Must Reads
There is so much to read, so much to know, so many sources to follow. And the volume of news and information just keeps growing exponentially. How to keep up? Even more, how to rediscover the serendipity of learning something new and interesting for its own sake?
Here, for your enjoyment and interest, are the articles Temin and Company considers “must reads.” They are primarily on the topics of reputation and crisis management, the media, leadership and strategy, perception and psychology, self-presentation, science, girls and women, organizational behavior and other articles of interest.
They are listed below with the most recent articles first, and to the side, by category.
We hope you enjoy them and would appreciate your comments. And whenever you have any favorite articles for us to add, please let us know so that we might include them for other readers to enjoy.
There is so much to read, so much to know, so many sources to follow. And the volume of news and information just keeps growing exponentially. How to keep up? Even more, how to rediscover the serendipity of learning something new and interesting for its own sake?
Here, for your enjoyment and interest, are the articles Temin and Company considers “must reads.” They are primarily on the topics of reputation and crisis management, the media, leadership and strategy, perception and psychology, self-presentation, science, girls and women, organizational behavior and other articles of interest.
They are listed below with the most recent articles first, and to the side, by category.
We hope you enjoy them and would appreciate your comments. And whenever you have any favorite articles for us to add, please let us know so that we might include them for other readers to enjoy.
The language of lying – Noah Zandan
Noah Zandan, TEDEd, November 3, 2014
We hear anywhere from 10 to 200 lies a day. And although we’ve spent much of our history coming up with ways to detect these lies by tracking physiological changes in their tellers, these methods have proved unreliable. Is there a more direct approach? Noah Zandan uses some famous examples of lying to illustrate how we might use communications science to analyze the lies themselves. […read more]
19 iPhone Tricks And Tips Apple Doesn’t Want You To Know. #7 Just Made My Life
Beej Rudd, Dose, August 11, 2014
This article’s author shares 19 tips and tricks for Apple’s iPhone – everything you never knew your iPhone was capable of doing. […read more]
To Siri, With Love
Judith Newman, The New York Times, October 17, 2014
In a world where the commonly held wisdom is that technology isolates us, it’s worth considering another side of the story. In this article, the author, whose autistic son befriended the app, shares her appreciation for Siri, Apple’s “intelligent personal assistant” on the iPhone. […read more]
Handling of Sexual Harassment Case Poses Larger Questions at Yale
Tamar Lewin, The New York Times, November 1, 2014
A sexual harassment case that has been unfolding without public notice for nearly five years within the Yale School of Medicine has roiled the institution and led to new allegations that the university is insensitive to instances of harassment against women. […read more]
Spying On Swarthmore
Martha Shirk, Swarthmore College Bulletin, Fall 2014
Files stolen from the FBI’s Office in Media, Pa., by burglars calling themselves the Citizens Commission to Investigate the FBI revealed that the agency had been spying on Swarthmore students and faculty members with the help of College employees as well as the Swarthmore’s borough’s chief of police, postmaster, and letter carriers. […read more]
New York Magazine’s Kevin Roose Heads to Fusion, Too
Edmund Lee, New York Magazine, October 31, 2014
Fusion, the little-known cable network that’s snapped up a raft of Big Name Writers, has hired New York Magazine’s Kevin Roose as part of its effort to build out its new Silicon Valley bureau. […read more]
Meet the Woman Leading NYC’s Ebola Fight
Alexandra Sifferlin, Time, October 26, 2014
Dr. Mary Bassett, the New York City Health Commissioner, is no nonsense. Back in August, Bassett and her team identified Bellevue Hospital Center as the hospital where they would funnel any patients in New York who appeared to have Ebola.”We had to be prepared, especially after Dallas. I think everyone agrees that a lot was learned from that experience. Having guidance is not enough. Having protocols is not enough. People need to be drilled. They need to practice. Practice, practice, practice.” […read more]
Tested Negative for Ebola, Nurse Criticizes Her Quarantine
Anemona Hartocollis and Emma G. Fitzsimmons, The New York Times, October 25, 2014
A nurse who was being quarantined at a New Jersey hospital after working with Ebola patients in Sierra Leone criticized her treatment on Saturday as an overreaction after an initial test found that she did not have the virus. […read more]
Wisdom from a MacArthur Genius: Psychologist Angela Duckworth on Why Grit, Not IQ, Predicts Success
Maria Popova, Brain Pickings, September 26, 2013
Creative history brims with embodied examples of why the secret of genius is doggedness rather than “god”-given talent. But it takes a brilliant scholar of the psychology of achievement to empirically prove these creative intuitions: Math-teacher-turned-psychologist Angela Duckworth has done more than anyone for advancing our understanding of how self-control and grit — the relentless work ethic of sustaining your commitments toward a long-term goal — impact success. […read more]
The journey of a virus
The Economist, October 25, 2014
An interactive map of the 2014 Ebola outbreak listing the number of infections and deaths, and highlighting where in the world there are widespread cases, limited cases, no recent cases and no cases. […read more]