Many parents want their children to go to so-called “elite” schools. Why? They believe those schools have some magic formula when it comes to educating students. But according to MIT researcher Josh Angrist, those parents are wrong. Those schools’ graduates don’t score highly because the schools are great. No, the schools appear great simply because they choose students who are going to do well no matter were they go to school. There is a bizarre tendency among Americans to see a cause-and-effect relationship between fancy schools and superior education. That’s why parents assume that a school with fancy buildings and expensive labs and bright reputations can turn their children into brilliant scholars. That’s why people look at high-income suburbs — with expensive schools paid for by higher taxes — and assume the high test scores from there are because of “better schools.” But they’re not. If you take those kids from high-income homes and send them to a run-down urban school and take those kids from poor neighborhoods and put them into the fancy school buildings, the schools’ results would reverse. Most of the difference between schools is because of which homes the students come from, not because of fancy buildings and elite reputations.
Getting better at all I do is only way to fight ‘imposter syndrome’
Nobody ever taught me how to write. Nobody taught me how to take photos. Nobody taught me how to do graphic design. Or political consulting. Or filmmaking. I’ve never been taught properly how to do any of the things I’ve spent my life doing. Because of this, I have a terrible secret.
I’m insecure about most of what I do. I feel like a fraud — and I’m scared I’ll be exposed one day.
See this simple photo of Molly sitting on my desk over the weekend? I could not have taken that photo a year ago. It looks simple — and that’s much of its charm — but it’s a very difficult photograph, at least by my standards. And unless you know a lot about photography, you wouldn’t be able to shoot it correctly, either.
If people love what I do, I beat myself up and say they just don’t realize how untalented I am. I tell myself they don’t see the work which I attempt and throw away because it’s terrible. They don’t know I’m a fraud — as a writer, photographer, filmmaker, whatever. I’m hiding it from them.
Briefly: Here’s my promo video for Phase 1 of my realty company’s renovation
Phase 1 of our realty company’s renovation starts tomorrow and I made a quick video promo Sunday night to use on the company’s Facebook page and website. I don’t have approval for it yet, so it might still change a bit, but here’s what I’m currently planning to use. It’s amazing that just a 60-second video with stills, narration and music takes a couple of hours to put together when you count finding the right pictures and going through stock music and editing everything together. You wouldn’t think it would be so time-consuming. Here’s where you’ll find the video if you’re interested.

Briefly: Lucy’s been meeting little girls in her neighborhood tonight
Briefly: Old music paints beautiful picture of ‘Matters of the Heart’
Briefly: Running away from home sometimes has a happy ending
Society needs storytellers to help make sense of a changing world
Why do we stay in prison when there’s no lock holding us there?
How could a stranger at sunset possibly know what I had to say?
Briefly: Psychologist outlines how parents create narcissistic children
Briefly: Check out new podcast for fascinating tales of Salem witch trials
Briefly: What’s so important you’d do it even if you knew it would fail?