Little Legends - any feedback gratefully received

Little Legends is a newish, free service for parents and carers in the UK. A while ago, my sister and I were discussing how hard it was for her to find anywhere useful and good for mums (schools, late night chemists and the like). As a solution, I’ve hit the Ruby books, scratched my head a fair bit, and developed Little Legends with her.

Essentially, it’s a mix of a wiki, directory a social bookmarking site and maps. Something that Will Davies said a while back sums it up really:

“ICT can localise and delocalise communication; our public discussions can descend upon places, and then depart, and then descend again, like a stone skimming across a lake.”

What we’re trying to do, in our own small way, is to help parents, carers and people with kids to look after skim those stones more easily. [If you want a more in depth explanation of the thinking behind it, you might want to have a look here.]

Like all these things, it’s by no means a finished article. There’s more coming in the way of helping mums actually connect with each other (groups, messaging and the like). Anyway, I’d love to hear any feedback you have so we can find out what we’re doing wrong, what we could improve, and where we’re on the right track.

And of course, if you think it’s at all useful for anyone you know, do pass it on.

Thanks.



The Great Global Warming Swindle

Fascinating documentary, including why CO2 levels rise after global warming, not before.



A Physics of Society: Critical Mass Notes #1

Ton has written an elegant post about the value of maths in the design of social tools. It reminded me of a book by Philip Ball called Critical Mass, and I realised how little I could really remember of it other than the broad brush strokes.

So I thought I’d reread it and post some notes.

1: Raising Leviathan

  • The Scientific Revolution did not just affect the sciences. It affected politics too.
  • Various thinkers, such as More, Grotius and Bacon began to imagine societies based on scientific reasoning. They were “Utopians”; in many ways descendants of Plato in that they gathered some first principles, and tried to deduce what sort of societies would work given those principles
  • Hobbes was an especially mechanistic Utopian. He fell in love with geometry and the way mathematicians could build on simple assumptions to find more complex, and sometimes surprising truths.
  • With his Leviathan, he aimed for
    “a theory of governance as unimpeachable as those of Euclid’s geometry”.

  • Traces of his approach can be found in Adam Smith, Jeremy Bentham, John Stuart Mill, Karl Marx and other political theorists.
  • That’s one trajectory, but it’s not particularly scientific one.
    “Political theorists tend to concern themselves with what they think ought to be; scientists concentrate on the way things are

  • “There are few political thinkers who have defined a social model with the logical precision of Hobbes, and none who have carried those precepts through to their conclusions in a truly scientific way.”

  • Physicists have developed tools since then that, however unintentionally, add rigour to the sorts of scientific models a modern day Hobbes might want. The same tools that allow physicists to understand the behaviour of atoms can be used to begin to model the behaviour of people.


Crowd Control

At the school I’m working at, one of the teachers is coming to the end of her career. She gave me a quick distillation of how she’s learnt to keep control in a classroom.

There are 3 golden rules:

  1. Move around
    As you move around the classroom, you spread your influence and it’s easier to stop children switching off. Moving your questions around, i.e. not always asking the same children, keeps everyone involved.
  2. Vary your delivery
    Whispers, sharp yelps, different visual cues all keep children on their toes and focused on what’s coming next.
  3. Balance criticism and praise
    If you have to reprimand a child make sure you come back to them later, and find something good to say about what they’ve said, how they’re behaving. It stops children making a virtue of being naughty.

Gold dust, really. What she missed out, I think, was to say how much her enthusiasm for what she teaches engages the children, but then she’s modest like that.