Category Archives: Uncategorized

Student Success Project

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I have recently undertaken a new project at work for cultivating reading skills among students about to attend college, and developing a series of online tutorials. The purpose of the program is to create brief workshops that students can participate in at their leisure, delivered in short bursts. Each tutorial ranges from 5 to 10 minutes and focuses on only one key aspect. So far the program is in the beta stages and extends only to English and math, core principles that are thought to help students succeed in a majority of their general education courses. I can’t speak for the math aspect of it too much (as I am obviously in the English section of it all), but math principles extend into the the sciences as well. My focus is within fostering reading and grammar skills beneficial not only in future English courses, but the humanities as a whole, considering adequate English skills are necessary for success in a majority of these classes. Looking at numerous studies it has become apparent most students who don’t do well in history, psychology, sociology, and even geography and astronomy, fail because they are unable to read and understand the textbooks (yes, I know, did we really need a study for this?).

Right now the project is pretty small: me, my counterpart in the math department, and a few others on and off campus for support. The project is run by a team at UCLA who have been extremely generous with their resources and funding, and overall very supportive.

My immediate goal is to create the workshops, which is actually a pretty fun process. After I get the basic concepts organized, I narrow each down to one fundamental principle. For example, right now I am focusing on skimming/scanning a passage for pertinent information and discerning its topic/scope. I create the entire thing in powerpoint, but instead of actually using the antiquated system, I separate out the slides as screen shots, create a video with a voice over that allows me to insert the slides as jpgs whenever I need them, and use Zaption to make the whole thing interactive.

I am fine tuning the verbal versus visual aspect of it since I don’t necessarily want to read what appears on the slides. Enough research has demonstrated that when the verbal and visual cues are aligned, the receiver experiences a disconnect and cannot grasp either. Since it is ultimately a video I am experimenting with pauses and overall timing to cue the images. And because this particular tutorial focuses on reading comprehension, you can imagine there are some lengthy reading slides, but I am assuming that if I don’t give them enough time they can also pause the clip to finish reading before I continue with the instruction. Another problem I am having is that I happen to talk too fast. I have now rerecorded this several times, speaking at a rate that I feel is abnormally slow, but within the recording sounds a lot better (maybe this is what my students keep complaining about!).

What I love about Zaption is the interactive aspect where I can insert multiple choice and open ended questions right into the video for students to answer, while also being able to play back instant feedback for each choice (open ended question are a little more tricky and rely on key words used in the answers to deliver the appropriate feedback.. I am sure you can imagine the problem there).

I have been tweaking and playing with it for two weeks trying to get it just right, and while it is still all in the developmental stages, we all expect to go live and national throughout different colleges with this by fall.

Obviously I only have one tutorial so far, but the the idea is that once the process is more or less figured out, and we have a template of sorts, creating more within the same subject should progress more quickly. I am pretty excited to see how all this pans out, and with any luck I should have a small army of these workshops ready to go before the end of the year. Hopefully by next summer we will have enough student feedback to adjust the program as necessary and in the next few years hopefully recruit others across the country to create even more of these until we have workshops to cover every basic skills category out there.

 

Wordless Wednesday

I haven’t even had time to take pictures lately… but since a friend wanted to see pictures of my bunny from about ten years ago, while digging around for those, I found others as well. So, here are some pictures of me from the early 2000s.

These were taken in 2004.

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I found some from a trip to the Getty. I was unbelievably sick that day, but I recall really wanting to go…  I look like death, but there were manuscripts that needed to be seen. These were taken in 2003.

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Later that day, I got to shiver by the fire…

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I also found these, from the end of the year… it appears I was wrapping Christmas presents… (and although the fire is burning in both sets, the Getty pictures and accompanying fire happened in April, while these were in November/December… because that house was never, ever warm).

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From a trip… we went from LA to San Francisco, to Las Vegas, to Scottsdale, and back… this is somewhere en route…

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The next set was taken on two different summer trips to the bay area, 2004 and 2005.

With Tanya and her (now) husband at Berkeley… She had a paper she had to turn in so we wen to to campus over the weekend…

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And on the next trip we went to the Botanical Garden in San Francisco…

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We also went on a boat tour of the bay…

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And a tour of a submarine…

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Here are some miscellaneous pictures…

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The Great Friend Shift

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Once again I have a friend leaving me. The first time this happened was after high school in a mass exodus of people moving off to college. Then, after our B.A. more people moved off to go to graduate school. Since there is a gap in my education between my B.A. and M.A., I got to witness it once more as several friends that stayed local for one advanced degree left for another. And now after another friend completed her M.A. she, too will be leaving me.

Some of my friends eventually moved back (like Tanya, even though she remained in Berkeley for several years after graduation), while others only return for the summer and winter holidays (Sean, Ashlyn, once in a while Trish, Jason, David, Henry, et al.), while others I have not seen in many years (Julian, Mer, Justin, Leyla, et al.). As you can see from this list, aside from the seasonal folks who come and go, my friend list over the past ten years has been greatly diminished.

As Hannah is getting ready to leave me and get her Ph.D. in Minnesota (and seeing as how I now have plenty of experience with friends leaving) of course I hope she moves back once she is done, and visits on occasion while she is there, but in the interim, I will proactively begin a search for her replacement.

To narrow down my results and ensure a successful friendship, I have outlined some important qualities my new friend should ideally possess.

1. I prefer female friends. This doesn’t mean I can’t work with male candidates, but I will not attend sporting events (except for tennis), I do not wish to know how things are built, and am not particularly fond of aggressive behavior.

2. You don’t have to be an English person, but it does make things easier as I foist my research on you. Also, I like to swap books, and I am not terribly interested in other subjects (with exceptions of course). Although Hannah is an 18th Century person, and that seemed to work out just fine, I would also not mind someone closer in time period. Like 500 years closer.

3.  Hannah and I walked placed, so you too must like walking. In other words, if something is two blocks away, you are not getting me into a car.

4. You have to drink coffee, or at the very least tea. Okay, fine, I will settle for you just sitting with me at a coffee shop.

5. You should probably  like piano playing because I will invariably drag you to a piano bars and/or trendy jazz clubs and make you sit there with me as I look about as delighted as a five year old in a candy store. While Hannah has managed to avoid such outings, my other friends have not been so lucky. In fact, not that long ago I made Tanya sit through a several hour piano frenzy at the Blue Whale. She appeared to be having fun.

6. You have to let me help you with things. However, despite my eagerness to be helpful you must also realize  I have sever foot in mouth syndrome and am just about the klutziest person you will ever meet. And this is not limited to my physical state, but extends into my verbal and written sphere as well, including my social awkwardness that should become apparent the first time we meet.

7. I have children, and while you don’t have to have any, you should understand that they will always come first for me. Hence calling me an hour before you want to do something will not work.

8. I have a tendency to over share, as in “here is my life story in twenty minutes,” which sort of goes hand in hand with the social awkwardness, but should serve as a reminder that if such things make you uncomfortable, we probably should not be friends.

9. My blog is like my third child. In fact, after the other two go to sleep, this is where you will find me. I don’t expect anyone to read as much as I write considering I post almost every  night, but acknowledging its existence every once in a while would be appreciated. Also, if you do not wish to be mentioned in my blog, please tell me this *beforehand.*

10. You cannot be allergic to cats. Even if you never come over, I am probably carrying all sorts of cat scents.

11. You cannot be allergic to dogs. Even though my dog has been living at my mom’s house for five years and I only see her once a week, I have several friends who do have dogs and carry all sorts of dog scents. I like my friends to socialize with each other as well.

12. I am not a huge fan of shopping with other people around. So if you like to shop with all your friends, I will come once in a while for the social aspect, but please don’t ask me to try on a billion things.

13. Let’s just say my sense of humor is an acquired taste. Deadpan. Often morbid. More than often “did she just say that??” Yes, I did. I *will* point out what no one else will. And I don’t sugar coat things.

14. I respect your eating habits, but please don’t ask me to join in. I have no problem with vegan/vegetarian restaurants, or any other kind of food, but I do not diet. I don’t trust activities where the first part of the word starts with “die.”

15. I don’t have age requirements for my friends. But I am no longer 25, so let’s keep that in mind.

16. My children, like my cats, will not like you at first and shy away. If you are around more than a month, meaning you have survived me at my most strange, they will eventually poke their heads out of their respective rooms and come either meow or talk to you.  Occasionally my children may meow because they think this is standard small creature behavior.

17. I am not an “outdoorsy” person so to speak, but I do enjoy a fair share of outdoors-like activities. It would be a plus if you would come along. Yes, there will be walking involved.

18. This last one will probably never happen, but if you happen to have a 5.5 shoe size and own ridiculously cute shoes, then you will be instantly upgraded to best friend status.

So, if you fit at least ten of the above, and wish to audition as Hannah’s replacement, I am currently accepting applications.