The Personal Project

Teaching with AI

I’m not a fan of using AI for day-to-day activities, or for art. It’s not that I think that nobody should use AI, or that AI isn’t useful in some circumstances. I just… don’t use it for the research and writing that I do (most of the peer-reviewed work I reference lives behind paywalls). And using it for literary writing or visual art is appropriating, at best, or even outright stealing. No, thank you.

(Also, I wish that browsers, word processors, Adobe products, and even WordPress would just knock it the f— off. Stop foisting it on me; I don’t want it and won’t use it… go away.)

I am interested in how instructors are teaching with (or trying to avoid) AI, because from what I’m seeing in the world, students using AI to generate some or all of their work has become a significant issue for teachers. It’s difficult to know how to address it, because AI is a thing that’s here. How do we interact with it, and teach others to interact with it, in ways that are responsible, ethical, fair, and useful?

In other words, it’s not just about using AI — it’s also about pedagogy. I don’t have answers, but I’ve seen what seem like some good ideas, including having students generate a piece of writing using AI and then asking them to fact-check it and revise it as necessary. I’m also seeing some instructors going back to requiring at least some handwritten work for drafting.

Another approach I’ve seen is one that one of my professors used this semester: requiring a lot of writing over the course of several weeks, much of it reflective writing based on personal experience (with citations based on course reading), along with written responses to classmates. AI wasn’t forbidden, per se (we could have used it if it was appropriately cited), but when you have to produce that much original writing, in that style, your distinctive “voice” becomes recognizable. That kind of writing isn’t appropriate for a lot of academic work, and we did have a couple of longer, less narrative, writing exercises, but it worked well for this class. (It was a lot of writing, though. I don’t envy our professor having to wade through all of it.)

The other class I took this semester was a coding class that focused on PHP and Javascript. It was a good class, challenging and structured well. Do I know how to use either PHP or Javascript as an expert? Lol, no. But I know more than I did at the beginning of the semester, so I guess that’s a win — good foundation and all that. What was particularly interesting to me, though, was the way the instructor asked us to use AI.

Photo by Peaky Frames on Unsplash

For the most part, we were required to demonstrate that we could use the concepts he introduced to us in the way they were introduced, without the use of AI. Most of our assignments consisted of small, simple (if you know what you’re doing, which I… did not) coding exercises that followed the logic of his demonstrations, but focused on a slightly different problem. (In my evaluation of the class, I said that this approach is an “infuriatingly effective” way for me to learn, because the problems he asked us to solve were just different enough from his demonstrations that I really had to think through how to use the concepts he was asking us to use.)

He asked us to use AI on three separate occasions over the 15 weeks, in three different ways:

  1. Early in the semester, we were asked to prompt an AI (of our choosing) to solve a simple coding problem, make sure the code executed the way we intended, and comment on whether we understood what the AI did and why. (The AI produced code that was far more complex than I could read, much less write, at that point in the semester. It worked, but I wasn’t sure how.)
  2. Several weeks later, we were asked to manually code the scaffolding for an assignment, and once the code worked the way it was assigned, prompt an AI to add additional functionality that we had not yet covered in the class. (I had to instruct the AI not to change the structure of my code, to make sure that I could still navigate it after the new code was added — I’m a beginner! We had to turn in/upload to a class server both instances of code.)
  3. For our final assignment, we were to use an AI to code a simple web app (with HTML, CSS, Javascript and PHP) that met his specifications — vibe coding! I used GitHub Copilot/GPT-5 mini in Visual Studio Code, so I was using AI within the context of an IDE (I found working within a specific environment very helpful). It required a fair amount of intervention to get where I wanted to go. (Granted, someone with better prompting skills would probably be much more efficient.) But by the end of the semester I could at least read the code and understand most of the logic — or ask the AI to explain what it was doing — so I could make the adjustments I needed or wanted to meet the expectations for the assignment.

As a person who does not use LLMs on the regular, I thought these exercises, in this progression, were an interesting and effective way to introduce AI. The exercises asked us to solve specific problems, and encouraged us to develop an understanding not just of the end product, but of the working parts. Exercises 2 and 3 also introduced us to different ways of using AI: to generate code that complemented manually written code, and to generate most of the code and adjust it as we tested it. Using AI to generate code to let a machine do the work of machines seems like a good use case to me. And because code needs to be checked and adjusted to make sure it’s doing what it’s supposed to do — no matter who (or what) generates it — that workflow seems like a defensible use of an AI.

Coding · Studenting · The Personal Project · Volunteering

This summer sucks.

Confession: a big part of that is on me.

[I am in a mood today, and I feel like screaming into the void. (Sorry, not sorry) This post is even more skippable than most.]

I mean, for a little bit of context, am I the one snatching legal residents from the streets of Spokane? No.

Am I causing uncertainty in the markets by threatening/misusing tariffs, defunding the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, “re-appropriating”(?) funds to spiff up a “free” jet, and building a $200M ballroom at the White House? Also no.

Am I sending congressional propaganda email polls to my constituents in WA-5 (do you think the US should bomb Iran, or should Iran be allowed to build nuclear weapons unchecked? Oh, I see, those are the only options in that situation…) and chirpy weekly newsletters about how I’ve met with three constituent groups and explained to them that the Big Beautiful Bill is the best thing that ever happened to America? LOL, most definitely not.

[Quick aside, though, to Congressman Baumgartner (Harvard, ’02*): given the demographics of our district, you’re going to be re-elected for as long as you want to hold the office. How are you going to manage your next term, after that bill starts limiting access to Medicaid in earnest, given that our district will be one the most impacted in the state? “Waste, fraud, and abuse” are rampant at the federal level (see “free” jets, ballrooms, firings/hirings, and paying people not to work), and your party has given over the power of the purse to the executive. You enabled (funded!) secret police to indiscriminately snatch people off the streets. And, um, you might want to steer clear of talk of high moral character. So, Mr. “fiscal conservative” who campaigned on economic responsibility, protecting the southern border, and family values… what’s your plan?]

Ok, off the soapbox, and back to business. Yes (waves arms), all the things are a monumental buzzkill. But here’s the thing: I don’t actually have any control over any of that. So when I say that this summer has been icky, I’m not talking about all the things. I’m taking about the fact that I made a couple of dicey choices:

  1. I took two graduate courses this summer (because I need to get through this degree before it either goes away or becomes too expensive to continue — another set of circumstances I preemptively blame Congressman Harvard* for). In my defense, one of them was a one-month, one-unit seminar on copyright law. It might have been manageable, if I hadn’t added the second course. Where I really messed up was taking a web development class — a 15-week spring/fall course that was compressed into a ten-week summer semester. BIG. MISTAKE. (It’s a good class, and I know way more about CSS inheritance and precedence, grids/flexboxes, and media queries than I did before, but I would have gotten more from it, had an easier time of it, and enjoyed it more, with a little bit more time.)
  2. And then, to add insult to injury, I took on an additional weekly volunteer shift. Ugh. By the time I realized how messed up that was, it was too late to back out of it without creating a lot of work for a few other people. (It would not have been advisable, or fair, for me to say “whoops, my bad” when I volunteer for a small, heavily volunteer-staffed, environmental education organization whose few employees take a much-needed quasi-break during the summer.)

Any one of those choices would have been doable. But all of them together? Not great. Don’t get it twisted; even in the midst of (waves arms) all the things, I did it. I finished my final assignment last night at 9:30p; both of the classes were interesting and worth taking. I haven’t missed any of my volunteer commitments (I have 3 shifts next week); the OLC’s birds (and sometimes other critters, depending on the day and what the rabbit’s enclosure smells like) are fed and cared for, the raptor gravel piles have new markers, and the Harris’s hawk has three new perches (because power tools are a delight).

But it has not been easy, or pleasant. I’m in charge of the meal planning in my house, and that’s not going well (although it is also summer, when my coffee is cold brew, my morning toast is store bought, and we often have “snacks for dinner” so I can avoid using the range — no one is going hungry, but it is… inelegant). I have no hobbies at the moment, and very little social life. The only extracurricular reading I have brain space for is rom-coms, for 30 minutes before going to sleep — think spicier Hallmark stories (at least they’re from the library). My TV time has been largely limited to replays of WNBA games (League Pass, FTW).

But I also haven’t had a lot of time for social media, and maybe that’s a good thing.


* Congressman Baumgartner (Harvard, ’02) used a not insignificant amount of space in one of his weekly newsletters to parrot the administration’s anti-Harvard shenanigans. I gather, from the newsletter, that Harvard is elite, they’re not sending their best, and they need to be taken down a notch. I could have told you that, Congressman Harvard, but how are you the exception?

Lucy the Pup · Thoughts about Stuff

Leftovers

July 4th ended up being a very busy day. I had an early volunteer shift that had morphed into doing animal care for the whole place (instead of just the birds) — for me that adds more than an hour to my shift (I’m not terribly efficient with the other animals because I don’t work with them all that often). I had to finish a school assignment that — technically — was not due until today, but I’ve had a bunch of other, unrelated stuff on my plate and just didn’t have time to mess around with it. I have a standing date on Fridays to talk to my mom, and we had a lovely conversation.

And then Lu and I got to spend some time in the evening with friends. It was a comfortable day outside (thankfully), so getting her in the car and spending time in their backyard was lovely. This is her after spending a few hours playing with her special friends Jennifer and Kevin (special friends because she loves them unequivocally, and loves to play with them — she’s more wary around new-to-her people and men):

Lu needed a nap, but she wasn’t *sure* she needed a nap.

We got home kind of early to make sure we were tucked in before the fireworks got going. We’re lucky that (so far, knock wood) Lu hasn’t shown any reaction to boom booms, other than to make a note and go back to sleep, but I wanted to make sure that she was at home and could spend time in her crate if something had changed between last year and this year… thankfully, her experience of the fourth this year was similar to her first two years, in that she could not have cared less about what was going on outside. (I’m not sure how we have lucked out on this front, but I’m grateful we have… at least so far.)

Lu’s special friend Kevin is great on the grill, and I got sent home with a care package that included some bell pepper slices and grilled corn on the cob. Last night for dinner, I “repurposed” both and made a coconut curry with tofu and vegetables, which I topped with chili oil.

Yellow coconut curry with tofu and vegetables over rice.
YUM.

It. Was. DELICIOUS. And there are leftovers!

The world feels heavy right now; it was a nice reprieve from (waves arms) everything to spend some quality time in community with friends. The leftovers were a nice (and tasty) reminder of our time together.

Coding · Studenting

Summer School

I made a couple of miscalculations this summer.

Last year I took a MySQL course, which is only taught during the summer at SJSU. It’s designed to run as an intensive 10-week course. And yep, it was intense — the kind of situation where you end up knowing about 1000% more than you did before you started, but you recognize that you’re still just scratching the surface. It was a good class.

This summer, I’m taking a front-end web development survey course. Most of the material is a review (not all of it, but I’ve been at least exposed to most of the concepts and have a little bit of experience with the code), so I was not worried about tackling it over the summer. I was so unbothered by the prospect that I added a four-week seminar that examines copyright law through the lens of digitization of special collections (also only taught during the summer, by a professor I like).

Those were both miscalculations.

The seminar, because it’s designed as a short course covering a specific (very niche) topic, required a lot of reading, a fair amount of writing, and some engaging assignments. It was heady stuff — interesting and dense, and full of important information. It ended last week.

The WebDev course is primarily taught in the Spring and Fall semesters, as a 15-week course. For the summer, that course is compressed to 10 weeks. It’s also a graduate-level survey (similar content to an undergraduate course of this type, but you’re expected to do a deeper dive and produce a more “finished” product). And as it turns out, there is a significant difference between a 10-week intensive course and a compressed 15-week course. I wouldn’t change the course structure or content; I really enjoy this kind of work — any coding, or working with data, is absolutely my jam. My primary frustration with the situation is that there is not enough time to finesse or explore anything beyond what’s in the task list, because the timeline is so compressed.

The latest example: we had to produce a navBar and style it, which I did (with flexbox!), but it’s not responsive for mobile screens (yet) because a) it wasn’t explicitly part of the assignment, b) it would have required another big technical leap (for me), which I did not have time for, because c) there was another — totally unrelated — piece of the assignment to complete.

The navBar in question.

Sometimes you don’t finish projects… you just have to end them so you can move on.

There are other things going on that are making the summer more challenging, including a bigger volunteer load and some unforeseen family stuff. It’s tempting to be all dramatic, like, I’m in hell, but that would be inappropriately hyperbolic; it’s just a more than I expected… sometimes an uncomfortable amount of more.

[Side note: almost all of the projects I do for my MLIS program in some way involve the organization I volunteer for, because there’s a lot of information floating around an environmental education organization that is responsible for animal care. These projects aren’t affiliated with the OLC, but I discuss them with the director, and if anything I do is relevant to their interests, they’re free to use my work. I strongly suggest that if you decide to pursue graduate work, you have some experience (volunteer or paid) that you can draw on; I have found it extremely helpful for contextualizing what I’m learning in class.]

Studenting

Get the Useless Degree

Get in losers, we’re going for a trip down memory lane, via my current grad school classes. I’m feeling salty today, for reasons, so there might be some swears. (Here’s a photo tax.)

My homegrown drip coffee setup: a quart-sized mason jar, a quart-sized measuring cup with a strainer and coffee filter. In front is an iced caramel latte with cold foam.
Improvised cold brew system. The drink: caramel iced latte with cold foam.

I’m an MLIS student (Library and Information Science), and this summer I’m taking a one-month seminar on copyright for cultural institutions, and a 10-week front-end web development survey. (Turns out doing them at the same time is not something I would advise; I’m struggling at the moment.)

Before the MLIS program, I spent a hot minute as a graphic designer. Before that I spent a few years in school (New York City College of Technology — CUNY FTW) studying graphic design and print production. I took a lot of shit for it, because despite the program being vocational in nature (the print production part), it’s… ahem… not useful.

OK, but here’s the thing: I learned how to research and write during my “useless” undergraduate degree (Classics). What that means right now: I don’t use AI LLMs because I don’t find them useful — too much copyright infringement (cheating) and making stuff up, or “hallucinating” (lying), that I would have to account for, and I’m sorry, but ain’t nobody got time for that. Everything is already too complicated to have to spend extra time dealing with AI slop. (This is not to say that there is no use for AI; I’m saying that for what I’m doing right now, it’s more distracting than helpful, so I just don’t use it… and I would appreciate it if Microsoft would stop reactivating CoPilot every time office updates.)

As for studying graphic design, guess who has a pretty reasonable foundation in copyright law, particularly with regard to fair use? That would be me. When you’re in art school, you copy masters on purpose. And you might use photos that don’t belong to you to mock up design assignments… and you learn pretty quickly that you’re not allowed to sell or distribute those works. While you might have a defensible fair use argument for creating that work in the context of an education setting, the copyright holders of the original works may very well be able to claim infringement if you publish or otherwise distribute their work without permission or licensing.

Drawing from a photo reference? Did you take the photo? The drawing is yours to do whatever you want with. If you didn’t, and your drawing is a faithful reproduction (has not been substantially altered), it’s not yours to sell or distribute. And guess what, friends? Posting something to the internet is a potential method for distribution.

[Related: do not ask me to remove a watermark from a low-resolution digital mockup so you can use it as the finished piece. I made it a low resolution digital mockup with a big ol’ watermark on it for a reason.]

Also:

  • Darkroom photography –> photo editing in Photoshop or Affinity Photo
  • Typography –> relative measurement units in CSS
  • PPI vs DPI –> IYKYK
  • Color theory –> related to everything, everywhere… it’s astonishing, really.

Moral of the story: study what you want to study, and make sure to develop some critical thinking skills along the way. Everything is related, and even if you don’t end up using that exact discipline for your work for the rest of your life, there’s a better than even chance that at least some of it will be useful.

Black History Month · In the Kitchen

Black History Year

I did not get through my ambitious syllabus in February, so I guess 2025 is going to have to be Black History Year… I’m not mad about it.

One thing I did do: cook using recipes by Black recipe developers.

First up: Bryant Terry. He specializes in vegan food, which I enjoy, and the cookbook I used is one I already own (bookshop.org link): The Inspired Vegan. It’s a cookbook for entertaining, with recipes for whole meals, including drinks, books, and playlists. He handles tofu really well; I could eat buckets of the tofu from his tofu saag.

A couple of weeks ago, I made congee and tofu with peanuts and chili oil. I did not mix my rices, so I didn’t follow the recipe exactly, but it was still delicious… so delicious that I had leftovers for breakfast the next day.

This one will be in the rotation. It’s really good.

As I type this, I’m making Terry’s masala chai, which I have also been enjoying for the last few weeks. I’ve done some research online, and his technique isn’t entirely traditional, but it’s very tasty (and it makes the house smell so good while it’s in the works).

Since these recipes are for entertaining, I halve them so we don’t end up eating (or drinking) dishes (drinks) for weeks. What I should do is make the whole tofu recipe, and halve the meal it comes with, because the tofu is just that good.

Next up: Jerrelle Guy’s sweet potato tart with chocolate hazelnut crust, from (bookshop.org link) Black Girl Baking. Look, I know I said I was going to do something new to me… but I can’t convey to you how delicious this tart is, and I really wanted to eat some of it (confession: I’m having a slice right now).

It’s really pretty, right? It has some citrus zest and juice in it, which gives the sweet potato filling a nice, bright flavor. I think this is going to replace the pumpkin pie at Thanksgiving (or at least be an addition).

The tart has eggs in it, but it doesn’t have any dairy, so it’s safe for fabulous and talented husband to eat (the whipped cream is also non-dairy).

So yes, it’s true that I did not do all of the reading I wanted to do, but it’s only March; there’s plenty of time left in Black History Year.

Black History Month

Black History Month: Kadir Nelson

Kadir Nelson is a talented, prolific, accomplished artist. I became aware of his work because of his New Yorker and Rolling Stone covers, which are… just… breathtaking. In addition to his incredible skills as a painter, his narrative chops are second to none.

He has a website, with a gallery and store: https://www.kadirnelson.com/

In 2022, the Norman Rockwell Museum curated an exhibition titled “In Our Lifetime: Paintings from the Pandemic by Kadir Nelson.”

He has written and/or illustrated a number of children’s books (autographed copies available).

And he painted what is, quite possibly, the best bookstore poster of all time (in my humble opinion):

Norman Rockwell was able to create self-contained visual narratives, using incredible drawing and painting skills. I would argue that Norman Rockwell was good at showing us what we already knew, sometimes even when we didn’t want to know it. That is a very particular, very specific skill. It is rare, and it is special.

Kadir Nelson is wholly original, artistically — he is one of a kind — but I think he does a similar kind of narrative work, with a similar skillset, and that his work is incredibly important in our time.

Black History Month

Black History Month: Augusta Savage & Annie Easley

Gamin (1930), by Augusta Savage. Photo credited to the Cummer Museum of Art & Gardens, Jacksonville, Florida. Image featured in Sculptor Augusta Savage’s Towering Impact on the Harlem Renaissance, by Niama Safia Sandy, on artsy.com.

This morning I learned about two extraordinary Black American women: sculptor, poet, teacher and gallery owner Augusta Savage (1892-1962), and mathematician and computer scientist Annie Easley (1933-2011).

[The New York Public Library has a great libguide for Augusta Savage.]

Thank you to Mariame Kaba (@prisonculture.bsky.social) for posting a link to a PBS American Masters segment about Augusta Savage:

Annie Easley was a NASA “computer.” Hidden Figures (the book by Margot Lee Shetterly, and the film of the same name) featured profiles and stories of Black women hired by NASA for their skills and mathematics and engineering. Annie Easley wasn’t featured in that work, but she shared a similar skillset. Among her accomplishments, she created code for the Centaur rocket stage that allowed it to be used successfully (it was blowing up on launch). The code Easley created allowed the Centaur stage to be used in more than 220 launches; the technology was incorporated into other rockets used for missions to the moon, and for the space shuttles.

Annie Easley is one of the featured women in an article at biography.com: NASA’s Hidden Figures: The Unsung Women You Need to Know

Caitlin Aamodt, PhD (@caamodt.bsky.social) posted a gift article of an obituary for Annie Easley, published on February 1, 2025, by the New York Times in their “Overlooked No More” series: https://bsky.app/profile/caamodt.bsky.social/post/3lh7czy27ws2r

The Times summed up some of her skills this way: “She analyzed systems that handled energy conversion and aided in the design of alternative power technology, including the batteries used for early hybrid vehicles.” (For those of us who flirt with data transmission, the article also mentioned that she worked with SOAP.)

Easley spent her retirement mentoring others, and served with the EEOC.

From the Times piece, in a 2001 interview, Easley said this: “My thing is, if I can’t work with you, I will work around you.”

Wise words.

Black History Month · The Personal Project

Black History Month

Meteor Shower
by Clint Smith

I read somewhere that meteor showers
are almost always named after

the constellation from which
they originate. It’s funny, I think,

how even the universe is telling us
that we can never get too far

from the place that created us.
How there is always a streak of our past

trailing closely behind us
like a smattering of obstinate memories.

Even when we enter a new atmosphere,
become subsumed in flames, turn to dust,

lose ourselves in the wind, and scatter
the surface of all that rest beneath us,

we bring a part of where we are from
to every place we go.

—* — *—

February is Black History Month. Here is how I’m celebrating:

Watching:

Crash Course Black American History, hosted by Clint Smith (YouTube)

Red Tails (Disney+)

Captain America: Brave New World (Releases February 14)

Photo of an iPad with a Kindle book, a library book, a book of essays, and two cookbooks.

Reading:

Sister Outsider: Essays and Speeches by Audre Lord

The Sum of Us: What Racism Costs Everyone and How We Can Prosper Together, by Heather McGhee

Live Nourished: Make Peace with Food, Banish Body Shame, and Reclaim Joy, by Shana Minei Spence, MS, RDN, CDN

Cooking:

New-to-me recipe (TBD) from Black Girl Baking, by Jerrelle Guy (The sweet potato pie with chocolate hazelnut crust from this book is *chef’s kiss*.)

New-to-me recipe (TBD) from The Inspired Vegan, by Bryant Terry (Terry’s saag tofu is my go-to; his recipe for the tofu is out of this world.)

Thoughts about Stuff

The Worst Day

A couple of nights ago, there was a mid-air collision between a military helicopter and a commercial flight on approach to Reagan National Airport. Sixty-seven people were killed, including the crew of the helicopter, and the crew and passengers on the jet.

Although we saw what happened, we will have to rely on the skill and experience of air crash investigators to sort it out. [In the meantime, apparently the FAA has restricted the helicopter route along the Potomac to police and medical helicopters.]

In my personal search for helpful information, my husband alerted me to this video, made by a former F-15 pilot. In my limited experience with pilots, this is how the really good ones talk about flying — as analytical, careful practitioners. This creator has a YouTube channel, and is at https://pilotdebrief.com/. (One of my first questions was about why TCAS didn’t seem to be in play in the jet, and he answered that question — because of the low altitude of both aircraft.)

I’m sure there are many other smart, experienced people, with relevant experience as pilots or controllers, who can help us make sense of the publicly available information we have so far. I watched another video where the creator (a pilot) talks about the tower and ground response being quick and professional, and another where the creator broke down (in more technical terms) the routes each aircraft were taking and the challenges presented by busy airspace in nighttime, urban, conditions. Although “visual separation” is a recurring theme in these videos, one of the most important features of them is that each of the creators says that they are working with publicly available data, and that there’s still a lot that we don’t know…

… which is an excellent reminder that air crashes tend to be complex, often cascading, events. A lot of the time, they can’t be explained easily, and sometimes, investigations raise more questions.

The NTSB investigated the air accident that killed my dad, many years ago. The report was comprehensive, and fair, and included not just information about the weather (nighttime, poor visibility due to fog, near-freezing conditions), and the equipment involved (which I can’t remember off the top of my head), but information about the pilot’s (my dad’s) qualifications, his decision making on the ground before the flight, and in the air. They also sought information about the conditions and operation of the airfield, and the quality of information from the tower just before the crash. In their final report, the NTSB pointed out decisions that probably should have been made differently (including by my dad), but stopped short of assigning blame for the accident. (This may be wrong, but I get the sense that they avoid assigning blame when they can, particularly if no one is behaving recklessly, or purposely acting against their training.)

Of course, in my dad’s accident, the investigator knew what had happened immediately (the pilot was dead, the plane was destroyed, the tower was damaged), but they took the time to examine multiple factors that may have contributed to the accident, to get a better sense of how it happened, why it happened, and how to prevent it from happening again. None of it could bring my dad back (closure is not a word I would reach for, here). There have been other small-craft air accidents in similar situations with similar outcomes, because when weather issues, human perception issues, and navigation issues converge, bad things can happen. But I hope that, with more information and understanding, these kinds of accidents are rarer than they might have been otherwise.

Point is, I think the NTSB does excellent, important, work. I expect they will do the same here. The rest of us should avoid coming to conclusions based on easy explanations and/or speculation, and let the NTSB and the FAA investigate the accident without pressure or interference.

But it’s also important to understand that even if the NTSB’s report is helpful, and this kind of accident never happens again, there is no making sense of this event for the families of those killed in it; it is a terrible tragedy.

–*–*–

Confession: I’m a fan of the TV show Air Disasters (Smithsonian Channel, and now Paramount+), not because of the flashy recreations, but because they highlight the work of air crash investigators (often the NTSB, but they have featured agencies from around the world). The work these folks do is creative, evidence-based, interesting, and important, and has improved safety for both aviators and passengers.