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Debate Cards: Teaching Students to Think With Evidence
Debate Cards: Teaching Students to Think With Evidence

Building Cards from Sources. Give students 2–3 articles on one of the topics — job displacement, autonomous weapons, surveillance, AI personhood — and have them produce 5 cards. They choose the tags, select the passages, decide what to underline. This forces them to read the full articles and make judgment calls about what matters.

Card vs. Card. Pair students up. One has cards arguing AI job displacement will be catastrophic; the other has cards arguing new jobs will emerge. They have to respond to each other’s specific evidence, not just assert opinions. This teaches that disagreement lives in the evidence, not in volume.

Find the Weak Card. Give students a set of 10 cards on a topic where 2–3 have weak sources, outdated citations, or tags that overstate what the evidence actually says. Students have to identify which cards they’d cut from their file and explain why. This builds source evaluation skills without a lecture on “media literacy.”

Tag Rewriting. Provide cards with the body and citation but no tag. Students write their own. Then compare — did different students read the same passage and frame the argument differently? This surfaces how framing shapes persuasion even when the evidence is identical.

Build the File. Assign a topic — say, mass surveillance and AI — and have students build a 15-card file over two weeks. They need cards on both sides. At the end, they write a one-page assessment of which side has stronger evidence and why. The constraint of finding evidence for both sides prevents the assignment from becoming a book report that confirms what they already believe.

The Missing Question. Give students your list of ignored topics (job loss, surveillance, autonomous weapons, AI rights, schools ignoring the new world). Have them pick one, build 5 cards, and then write a one-paragraph argument for why their school’s curriculum should address it. This turns the meta-argument from your article into something students own.

Update the Card. Give students a card from 2023 and ask them to find a more recent source that either strengthens, weakens, or overtakes the original evidence. This teaches that evidence has a shelf life — especially in AI, where six months can be a lifetime.

The Oral Drill. Students pick their three strongest cards on a topic and deliver them aloud in 90 seconds — reading only the tag and underlined portions. Listeners have to identify the core claim from what was read. This builds both public speaking and listening comprehension under pressure.

·dwarkesh.com·
Debate Cards: Teaching Students to Think With Evidence
The Small Morality of Everyday Days
The Small Morality of Everyday Days
Most of the ethical debates I grew up hearing were colossal: war, climate disaster, reproductive rights, guns. They felt too vast to touch, as if morality only lived in rooms with microphones. But lately I’ve started paying attention to something quieter — the ethics of the everyday, the moral weight of small choices in ordinary […]
·thehumanist.com·
The Small Morality of Everyday Days
Proton Mail Helped FBI Unmask Anonymous ‘Stop Cop City’ Protester
Proton Mail Helped FBI Unmask Anonymous ‘Stop Cop City’ Protester
Privacy-focused email provider Proton Mail provided Swiss authorities with payment data that the FBI then used to determine who was allegedly behind an anonymous account affiliated with the Stop Cop City movement in Atlanta, according to a court record reviewed by 404 Media.
·flip.it·
Proton Mail Helped FBI Unmask Anonymous ‘Stop Cop City’ Protester
Check out "Nearby Glasses"
Check out "Nearby Glasses"
This app searches for smart glasses nearby and notifies you of their presence.
·play.google.com·
Check out "Nearby Glasses"
Vaibhav Bodana (@vaibhavspace) • Threads, Say more
Vaibhav Bodana (@vaibhavspace) • Threads, Say more
7.2K Followers • 1K Threads • 🌀 Educator building into solopreneur 🌱 Growth, philosophy, science, spirituality 🌟 Connect for how-why-what of content 🎯 Get FREE Ikigai clarity. See the latest...
·threads.com·
Vaibhav Bodana (@vaibhavspace) • Threads, Say more
A New Counter-Apologetic for Humanism
A New Counter-Apologetic for Humanism
In the past fifteen years since my deconversion, I’ve had many conversations with many followers across a spectrum of denominations. Despite these conversations rarely turning overtly hostile, there were always implicit assumptions about my motivations for leaving faith. Over the years, I’ve noticed a shift in the “debate”-style conversations where my interlocutor will attempt to […]
·thehumanist.com·
A New Counter-Apologetic for Humanism
Servers - Mastodon
Servers - Mastodon
Find where to sign up for the decentralized social network Mastodon.
·joinmastodon.org·
Servers - Mastodon
Is Flock Mass Surveillance? Here's What 30 Courts Decided
Is Flock Mass Surveillance? Here's What 30 Courts Decided
Flock ALPRs do not and cannot track vehicles, much less individual people. ALPRs take a point-in-time image of the rear of vehicles on public roadways. They are incapable of tracking the whole of anyone’s movements, a determination that has been consistently made by Courts across the country.
·flocksafety.com·
Is Flock Mass Surveillance? Here's What 30 Courts Decided
Ártur Rioni (@arturrioni) • Instagram reel
Ártur Rioni (@arturrioni) • Instagram reel
15K likes, 72 comments - arturrioni on December 2, 2025: "1️⃣ One of the most repeated findings in psychology is that the events of life do not determine long term wellbeing. The interpretation does. The meaning you assign to a situation predicts emotional outcome far more than the situation itself. Two people can face the same challenge and experience completely different internal realities. 2️⃣ Researchers at Stanford studying cognitive appraisal found that when people reframe a stressor as a challenge rather than a threat, their bodies respond differently. Heart rate increases in a way that supports performance. Cortisol spikes are lower. Decision making improves. The event stays the same. The response changes everything. 3️⃣ Another study from the University of Michigan showed that people who practiced deliberate mindset shifts during difficult moments recovered emotionally up to three times faster. Their brain activity in regions tied to rumination decreased. Their prefrontal cortex, which governs clarity and regulation, became more active. The conclusion was simple. Mindset is not positive thinking. It is neurological strategy. 4️⃣ Therapists see this daily. Some people collapse under minor disruptions because they interpret them as personal attacks or signs of failure. Others stay grounded during major upheavals because they treat the moment as information rather than identity. The skill is not avoiding difficulty. It is choosing your internal posture when difficulty arrives. 5️⃣ Life will always bring situations that are unfair, unexpected, and uncomfortable. You cannot stop that. But you can decide whether the moment shapes you or strengthens you. You can choose whether the challenge is a wall or a doorway. You can decide whether you freeze or move. Here is the question that matters. Do you believe mindset is something people are born with, or something anyone can learn with enough practice? We may never cross paths again. Follow so you don’t lose me — @arturrioni".
·instagram.com·
Ártur Rioni (@arturrioni) • Instagram reel
I Am Creation | Retreats & Events | Community | Podcast (@iamcreationretreat) • Instagram reel
I Am Creation | Retreats & Events | Community | Podcast (@iamcreationretreat) • Instagram reel
4,087 likes, 49 comments - iamcreationretreat on February 16, 2026: "In 1665, a Dutch physicist named Christiaan Huygens placed two pendulum clocks side by side on a wooden beam. He watched them swing at different rhythms for a few minutes. Then, slowly, they began to synchronize. Within half an hour, they were perfectly matched. He separated them. They drifted. He put them back together. They synced again. He called it entrainment. When two oscillating systems exist in proximity, the stronger rhythm mechanically pulls the weaker one into alignment. It requires no permission. No awareness. It is physics. An energy practitioner who worked with empaths noticed this same force in her clients. They would build a stable internal state, then spend time with chaotic people, and within hours their nervous systems would collapse. They thought it was their fault. That they weren’t “strong enough.” But entrainment doesn’t care about strength. It cares about proximity and amplitude. The Hermetic Principle of Vibration teaches that everything is in motion. But modern physics shows that motion doesn’t stay isolated. If their frequency is louder than yours, you will match it. Mechanically. Automatically. You cannot willpower your way out of a physics problem. Distance is the only protection against entrainment. Whose rhythm are you trying to resist instead of removing yourself from? We may never cross paths again. Follow so you don’t lose us — @iamcreationretreat".
·instagram.com·
I Am Creation | Retreats & Events | Community | Podcast (@iamcreationretreat) • Instagram reel
Aaron C (@chywn) • Instagram reel
Aaron C (@chywn) • Instagram reel
380K likes, 3,787 comments - chywn on October 14, 2025: "Never deviate away from production design. #engineering_memes #formoverfunction".
·instagram.com·
Aaron C (@chywn) • Instagram reel
The U.S. spent $30 billion to ditch textbooks for laptops and tablets: The result is the first generation less cognitively capable than their parents
The U.S. spent $30 billion to ditch textbooks for laptops and tablets: The result is the first generation less cognitively capable than their parents
In 2002, Maine became the first state to implement a statewide laptop program to some grade levels. Then-Governor Angus King saw the program as a way to put the internet at the fingertips of more …
·flip.it·
The U.S. spent $30 billion to ditch textbooks for laptops and tablets: The result is the first generation less cognitively capable than their parents
Missouri proposal reignites debate over Chromebooks in schools
Missouri proposal reignites debate over Chromebooks in schools
A proposal in the Missouri Legislature to scale back the use of Chromebooks in schools has sparked debate among educators, parents and health professionals about how much technology belongs in the classroom.
·san.com·
Missouri proposal reignites debate over Chromebooks in schools