User:Mchua/Interests

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[edit] Subjects I've been fascinated by along the way

In the course of being interested in learning about learning, I've done a fair bit of learning along the way, and picked up interests in specific things to learn as well.

[edit] Current obsessions

  • Resources and theory on self-directed learning in engineering education
    • Engineering textbooks - as a literary genre (seriously; I collect my favorites both as references and works of fine writing) as well as on a meta-level regarding how they're produced, consumed, designed, and the effects they have on learners.
    • Reading journals of engineering education - I think I critique the work (process & style) more than I look to it as a model of best practice, though.
    • The work of Holt, Piaget, Papert, Applebee, and Kuhn in educational literature, and its applications to the above. Trying to pull off a self-initiated "mini-quals" type thing (read very intensively for several weeks, and get people in the field to give me oral examinations at the end for feedback).
  • The relationship between generative grammar, the semantic web, and (programming) language design
    • Currently reading "Rhyme & Reason," would like to re-read Sipser's "Introduction to the Theory of Computation," SICP, do some tinkering with Semantic Mediawiki, and/or read a programming languages book or similar in parallel - basically, upgrade this from "cool book!" into full-fledged class-like learning experience - but haven't figured out how to sync this up nicely yet. Would love collaborators.
  • Distributed music-making
    • see http://licenseserver.pbwiki.com/WhatTheHell
    • also see Jamming Online and UNIT-E (thanks to yeoman for the pointers)
    • gives me a good excuse to learn music theory, which I've been putting off since the age of 5
    • also gives me a good excuse to learn improv (...and apply it to blues/jazz/swing playing). I was classically trained on piano from age 5-14, then stopped lessons and started fooling around on keyboards, guitars, choral arrangements, and other things by myself before landing with my last jam group (which played together for 2 years and split when we all graduated).
  • Aural rehabilitation (speech therapy for the deaf)
    • learning the IPA (international phonetic alphabet)
    • tinkering with audiograms
    • also the impetus behind my re-explorations of signal/audio processing, as I haven't touched z-transforms for years
    • somewhat selfishly motivated here, as I'm severely hearing impaired and speak with what's apparently a slight but noticeable "deaf" accent which I want to learn how to both detect and eliminate.
  • Appropriate technology
    • in the context of entrepreneurship & business studies
    • and the tools being used to design/manufacture it
    • nurturing grassroots groups; how have current successes started? Reading about case studies, history.
  • The notion of self and identity in Tai Chi, Zen, and other eastern traditions/practices/arts/religions/philosophies
    • Most of my life has been spent in a never-ending quest to fulfill the "Man, Know Thyself" adage - I figured that since I grew up in a Western country (USA) I'd get a bigger perspective shift & appreciation from reading Eastern philosophers before Western ones.
  • Languages
    • Spanish (self-teaching right now)
    • Tagalog (may need to learn quickly next month - currently have a vocabulary equivalent to a 3-year-old's)
    • Italian (picked up a bit of reading/writing Italian in high school through a simultaneous obsession with operas and Italo Calvino, but faded out since I had nobody to speak it with.)
    • Japanese (learned in high school, rather rusty; I read it better than I speak it - probably ja-1 speaking, ja-2 reading).
    • Mandarin Chinese (planning to learn next year, at the moment)
      • Traditional Chinese
      • Chinese calligaphy (...and for that matter, brush painting)
    • Fookien (Chinese dialect of my home province - one of those someday/maybe things that would be really nice)
    • American Sign Language (used to have a full-time interpreter when I was a kid, really rusty now but would love to practice again - nobody to speak with though)

[edit] Past obsessions

There is a thin, thin line between past and present obsessions. In fact, the distinction is probably wholly arbitrary; I'm still ragingly passionate about these subjects - and many more - but not necessarily actively working on a project involving them.

  • Art (what I was "known for" around high school)
    • the "old masters"
    • Picasso. My first intellectual obsession centering around the work of an individual person. Especially his progression through multiple styles.
    • Pencil/graphite, charcoal (what I do most of my work in)
    • Pen & ink (what I want to learn)
    • soft pastel, conte crayon (which I'm terrible at, but absolutely love)
    • Photography - primarily digital, and image manipulation. Brief love affair with doing staged narratives back in 2003.
    • fractals! and mathematical art in general
    • computer-generated art
      • and tools to produce it
    • user interface design
    • advertising art
    • industrial design
      • as an art form and as an evolving field, and its relationship to both the studies of engineering and marketing
  • Math (my first academic love)
    • number theory (in particular, a brief flirtation with Gauss-Jacobi sums)
    • graph theory (especially when meshed with communications engineering topics, but also as an alternative intro math course in elementary school)
    • proofs without words
    • visual mathematics, especially fractals (I once spent an entire semester reading Mandelbrot's book "A Fractal Geometry of Nature" during my math lectures, which were decidedly not about fractals.)
    • meta-math - things like Godel's Incompleteness Theorem (yay! someday I want to read the actual proof instead of just books about it, but I'm not ready yet) and also mathematicians on math, such as Polya's "how to solve it."
    • math poetry, parodies, and humor, and what constitutes beauty in mathematics
  • Communications engineering as an analogy for education
    • Inspired by Raymond Yim, an electrical engr. prof at Olin College, and a 6-person independent study group (MetaOlin) I was lucky enough to be part of.
    • Seriously, it works! Think of the transmitter/receiver = teacher/learner metaphor, lossy channels = noisy classrooms, sleepy students, etc. and peer-to-peer/mesh networking = talking with friends after class, passing notes under the table, whatever.
    • Attempting to procure a copy of Proakis (classic communications textbook) so as to actually understand the analog & digital communications topics well instead of just vaguely knowing what the words mean (it was a class I... to put it mildly, didn't do very well in).
  • Religion
    • My family is super-Catholic. (Filipino roots.) I am... not. I have always been fascinated by this, and adamant about learning what it is that I was supposed to be believing in.
    • I've read the actual Catechism of the Catholic Church multiple times, beginning in middle school, but want to someday study it as a living document, and a document in historical context, rather than just a fascinating reference in its own right.
    • Also very interested in - but not very knowledgeable about, since I grew up surrounded by Catholics - other religions and beliefs. Would really like to do more with this interest someday.
  • Sociology
    • of institutions of higher education
    • of 'hacker culture' - particularly of learning within various technical communities
      • accessibility, diversity, and bias within
      • would love to do something with ESR's "How To Become A Hacker" doc
  • Computing
    • computer programming itself (currently consider myself reasonably passable with C, C++, Scheme, Python... passing experience with many more, with the ability to pick up new languages with relative ease)
    • culture of
    • mathematics behind
    • tools used in
    • as a way of thinking about and teaching math
    • as a way of understanding the way people think and learn
    • I'm leaving out a lot here
  • Medicine
    • anatomy. I want to take a summer course on cadaver dissection someday.
    • physiology
      • and its relation to "nonconventional" therapies (Rolfing, Feldenkrais, Alexander, Shiatsu, other bodywork)
      • and dance
    • traditional Chinese medicine, particularly acupuncture and qigong
  • Dance
    • swing (primarily lindy - I also play swing music on the piano occasionally)
    • blues
    • and relationship to martial arts
    • and relationships with biomimetic robotics
  • Physics
    • relativity - more in a historical sense; I love reading the original papers & books
    • string theory, quantum mechanics - two things I know a reasonable amount of "popular science" regarding but would like to study in more depth
    • classical mechanics
  • Music
    • piano (have played for 16 years; decent)
    • cello (have played for 10 years; reasonably passable)
    • a capella (have arranged for 4 years, sung for however long people can tolerate - I can arrange much better than I can sing)
      • vocal percussion (have done for 1.5 years)
    • keyboard/synth
    • theory
    • bass (electric & string)

And more. I'm leaving out quite a bit here.