The sheet of quotations sounds like a good idea. But I imagine that only really works if students know what text or texts they'll be asked to examine for in-class essays.
The sheet of quotations sounds like a good idea. But I imagine that only really works if students know what text or texts they'll be asked to examine for in-class essays.
For folks who are pivoting to in-class essays to assess student learning, how do you do it? Undisclosed text (students don't know what they might be asked to analyze), disclosed text selection (students will be asked to analyze text a, b, or c), or something else?
"I used AI to generate ideas" ys just like "Ich used pickpocketing to generate a litel pettye cash"
Congratulations! One day at a time.
Just a reminder to check for your name in this list of books that OpenAI trained from. If your name is there, they probably owe you several thousand dollars.
OpenAI cried that if everyone eligible author files, the company will go bankrupt, so I'm alerting every author I have ever spoken to.
It is such a good book!
Oh wow! Are you amenable to discussing the game via email or the like? I can DM you my email.
@jayb33.bsky.social you wouldn't happen to be the Justen Brown who wrote For Gold & Glory would you?
Love it! I have the same basic policy, but I hadn't thought to explicitly link it back to the typical student's use case (mismanaged time) and the better solution to that problem (an extension, which I already have provisions for).
Enough people said they wanted to see the final slide deck, so I took the time to put it on my non-teacher github so I could share it. I didn't end up getting in trouble. I ended up being encouraged by a colleague to share it with my dept chair, and he liked it
authorblues.github.io/lecture-slid...
Share with the vulnerable you know:
humanrightsfirst.org/library/huma...
I can think of thousands of reasons why I wouldn't want some random AI chat bot to have access to my entire college career and all of my job prospects. I can think of literally no good reason to do this ever.
OpenAI, the maker of ChatGPT, has a plan to overhaul college education β by embedding its artificial intelligence tools in every facet of campus life. If the companyβs strategy succeeds, universities would give students A.I. assistants to help guide and tutor them from orientation day through graduation. Professors would provide customized A.I. study bots for each class. Career services would offer recruiter chatbots for students to practice job interviews. And undergrads could turn on a chatbotβs voice mode to be quizzed aloud ahead of a test. OpenAI dubs its sales pitch βA.I.-native universities.β
Every future imagined by a tech company is worse than the previous iteration.
Folks in the gaming space: does anyone know how to get in contact with Justen Brown, the copyright holder for the 2e retroclone, For Gold & Glory?
Nice! I'll look forward to reading it when it comes out!
Is this related to your Rites of Transmutation game?
For folks who have wholly moved to blue books for student essays, how has it worked for you? I presume it would be held in-class.
That sucks. I was *really* hoping that it was one of those scenarios where the car still operates in the meantime. I've had good luck with certified pre-owned vehicles, and I second the vote for either Honda or Toyota.
Ugh, I'm sorry to hear that. What was the diagnosis? Can you still use it, until you can get something better in the meantime?
At least it was polite! π€£
Wow! That's awesome! I'd love to talk with you about this stuff. If there are days and times that work best, let me know, and we can set up a Zoom call.
I've *always* loved it when players come up with super interesting solutions for any given scenario. If you offer open-ended problems, you encourage player agency and emergent gameplay.
I'm not a fan of either the GM = adversary or the GM = player's number one fan. I prefer to think of GMs as the person who puts obstacles in the way of the players without specific solutions. TTRPGs are, at least in part, exercises in dramatic, creative problem solving.
Last week I attended Pax East to learn more about game design, and couldn't believe how open and affirming that space is. Some academic conferences could learn a thing or two.
Long time, no post. So, what have I been up to? Researching TTRPGs, drafting my own game, and learning about book layout and design with InDesign.
Oof, talk about bringing a horror film to life.
Kansas babysitter finds man hiding under kid's bed www.npr.org/2025/03/28/n...
This is amazing π€£
I love this so much
I'm glad to see someone else does this!
This is all to say: I think that for independent TTRPG companies, the landscape has shifted to quickstart rules in place of starter boxed sets, which makes sense, considering how labor-intensive it is to write, design, and market your game in the first place.