Faculty Academy 2006 Podcasts begin: A Fantastico Expedition

Andy Rush

I don’t have a very elegant beginning crafted here. That’s a shame, but it would be an even bigger shame not to begin at all, so here’s the first podcast from the 2006 UMW Faculty Academy on Instructional Technologies. This lunchtime session on May 17 was entitled “A Fantastico Expedition: Massive Web Innovation on $6.95 a Month,” and it featured our five UMW Instructional Technology Specialists: Martha Burtis, Patrick Gosetti-Murrayjohn, Jim Groom, Andy Rush, and Jerry Slezak.

Four ITS contemplate Andy Rush.

This was a great session for many reasons, and on many levels. Rather than try to describe them, I’ll let you listen and hear for yourself. I do want to say a special thank-you to Jon Udell, our Faculty Academy keynote speaker, who has very generously made this session the subject of both an InfoWorld column and a blog. These pieces are extraordinary in themselves and would be in my “save forever” category even if they didn’t feature the work we’re doing here.

I found nearly all of Faculty Academy deeply inspiring this year. And there were many moments that were truly magical. You’ll hear some of them here. There are more on the way.

I also need to say that these Instructional Technology Specialists are remarkable folks to work with. Their intelligence, wit, and imagination inspire me on a daily basis. I want to say something very intense and profound at this point, but if I do I’m likely to short out my computer (they’ll understand why), so I’ll simply say that I am humbled and grateful to be among them.

Downes on teaching

Oook writes admiringly of this post from Stephen Downes, so I immediately went to read it. I agree wholeheartedly with 50% of what Stephen has written, and disagree violently with the other half.

In terms of the way people live their lives, it may be true that there’s no point to argumentation. But that’s regrettable, and it’s the fault of people, not of argumentation. That’s another way of saying that argumentation should *not* be pointless.

Polemic may be pointless, in that it merely solidifies convictions on both sides of the debate, and perhaps bullies a few others into taking the speaker’s/writer’s side. But polemic is not the same thing as argumentation.

I fully agree that cognitive apprenticeship is at the heart of real school. But reason, rigorous argumentation, must be there as well. As should hilarity, passion, dogged commitment, and a richly integrative vision.

If all we can do is explain our beliefs to each other, how are we to learn? Or perhaps Stephen has brought the notion of argumentation in through the back door, so to speak, in his notion of a true, honest, and forthright explanation. Does not the very act of communication imply a request that we consider his statement and, if we judge it sound (not just agreeable), agree with it or learn from it? Picking up on Ron’s comment on Stephen’s post, I too hope that my students will not simply say “that’s what Dr. C. believes” but will actually engage with it, argue their own position, and teach me something in response. There have been several occasions in which my students’ arguments about topics of class discussion have caused me to change my mind in some fundamental ways. And of course I seek to change their minds as well, when that’s appropriate, always holding in our class meta-mind the larger principles of openness, fairness, and rigorous analysis.

I understand that by responding to Stephen’s post I have in some respects failed the test, though in writing that I’m being harsher than I feel. I do think, however, that the mind and meta-mind I’m trying to articulate form the paradoxical, vital reality of human interaction.

Wee paws

That’s the punch line to a joke my dear mother-in-law told me many years ago. “Why do broadcasters have such small hands? Because you have to have wee paws for station identification.” Of course that joke, like jokes about typewriters and broken records, will need footnoting as the baby-boomers die out, but I’ll laugh even if it dates me. So there.

That said, I feel compelled to put a placeholder here to say that I have many things I want to explore about the recent Faculty Academy, about what I’m reading, about where my thoughts are taking me these days, about my new citizenship in Second Life, about last night’s episode of House and the ethics at the heart of epistemology (and vice-versa), but I can’t yet. Too many loose ends at this moment, too many projects I need to push a little farther along. And then there’s my job, too. All of which leads me to ask my five (or is it six? I lose count) loyal readers to bear with me for a while as I get some clear space to resume my natterings here.

I really want to push hard at some of the ideas and questions emerging for me out of the last few months, perhaps even the last year.

Stay tuned.

Faculty Academy 2006 is over, or not

The event is over, yes, in terms of strict chronology. In other respects, I think we may have just matriculated into a vital, “real school” course of study. More on this idea soon. For now, I want to thank Jon Udell, Rachel Smith, Cyprien Lomas, and my astonishing staff of Instructional Technology Specialists for helping to shape and deliver this experience. You take my breath away.

Faculty Academy 2006 is nearly here

Tonight I picked Cyprien Lomas up at National Airport in D.C. and ferried him to the motel near the University. Jerry did the same for Rachel Smith. Tomorrow we get started with the first of two days of Faculty Academy 2006.

We’ve been working toward this event for months, and to our great delight, we have about 110 folks already registered to attend and nearly forty presentations scheduled, including sessions by our special guests and by us in the Division of Teaching and Learning Technologies. We’re going to do our best to record and podcast all the sessions, and there’s a conference blog and a conference wiki so you can all follow along.

I’ll be blogging here, on the conference blog, and on The Smooth Elephant, and tracking my comments with CoComment. At least, that’s what I hope to do. Given the way these conferences often take on a ferocious life of their own, you may not hear from me again until Thursday, as I come down from what I’m sure will be an utterly exhilarating two days. But perhaps I’ll have the presence of mind to sneak in a few words here and there.

Viva Faculty Academy!

Jessica Rigel reads "The Flea"

I was about to write that “The Flea,” one of Donne’s most famous, even notorious libertine seduction poems, changes its character radically when a woman reads it, but I don’t think that’s true. I think the poem stays the same. What changes, at least to some extent, is one’s horizon of expectations with regard to gender and/or sex. There are several ways to think about this:

1. the woman reads the poem against the grain, with an implied critique of the poem’s argument
2. the woman reads the poem with the grain (1), and the reading demonstrates Donne’s own witty or earnest or seriocomic critique of his own argument (i.e., self-consciously or not, Donne the poet writes in a way that subverts the poem’s argument)
3. the woman reads the poem with the grain (2), as a straightforward seduction poem, claiming the energy and wit and aggressiveness as her own

I don’t think I’ve exhausted the possibilities here by any means, and now that I mull this over, I see that these readings are available to men as well, depending on their own sexual ethics … but given that the poem’s original voicing is of a man seducing a woman, it’s easy to recognize why the reversal would stimulate thought.

Here’s Jess Rigel reading “The Flea.”

Charlotte Naas reads "Witchcraft by a Picture"

In today’s Donne Seminar podcast, Charlotte Naas reads one of Donne’s less-well-known poems, “Witchcraft by a Picture.” Such is Donne’s sharply marked poetic character, though, that you could probably tell it was one of his even if I hadn’t told you. Try the experiment: play the poem for your nearest English major or poetry lover, and see if he or she can “name that poet.”

Click here to play Charlotte’s reading.

Great news from Pete T.

Encouraging update on Pete Townshend’s web site:

The Who begin rehearsing in two weeks, during which time I have to finish the rest of the Who album with Roger – so again, I’m trying to keep the music simple and direct. Our new stage set will allow us to do some new things, and to help tell some stories as yet untold.

I’ll be in line with Alan when tickets go on sale.

Creating Passionate Users

By way of Dorine Ruter’s blog–at least, I think that’s where I found it, after taking a look at Dorine’s public Bloglines feeds (cue Donald Fagen, “I.G.Y.”)–I’ve been learning a ton lately from Kathy Sierra’s “Creating Passionate Users” blog. Because I’m always about one cognitive millisecond away from analogy-mode (I almost said allegory-mode) in most of my daily interactions, I have formed the unshakable conviction that Kathy’s blog is sending important messages about teaching and learning, as well as about the work I and my team do every day as we try to encourage and empower our colleagues to transform their work as scholars and professors.

Kathy’s blog post on “Which user’s life have you changed today?” is one compelling example of what I’m talking about. I’m betting that most writers, teachers, and students would find the post just as inspiring and insightful as I did. And during the tough days when I’ve got (at last count) 30 papers and 61 exams left to grade, along with discussion forum portfolios and a few other odds and ends, and that’s before I get to the admin stuff, this tale of a simple owner’s manual that changed a life gets my chin up and my determination on full. Thanks to Kathy for telling the story, and thanks to Nick for writing that manual (Nick says, “Our goal is that the user has to do something cool within 30 minutes”), and thanks to Edward for being passionate, and thanks to O’Reilly for rewarding that passion–and, it seems, prodigious talent.

None of this magic happens automatically. That’s one reason I’m so grateful for every human being who helps make it happen, despite the real possibility that he or she will never, ever know that magic was the result.

And thanks again to Dorine, one of the most recent additions to my personal suite of inspiring and trusted experts.

Zac Smith reads "Elegy 3: Change"

Here’s Zac Smith reading Donne’s “Elegy 3: Change.” Donne’s elegies (in the Renaissance, “elegy” could mean any discursive or meditative poem, and could include even bawdy, Romanesque poems, as Donne demonstrates) are particularly interesting as indications of his wit and his skill at arguing several sides of the same issue, sometimes all at once. “Elegy 19: To His Mistress Going To Bed” is Donne’s most famous in this genre, and it’s a great poem, but I was very happy to see students go for some of the less well-known elegies in Donne’s work.