Stuff about using computers to help people teach and learn better.

695-2009

Stuff for IT695, Spring 2009

Why We Teach

I have been thinking lately about how it is that it's very hard to recruit people to be teachers, scientists, and especially science teachers. When I talked to one of the most intelligent kids I taught some years after he graduated from college he explained that there was no reason to go into a technical field, there was no money in it. What did he do? Traded derivatives on Wall Street.

Yesterday I got a friend request from a student I taught in my first job (from 1987-1990). Here's what he wrote on my wall:

why shouldn't i seek you out? i graduated with a computer science degree. your classes at "perk" were awesome. to this day i will never forget you retrieving info from a hard drive. i wanted to know that stuff!!! unfortunately, i was a u.s. history major in college - then i switched to computers. i went on to graphics and finally got to edit corporate videos on an avid for a fortune 500 company. thank you for waking my mind up to that field! take care -

So it seems that something I did helped someone turn out OK. I'm not quite sure how these two stories are connected, besides they're both people that I taught. I guess it's good to know that when I was flying blind as a new teacher establishing a computer program where none had existed (something that I'm not sure I'd do again) I did some stuff right. I'm glad that Chris learned enough about computers to make it a career, I'm still worried, though, how our country is going to again convince people like Nimrod that contributing to knowledge and making stuff is a better career choice than manipulating numbers to "make" money and destroy our economy.

On e-portfolios (or double-dipping)

I'm double-dipping. This is an email I sent a student who is interested in doing some work on e-portfolios. 600 words in, I figured it was just the kind of thing that I'm trying to get us to think about in IT695 this semester. So, here it is, edited a bit.

I just reviewed an article about e-portfolios for a teacher education journal. I wasn't convinced that the e-portfolio system was doing anyone any good and one of the solutions was better training. (I like to point to the extensive training that the millions of people who use blogs and Facebook require in order to use those tools effectively.)

First Post!

OK. Learn.occ.utk.edu and ubiquity.utk.edu were inaccessible because my machine had crashed.

I set up my blog and here it is.