1 post tagged “jim guest”
What do all of those have in common? They are all topics of interesting articles that I have read in the last few days.
Should college football players be paid? That is the question asked by Michael Lewis in his NYT piece (and a question that is worthy of its own blog post, which I shall try to produce in the next few days). Favorite quote:
College football’s best trick play is its pretense that it has nothing to do with money, that it’s simply an extension of the university’s mission to educate its students. Were the public to view college football as mainly a business, it might start asking questions. For instance: why are these enterprises that have nothing to do with education and everything to do with profits exempt from paying taxes? Or why don’t they pay their employees?
How much revenue does college athletics generate in Mississippi? Some answers here:
Southern Miss football brings in about $2 million per game, adding to the $52 million annual economic impact of university athletics to the Hattiesburg area, said Scott Carr, associate athletics director for Southern Miss.
Does the SAT measure a fixed intelligence level? Malcolm Gladwell's well-researched piece answers that question by starting with Stanley Kaplan. This article also touches on the off and on talent debate that has taken place in these pages:
Some years ago, a group headed by the British psychologist John Sloboda conducted a study of musical talent. The group looked at two hundred and fifty-six young musicians, between the ages of ten and sixteen, drawn from élite music academies and public-school music programs alike. They interviewed all the students and their parents and recorded how each student did in England’s national music-examination system, which, the researchers felt, gave them a relatively objective measure of musical ability. “What we found was that the best predictor of where you were on that scale was the number of hours practiced,” Sloboda says. This is, if you think about it, a little hard to believe. We conceive musical ability to be a “talent”—people have an aptitude for music—and so it would make sense that some number of students could excel at the music exam without practicing very much. Yet Sloboda couldn’t find any. The kids who scored the best on the test were, on average, practicing eight hundred per cent more than the kids at the bottom. “People have this idea that there are those who learn better than others, can get further on less effort,” Sloboda says. “On average, our data refuted that. Whether you’re a dropout or at the best school, where you end up can be predicted by how much you practice.”
Finally, "Success Without Ads" is the title of a nice piece about the magazine Consumer Reports, of which my father, Jim Guest, is President. CR is proving to be one of the only print magazines/newspapers to be financially successful (knock wood) online. This accomplishment is even more impressive in that CR does not accept advertisement (online or in print) of any kind.