Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category

Canadian Journal of Communication on stands now!

Friday, October 27th, 2006

The new Canadian Journal of Communication came out and I’m in it! It’s “only” a book review, which means not peer reviewed, which means fuck all in the world of academic publishing. But I don’t care. We’ve all got to start somewhere. In fact, this was my first foray into academic writing – I submitted it last January. Then I had the Media-Culture publication a couple months later but as that’s an online journal, the turn around time, as you can imagine, is much quicker. My esteemed colleague, and fellow ACTant, Roy Bendor, is also in the new CJC – in fact, his review follows directly after mine.

So anyway, that’s something.

Coffee and KK+

Wednesday, October 11th, 2006

I was walking to school today (SFU Harbour Centre), down Seymour from Granville station, lost in thought and not paying attention to anybody or anything, simply enjoying the beautiful fall morning, when I run into Kris Krug. He was approaching from the opposite direction and paused just abreast of me, thus catching my eye. I met Kris, local geek and photographer about town, at BarCamp in August. We arrived at the same time and I was sure he must be an organizer: he looked so rock starish. Now you might not think that local geeks look like Lenny Kravitz, but I think Kris (or simply KK+ as I like to refer to him) does a good job.

Today, though, not so rock starish. Perhaps a Tuesday morning rendition; still styling regardless. “Hi Kris,” I say, once I focus and register his face. “Kate, right?” Yeah, hey, how’s it going etc. etc. Anyhow, in the span of 9 minutes, KK+ invited me to coffee, put money in his metre, bought me a coffee and tried to steal my Globe and Mail. I told him I was going to the next Social Tech Brewing, which begins at the office of his work, Bryght and then moves on to a local watering hole to fulfill the “brewing” aspect of its mandate. He told me a wee bit about his trip to China. I’m beginning to dig this bumping into people I know (I don’t need to know them well). Also, and it’s what I’ve always suspected about Vancouver – it’s as small a town as Windsor, or any other Canadian city dwarfed by Toronto or Montreal. Once you get to know people in a certain set – say the geekish community, or fellow students – you start seeing them around. And all of a sudden big ole Vancouver smells the same as the City of Roses (whether sweet or rancid depends on your state of mind).

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Gettin’ on down

Tuesday, October 3rd, 2006

Andrew Feenberg hosted a party the other night. His pad is in an old apartment building, built circa 1920s or so, but totally retrofitted in the way that Vancouverites have. Sort of moderne + contemporary inflected with appeals to nature and nice things. There was a yummy spread by Anne-Marie, who is one cool French lady, with a pasison for the novel, and dancing. I totally dig her – she’s so warm and funny, but totally hardcore sma-art. She asks me things like: So what’s going on with feminism and young women today? She calls Andrew “Andy” which freaks all us students out. Imagine! Once I asked Darryl Cressman, in jest of course, if les ACTants called him Feenie (I was sort of thinking it would be a natural shortening, plus there’s Vancouver’s Feenie’s). Darryl responded with his usual quick wit, no, we just call him F-Dawg. That was funny.

Anyway, we drank wine from 1.5 litre bottles, Heineken out of cans, or for the sophisticated and worldly, there was scotch. I went with My Friend who had never met Feenberg before, yet in a weird coincidence, had seen him at a talk at SFU Harbour Centre that very afternoon! Director Michael Goldberg discussed his new documentary film A Zen Life – DT Suzuki, screening in the Vancouver International Film Festival. I guess Andrew is into that stuff – Zen, I mean; My Friend, too. But, really, who doesn’t need, wouldn’t like, couldn’t benefit from a little balance in their life? That’s my thing lately too – the work/school-home/family-me/sanity balance. I have one word to describe it: elusive.

Anyhoo, it was a nice gathering, and the only one hosted by one of my prof’s since my time here at SFU – that’s telling, no? Andrew’s a cool cat and I’m glad I’m working with him.

Writing-intensive learning – Session 1

Tuesday, September 12th, 2006

Today I had to go to this training session for the “W” course I’m TAing, Communication 253, at SFU. I was late – waited for 3 buses at the loop for the express up Burnaby Mountain. All summer, there have been buses idling in the bay, with not a student in sight; all of a sudden, it’s “back to school” and there’s a small bus every 6 minutes. The line-up literally went back into the SkyTrain station. Incredible.

What is writing-intensive learning? Good question – and one that has been answered for me as this interesting session, led by the engaging and erudite Kathryn Alexander draws to a close. In a nutshell:

Writing to learn: learning through writing, engaging with disciplinary course content, congnitive emphasis.

Learning to write: learning specific writing skills in disciplinary contexts, improving through increased writing, skills-oriented.

Assumptions about writing and learning: Students tend to
*see writing as communication vs a tool for thinking
*see writing as recording process vs a process of finding out, figuring out what they know and think
*see writing as test of knowlege, not a tool for learning
*don’t see writing as generative e.g. a process through which new ideas are generated

In a “W” course:
1. Students use writing as a way of learning course content, are taught to write in forms and for the purposes typical of their discipline;
2. Examples of writing are used as means of instruction about typical structures, modes of reasoning, styles of address and use of technical language;
3. Students receive feedback, response to their writing based on explicit criteria directed at improving quality of their writing.
4. Revision is built into process of writing for formal assignemtns;
5. At least half course grade is based on writen work

We also discussed things you might not automatically think of, like how a “newcomer” would look at a text e.g. how to read an academic article. For example, what are the functions of the parts of a text – title, abstract, methodology, thesis. Also important, but not obvious, was setting the foci for reading e.g. what should students get from the reading, what is the relevance of the reading ot other course materials, advice on pre-reading preparation (e.g. vocabulary), setting an outcome for reading (synopsis, critical summary, margin notes etc.). Also, the technique of “demonstrated reading” was highlighted as important e.g. modelling how to read a difficult text, time required to get through it etc.

One of the hallmarks of WIL is the one-minute essay, writing that doesn’t count, so it will when it does. This is “exploratory, informal writing [that] emphasizes thinking and invites reflection” (Werder, 2002). Also called quickrites or freewriting, these one-minute essays are supposed to generate ideas and discussion, provide a chance to situate responses in the disciplinary framework of the course, and give feedback on student uptake. It also, obviously, promotes an active classroom dynamic. There are different approaches: “framed” (open ended or structured around an issue) or concept maps (visual representations).

I’ll see how all this pans out in class…

Thursday, August 3rd, 2006

I’m writing a journal article for Tailoring Biotechnologies. And their editorial comments are here.