, “can we just write our work for problems 2 and 3 over here?” They pointed to the right of problem 1.

“No,” I said.

“What!? We can write small!”

“Did you read the instructions?”

They had guilty looks on their faces.

“For shame,” I joked. “Read the first two sentences out loud.”

They looked at the top of the paper and started to read out loud.

I have not left you any room on this sheet for your work on problems 2 and 3. To get credit for this assignment, you must do all your work for those problems on separate sheets of paper, closely following the steps we did in the notes.

“Oh,” they said.

2. Why Would I Do this?

You might ask why I do this. Am I just mean-spirited? After all, if they can write their work anywhere, doesn’t that demonstrate mastery of the core underlying skill?

Well, that is sufficient only if you have an incomplete notion of what the core underlying skills really are. There are in fact two.

You see, what I’m doing in this lesson is preparing them for the next. Tomorrow, the problems will be more confusing and the technical steps involve many more details than today. If they squeeze their work into an arbitrary block of white space they’ll “lose lock” on what the heck they’re supposed to be doing.

In tomorrow’s problems, being organized will be a necessary precondition for getting the math right. Without that, the whole process will be a dizzying blur. (I know this from personal experience as a student many years ago.)

So no, I do not do this to be mean. I am intentionally teaching (1) organizational skills and (2) mathematical skills together to prepare them for what’s next.

Because without mastering both, they’ll be toast on the next test.

Words Matter

Sat, 20 Sep 2025, 10:19 AM (-06:00) Creative Commons License

1. Ambiguity

In the abstract it’s a fair question. Does this mathematical notation

(2,7)

represent a point in the x-y plane with coordinates x=2 and y=7? Or does it represent an interval on the number line extending from x=2 to x=7?

The  notation by itself really is ambiguous.

2. Clarification

When he called me over, he pointed to his laptop screen. 

“I’m not sure about this question,” he said. “Are these points or intervals?”

“Well,” I said. “Read the question carefully.” And I pointed to the sentence:

Consider the two points, (2,7) and (5,10), ...

“Oh,” he said.

No ambiguity!

3. Close Reading

Of all the challenges in teaching AP Precalculus, I find this the greatest: The kids do not “read” the questions. Their attention snaps to the math-y stuff, and they immediately begin answering, often before they know what the question is.

This is a recipe for disaster on the AP Precalculus test, and they’re not used to it. The AP test is loaded with questions where it is absolutely crucial that they slow down (and maybe set down their pencils?) and read every single word as if their success depended on it. 

And so my mission in this class is to teach the kids to read closely, just as much as teaching them them the (challenging) mathematics.

Because on this test, words matter.

Conspiring Against Us

Wed, 3 Sep 2025, 08:02 PM (-06:00) Creative Commons License

The poor man. Not invited to the party with its fancy festivities and marching military parades. Unable to hobnob with his besties, Xi, Vladimir, and Kim. He whines that they are conspiring against us.

Conspiring. You think!?

These and Many Other Things

Sat, 30 Aug 2025, 01:54 PM (-06:00) Creative Commons License

There is too much good in America. If I were Vladimir Putin, I would undo it all. For example, I would

  • cancel US wind power projects
  • sabotage the American EV industry
  • gut US expansion of solar power
  • expand Clean Air Act exemptions for coal-fired power plants
  • roll back rules governing clean water and climate change
  • roll back EPA toxic chemical regulations
  • gut the protection of endangered species habitats
  • export US government data about citizens onto insecure computers
  • punish any civil servants who fail to praise me with great praise
  • cease protecting people with vaccination programs
  • destroy NASA Earth-monitoring satellites
  • torpedo ACA health insurance subsidies, cut Medicaid and whittle away at Medicare
  • pardon violent thugs
  • force all agency heads to bend the knee
  • force all elite law firms to bend the knee
  • force all elite universities to bend the knee
  • force all corporate CEOs to bend the knee
  • deploy hooded ICE brigades to kidnap brown-skinned people and dump them in Gulags
  • send in shock troops to punish troublesome mayors and governors
  • create federal ownership of public corporations
  • emulate autocrats like of Erdoğan in Türkiye, Orbán in Hungary, Bolsonaro in Brazil and me
  • invite me to meet with the American president with no-one in the room 
  • invite me to come to Alaska and speak first to the press in Russian before the president has arrived at the podium

Yes, if I were Vladimir Putin, I would do these and all the things. To make Russia America great.

Perhaps you know someone who would help me?

First American Edition

Sat, 23 Aug 2025, 07:13 AM (-06:00) Creative Commons License

1. Are Those Your Books?

As the room was emptying, a student walked up. There had been many questions that first day of class, questions about rates of change and concavity, about what the diagram really meant. I figured she was following up.

“Mr. Hasan,” she said, “are those your books?”

I put down the whiteboard marker.

“Those books on the shelf?” I asked, looking to the back corner of the room where an Aztec calendar, multicolored posters, and a big Canadian flag (Elbows up!) hang from the wall — the “culture corner” of an otherwise relatively bland math classroom. She nodded.

“They are. Why?”

“Even that Silmarillion?”

We walked to the corner where a dozen books sit on a bookshelf that the previous teacher left behind. I took The Silmarillion off the shelf and shared how I had rescued it from a library discard pile at the school where I used to teach.

“Is it a First American Edition?” she asked.

“Let’s look.” I said.

We flipped the book open and looked: First American Edition

Her eyes widened.

2. I Have Something For You

At home that evening, I checked the bookshelf in the living room that holds all my Tolkien books. Those three shelves are barely enough for them all — the product of years of scouring used bookstores and joyful trips to Ontario where the production values of Harper-Collins editions of Tolkien books put American versions to shame (Elbows up!).

I looked closely at the second shelf. In 1977, a girlfriend had given me a hardback copy of The Silmarillion. It had just been published, and she knew I was a fan. But I had a vague memory of having parted with that well-worn copy, being enamored of my annotated Harper-Collins edition. I was curious if I had indeed ditched the older edition.

As I ran my figure slowly across the titles, I found it. It was sans dust jacket, but it was indeed the one she had given me, including the note she wrote on the inside. And on the copyright page it also said, First American Edition.

So at the end of the second day of that Precalculus class, as the room was emptying, I walked up to that student.

“I have something for you,” I said. She cocked her head in mild confusion.

I took her to the culture corner in the back of the room and pulled that copy of The Silmarillion off the shelf.

“I found my other copy of this. I don’t need this one.” I held the book out to her. “You may have it.”

Her eyes went wide.

“You mean it’s mine to keep?” she asked, holding it to her chest.

“Yes. It’s yours to keep,” I said.  

Chairs and Lakes in Michigan

Tue, 5 Aug 2025, 06:08 PM (-06:00) Creative Commons License

At a “random public boat ramp” on Lake Huron, Gregg and Kelley say that they found this view to the east.

It was a sunny day. The sky and lake were blue. They had the place to themselves until some fishermen showed up. And then there was this.

an empty light blue chair along the shore with a light blue sky above the light blue water

What is it with chairs and lakes in Michigan? On a Silent Sunday not so long ago, there was THIS.

The chairs are telling us something. But what?

Only the Lonely

Tue, 5 Aug 2025, 02:09 AM (-06:00) Creative Commons License

Ada

Years ago I dove into the programming language Ada. The NASA lab was funding me was deep into it, but they were far away, and no one here was interested. Here, it was either FORTRAN, or it was C. But I had drunk the Kool-Aide. Ada was difficult to learn in isolation but not impossible. And it enabled amazing things — things that gave me big ideas. Still, there was no one to talk to about it.

My son periodically jokes about how his mom told him years later that I would come home late at night and go on interminably about Ada. She was a captive audience, and I was desperate to share my excitement. But as I went on, her eyes would droop, and her head would begin to bob.

“Ada…,” so their joke goes. “Zzzz.”

LaTeX

Over the last severn years of teaching Algebra 2, I’ve assembled a year’s worth of guided notes in a format that… in a nice format. 

I’d love to talk to you about my rationale for the visual appearance of the notes. And I’d love to talk to you about the LaTeX-based system I’ve built (See it here, if you dare.) There is much to say about the system, from the gorgeous math, to its ability to generate a “blank” student version of the notes and a “filled in” teacher version with answers and commentary in red. 

Wait. Don’t leave yet.

The system enables the generation a full year’s worth of notes (either the student or the teacher version) as a single PDF in book form, including a hyperlinked table of contents that will take you directly to (say) Lesson 4.3. 

No, wait. I haven’t finished.

The VS Code/LaTeX build automation allows a single set of LaTeX source files to generate either version without any duplication — a capability based on Unix symbolic links. The unit tests. The GitHub integration. I’d love to talk about it.

I see that I’ve lost you. 

“LaTex-based algebra guided notes…,” so it goes, “Zzzz.”

Dum-dum-dum-dumdy-doo-wah

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