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I listened to a teacher's presentation the other night and she repeatedly used the phrase "new pendulum" as in "multimedia composition is the new pendulum in education". Has anyone else heard this phrase? I found it a rather confused metaphor. Do new pendulums work any differently than old pendulums? If the phrase alludes to things swinging in a new direction, doesn't it also imply that things will eventually swing back? | ||
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I gather that it means upcoming force, as in to Give an Answer » Fundamentalism RecastWhen they saw the pendulum of fundamentalism at its apex in one wrong direction, they built a new pendulum of evangelicalism and set it in motion toward the ... blog.mytechaid.com/archives/2005/07/18/fundamentalism-recast/ | |||
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Then why not call it the new force? Don't answer that - it's clearly a manifestation of "academe-speak". It would be quite wrong to some academic minds to use a simple and accurate word or phrase when there are so many compex and confusing ones available! Richard English | |||
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Rich: Good question. But the expr does have a colorful ring. Perhaps it's meant to imply that the movement gains momentum as it swings forward or that a reaction to the force could develop so that eventually the pendulum is expected to swing back | |||
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I have no idea what it's supposed to mean and neither, I suggest, did the person who said it. Richard English | |||
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Rch: I'll bet (wager) you're right Yet some off-the-wall exprs do ring that old bell | |||
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The analogy of the pendulum is used in computational linguistics to describe the varying popularity of rule based approaches versus machine learning approaches. When one rises, the other falls. | |||
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I suspect the presenter wasn't talking about computational linguistics, though.
Richard, you really are anti-academe, aren't you? The fact is, it might just be a very bad metaphor. | |||
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So has anyone heard this "new pendulum" thing or am I the first to spot it in the wild? I don't count Seanahan's sighting as it's a normal pendulum metaphor. | |||
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Not always - but I have certainly heard some nonsense from academics - which is oftimes given credence simply because it comes from the pen or a well-known academic. That's not unique to academics, of course. The words of celebrities are usually given more credence than the words of nonentities - that's sadly the way of the world in which we presently live. Richard English | |||
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That's not unique to academics, of course. That's true. I hear an awful lot of blithering blather coming from non-academic circles, too. —Ceci n'est pas un seing. | |||
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<Asa Lovejoy> |
I suspect that the person meant to say, "new paradigm," but got it wrong. That expression is pretty common around these parts. | ||
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Rich, zm: Truly, and that's probably how Ronald Reagan and Arnold Schwarzenegger reached their high status | |||
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I think you may well be right, Asa. More managementspeak... Build a man a fire and he's warm for a day. Set a man on fire and he's warm for the rest of his life. | |||
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Of course, as in any other profession or occupation, there are the losers. However, I don't think the percentage is any different than in any other career path. I am not sure that "paradigm" and "pendulum" could be confused. I suspect the metaphor meant that it's the new issue that will be going in different ways. I checked "new pendulum" on Google, and while there were 13,000+ sites, many talked about clock pendulums. In fact, this thread was on Google's first page of "new pendulum," amazingly enough. Yet, there were a few other sites. This quote: "My current Mackerras Pendulum was published in The Weekend Australian for November 20 and 21 of 2004. When the new maps are final I shall offer the new pendulum again to The Australian newspaper." was from this site, and a similar comment here and here. It seems to be used in Australia for politics. Otherwise, though, I couldn't find anything similar on Google, and there was nothing in Google News. | |||
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The fact that there are no Google hits on that phrase in a similar context leads me to believe that it was a coinage of her own, and that Arnie and Asa are correct that it was a confusion with new paradigm. She also used "new paradigm" in her talk, so maybe it's a personal quirk that she sometimes says "new pendulum" when she means "new paradigm". | |||
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She may have meant "pendulum" to mean "paradigm," I agree, though I think it was her coinage for that meaning. I doubt that she got the words mixed up because they are too different. However, I've been wrong before and undoubtedly will be again. ![]() I, for one, did not go through all 13,000 Google citations for "new pendulum." There still could be a similar use to the teacher's. | |||
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