semiotic_pirate: (pirate rosabella)
Well. I finished the first homework handout! (at quarter to ten am.)

Last night I received the other book that we could use for the class (finally) around 5pm. This book was suggested as an alternative to the PhD level book for those of us just going for our masters degree. However, the bookstore wasn't carrying it. I decided early last week to order it, and expidited the shipping even, however I had to order it from a used bookseller through amazon (the amazon offering mightn't have been shipped for two weeks) and they didn't get it out of the shop for at least two days, no USPS on sunday... GAH!

So.... Read more... )

Teachers

Jul. 31st, 2005 07:45 am
semiotic_pirate: (book offering)
I keep getting told by my Mother that I would make a fantastic teacher. Yeah yeah, Mom's are always known to say all kinds of things. Thing is, I do enjoy teaching people things that they don't know - things that they are interested in. The coolest thing is to be explaining something to someone and have their face light up from the inside when they "get it." If I wasn't so deeply entrenched in what I'm doing now I'd think about it. Then again, there is always time to go back in another ten or fifteen years and get a teaching degree - and be able to use the experience and education I've gained so far and in that time. One of my most memorable teachers was for an economics class I took when I was in high school. There is this desire to help people, yes. One of the *only* enjoyable things about working retail that I can recall was helping people to find what they need. I guess teaching is like that. You are helping students learn what they need to get where they want to in life. One thing that really struck me was the attrition rate of new teachers! Wow! It almost feels like we are entering a crisis in supply.

All of this thoughtful contemplation was inspired by the following VERY LONG article about the education of the educators. Myah!

And in other news, I sent in the name MINERVA to CNN this morning for their poll on "What to name the new planet." It is yet another Roman Deity, I figure we should stick with the theme we've got. Also, Minerva represents quite a few good things, one of which is education and learning! Heh, I knew there was a link between this and that.




July 31, 2005

Who Needs Education Schools?
BY ANEMONA HARTOCOLLIS

THE whistle-stop town of Emporia, Kan. (population 27,000), has two claims to fame: William Allen White, the Pulitzer Prize-winning newspaper editor and confidant of Theodore Roosevelt, and turning out teachers.

Emporia State University was established as a "normal" school - dedicated solely to the training of teachers - in 1863, two years after Kansas became a state. The esteem in which teaching is held there can be seen in the one-room schoolhouse maintained as a kind of shrine at the edge of campus. The National Teachers Hall of Fame is in Emporia, and tourists come to see the dollhouse models of classrooms from the early 17th century onward and to read the plaques of inductees - 70, so far.

Read more... )
semiotic_pirate: (Default)
Hey everyone. This is just a heads up - I won't be on LJ for a while, so all those witty responses to your posts that you look forward to will have to wait. I just started my summer classes and I'm getting slammed with homework. They are stuffing a semester's worth of classes into six weeks. As some of you may know, one of the classes is that Mathematics for Economics course that I was attempting to self-study this summer (that didn't work out too well) and then I discovered that I could find a way to attend the summer session of the course. YAY!

I want to apologize for ruining someone's vacation - you know who you are - I didn't mean for these classes to upset the apple cart. Keep that ever-approaching GRADUATION date in mind. Next vaca will be better, much better.


Now, on to the picture show... Went to Putnam/Pomfret this past Sunday. Just tooling around the Quiet Corner of CT while waiting for the right time to drop into The Vanilla Bean in Pomfret. TVB was having a really good live music set that night, someone I'd never heard of Garnet Rogers and the plan was to get there early enough to have dinner so that we'd get our seats locked in for when the music started. WOW they have good food! I had a mozzarella-basil ravioli in a tomato cream sauce with a couple of wedges of grilled asiago bread. And I had a cup of ginger-lemonade with it. Unknown to me, there ended up being an opening act. Her name is Natalia Zukerman and I highly reccomend that you all go out and get her music now. Seriously, at the break I went and bought the two CD's she's made, she's going to hit the big time soon. She's still in that stage that signing her autograph on one of the CD's made her blush a bit and break out into a big smile. Needless to say, they ended up on my iPod the next day.

Backtrack... the picture show. While wandering about before the show, we found this little town with what seemed like a half-dozen antique shops. It being Sunday, only a couple of them were open. Has anyone seen [livejournal.com profile] crabbyolbastard's pictures of the painted whale statue in Mystic? There are supposed to be a bunch of them, painted with different images, all over the town. The town that we were in had a bunch of cows set up everywhere, in front of the businesses that had sponsored them. I took pictures of my favorites. They weren't as fantastic as that whale, but they were nice enough in and of themselves.

here's the peektures, no that wasn't a mispelling... Heh. )
semiotic_pirate: (Typewriter - blue on checks)
This is fascinating. I wish I could be involved in a class that is using them. It sounds like a cool idea as far as the emphasis on increased interaction is concerned. The immediate response in grading is great too. It all reminds me a bit of the "smart desks" that you have in the book Ender's Game and was hinted at in Starship Troopers, the movie. At first I was a little perturbed, since it was compared to the clicker used for the television, the remote control. Associating the words Remote Control with teaching was definitely something they intended to avoid. There is nothing remote about the system. I was happily suprised (but not really too suprised) by the fact that children of teachers are involved in the marketing of this set of products. Grades go up, the rate of learning and understanding goes up (due to immediate feedback).

Classroom Clickers Make the Grade
Associated Press
Story location: http://www.wired.com/news/technology/0,1282,68086,00.html


12:40 PM Jul. 04, 2005 PT

An honors student at Ohio State, a kid in a fifth-grade science class in Kentucky and a deaf student in England all begin their learning experience the same way: with their hand wrapped around a remote control.

Not a TV remote, but rather one that connects a student with everyone else in the class, with the instructor and with the subject at hand.

Hundreds of colleges, high schools and even middle schools are using "clickers" -- as even manufacturers call them. A moderator can pose a question and within seconds the respondents' answers are anonymously logged on a laptop at the front of the room.

"This is the MTV era," said Neal H. Hooker, an Ohio State professor who uses the technology in his agricultural economics course. "It's the instant-gratification generation. They don't like doing a quiz and hearing the responses in three days. They want to see if they've got it right or wrong right then."

InterWrite, a clicker manufacturer in Columbia, Maryland, has over a half million remotes in use, most in classrooms.

The clicker itself isn't different in size or shape from the one that enables you to switch from Fear Factor to Nova at home. Software logs the students' answers, enabling the teacher to determine if students understand the topic as the topic is being discussed. Teachers can post a true-false or multiple-choice quiz at the front of the room and, within seconds, the students' responses are logged, their scores tabulated and a grade is assigned to each.

"My mom taught middle-school math for years," said Rob Meissner, the vice president of marketing for Interwrite. "And every day she started with a 10-question drill assignment. If you could do that and have those things graded in 10 seconds versus bringing them home at night, that's a phenomenally efficient tool."

Teachers can readily determine which students need immediate help -- and in what areas -- as the class progresses. The system actually encourages more class discussion, prodding even shy students to get involved as responses are debated.

Christina Grimsley, 16, a junior at Coeur d'Alene High School in Idaho, first used the clicker during a third-year Spanish class earlier this academic year. She said instantaneous feedback was a huge advantage.

"You don't have to wait for someone to sit down and grade them by hand," she said of class assignments. "Right away you're able to get your answers back."

Hooker said the new technology saves reams of paper that he used to use on quizzes. About the only paperwork now is individual grade sheets.

"I don't grade," he said. "It is simply done. And I can't make a grading mistake -- it all comes out on the spreadsheet. I just have to cut and paste and put it in my grade sheet, and it's done. So it's foolproof."

College bookstores sell the clickers for between $10 and $40 apiece to students, depending on a range of functions. Most schools provide a basic system, including a receiver and software, which runs around $1,500. Bigger systems with higher-end equipment can cost $25,000, according to Rick Baker, CEO of clicker maker Meridia Audience Response near Philadelphia.

At the end of an academic term, a college student can sell the clicker to the kid down the hall in his dorm or can keep it for future classes.

More book publishers are tailoring their textbooks to provide exams and quizzes for classes with handheld remotes to meet the growing demand, said Donald Yocum, a social studies teacher and technology specialist at King Middle School in rural Harrodsburg, Kentucky.

Yocum's school has five sets of mutually compatible clicker sets -- all won at state or national teachers conventions.

Many clicker makers hand out the systems as prizes. Their thinking is that once teachers and students see how cool the systems are, the word will spread.

"All of the kids like it," Yocum said. "It helps the ones who don't like the traditional way of doing things, who don't like to sit there and write out their answers on a piece of paper. This way, through an interactive system, they stay engaged."

Many feel that the ideal use of clickers is in larger classes at universities, where sometimes hundreds of students jam lecture halls to hear a distant figure at the front of the class talk in a monotone until the class ends. Clickers are also becoming popular in various business uses, such as seminars and conventions.

"It's not like an hour-long lecture where the professor is droning on and everybody goes to sleep because they don't know what's important," University of Southern California physics and astronomy professor Christopher Gould said. "It lets the lecture turn into a two-way conversation."

Teachers who have used clickers believe students learn more when using the remotes.

"The class that I just taught using it was possibly the best-performing class I've had in the five years I've been teaching it," Hooker said. "They understood the material well and the students really like it."

Mike Nelson, Grimsley's Spanish teacher in Coeur d'Alene, said he had proof that clickers enhance the lessons.

"I have noticed about a 15 to 20 percent increase in their oral grades and their quiz grades, because now I don't need to guess whether kids know it to the best of their ability," he said. "I can actually see it now."
semiotic_pirate: (Indian Foot)
Well folks... be glad you weren't at my house Saturday night. We ate in, had bread with mushroom pate and brie and caviar... Must have been the caviar. I am only now starting to feel better, having had symptoms on the list of "go to the hospital" without having gone to hospital. Yah, I looked, after I started to feel better, and realized if I hadn't been smart enough on my own to push fluids (and having been an EMT helped) then I might've been in some serious trouble.

Lucky for me classes start tomorrow! Heh.

Before that, part of Thursday, all day Friday and partway into Saturday LJ was down, at least for me anyways. ::sighs::
semiotic_pirate: (warm glow)
Yum yum yummy yum. Just finished off the last of my delectable cornish hen dinner... Wow. I hadn't realized how delicious the little birds could be - or how much meat is hidden within their juicy tenderness. Going to have to have that more often.

Ahhhhhhhh. That and the home-made Eggnog that I had at the holiday party today. (The professor who made it is a genius! and they put RUM in it!) I had no idea that graduate holiday parties had alcohol involved! Mwahahahahahahahaha!

YAY!

Dec. 16th, 2004 10:10 pm
semiotic_pirate: (Juicy Oranges)
I'm sorry, I've got to toot my own horn...

I just got the results from this semester, my first as a graduate student, and my GPA is 3.3! WHOO HOO! That took a bit of stress out of my life, not having to worry about how the semester went. Now the thing will be in keeping that GPA up there. (After all, I only took two courses this semester along with an audit.) At least right now I won't have to worry about losing my funding due to bad grades. Yay.

Of course, I'm on the percs tonight, still feeling the loss of my wisdom teeth. ::sighs:: So, this is probably a babble from hell for most of you. Heh.

And of course, the swirl and twirl of the holidays is upon us all... Good luck to all of us.

Yesterday

Dec. 14th, 2004 08:32 am
semiotic_pirate: (Default)
Well! How could I have forgotten The Law of Diminishing Returns??!! Dammit! I kind of described it right, but couldn't put the name to it... Nor did I call the long term supply line of the firm the Marginal Cost Curve! AAARRRRGGGHH. And then I blanked on what retailer push and consumer pull marketing was and if a food broker would be involved in either....

Ah well... ::hangs head in self-disgust::

At least lunch had plenty of potential. I took a break from studying (it had completely fried my brain by that point) to have lunch with [livejournal.com profile] kadath at the local Red Robin. Had the usual for myself. C. tried the pot roast burger. We both dribbled all over ourselves and our plates. The conversation had the expected awkward moments that all first meetings have. I thought it went well, myself.

Yay! First successful MIP from lj for me!

Now if only the final went so well... Argh. I won't know for another week probably, though the professor had the willingness to start correcting them right away at least so maybe I won't have to wait that long for the unknown news. Watch, the class I was most interested in, and enjoyed the most, I'll get the worst grade in. (Please, let me get a B... aaaaaaahhhhh!)

AND to make matters soooo much better ::sarcasm:: I get to go in to the oral surgeon today and get my wisdom teeth yanked. Thinking about that yesterday while I was sitting for the exam didn't help my concentration at all. So, wish me luck! Hopefully I won't make a fool out of myself and get on here later while I'm still under the influence of the sedation... Heh.

Oh, and as a side note... The Board of Directors is meeting tomorrow to discuss me. Ack.
semiotic_pirate: (Default)
well, here we all are, waiting to find out what the result of the NY Yankees Boston Red Sox tie breaking game will be.. I get an email from the university that makes me laugh:


Read more... )

What do they expect?? Perhaps some vandalism, some violence? Will there be overturning and burning? HA! It will happen, any excuse to cause mischief. There will be drunken "children" everywhere, scattered over campus, trying to either rejoice or complain, and they will all be reacting in the same way. ::rolls eyes:: In the going on four years that I've been here at Uconn, there have been MANY of these self-same occurrences. It is amusing, as long as my car isn't on campus to receive the brunt of the "fun." (First year there, an event called "Spring Fling" where students and locals - from the entire state - party... A good friend of mine had his truck overturned.) Wonder if they'll bring the state troopers in for this one like they've done before. Heh.

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