Some academics cringe when students turn to Wikipedia as a reference for term papers, but this teacher made it an assignment to write a Wikipedia article. Students found themselves having to write differently when works were submitted to wikipedia, vs in the classroom; they were now written for more than one reader.


Three talks and many insights…
The last week or so has been quite eventful at TIFR. We have had some famous/important visitors who have given public lectures and talks.
The first visitor was Prof. Kumar Patel of UCLA, the Indian origin inventor of the $CO_2$ laser. He gave two talks. The first talk was for graduate students where he shared his insights and gave us some tips. The next talk was about about using lasers to detect explosives and chemical warfare agents. Both talks were interesting but I want to share some of the tips he gave us during his freewheeling, informal conversation with graduate students:
The next talk was by a French Prof. Étienne Ghys on the Butterfly Effect. The Butterfly effect is popular description of chaos: How a small event can have extremely large impacts on a system. “Does the flap of a butterfly’s wings in Brazil set off a tornado in Texas?” is a one of those questions that have entered the public imagination. I have my own version of the Butterfly effect (intended to be a joke of course)
This has another humorous implication:
Incidentally I shared Sid Butterfly Conjecture 1&2 with the French Prof when I bumped into him. He seemed to love it!
The third talk that I want to mention was by S.R. Varadhan a famous Indian origin mathematician from ISI Calcutta who is now at Courant Institute, NYU. S.R. Varadhan was the winner of the Abel Prize (considered the Nobel Prize for Mathematics) in 2007. I have blogged about him here.
Hoping to learn from him, I asked him about the secret to his success. The answer was “you should have passion in what you do”. True, it was boring answer but its worth mentioning here because sometimes the secrets to success are quite simple. We shouldn’t expect rocket science answers to everything. Too often, the expectation of rocket science answers or tricks means that we don’t want to concentrate on the basics (which are obvious but tough to implement) like hard work, perseverance, passion, excellence, time management and so on.
It was inspirational to hear from two Indian origin scientists who have reached the heights of success in their fields. Can I apply their suggestions in my life? Only time will tell.