Monday, April 27, 2015

Teach in China

Date:    Mon, 27 Apr 2015 12:37:51 -0400
From:    Marcy Bauman <marcybee@GMAIL.COM>
Subject: Teach in China this summer

Hi, everyone,

Are you interested in a short-term teaching experience in China?  For the
past 7 years, I've led a group of teachers to the Harbin Institute of
Technology (recently ranked #20 in the world on US News and World Report's
top engineering colleges), where we teach a three-week intensive English
conversation program to the school's Honors students.

This is a low-stress, high-impact teaching environment.  There are no exams
or grades; students have a relatively high degree of English speaking
proficiency, and so we spend most of our time engaging in cultural
dialogues. Harbin is a northern city with moderate (for China) summers -
temperatures are usually in the 80s.

Dates for 2015 have not yet been finalized, but the program will take place
during July (and possibly early August).

HIT provides:

* Round-trip airfare (reimbursed; you have to front the ticket)
* Lodging (with a/c and internet connectivity)
* A teaching stipend

Teachers provide:

* a valid passport with at least 6 months remaining on it.
* a visa (HIT provides necessary paperwork; visas cost about $150)
* 25-30 hours of instruction per week in a team-teaching environment.

If you have a Masters' degree, some experience with overseas travel, some
ESL experience, and a desire to have a truly AWESOME summer, then please
send me a letter of interest and a CV.

Thanks very much!

Best,
Marcy

Monday, April 20, 2015

Stats on RIC

Last Friday, Dr. Tom Schmeling and I testified in front of the RI House Finance Committee Sub-Committee on Education about how Rhode Island College students are suffering because of poor state funding for Higher Education.  Testimony from students about how difficult it is to pay for College, and how their lives have been impacted by working more than students at any New England peer institution, would be influential.  This factors strongly into Performance Based Funding, because the institutions of public higher education in the state will be evaluated by how many of our students graduate in 4 and 6 years, and yet in many cases work requirements (made necessary by difficulty paying tuition and making ends meet) limit students’ ability to complete 15 credits a semester (which is the norm required to graduate in 4 years.)

I quote here from Dr. Schmeling’s testimony last Friday:

"Since FY2008, Rhode Island’s educational appropriations per full-time equivalent student declined 24%, measured in constant dollars (SHEF p.32). 

In support for public higher education, Rhode Island ranks:
  • 44th in the nation in educational appropriations per full time student 2014 (SHEF p.39).
  • 46th in higher education funding per capita (SHEF p.46).
  • 46th in higher education funding per $1000 personal income (SHEF p.46).
  • 48th in the percentage of state revenue allocated to higher education.
As a result of declining state support, tuition at Rhode Island institutions of higher learning has risen 34.6% since 2008 .
  • We are 45th in net tuition burden as a percent of total public higher education revenue. That is, we ask our students to bear more of the cost of their education than all but five states (p.33)
  • Rhode Island is one of only six states where the student tuition burden is more than twice the amount of support provided by the state (p.33)
  • In short, across multiple measures of state financial commitment to higher education, Rhode Island is consistently at the bottom of the heap. For those of us who believe that investment in public higher education is a key source of economic mobility for our citizens and of economic growth for the state, it is both disturbing and embarrassing to find that Rhode Island has sunk so low in state rankings on education funding.
These cuts have a clear impact on our students’ ability to complete a college education. For instance, significantly more RIC students have to work off campus to make tuition than at other New England Public Colleges. 31% of RIC seniors work thirty or more hours per week at off-campus jobs, a rate which is about 50% higher than for students at other New England Colleges . Students who must spend so much time working to pay for college cannot devote the time needed to achieve academic excellence. They have a harder time completing a degree in four, five or even six years, and they are more likely to drop out."

Dr. Schmeling is using the State Higher Education Executive Officers Association's State Higher Education Finance Report (SHEF).

Stop shaming people on the Internet for grammar mistakes. Its not there fault.

I am a writer, which is why it’s particularly embarrassing that I sometimes type the word “right” when I mean to type “write.” Shouldn’t I know better? Just yesterday, I typed “there” when I meant “their.” And I’ll even admit that I’ve committed the most mocked grammar error on the Internet: “your” instead of “you’re” (and vice versa). And yet, I have stood by and watched on Twitter and in comment sections as people are pilloried for making these egregious blunders, knowing I’ve been just as guilty. I’ve even snickered when someone commits a grammar crime while writing a particularly objectionable opinion about politics or sports.
Calling out other people’s grammar mistakes has become such an Internet pastime that Weird Al Yankovic made a music video about it and a Twitter account called the Grammar Police has attracted more than 19,000 followers. The Grammar Police bot publicly shames people for making little language errors, such as using “hear” for “here,” and lets the world know exactly what grammar rule the offender broke.

But people don’t need to be corrected any more than they need to be ridiculed. I know the rules for how these words should be used and spelled, and I’m sure most who make these mistakes know them, too. What I really wanted to know is why we make these slip-ups anyway.
To find out, I spoke with Maryellen MacDonald, a cognitive psychologist at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, who studies how the brain processes language. She said that even though your brain knows the grammar rules, other forces override that knowledge. The brain doesn’t just store words like a dictionary does for easy retrieval, it’s more of a network. You start with a concept you want to express and then unconsciously consider several options from its associative grouping and quickly select one. For instance, if you’re explaining how you hit a ball, you might cycle through the concept of a stick, a pole and a bat. Next, your brain will use sound to aid its expression. Here’s where things can get tricky.
“Usually we pay a lot of attention to pronunciation while we’re typing because it’s usually a really good cue how to spell things,” MacDonald said. But homophones can trip this process up. “When someone types ‘Are dog is really cute’, it’s not that they don’t know the difference between ‘are’ and ‘our’; it’s that the pronunciation of ‘our’ in the mind activated the spelling ‘our’ but also ‘are.’” Even nearby “hour” might come out, she said.
The brain doesn’t always consult a word’s sound, but studies have shownthat it frequently falls back on it, and sound tells us nothing about the difference between “you’re” and “your.” Research on typing errors revealsthat sound creates even odder mistakes, such as people writing “28” when they mean to type “20A.” It’s no wonder that people who know better will routinely confound closer pairings such as “it’s” and “its” or “know” and “no.”
Tom Stafford, a cognitive psychologist at the University of Sheffield who is currently involved in a massive study of Wikipedia edits to see what they reveal about how the brain processes language, told me that we usually get these spellings right less because we apply a rule than because of our brains’ wiring. “When you first start typing, you don’t have any habits,” he said, “and then as you become fluid, that skill is based on the assemblage of routines that you don’t have to think about.” Over time, motor systems allow you to act without belabored thought. But there’s a cost to being able to type 60 words per minute: Sometimes those habits steer us wrong.
For instance, if a friend texts that she’s “going to a concert” and you want to tell her you’re also going, you might type, “I’m going, to,” instead of “I’m going, too.” Your brain is used to hearing the word “going” followed by the word “to” (as in going to work/school/etc.) and it just saw the phrase used that way in your friend’s text. Conversely, in sentences that should end with the preposition “to,” people often write “too,” because that word more frequently concludes a sentence. Habit, usually so helpful, sometimes leads us astray.
We’ve long known that habits have the power to overwhelm intentions. In the 1880s, psychologist William James described the man who goes to his room to change clothes and suddenly finds himself undressed and in bed. “He began the routine correctly,” Stafford said, but then lost focus and did the more high-frequency action. In extremely grave cases, this slip from conscious intention into repetition of habit has led people to forget their children in their cars. In extremely trivial ones, they type “then” when they mean “than.”

Regardless of what you intend to do, “there’s this tendency for these high-frequency things to assert themselves,” Stafford said, “and that’s particularly true when you’re not paying attention or you’re in a rush. And when we’re typing, we’re always in a rush.”
Slips of the brain also create less common mistakes. Consider all these people trying to make a joke about calling 911 and inadvertently typing “call 9/11.” You don’t say the two the same way, but somehow the constant invocation of 9/11 helps it supplant the phone number. Or consider my fairly uncommon last name, Heisel, which for my entire life has appeared on name tags and forms as “Heisler.” That surname is not all that common,either, but it’s familiar enough that the brain’s autopilot often chooses it over mine. Similarly, professor Maryellen MacDonald told me, “I’ve been Mary Anne all my life.”
If we can mistakenly deploy words we rarely see, it’s no wonder that the basic building blocks of the language, such as “to” and “too,” would continually intrude upon each other’s space. We can take care to make sure the right one comes out, but, MacDonald said, “cognitive control is hard work. … It’s putting the brakes on something you would typically do.” As studies of attention show, you only have so much to go around before your mind falters.
Of course, people can and should proofread (a practice the brain complicates as well), but we can never fully curtail these slips that rapid-fire media like Twitter bring to the fore. Mocking another person for making one of them is like mocking a heart for skipping a beat. Errors are a routine part of our cognitive systems, as likely to happen to you as to me, as to that guy with the terrible opinions ranting beneath an article. And people certainly don’t need reminders of the simple rules by a program such as  Grammar Police, either. The bot is really just a reminder of the difference between the tidy logic of a machine and the wonderfully messy mental architecture of humans.
But if to err is human, so, too, it seems, is wishing you weren’t. Maybe the pleasure in following that bot is that it allows you to pretend, 25 times a day, that you’re perfect and other people’s foibles are not your own. Even people who understand precisely how helpless we are to avoid these little missteps can fall prey to this desire. MacDonald said she still ends up chastising herself when she realizes she’s made them.
And though she and Stafford helped me feel less shameful about committing these errors, my focus on them did nothing to stop me from making them repeatedly while typing this article. Sometimes, knowledge is powerless.

Friday, April 17, 2015

Re: Your Recent Email to Your Professor

Re: Your Recent Email to Your Professor

April 16, 2015 
Dear College Student,
If your professor has sent you a link to this page, two things are likely true. First, you probably sent an email that does not represent you in a way you would like to be represented. Second, while others might have scolded you, mocked you or despaired over the future of the planet because of your email, you sent it to someone who wants to help you represent yourself better.
In part, because only a click or swipe or two separate emails from Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and texting, the lines between professional emails and more informal modes of writing have become blurred, and many students find the conventions of professional emails murky. We think we can help sort things out.
In the age of social media, many students approach emailing similar to texting and other forms of digital communication, where the crucial conventions are brevity and informality. But most college teachers consider emails closer to letters than to text messages. This style of writing calls for more formality, more thoroughness and more faithful adherence (sometimes bordering on religious adherence) to the conventions of Edited Standard Written English -- that is, spelling, punctuation, capitalization and syntax.
These different ways of writing are just that -- different ways of writing. The letter approach to emails is not always and forever better (or worse) than the texting approach. Knowing how and when to use one or the other -- based on why you are writing and whom you are writing to -- makes all the difference. So, if you use emojis, acronyms, abbreviations, etc., when texting your friends, you are actually demonstrating legitimate, useful writing skills. But you aren’t if you do the same thing when emailing professors who view emails as letters.
Effective writing requires shaping your words according to your audience, purpose and genre (or type of writing, e.g., an academic email). Together these are sometimes called the rhetorical situation. Some of the key conventions for the rhetorical situation of emailing a professor are as follows:
1. Use a clear subject line. The subject “Rhetorical Analysis Essay” would work a bit better than “heeeeelp!” (and much better than the unforgivable blank subject line).
2. Use a salutation and signature. Instead of jumping right into your message or saying “hey,” begin with a greeting like “Hello” or “Good afternoon,” and then address your professor by appropriate title and last name, such as “Prof. Xavier” or “Dr. Octavius.” (Though this can be tricky, depending on your teacher’s gender, rank and level of education, “Professor” is usually a safe bet for addressing a college teacher.) Similarly, instead of concluding with “Sent from my iPhone” or nothing at all, include a signature, such as “Best” or “Sincerely,” followed by your name.
3. Use standard punctuation, capitalization, spelling and grammar. Instead of writing “idk what 2 rite about in my paper can you help??” try something more like, “I am writing to ask about the topics you suggested in class yesterday.”
4. Do your part in solving what you need to solve. If you email to ask something you could look up yourself, you risk presenting yourself as less resourceful than you ought to be. But if you mention that you’ve already checked the syllabus, asked classmates and looked through old emails from the professor, then you present yourself as responsible and taking initiative. So, instead of asking, “What’s our homework for tonight?” you might write, “I looked through the syllabus and course website for this weekend’s assigned homework, but unfortunately I am unable to locate it.”
5. Be aware of concerns about entitlement. Rightly or wrongly, many professors feel that students “these days” have too strong a sense of entitlement. If you appear to demand help, shrug off absences or assume late work will be accepted without penalty because you have a good reason, your professors may see you as irresponsible or presumptuous. Even if it is true that “the printer wasn’t printing” and you “really need an A in this class,” your email will be more effective if you to take responsibility: “I didn’t plan ahead well enough, and I accept whatever policies you have for late work.”
6. Add a touch of humanity. Some of the most effective emails are not strictly business -- not strictly about the syllabus, the grade, the absence or the assignment. While avoiding obvious flattery, you might comment on something said in class, share information regarding an event the professor might want to know about or pass on an article from your news feed that is relevant to the course. These sorts of flourishes, woven in gracefully, put a relational touch to the email, recognizing that professors are not just point keepers but people.
We hope that these rules (or these and these) help you understand what most professors want or expect from academic emails. Which brings us back to the larger point: writing effectively does not simply mean following all the rules. Writing effectively means writing as an act of human communication -- shaping your words in light of whom you are writing to and why.
Of course, you won’t actually secure the future of the planet by writing emails with a subject line and some punctuation. But you will help your professors worry about it just a little less.
With wishes for all the best emails in the future,
PTC and CHM

Friday, April 10, 2015

Rhetoric: A Case Study

NY TIMES (4/8/2015, 11:21am)



FOX NEWS (4/8/2015, 11:21am)