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Provide Rationality / EA Education at University of Maryland

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Max Morawski

$300raised
$7,500valuation
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Project description

I intend to run a series of rationality workshops at University of Maryland for a group of dedicated CS students. I have run five workshops so far, to an audience of about 40 students. An example of a typical lecture can be found here: https://docs.google.com/presentation/d/17OpIeX9KWvrrcmQ-YLIKYq2PlkKDDVa2WzsuWsH6Tsk/edit?usp=sharing

I estimate that out of this group, maybe 5 or so will head in an EA direction, which honestly, given the potential lifetime earnings from a computer scientist coming out of a top school, seems like it could have pretty good ROI. I have no way of measuring the actual impact beyond "I gave a bunch of lectures about thinking clearly and trying to save people from Malaria to impressionable college students who are about to be making tons of money," but hopefully you find that compelling.

What is your track record on similar projects?

I am an experienced educator with 10 years of teaching experience at the collegiate level, as well as a dedicated lurker in the EA/LW space. I did a prototype of this class a few semesters ago as a pilot with generally positive reception. The first five of these classes have been met with massively positive feedback.

"oh right regarding that question that u asked at the start of class, the one where its like why people keep showing up. Idk about others but for me, this class is actually something I look forward to every week. It is really fun to learn all these new tricks and algorithms for better understanding life. Also so far I have been applying literally everything you have mentioned in the lectures so far and it has improved many parts of my life very different [sic]. Even the procrastination lecture, i finally understand why my friend has so much trouble with his studio landscaping projects. But yeah, that is just why i at least come to the class every week and also why i take it extremely seriously. Also the reason why i try and ditch my english class several minutes early to try and get to ur class in time."

How will you spend your funding?

At present, I am financing this entire project myself, but that isn't sustainable. Costs include: Weekly snacks for 40 people, prizes for solving various puzzles (typically copies of the books used to teach the class, such as Scout Mindset and The Precipice), puzzle components (they have fully destroyed two lock boxes at this point). If anyone is interested, I can provide a full account of expenses. I am happy to finance this on my own, but any assistance would be appreciated.

For further information, please contact me at maksym.morawski@gmail.com

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Max Morawski

about 1 year ago

Final update! Not going to make these seem natural, just going to answer the questions they asked.

To be considered for the evaluation, please post a comment on your Manifund project, answering these questions one at a time:
1. How much money have you spent so far? Have you gotten more funding from other sources? Do you need more funding?

For last semester I probably spent around a thousand dollars, which I believe was mostly overkill. The other funding source was my wallet. I'm starting up again this semester aiming to spend a lot less. Think my big expenses will be food (just for the first day) and prize money for games (prediction tournament and a few others).

2. How is the project going? (a few paragraphs)

Weirdly great! This semester I am doing two tracks--one for advanced students, one for new students. Both classes have thirtyish people in them. I expect to lose some as the semester rolls on, but last semester I GAINED people every week for the first five weeks, so who knows. One unexpected advantage is UMD is more of a party school than I thought, so I've been slowly carving out a social enclave of the nerdy students who aren't comfortable with that while introducing people to basic rationality / EA ideas. Which makes me think the niche I'm trying to occupy is more stable than I thought, because it serves an existing need.

3. How well has your project gone compared to where you expected it to be at this point? (Score from 1-10, 10 = Better than expected)

10, I honestly thought I'd have about ten people after three classes.

4. Are there any remaining ways you need help, besides more funding?

I don't think so, unless there are any people in the DC area who want to give talks.

5. Any other thoughts or feedback?

This was great not just because I couldn't afford what I was trying to do, but also just to feel like someone thought my idea was good and worth supporting.

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Aaron Bergman

over 1 year ago

Coming from the perspective of "university outreach is good actually," big US state schools (which have competitive honors colleges) seem like a huuuge tree(?) of low hanging fruit and afaict haven't gotten due attention or support, including monetary support.

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Max Morawski

about 1 year ago

Glad you agree :)

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Max Morawski

over 1 year ago

Hi all, we've come to the end of the semester! For the past three months, I've been able to get around thirty undergraduates, mostly CS but a few from other majors, to sit through lectures on:

  • Effective Altruism

  • How to make an Effort

  • How to communicate effectively in relationships

  • Habit Building

  • Thinking and Communicating Clearly

And more! Throughout the semester, we challenged the students with various puzzles and games designed to increase their cooperation and problem solving abilities. I also connected with the head of the EA club at UMD as a result of the class and am now the faculty sponsor. Student reports at the end of the semester were glowing--an informal exit survey showed that nearly 75% of them were applying ideas they'd learned in class on a weekly basis. Next semester looks to be even more intense, since I will be running two sets of these classes simultaneously--one for returning students, and one for a fresh batch.

The money I received was used to refund my original outlay, which involved providing free lunch for the first three classes just to get people in the room, as well as some prizes for various games throughout the semester. Thank you everyone who contributed.

As always, if you have any questions or interest or suggestions, feel free to contact me at maksym.morawski@gmail.com