Monday, June 10, 2013

The Rhythm of Writing

This summer I have time to work on my book manuscript.  It has to get done before fall classes start.  I've worked out a rhythm for writing (all components are necessary): 1) get up before dawn; 2) eat light breakfast and feed dogs and then take dogs to off-leash dog park for romp at sunrise; 3) come home, lift weights, and have second breakfast; 4) write till lunchtime; 5) read or translate in the afternoon; 6) avoid dogs' stares until dinnertime.  Depending on my mood, the evening consists of relaxation or more reading or translating.

Wednesday, January 23, 2013

I don't want to just provide links to other posts or texts on the interwebs, but this one expressed so much of how I see grading, it seemed worth sharing and I haven't been writing much here any way.  It's from 1996 evidently, so things apparently haven't changed much, but at least there are like-minded professors.  I particularly like the emphasis on the connection between action and consequence.

Link to the piece

Saturday, January 14, 2012

Another semester begins...

After the first week of classes, all I have to say is, I know I had a good class when I had more energy at the end of class than at the beginning of a 2.5-hour class. I think the students had a good class, too.

Wednesday, December 21, 2011

Another semester ends

Another semester has ended and the perennial woes circulate among professors and instructors. "Why can't students follow (simple) directions?" "Why are they asking for extra credit on the last day of class?" "Who was that student (re: student who managed to miss all classes since the first week until the last but still showed up on the last day to turn in work or take the final)?"

I keep a few ideas in mind to keep things in perspective and to avoid unnecessary angst:

1. Students earn grades; professors do not "give" grades.
2. Students have what they need to do as well as they can from the first day because the syllabus and assignment instructions were complete and thorough.
3. Not all students can do as well as they think they can, at least, perhaps, not at this point in their lives.
4. I cannot control what administrators may do, but I am a conscientious grader. A pravda vítězí (And truth prevails).

Saturday, August 20, 2011

Here's an amusing slideshow as movie that gets my World History started. Yes, I update it every year. It's "13.67 Billion Years in approximately 13.67 Minutes." (Disclaimer: the timing works better in PowerPoint; as a movie it seems to go much too long.) . . . Drat, it didn't upload the entire "movie." Sorry.

Friday, July 29, 2011

Collaboration in the classroom experiment, Fall 2011

This fall semester in my History 103 class I am going to try out group work again, but this time I would like to initiate better collaboration. History 103 is ambitiously titled "World History, from the Beginning to 1500" and trying to cover millennia of history in one semester is daunting. The first step in this experiment I'm going to take is to show the following 10-minute clip in class on the first day.

What should step #2 be?