Explore, Create, Share… the videos

June 30th, 2009 Punya Mishra Posted in Art, Blogging, Creativity, Design, Film, Fun, Games, Personal, Philosophy, Publications, Puzzles, Representation, Teaching, Technology, TPACK, Worth Reading 1 Comment »

Over the past few months I have been working with my kids on creating short thematic videos. The themes we chose were the three words, Explore, Create & Share. Though the videos for Explore and Create got made rather quickly, the video for Share appeared to stump us.

Much to my relief, after weeks of discussion and thinking, we finally have a video for the word share. I am including all three videos here, in sequence, so that you can see just how these three videos work together. All three videos have original music composed by my cousin, Sonny Mishra.

7 tools… one big job: Explore

YouTube Preview Image

Emergence: Create

YouTube Preview Image

… and finally,
A helping hand:
Share

YouTube Preview Image

(Other videos created by us can be seen here.)

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

Like to learn, but hate school

June 12th, 2009 Punya Mishra Posted in Art, Creativity, Design, Fiction, Film, Fun, Good | Bad Design, Learning, Philosophy, Psychology, Puzzles, Representation, Research, Teaching, Worth Reading 9 Comments »

In this TCRecord piece, Daniel T. WIllingham uses what we know about cognitive psychology to explain  Why students don’t like school. He suggests that

although most people believe that humans are good at thinking, it is actually the weakest of our mental faculties… Our minds are biased against thinking, because thinking is slow and effortful. In addition, it’s error-prone; it may not even produce an answer at all, much less a good one.

What we truly hate, according to him are things that are (a) either too easy; or (b) things that are incomprehensible. What fascinates us are problems that hit the sweet spot, not merely unpredictable but rather postdictable. He defines this as being initially be surprising, but then be understandable with a bit of thought.”As he says:

… interest is engendered by an appraisal process: that is, a process by which we evaluate the potential interest of something before we delve into it. If we perceive an event to be novel and complex, but also comprehensible, we find it intriguing and worthy of continued thought. Tasks that lack complexity seem too easy. Tasks that lack comprehensibility seem too hard.

Just two points here. First, most of school, it seems to me, lies at these two extremes, either lacking in complexity OR lacking in comprehensibility. Combine this with the diversity of student interests and background it is hardly surprising that even students who like to learn, learn to hate schoo.

Second, I had never heard of this term “postdictable” before but I think it is going to become a part of my vocabulary from now on. It helps me explain and categorize educational activities that work from those that don’t. Additionally it helps me explain movies and books I like – from ones that don’t. I know I hate predictable plots and stories (something I am trying to get my daughter to realize particularly around the typical Disney fare she so seems to love). However, complete unpredictablity is also a pain – a waste of time. Movies I like are postdictable… surprising at first glance but understandable later. Cool.

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

Fact / Fiction, ambigram

May 29th, 2009 Punya Mishra Posted in Ambigrams, Art, Creativity, Design, Fun, Good | Bad Design, Puzzles, Representation, Worth Reading 3 Comments »

Yesterday after I had posted my two latest ambigrams (see them here) I got a message on Facebook from my cousin Sonny (the one who composed the cool music for my Explore, Create videos) saying

Big deal. I can make “fact” and “fiction” blur together till they are indistinguishable. Using only my brain! And not much effort, either.

Not to be outdone by a good put-down… I created an ambigram that really makes “fact” and “fiction” blur together… Check it out


So does this read “Fact” or “Fiction”? Or is it neither, and actually reads “Faction?” Hmm…

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

7 tools… one big job: Video Explore II

May 3rd, 2009 Punya Mishra Posted in Art, Creativity, Design, Film, Fun, Good | Bad Design, Personal, Puzzles, Representation, Technology, TPACK, Video, Worth Reading No Comments »

A few months ago I had created a video mashup of a commercial (see the original and my mashup here). This video ended with three key words, encouraging people to Explore, Create, Share! I then got the idea for creating short videos to represent these three ideas.

I also set some constraints on myself. First, these videos would be short! This meant each video would be between 30 seconds to a minute in length. Second, these videos would be, as far as possible, one continuous shot with minimal post-production and editing. Third, these videos would always end with a typographical representation of the word. Fourth, and finally, these videos would have some kind of a “surprise” at the end.

I was helped in my task by my kids and my cousin Sonny Mishra who composed three original clips of music for the three videos. Sonny has done an amazing job. All three pieces of music are unique, attempting to express musically the theme of the video. That said, all three pieces have a certain family resemblance, so that they all sound connected somehow, at a deeper level.

I have been working on these videos, off and on, with my kids for the past few weeks. We have created original videos for two of the three themes, Explore and Create. Here is the one on Explore (the video on Create can be seen here).

YouTube Preview Image

Though I liked what we had come up with for Explore, I also felt that the video was flawed. Essentially, everything happens so quickly that it is difficult to see, till the end, what the objects are that were picked up from the basket. This I felt, robbed some of the impact of the video. So we decided to shoot it again in a slightly different manner. Did it work? Find out for yourself by seeing 7 tools… one big job!. Another change was that this time my daughter was the performer!

YouTube Preview Image

What do you think?

(Other videos created by me, with our without my kids, can be seen here.)

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

Create… Emergence!

April 19th, 2009 Punya Mishra Posted in Art, Creativity, Design, Fun, Good | Bad Design, Puzzles, Representation, Teaching, Technology, Video 2 Comments »

I ended the mashup TPACK commercial with the following words, Explore, Create, Share!

Over the past couple of weeks my kids and I have been working on a series of short videos around these three words. The first one we made was around the idea of “Explore,” titled To see .. or not to see.

We created the second one, around the idea “create” this afternoon. Soham suggested calling it Emergence (the title of a Radio Lab podcast we had been listening to a few days ago).

YouTube Preview Image

Original music for this series was created by my cousin, Sonny Mishra.

You may notice a certain level of self-plagiarism going on here. We had created a similar video as a new year’s card (see it here). But the idea worked so beautifully for the theme… it would be a shame not to use it. Imitation as they say, is the sincerest form of self-flattery :-)

(Other videos created by me, with our without my kids, can be seen here.)

Enjoy.

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

Palindromes in video and poetry

March 11th, 2009 Punya Mishra Posted in Ambigrams, Art, Creativity, Design, Fun, Good | Bad Design, Housekeeping, Personal, Poetry, Puzzles, Worth Reading No Comments »

Leigh Wolf just sent me a link to this extremely creative YouTube video. The funny thing is that I had seen this a while ago but I didn’t get it. Of course now that Leigh explained it to me, it seems so obvious. Anyway, the narration is crafted in such a way that it reads the same backwards AND forwards. Now this is cool in and of itself, but the kicker is the manner in which the meaning flips when the reading reverses! Very cool.

YouTube Preview Image

Here is another one with the same overall idea though less well designed (and a bit more political)

What is most ironic about my “not getting it till explained” is that many years ago I had gotten bitten by the palindromic poetry bug – and had written a bunch of poems that read the same backwards and forwards. Moreover in these poems I tried hard to create a shift in meaning when you began reading the lines in reverse order. So to not notice this self-same pattern when I saw it in the video seems particularly embarrassing. Read the rest of this entry »

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

Optical illusions go live…

February 26th, 2009 Punya Mishra Posted in Ambigrams, Art, Creativity, Fun, Psychology, Puzzles, Representation, Video, Worth Reading No Comments »

If you love optical illusions you have to see this… just absolutely brilliant. The moment she pulls out the driver’s license is priceless. And of course the face / vase flip-flop at the end is cool too. Read the rest of this entry »

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

Gandhi, ambigrams, creativity & the power of small pieces loosely joined

February 21st, 2009 Punya Mishra Posted in Ambigrams, Art, Blogging, Books, Creativity, Design, Fun, India, Orissa, Personal, Puzzles, Stories, Technology, Worth Reading 18 Comments »

This is an extended piece on the manner in which the web, small pieces loosely joined, can lead to “serendipitous connectabilty” (something I had written about earlier here). All this is situated in a story that connects cognitive scientist Douglas Hofstader, Oriya writer and poet J. P. Das, and the father of non-violence Mahatma Gandhi. This is an interesting story in and of itself, and along the way offers some insights into the nature of the Internet and the psychology of creativity. Quite a lot to fit into on posting but bear with me.


Read the rest of this entry »

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

Playing with light and shadows

January 23rd, 2009 Punya Mishra Posted in Art, Creativity, Design, Fun, Puzzles, Representation No Comments »

Stumbled upon the creative work of Kumiya Mashita. It is amazing just how much can be created with just light and shadows. Just brilliant. Here are some examples:
Read the rest of this entry »

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

On making computation visible

January 20th, 2009 Punya Mishra Posted in Art, Creativity, Design, Engineering, Good | Bad Design, Learning, Mathematics, Puzzles, Representation, Science, Teaching, Technology, Video No Comments »

Here is a cool video about a “a mechanical, binary adding machine that uses marbles to flip the bits” – in other words a computer made of wood, that works at a pace that we can grasp! Marvelous. (HT: Collision Detection). Check out the video:

YouTube Preview Image

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

On messing with your mind

January 19th, 2009 Punya Mishra Posted in Biology, Creativity, Fiction, Fun, Mathematics, Psychology, Puzzles, Representation, Science No Comments »

A fascinating series of illusions to reveal just how complicated a phenomenon perception is. I was particularly impressed by the “rubber hand” illusion.

And then, from Gizmodo, comes the Yoshimoto cube. Words are not enough to describe what this mind-bending object can do, you just have to watch the video.
Read the rest of this entry »

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

Technology, creativity & illusion

January 12th, 2009 Punya Mishra Posted in Art, Creativity, Design, Fun, Good | Bad Design, Learning, Puzzles, Representation, Teaching, Technology, Worth Reading No Comments »

Marco Tempest is magician who loves technology, or a techno-geek who happens to be a good magician. He brings an unique amalgam of high-tech and magic to his shows (see this article for details), but that is not what is most impressive about his work. What is impressive is his relatively low-tech side, the one that loves to puzzle viewers with nothing more than a cell-phone camera. These short videos are always single, extended takes, with no editing or post-production whatsoever!! These videos, many of which are hosted on youtube, have to be seen to be believed. The level of creativity, ingenuity, planning and timing is just amazing. Here is one:
Read the rest of this entry »

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

Solving the rubik cube, blindfolded

January 2nd, 2009 Punya Mishra Posted in Creativity, Film, Fun, Personal, Puzzles, Representation, Video, Worth Reading No Comments »

A YouTube video of Soham solving the rubic cube blindfolded!

YouTube Preview Image

[Thanks for Michael Gondry for the idea.]

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

Binary Sudoku

December 30th, 2008 Punya Mishra Posted in Art, Creativity, Fun, Games, Mathematics, Puzzles 1 Comment »


Courtsey, XKCD!

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

Drawing hands

September 25th, 2008 Punya Mishra Posted in Art, Creativity, Fun, Personal, Puzzles, Representation No Comments »

Image says it all…
Read the rest of this entry »

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

100 greatest mathematical theorems

September 25th, 2008 Punya Mishra Posted in Creativity, Design, Good | Bad Design, Learning, Mathematics, Puzzles, Representation, Teaching, Technology No Comments »

Title says it all… check it out.

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

Interesting links

September 18th, 2008 Punya Mishra Posted in Conference, Games, Learning, Mathematics, Online Learning, Puzzles, Representation, Science, Teaching, Technology No Comments »

Here are some links that came up during our discussion today regarding web-based software for education. Read the rest of this entry »

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

Glass half full?

September 14th, 2008 Punya Mishra Posted in Creativity, Fun, Personal, Puzzles No Comments »

Just discovered a great riddle/puzzle site: [wu:riddles].
Read the rest of this entry »

AddThis Social Bookmark Button