07. May 2008 · Write a comment · Categories: Uncategorized · Tags: ,

I’ve already blogged recently the ways in which Twitter has enhanced my ability to connect to people and collaborate with them. Today I bring you a story of Twitter bringing me news before CNN or anyone else could. Yesterday, I was clearing out my inbox, when Barbara S. sent me a direct Twitter message informing me that the U of R was under lockdown and that I should pay attention to Jim Groom’s tweets. Well, several of my Twitter friends are at the U of R, so glancing at my feed, I realized there was a play by play of the whole situation. I sent my well wishes and continued to follow the action.

The whole incident was written up in the Chronicle’s Wired Campus Blog, a fact I found out via Twitter. This happens to me all. the. time. I really do get good information from Twitter, links to products, links to research, quick answers to questions. It really is a cool tool.

06. May 2008 · Write a comment · Categories: Uncategorized · Tags:

Via 11D and Bitch, Ph.D., other erstwhile “mommy” bloggers, I learned that Dooce apparently let one fly last week. She criticized the critics of mommy blogging, those who say it’s egotistical and that the kids are going to resent the moms for doing it. For me, this was the money quote:

This is the glorification of your childhood, and even more than that this is a community of women coming together to make each other feel less alone. You are a part of this movement, you and all of the other kids whose mothers are sitting at home right now writing tirelessly about their experiences as mothers, the love and frustration and madness of it all. And I think one day you will look at all of this and pump your fist in the air.

I first turned to the Internet because I was at home alone with my young son. Blogs didn’t really exist in 1996, but I joined Parent Soup, a website for parents, and got involved in the IRC chats they held on various topics. It was a lifesaver in so many ways. I found out I wasn’t alone, that not everyone was thrilled to be at home with their kids (as many of the local moms I’d met were), and I got support and advice on everything from playdates to poop.

I don’t consider myself a mommy blogger even though I have “Mom” in the title of my blog. When I write about being a mom, it’s usually tied to political and economic issues. But I don’t knock any of the mommy bloggers for what they do when they write about their kids’ lives. I applaud them. Their writing is quite good, well beyond what I could write. And I think it’s a political statement of its own. It really is going to be hard to ignore the hard work of mothers when it’s all going to be written down for the world to see. Maybe that’s what has the critics on edge. Having to acknowledge invisible work is painful for those who rely on it to move their careers forward.

05. May 2008 · Write a comment · Categories: Uncategorized · Tags: , , ,

I think I can safely say that most, if not all, faculty go into a classroom with the idea that their students will learn something. Many spend a lot of trying to guarantee that learning will happen. They think long and hard about what students should learn and the process by which they should learn the material. There’s no guarantee, of course, that students will learn, and I know that when confronted with students who haven’t gotten as much out of a class as professors might have hoped, they are often deeply disappointed. Year after year of this might lead to resignation and bitterness. You see this, sometimes, in the cranky comments on IHE articles or Chronicle forums. You know the ones that complain how the students can’t read or write or tie their shoes. (Dr. Crazy has an excellent post debunking many of these complaints–highly recommended reading.)

What I’ve experienced over the last few days, however, is the exact opposite of the complaints the cranks make. It’s the idea that sometimes, maybe lots of times, students learn more than we expect they will and learn things we didn’t expect them to. And they do so because the focus is on learning, not teaching. In the examples I saw today in a panel I organized on teaching with technology, that learning was made visible through technology and was facilitated to some extent through technology, but I don’t think technology is really the point. The point was that shift in focus that the technology allowed, but perhaps could have been accomplished another way.

Anne Dalke, for example, has been teaching online for years and said some things today that really resonated with me. She talked about treating students as budding public intellectuals who are learning how to present their work in a public forum which just happens to be online. She talked about not just encouraging interactions between her students but also bringing in alums and others so that the community of learners is broader than just the classroom. She also talked about not grading them, but having a conversation with them about their ideas, something another teacher I know does also. To me, Anne was treating her students like colleagues, perhaps in an apprentice phase, but still more than children who need to be spoonfed content.

Before that, Wil Franklin and Neal Williams from the biology department showed off their students’ plant blogs. Although these were behind a password in Blackboard, the students really got into them. They set very few guidelines for the blogs except that they needed to use appropriate scientific language. For example, they couldn’t just say that their plants were sprouting little hair thingies, they had to find the scientific terms for these, terms that Wil and Neal did not provide. They made the students look them up–which they did, mostly through Wikipedia according to Wil. I thought this was a great way to teach not just the scientific concepts, but also the process of finding information. They wondered as we segued into Anne’s discussion, whether they might have opened the blogs up to the public. They ended up inviting people in from another school to comment on the blogs and thought that might have been a valuable learning experience to formalize that relationship.

In both of these cases, I think that the faculty had thought a great deal about what might work, but they also had a lot of surprises about what the students did and they were flexible enough to go with the flow and allow the students to do what they needed and wanted in order to get the most out of the class. I also think there was a real recognition of the value of working in public in some way, that real learning can take place by connecting with others, be they alums interested in the topic or experts working in the field, they saw a value in opening up the classroom, not for those outside the classroom, but for their own students. Also, there was a real connection between what the students and faculty were doing online and what happened in the class. Blog and forum posts became jumping off points for discussion in class and discussion continued online sometimes after class.

I’ve also had several conversations with students that have been inspiring, where they are thinking about this cyberworld they find themselves immersed in and they’re starting to wonder what it means and how their education is or isn’t engaging this world. As I told one student, these are the things that keep me up at night.

01. May 2008 · Write a comment · Categories: Uncategorized · Tags:

I consider myself a nice person (mostly). I have my occasional moments, but generally, I feel that I’m a good citizen of the world in terms of sympathizing/empathizing and wanting to help my fellow human beings. Mostly that’s localized in that I tend to help people I know rather than strangers on the street, but I’ve done that too.
This morning, I bumped into this article about how the students who are entering our top colleges are just not that nice. And yet, these are the students who will become (our not so nice) leaders. Mostly, the author points out it’s not just that these students aren’t nice, but also hypocritical:

sometimes some of these students will denounce world hunger but be unfriendly to the homeless. They will debate environmental policy but never offer to take out the trash. They will believe vehemently in many causes but roll their eyes when reminded to be humble, to be generous and to “do what is right.”

I can say that I haven’t seen this behavior in students at my institution, but sometimes in the faculty. They denounce class divisions, for example, but treat the housekeeper who cleans their office like a second-class citizen. I’m just saying . . .

I think it sucks that nice people finish last–as the saying goes–because I think the world could use more of them in leadership positions. Being nice doesn’t mean that you have to always, always do nice things. Sometimes, you have to fire people, say unpleasant things to people, or do something that might hurt someone. But the idea is that you do so for the greater good and that greater good isn’t yourself. It’s an ideal or an institution or whatever you’ve put your faith in. There’s integrity in what you do that follows certain principles. I don’t see this, as the author points out, in many of our current leaders and politicians. And what message is that sending to the rest of us? That this is how you get ahead–lie, cheat, and steal? Frankly, I don’t want to live in that kind of world.