Thursday, January 31, 2008

Ice Quake

We had an ice quake this afternoon!

Seriously! The whole building I was in shook. Kinda crazy, but apparently this can happen when there are extreme shifts in temperature - and we have had 30-40 degree variations. The seismologists on campus say that there will probably be a fresh pressure ridge out on the lake.

Wednesday, January 30, 2008

Why I Teach

Update Below

Starting with Dr. Crazy's post-MLA post about why she teaches literature, a number of others out there have been posting their reasons for teaching (I'm not going to try to link to them all). There has been some dissent, which is curious since these are individual/personal reasons. Anyway, I've decided to join the fun.

So, why do I teach composition and rhetoric?
  • I love words. I love the different ways we can put words together. I love helping people see how words and language work and how words and language can work for them.
  • Teaching people the multiple ways they can think through and express their thoughts for different audiences is important to me. I don't just focus on academic audiences when I talk to students about writing. We work on different types of academic audiences, that is true, but we also talk about and write for the different types of audiences they will encounter at work and in their communities. I've seen some amazing health information resources created by pre-med students writing for audiences such as children, adults with low-levels of education, etc. I love these projects and, for the most part, they become very important to my students.
  • Reading and writing, as seemingly everyday acts, are often overlooked. I want to show people the ways reading and writing are material parts of our lives and histories. I also want to show them the complexity of both of these acts, the environments (broadly defined) in which they occur, and the ways reading and writing are both valued and devalued.
  • I want to help people see themselves as writers.
  • I want to make processes of inquiry (both in terms of rhetorical invention and research) more meaningful to students and I want students to take ownership of these processes.
  • I love helping people understand how reading, writing, and research are all social acts.
  • It's important to me to provide places where students can write works that aren't assessed by grades. I want them to have a safe space to take risks with their writing.
  • I can't think of anything I'd rather do.
Update: I'm updating to both add the link for the Free Exchange On Campus listing for the meme and to write briefly about what all of this has to do with intellectual freedom.

I couldn't do the items listed in the second, third, fourth, and sixth bullets, in particular, without intellectual freedom for both myself and my students. In all of these areas, students need the space to take risks with their ideas and their writing. I need to be able to provide space for students to take these risks. This cannot be done without intellectual freedom.

Additionally, intellectual freedom allows me to study and teach those things that are part of everyday experiences such as reading and writing. It means that I can teach more than just belles lettres (although that, too, is important). It allows me to integrate cutting edge work into my classroom. It allows us to rhetorically explore all types of arguments, as well as their groundings and support. It allows me to discuss rhetorics of non-dominant groups.

At least theoretically, it allows me to engage in materials that cross-disciplinary boundaries (I've written about my frustration with interdisciplinarity in this post). And, it allows me to talk about my research and teaching in this very space. That is just the beginning, but it covers some of the key points for me.

Tuesday, January 29, 2008

Ouch!

Hail to Face contact - not such a good thing.

Monday, January 28, 2008

Cravings and Fixations

I've been trying to substitute junk food for healthy/healthier fare*. However, ever since last Saturday night, I've been craving carrot cake. I was at a retirement party that night, surrounded by yummy looking food. The carrot cake caught my eye, but I successfully resisted.

Or so I thought.

I want some. I almost gave in tonight, but I made a successful (but more expensive) substitution. Have you had Whole Food's ridiculously expensive (kinda goes without saying) curried chicken salad? Soooo good! But I still want carrot cake. And no, I don't think eating some carrots will help the situation.

*Update: What I meant is that I am replacing my consumption of junk food with consumption of healthy food. But yes, the other way around would be sooooo much more fun. I wonder if I can blame the grammatical confusion on sugar deprivation?

Friday, January 25, 2008

Book Meme

As seen over at Anastasia's:

1. Name one book that changed your life.
Driven to Distraction: Recognizing and Coping with Attention Deficit Disorder from Childhood Through Adulthood by Edward Halloway and John Ratey

Enough said.

2. Name one book you have read more than once.
Ummm...a lot of them. Of the 1,064 books I have listed on librarything.com, I've tagged 338 reread. And that's the books I own and it just notes that I've reread them, not how many times. I'm a compulsive re-reader. So, I'll list one I reread a lot: The Complete Fairy Tales of the Brothers Grimm. And yes, I've reread it in English and in German multiple times.

3. One book you would want on a desert island.
See the title listed above.

4. Two books that made you laugh.
Kat Kong by Dav Pilkey and Science Verse by Jon Scieszka. Seriously funny!

5. One book that made you cry.
Kira Kira by Cynthia Kadohata. As I noted here, I had to put the book down several times because I couldn't stop crying.

6. One book you wish you'd written.
It's a toss-up between Fire and Hemlock by Diana Wynne Jones and American Gods by Neil Gaiman. Both are brilliant.

7. One book you wish had never been written.
The entire Left Behind series. I'm not linking to these - I do have some principles.

8. Two books you are currently reading.
The Fairies in Tradition and Literature by Katherine Briggs and Trust in Texts: A Different History of Rhetoric by Susan Miller.


Hmmm...........who to tag??? I pick Breena and Dave. Yes, I have been reading. ;-)

Saturday, January 19, 2008

Interdisciplinarity: Static or Dynamic

This could get messy - I'm still thinking in draft form.

The Academy and its members often claim to support interdisciplinary work, but more and more I see this as support for what I call static interdisciplinarity rather than dynamic interdisciplinarity.

What I mean is this: The interdisciplinary work attributed value or merit typically belongs to work between disciplines connected so frequently that we could almost say that the combination is a discipline. What is valued is the work that comes out of a status quo mix of disciplines. It has become so normalized within the academy that it has become an almost static approach to subject x.

At the same time, work that forges new boundaries, that creates new dynamic connections between areas of study, is not supported in the same way. The Academy doesn't know what to make of this work and, even if the work elicits interest, there isn't always room for it. The mechanisms aren't truly in place to support innovative interdisciplinary work. Finding funding can be sketchy. Finding a department to work in can be difficult, as well. The academic who does this work doesn't necessarily fit neatly into the role staged by the various job descriptions out there.

Obviously, since I work in two interdisciplinary fields, I am constantly trying to work out these issues. The connections between comp/rhet and LIS make so much sense to me - they've felt natural from the moment I noticed them - but they don't always "fit" with the way(s) interdisciplinary work has traditionally occurred in/been understood by English departments. And, while practical aspects of my training appeal to people (I get a lot of questions about how to make the library days more effective for various English courses or how to best work with the librarians. Hint: treat them like the educated professionals they are and discuss your goals for your students and the assignment.), the intellectual and theoretical contributions I can make seem less important to many of those steeped in particular disciplinary traditions.

I don't want to sound whiny, and this isn't all about me. It's just something I see generally happening. Despite the calls for and valorization of interdisciplinary work, the work that is valued is often the work that relies on traditional interdisciplinary connections. People like to be comfortable, and the familiar is comfortable.

I Am A Muse!!!

Thursday, January 17, 2008

Brrrrrrrrrrr

The projected high for Saturday is -2.

I think I will stay in, write my dissertation, and consume warm comfort foods like oatmeal, soup, and hot chocolate.

Friday, January 11, 2008

Worse Than I Thought

I thought the car wreck carnage was just cosmetic, but I was wrong. Apparently the radiator was damaged pretty bad, as well as some other important items under the hood. As far as the insurance company is concerned, it is totaled.

Blah!

I went car shopping last night. Bought a car today. Hate that I had to do this. I had hoped to put this off for awhile - my old car was a 2002 with only 41,000 miles on it. Fortunately (I guess), the insurance check is fairly substantial. I figured out that I received a lot more by totaling my car than I would have from a trade in.

Anyway, I like the new car, but I don't feel great about it - and not because it isn't a good car. It's a better car than the one I had. A person should be happy about a new car, right? I suspect my ambivalence towards the car is related to the suddenness of it all. Probably.

Wednesday, January 09, 2008

Excited About Teaching

I am soooooo happy that I have a Tuesday/Thursday teaching schedule this semester. I always feel like I can accomplish more in my classes with the 2 day a week schedule. And, I love having the longer class period for peer workshopping - those 50 minute sessions just don't cut it.

So yes, I am happy.

Now I must complete my syllabus. I'm slightly revising my course on Textual Production and Consumption, so I don't have too much work, but I know there are some readings that need to be dropped. They are the most hated texts after two semesters and there are some substitutions I can make that would probably work better.

Back to work!

Tuesday, January 08, 2008

Tween Distractions

My work has been somewhat derailed. I found out at the last minute that I would be watching my niece yesterday afternoon and today. She had two teeth extracted, so she is understandably not feeling up to going to school. She's easy to take care of - she's tired and content to sprawl on a couch while watching tv.

However, as good as I am at blocking out all kinds of noise when I work, I discovered today that the Disney Channel is not one of those noises.

I know, the parents out there deal with this all of the time. I'm really in awe of you!

Saturday, January 05, 2008

Sloth, Gluttony, Greed, Envy

This probably isn't a good way to start out the year.

Sloth I've barely thought about my dissertation. I've been sleeping longer than normal. I've been napping (soft couch + cozy blanket + warm puppy = nap) too much. Lethargy.

Gluttony I've OD'd on chex mix. I really don't know what got into me.

Greed I desperately want to go shopping for a number of things, even though I know that this is completely out of the question. I don't need more books (I have way too many I haven't read yet), but I want more. There are shoes I want. I want to accumulate.

Envy I envy everyone who has a job that pays more than mine (see Greed listed above). I envy everyone who has finished a dissertation. I envy those with fancy fellowships that allow them to work on the dissertation and not worry about having a job.

I'm giving myself one more day of sinful behavior. After that, I'll be a more productive member of society.