Saturday, May 07, 2005
Backpack: Home page
OK here's a public backpack site for my project to put my intro to lit class online. This 37Signals and they are creating some simple, interesting, and useable sites with Ruby on Rails. I want to learn that programming language.
Teaching to the Six
So why do I like teaching undergraduates? Because I am not dismayed by the prospect of a world in which at least one-sixth (and as many as one-half) of my auditors-students-interlocutors take seriously the possibility that they will use the critical tools I try to wield and to offer for further use. I’m actually rather cheered by the idea. I think of it this way: On my bad days I teach to tbe six young adults who just might pursue literary and cultural studies for much of the rest of their lives, but on what scale of values does that constitute failure? Another twelve, maybe another twenty, might be motivated, by me and by my colleagues, to continue serious, critically reflective reading in their adult lives, and how could I possibly hope for a better "rate of response" from anything I might publish in a "public" forum? College teaching is, as many teachers have pointed out in the past decade, a substantial form of "public intellectual" work. And isn't pedagogy, in the end, one of the principal reasons that literary journalists have such complex and conflicted relations with literature professors —because we work the same beat save that they have readerships and we have students?
Berube, Michael. Pedagogy, Winter2002, Vol. 2 Issue 1, p3, 13p
Michael Berube justifies the literary game. Teachers should focus on students much as writers should pay attention to their audiences. Is this so obvious to belabor? No, because I honestly don’t see many teachers doing that. What would happen if we really thought of students as our audiences not only now but after they have left our classrooms? The classroom then becomes 4–D and time outside the semester becomes an element. How to do this? Continuing to serve your audience through weblogs, listservs, email zines, contests, surveys, consulting, etc. The classroom is not a linear thing, an object plopped down in a plaza for all to view then walk away from. A classroom is an inconceivable conflux of thread and space that spins out from one short moment in time. Practically speaking, it can actually be this now much more than ever before because we don’t have to abandon that web each semester. I want my teaching to be this way because I think that it is a continuing part of the “public intellectual” work that I embrace out of choice. It is a duty, too. I owe my students that much because they are also my colleagues and friends .
Yesterday was the last day of finals, graduation was slated for the evening and I was returning some books to the university library. One of my former high school students walked through the doors to do the same thing I was doing, but it was also his graduation day. James and I talked about his years in college, his plans, and his dreams. It was a closure moment for both of us when he told me what he remembered most from my classes—media analysis, especially movies, and most notably by the Wallace and Gromit movies. If I had had an enlarged view of teaching like I am proposing, I could have shared more of his story and would have had a fuller life in doing so. As James wished me a fond goodbye, I said I would start some cool rumors about him.
I don’t express myself well here, but that’s ok. Blogging can be so much thinking out loud and still be just fine.
Teach42 - RSS powered by FeedBurner
Teach42 - RSS powered by FeedBurner
A recent discussion on Will Richardson’s Weblogg-ed and a synchronicitous listen to a Steve Dembo podcast of Teach42 .
Dembo says in effect that blogging is not an intuitive and that's why you need to do the blogging 101 thing over and over. Part of the reason I don't blog personally as much is because I am doing a lot of this bloggo a bloggo interaction. So... let's keep doing the 101 thing, but let's also figure out how to make blogs "useable" to the novice. Any ideas?
Essential Questions in Teaching and Learning
Essential Questions in Teaching and Learning
Schools become invisible when they engage students with real-life problems.
I am not sure who said that originally, but I wholeheartedly agree. This has always been a goal of mine. I don’t want to objectify school in somebody’s head, I want somebody to extend themselves into the world. I am engaged in the process of gettng my intro to lit class on the web. How do I make that place invisible?
Friday, May 06, 2005
Combobulate.com : Cool Programs
Combobulate.com : Cool Programs
Lots of fun programs to junk up my computer and have my son yell at me, “Dad, there’s no more room on the desktop!”
Wednesday, May 04, 2005
Speeches by Bill Gates - Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation
Speeches by Bill Gates - Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation
America’s high schools are obsolete.
By obsolete, I don’t just mean that our high schools are broken, flawed, and under-funded – though a case could be made for every one of those points.
By obsolete, I mean that our high schools – even when they’re working exactly as designed – cannot teach our kids what they need to know today.
Training the workforce of tomorrow with the high schools of today is like trying to teach kids about today’s computers on a 50-year-old mainframe. It’s the wrong tool for the times.
Well, duh.
Grant Robinson : Montage-a-google launcher
Grant Robinson : Montage-a-google launcher
Take what is and make it new. This montage maker via google is the ultimate fun for the random learner/thinker.
Sunday, May 01, 2005
Why Won't They Just Use Technology?
We need to know what our tech tools do best and then back off if there are other alternative tools available. Wouldn't we be better off developing methods which help teachers decide on the best mix of all available tools and that includes which ones fits our teaching personas best. That's a lot more nuance than most of us blogvangelists have been able to muster. Until the ed schools get off their butts to do this, I think we better get started with it.
Will at Weblogg-ed broaches this topic. I think he is dead on when he says that we must continue to get the message out. I thing the best way to do that is by making these tools part of the larger mix of tools. We must co-op the old tools just as the Catholic Church co-opted pagan holidays by squatting down next to, say... the lesson plan and taking it over incrementally. And we need to make damned sure that the mix makes their teaching lives better in demonstrably easier ways. Technology must pay for them in their own way first. If they come to see it our way so much the better, but until that tipping point is reached we are pissing in the wind by just putting the food down where the goats can get to it.
Madame Bovary v. Half-Life 2
"Although Half Life 2 is, as Steve points out, far more complex than the previous generation's Pac-Man, for all its amazing physics and integrated puzzles and pretty good pixelated acting, HL2 gives us a toy world. The world of Emma Bovary, on the other hand, doesn't resolve to rules and puzzles. It's messy, ambiguous, and truly complex. Of course Steve knows this, but he underplays it when pointing out the hidden complexity of video games."
Could literature get more respect from students by a head on comparison with video game narrative? I should think that any lit teacher worth his water should be able to do that. That would be the real marketplace of ideas in action. I think I can win that debate.
Saturday, April 30, 2005
IDFuel, the Industrial Design Weblog
IDFuel, the Industrial Design Weblog
It's probably safe to say that every designer goes into the business with the intention of shaking things up. We want to "Change the world" or "Make a difference". And that's awesome. There are tons of problems that need worldchanging solutions. It just happens that not all the solutions are barn burners like a sexy new car or supersonic jet.
Take for example the brainchild of Deborah Adler and Klaus Rosburg. They are responsible for Target's brand new (and desperately needed) update to the lowly prescription pillbottle. Believe it or not, with the exception of the frustrating, and largely ineffective childproof caps, the orange plastic pill bottle has been unchanged since world war 2!
OK. Now let’s do what they did for the lesson plan , the gradebook, the bulletin board and the classroom. What would a redesigned lesson plan look like in a weblog? I would hope it would emphasize the organization of the old with the improvisational and interactive nature of the new. That’s the hard part, now somebody go out and do it.
Friday, April 29, 2005
Blogging 101
The major cause of fatalities among online learning operations, internal and commercial, is not technical failure or pedagogical failure, it is process failure flowing from a failure in vision. Short-sightedness, tunnel vision, and technology focus can leave you very exposed.
Parkin's Lot: Defining an E-Learning Strategy
Parkin's Lot: Defining an E-Learning Strategy
The major cause of fatalities among online learning operations, internal and commercial, is not technical failure or pedagogical failure, it is process failure flowing from a failure in vision. Short-sightedness, tunnel vision, and technology focus can leave you very exposed.
Amen to this. The proper order of business at the beginning of any project: 1. what do you want to do? 2.Where are the tools for doing it?
Hullabaloo
Justice Sunday. The jackboots are gathering and I can hear their thunder from afar. What will you do?
Twenty years ago, I wrote about “National Socialism as Temptation,” about what it was that induced so many Germans to embrace the terrifying specter. There were many reasons, but at the top ranks Hitler himself, a brilliant populist manipulator who insisted and probably believed that Providence had chosen him as Germany’s savior, that he was the instrument of Providence, a leader who was charged with executing a divine mission. God had been drafted into national politics before, but Hitler’s success in fusing racial dogma with a Germanic Christianity was an immensely powerful element in his electoral campaigns. Some people recognized the moral perils of mixing religion and politics, but many more were seduced by it. It was the pseudo-religious transfiguration of politics that largely ensured his success, notably in Protestant areas.
German moderates and German elites underestimated Hitler, assuming that most people would not succumb to his Manichean unreason; they didn’t think that his hatred and mendacity could be taken seriously. They were proven wrong. People were enthralled by the Nazis’ cunning transposition of politics into carefully staged pageantry, into flag-waving martial mass. At solemn moments, the National Socialists would shift from the pseudo-religious invocation of Providence to traditional Christian forms: In his first radio address to the German people, twenty-four hours after coming to power, Hitler declared, “The National Government will preserve and defend those basic principles on which our nation has been built up. They regard Christianity as the foundation of our national morality and the family as the basis of national life.”
As Digby says, “Makes the hair stand up, doesn’t it?”
Thursday, April 28, 2005
The Future of Mathematics
New technologies inspire and infuse with energy. One math teacher's love for Flickr. Check into it even if you aren't a math instructor.
Monday, April 25, 2005
Sunday, April 24, 2005
de Kooning, Willem -- Encyclopædia Britannica
Encyc. Brit. has an RSS feed. LiberalArtRSSUniversity. Tres bon.
de Kooning, Willem -- Encyclopædia Britannica
de Kooning, Willem
Encyclopædia Britannica Article
Page 1 of 4
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Willem de Kooning
born April 24, 1904, Rotterdam, Netherlands
died March 19, 1997, East Hampton, New York, U.S.
Photograph:Willem de Kooning and his wife, Elaine, photograph by Hans Namuth, 1952.
Willem de Kooning and his wife, Elaine, photograph by Hans Namuth, 1952.
Hans Namuth
Dutch-born American painter who was one of the leading exponents of Abstract Expressionism, particularly the form known as Action painting. During the 1930s and '40s de Kooning worked simultaneously in figurative and abstract modes, but by about 1945 these two tendencies seemed to fuse.
Wednesday, April 20, 2005
Here's a copy of the e-text which I would like to annotate by voice for students.
Sunday, April 17, 2005
Creating Passionate Users: One of us is smarter than all of us
Creating Passionate Users: One of us is smarter than all of us
The wisdom of crowds comes not from the consensus decision of the group, but from the aggregation of the ideas/thoughts/decisions of each individual in the group.
At its simplest form, it means that if you take a bunch of people and ask them (as individuals) to answer a question, the average of each of those individual answers will likely be better than if the group works together to come up with a single answer. And he has a ton of real examples (but you'll just have to read the book for them ; )
Need to read James Surowiecki’s book The Wisdom of Crowds . Combine this with Open Spaces meeting technologies, Appreciative Inquiry, the notion of “thin-slicing” in psychology, and the technologic innovation of connectivity with the web and I think what you have is a brand new classroom, one that needs a new name and a new taxonomy. We could call it the folkschool.
Extreme ESL
http://www.eastasiacenter.net/apcampbell/xml/rss.xml
My ESL colleagues could get a real charge from this kind of technology. It keys into their habits (text messaging, cell phones, picture phones).
I'm really interested in learning more about how to use mobile phone technology with my students, as everyone of them has a phone with digital camera, email capability, and most with limited internet access. Some quick ideas:
- I could record a 'good morning message' on Audacity and send it out to their mobile phones a few hours before class, seeding their minds with key vocab and questions to get them thinking. I could even give them the warm-up conversation exercise so that they are already speaking when I walk in the classroom.
- Using their mobile phones, students take a weekly picture according a given theme, record a 30 sec message describing the picture and why they took it, and have them post to their blogs via telephone. I could then aggregate weekly thematic posts via RSS, link to Flickr tags, and have students find and comment on similar photos. I can't help but think of Rudolf's EFL Flickr project when I write that.
- Once Skype gets hooked up on mobile phones, students could be assigned partners from abroad to chat with, completing some information gap type exercises, in addition to finding out more about cultural differences and similarities. Imagine free international telephone calls! We could even do real time scavenger hunts where the foriegn counterparts have all the clues and frequent telephone calls are necessary to complete the assignment. You could even get them using GPS technology. With the potential for free video streaming someday, perhaps our students can actually sit in their classrooms and walk into a real American diner and order a burger and fries....and not have to eat them!
apcampbell :
I mentioned earlier that compassion is a necessary condition in the teacher/student relationship for a movement toward learner autonomy to be possible, not to mention a healthy communicative learning environment. I then stated that 'creative visualization' practices could be helpful in bringing about compassion, something that Matt just asked me to explain.
A post near and congruent to my vision of classroom communion and communication. Life is too short to leave it outside the schoolhouse door. Bring it in and your students will know you as a real person. One less obstacle to truth.
Google Blog
Hey, gimme that camera, I want to make a video to upload to google. OK, videobloggers unite.
KR Washington Bureau | 04/15/2005 | Bush administration eliminating 19-year-old international terrorism report
Bush administration eliminating 19-year-old international terrorism report
If the truth is gummed up by the facts, get rid of the facts. Classic Himler technique. Way to go Condi. You are right up there with the best of them.
American DialectTest
This is fun, but I am uncertain as to its accuracy. As a tool to get people to consider the roots of language you can’t beat it.
I am:
25% Dixie
10% Yankee
0% Midwestern
0% Upper Midwestern
<table width=400 align=center border=1 bordercolor=black cellspacing=0 cellpadding=2>
<tr><td align="center" bgcolor="#A8FFB3">
<h3>Your Linguistic Profile:</h3>
Saturday, April 09, 2005
Saturday, February 12, 2005
Friday, February 11, 2005
FroshComp : tellio
This English-to-Snoop translation of my class weblog is freakin' top snizzle, dogg.
Saturday, January 29, 2005
eLearn Magazine: In-Depth Tutorials
"One possibility is a system of hierarchical peer-reviewed group assignments developed by David Hanson and Troy Wolfskill (Borman & Washington, 2003; Wolfskill, 1998) as an online component in face-to-face chemistry courses. For problem-solving assignments with multiple solutions, students are put into groups of five. Once every student in the group submits a possible solution, the group then discusses and selects the best one, finally submitting it to the whole class. The online environment is "hard-wired" so no student can participate in the group discussion without first submitting an individual assignment. Once every group has submitted their solution, the whole class, including instructor, discusses the group solutions and selects several as outstanding."
a possible solution.
Carl Soundboard - Aqua Teen Hunger Force - Brad Parker
The might Carl from Aqua Teen with sound bytes from Brad Parker. Hey, have a crappy weekend, hope yer house burns down.
VoIP Internet Phone Service: by MetaEfficient
Bring it on! The age of telephony is upon us. Every mobile technology is converging on the telephone. Damn!
Sunday, January 23, 2005
Hackers and Painters
Paul Graham smashes through the artificially sharp edges of academic discipline and makes the observation that bits and bytes are just another medium more akin to tempera and clay and stone than numbers. This essay reminds me of how when you first use a Coleman lantern you have to burn the mantle to expose the bright burnable skeleton underneath. Burn, baby, burn!
Orcinus
Amen to this. It is a damned slippery slope that Dobson would push us down. At its bottom is a damn sure nasty surprise.
Saturday, January 22, 2005
CNN.com - Poll: Nation split on Bush as uniter or divider - Jan 19, 2005
This would be funny as an exercise in meta-journalism and irony in The Onion, but is simply a testimony to the idiocy of CNN and their ilk.
YouSendIt | Email large files quickly, securely, and easily!
"
Another file sending/sharing program that looks useful at least a few times a year. Could have used it yesterday.
TypeBlaster - Download TypeBlaster from Teaching Tools category
I need a program like this to get better at typing. I am so poor even though I use all my fingers. Sigh. OK. I will give it a try and do the Ben Franklin improvement thing.
Thursday, January 20, 2005
Monday, January 17, 2005
Yahoo! News - Demand for KFC Soaring in China
Yahoo! News - Demand for KFC Soaring in China: "China's relentless appetite for the colonel's chicken has KFC on a building boom in the world's most populous country, with 1,200 locations, soaring profits and a menu that mixes in bamboo shoots and lotus roots."
Approximately Perfect: Social Security Day!
Approximately Perfect: Social Security Day!: "Social Security privatization and tax incentives for the affluent have another major drawback that endangers everyone's retirement security. Neither would add to national savings - the sum of government and individual savings that is a key determinant of the nation's overall standard of living. Privatization would not add to national savings because every dollar that goes into a private account would be offset by the government borrowing needed to establish the private system. Tax incentives for the rich do not add to national savings because they simply induce wealthy people to shift current assets from taxable to tax-free accounts.
Put more simply, with privatization and continued high-end tax breaks, the few would get richer as the many fall behind. Preserving Social Security while increasing savings outside Social Security is a better way to achieve a prosperous retirement."
Sunday, January 16, 2005
The Free Press -- Independent News Media - National Issues
In reality, the only sure way to create a bull market, and enjoy the reflected glow of approval it implies for a president, is to find a new source of funds. That’s where privatizing Social Security comes in. Create a new investment account, and the laws of physics take over. Momentum defies gravity. Remember what happened in the 1980s, when everyone, even the wealthiest taxpayer, was suddenly invited to open an I.R.A. account?
We are going to here a lot of hard sell for changing Social Security over the next few months. A conservative says, "No" a true conservative says, "Hell no!". A free thinker will sniff the bad air and say, "Fugeddaboutit!" God help us if these fools win the day. You will notice that none of the folks who want to change Social Security are actually going to need it. Follow the money, folks, and it leads straight to a Wall Street brokerage firm. It slamdunk obvious.
Thursday, January 06, 2005
Tuesday, January 04, 2005
A Giant Step Forward for Punctuation? - Introducing the long-awaited sarcasm point. By Josh Greenman
Introducing the long-awaited sarcasm point."
New Scientist - Novel calendar system creates regular dates
Thursday, December 30, 2004
The New York Times > Week in Review > China Expands. Europe Rises. And the United States . . .
Cracking like a limb in an icestorm--american hegemony crashes to the ground, it's rotten core revealed.
Saturday, December 25, 2004
Friday, December 17, 2004
Sunday, December 12, 2004
Wednesday, December 08, 2004
MIT OpenCourseWare | Literature
If you haven't seen MIT's open courseware site, get here quickly and see what an independent learner can do right now for absolutely no sheckels whatsoever.
Monday, December 06, 2004
Tuesday, August 31, 2004
Saturday, July 24, 2004
Beat Me, Daddy, Eight to the Bar
King Allen on the 24th of July. | ![]() ginsberghat Originally uploaded by Tellio. |
Tuesday, June 15, 2004
Thursday, May 20, 2004
CTHEORY.NET > Why the Web Will Win the Culture Wars for the Left by Peter Lurie
Amen.brother. But is it really a tool? A tool implies specific use and a deconstructionist reading makes it rather toolish to be that tool.
How communities work?
What is the common element behind all this activity? Trust. So the question begs itself: "What is trust? Is it related to belief? Are believers and unbelievers and non-believers all needed in this trust system?"
Monday, May 17, 2004
Water Cooler Games - Education Arcade, day 1
Laurel pointed out that schools are incredibly immune to change. Gaming can't change schools. The kind of learning kids need is not going to come up in schools. When used in classrooms, games become an accessory to the same hierarchy; they don't puncture the spectacle of culture of politics.
Amen to this. Now what do we do? Fucked if I know. Keep on or get out.
Read Darwin -Are You Ready for Social Software? - WHAT'S NEW - Magazine - Darwin Magazine
A brand new word on the horizon. I love neologisms like this. When I hear them I feel the satisfying click of brass-on-brass in my mind and know they are 'true'.
Sunday, May 16, 2004
Saturday, May 15, 2004
Saturday, March 20, 2004
Saturday, February 28, 2004
Monday, February 02, 2004
O'Reilly Network: Some Nice Editorials on Dean and Blogs [Feb. 01, 2004]
expertise trumps enthusias,? I think that is pretty limited view of how one becomes an expert--by becoming enthusiastic about a useful tool whether that tool is an idea or a new technology or a skill.
Monday, January 19, 2004
Best Practices and Case Studies: Be Very Afraid
Another bubble burst. The only best practice is your best practice.
Tuesday, January 06, 2004
The Atlantic | January/February 2003 | The New Continental Divide | Lind
Thursday, January 01, 2004
Gropinator
Thursday, October 23, 2003
Ursula K. Le Guin
Fabulous commencement address by Ursula Leguin at Mills College
Saturday, October 18, 2003
OJR article: NY Times Reporter Has Seen It All Before, and He's Still Pessimistic
Quote: it sometimes seems we have a world full of bloggers and that blogging is the future of journalism, or at least that's what the bloggers argue, and to my mind, it's not clear yet whether blogging is anything more than CB radio.
And if that doesn't rile you, how about this?
Quote: When I tell that to people … they get very angry with me. ... I also like to tell them, when they (ask) when I'm going to start a blog, and then, 'Oh, I already have a blog, it's www.nytimes.com, don't you read it?'
Wednesday, October 08, 2003
USM Center for Writers - The 39 Steps:Â On Story Writing
Of if you don't like Elmore Leonard, try Donald Barthelme's 39 steps.
Bucks County Writers Workshop
Elmore Leonard's Ten Rules. I love rule number ten: try to leave out the part that readers tend to skip.
universal education -- YES! A Journal of Positive Futures
Powerful guidelines for education here taken from private schools, the Amish, and Gatto's own life.
Thursday, July 17, 2003
Calligraphic Button Catalogue
Calligraphic Button Catalogue
How to Save the World
Tuesday, July 01, 2003
"If you meant to invite me, and let's proceed from that assumption, then you wanted a playwright and I have to say what a strange choice, what with Gabriel blowing his trumpet and the Book of Revelations unfolding seal by seal and all; it's as if you'd been warned of years of calamity and famine ahead and in response you anxiously stuffed an after dinner mint in your pocket. "
Vassar College: Commencement Speech