Morgan Steele
@morgansteele.bsky.social
190 followers 220 following 44 posts
National Research Coordinator for National De-Escalation Training Center Assistant Prof. of Criminal Justice at Fort Hays State U. Professional Nerd
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morgansteele.bsky.social
New evaluation of de-escalation training for law enforcement! . This shows that de-escalation training can actually improve officers' ability to handle volatile situations.
doi.org/10.1177/0093...
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doi.org
morgansteele.bsky.social
My colleagues and I used practical exercises and the beginning and end of training to assess whether officers'skills improved. We found that while officers' ability to deescalate drastically differed at the start of training, most were able to demonstrate substantial improvement
morgansteele.bsky.social
New evaluation of de-escalation training for law enforcement! . This shows that de-escalation training can actually improve officers' ability to handle volatile situations.
doi.org/10.1177/0093...
Sage Journals: Discover world-class research
Subscription and open access journals from Sage, the world's leading independent academic publisher.
doi.org
Reposted by Morgan Steele
shjarback-ccj.bsky.social
🚨Why hasn't this PQ article by Adams @brandondelpozo.bsky.social et al. on the some of flaws in
the Force Science Institute's (FSI) "research", which is highly influential in the courts/litigation mind you, gotten more attention in the last 10 days???🚨
Reposted by Morgan Steele
joycewhitevance.bsky.social
Law enforcement officers should never cover their faces when making arrests or conceal their identities (unless they are working undercover). They work for us. We have a right to know who they are. These face coverings are frightening & unAmerican, as though they're ashamed of what they're doing.
Reposted by Morgan Steele
jonbecker.bsky.social
Higher ed. folks: has your institution, to your knowledge, created a separate policy for "cheating" with genAI or have they tweaked an existing academic dishonesty policy (or neither)?
morgansteele.bsky.social
For my university, it's been left up to individual faculty. However, that may change soon(ish).
morgansteele.bsky.social
Dedicated my two undergraduate courses class time today towards understanding the Signal snafu. Even though my students aren't the most plugged into the news, they understood how damaging the unintentional leaks of war plans and secrets were. Wonder if the media will be that quick.
morgansteele.bsky.social
Anyone know of pop culture concerning the culture of henches/goons/minions?
I'm working on an article comparing fictional and real subcultures of henches. Already including Venture Bros, Harley Quinn, Hench (book), Guards, Guards, and Starter Villian. Any help to avoid reality appreciated!
Reposted by Morgan Steele
astrokatie.com
I think some people hear “grants” and think that without them, scientists and government workers just have less stuff to play with at work. But grants fund salaries for students, academics, researchers, and people who work in all areas of public service.

“Pausing” grants means people don’t eat.
White House pauses all federal grants, sparking confusion
The Trump administration has put a hold on all federal financial grants and loans, affecting tens of billions of dollars in payments.
www.washingtonpost.com
morgansteele.bsky.social
Nope! But if you run into an issue, I'll email it to you.
morgansteele.bsky.social
Thanks for putting this together! Can you add me, please?
Reposted by Morgan Steele
jenvictor.bsky.social
So many smart people seem to believe that higher ed. should be job training, explicitly. The rise in business (undergraduate) majors is one byproduct of such a perspective. And watching universities cut humanities is another.

I find this approach incredibly shortsighted, and ultimately defeating. 🧵
Reposted by Morgan Steele
whysharksmatter.bsky.social
If you are a scientist (including graduate students) or professional science communicator who is at least 18 years old and are using Bluesky for any kind of professional purposes, please consider taking our survey.

Link:

umiami.qualtrics.com/jfe/form/SV_...

Please help share. 🧪🌎 #SciComm
Scientists at the University of Miami are carrying out a research study on how scientists use online platforms like Twitter/X and Bluesky.

If you are 18 years of age or older and are a scientist who uses these platforms for professional purposes, please click the link below to complete a short survey.

If you are interested in learning more about this research study, please e-mail us at Julia.wester @ miami.edu. In the body of your email please provide your full name, and if you would prefer to be contacted by phone, your phone number and the best time to reach you. 

Contacting us for more information does not commit you to participating, and should you decide to participate you may terminate your participation at any time.
Reposted by Morgan Steele
mcopelov.bsky.social
AI is generally & mostly bad for higher education & we should not participate in the simplistic charade that it is a technological panacea/innovation that will make learning & instruction better & everyone who does not agree is a stupid Luddite.
mcopelov.bsky.social
Even the mildest pushback against AI & stereotypes about the liberal arts these days seems to generate “you’re Luddites who lack critical thinking & civility” responses here from its STEM/business champions. There are tradeoffs in everything. We need to talk seriously about them. This isn’t it.
Reposted by Morgan Steele
radleybalko.bsky.social
In 2022, Biden issued an executive order to create a misconduct database for federal law enforcement.

BJS has just issued the first report. It is . . . odd.

The strangest bit is that the number of misconduct records dropped from 1,100 in 2019, to just 365 last year.

bjs.ojp.gov/document/nle...
bjs.ojp.gov
morgansteele.bsky.social
Meaning, having more restrictions on how officers use force does not directly affect the number of people killed. But, there are some important caveats.
morgansteele.bsky.social
After accounting for the states' characteristics (e.g., population size, socioeconomics, violent crime), the effects of state laws were not consistent predictors.
Reposted by Morgan Steele
morgansteele.bsky.social
The fact that the newspaper has ran stories critical of the police and powerful individuals in the community means that law enforcement has to tread lightly. The appearance of impropriety affects the public's trust in police almost as much as actual misconduct.
morgansteele.bsky.social
I've been struggling to put my feelings about the Marion County law enforcement officers conducting a search of a newspaper office. Even if everything was conducted in good faith, they have jeopardized their legitimacy for the community. There's a reason why the freedom of the press matters.
Police questioned over legality of Kansas newspaper raid that seized computers, phones
Eric Meyer, the newspaper’s publisher, said he believes the raid was prompted by a story about a local restaurant owner.
www.nbcnews.com