Category Archives: college

Out With a Whimper

The semester ends in two weeks and the finals rush has officially begun. For the next two weeks I will become intimate with one of Radford lab’s 800 MHz G4 iMacs with a yellowed keyboard and Microsoft mouse. The worst thing that could happen right now would be if I accidently found a Nintendo Wii.

Astute readers may already know that I plan to spend the next semester abroad in Germany. The problem with this little plan is that Marburg University has yet to return their reply to my application. I have been waiting anxiously for months. It just became easier to tell people that I was going to study abroad than explain the whole situation.
I’m still officially enrolled in classes here at Oshkosh next semester. Why? Because the semester in Germany would not begin until April and again, I still have not received word from them. So what am I to do with my time when the semester ends in two weeks? I’ve been looking for a job, but no one is hiring. Do I bother buying books for next semester only to drop the courses here at Oshkosh? Do I move in with my parents (shudder) for the time until I leave? I do not have the money to shack of up in Greunhagen at $240/month for almost three months. The German universities have been calling my references. Hopefully they come through soon.

See that unshaven creature hunched over in the corner of the lab? If you see me come say hello. Bring me a coffee and give me a much needed break.

Random Thoughts

I am jonesing for a Nintendo Wii at the moment, but they are all sold out. It appears that whoever has been living in my room has been doing so in abject squalor for quite some time. There are two major projects I have to have done in the next 48 hours. The first is a presentation on German concentration camps and the other is an oral interpretation of Goethe’s classic Faust. My iBook is still suffering from video problems which I have not gotten around to fixing. The main theme from Dune is currently playing in iTunes. That is too bad because I was thinking about The Highlander. For Thankgiving I will be in Pardeeville, Wisconsin. Where is my acceptance letter from Philips-Universitaet Marburg, Deutschland? It has been almost eight weeks since I sent that application out. Maybe I should shave before going upstairs to watch [adult-swim] on Cartoon Network. Dethklok is by far my favorite show in that programming block. Now the Overture from Katamari Damacy is playing in iTunes. I’m getting hungry and there is a caramel Drumstick waiting for me. I spent way too much at Joe’s Sample House this weekend. God, I really want a Nintendo Wii…

Barrett Visits Oshkosh… and Lives!

Tonight I had the opportunity to see one of the most engaging and controversial speakers here at UW-Oshkosh in recent times. I am speaking of UW-Madison’s Kevin Barrett. Kevin Barrett has come under national media scrutiny for his views on the 9/11 terrorist attacks. I do not agree with Barrett point for point, nor do I agree with some of his assertions, but his discourse makes you think. I am not going to proselytize for either side of the 9/11 debates. I am going to tell you what Barrett did right.

Barrett agreed to disagree with his critics. In reading his critics’ publications and letters it appeared to me that Barrett was some tin-foil hat wearing, internet forum posting junkie, conspiracy nut that just happened to have a doctorate. This preconceived notion proved to be false. Barrett was well versed and acutely aware of his critics. He stated that despite their harsh criticism, he was willing to debate them. In one instance Barrett recalled that he was to be set up in a debate against fellow UW-Madison professors. Unfortunately, no one took the offer despite the strenuous efforts of his critics to find someone.  He also addressed questions challenging his position, to which he made arguments with supporting evidence. It is not required, nor advocated, by Barrett that you agree with him. He wants you to make an informed decision with valid evidence on either side of the issue.

When it came to providing evidence, Barrett was able to relay his findings in layman’s terms. This is absolutely crucial when trying to assuage someone’s position on a topic. Perhaps the most impressive use of evidence was when he demonstrated how the government uses polarizing incidents to shift majority opinion to the mobilization for war. Skipping thousands of years of history, Barrett used the staged military attack which led to the annexation of much of Mexico, the sinking of the Maine, the sinking of the Lusitania, the inaction against the attacks on Pearl Harbor, and more modern examples to demonstrate how government shifts opinion. When it came to discrepancies regarding the miniscule 16-foot hole in the Pentagon caused by huge 757, the complete vaporization of planes, or the “controlled demolition” way the Trade Center fell Barrett had logical answer for the all. He also points out idiosyncrasies in the chain of command, unusually high stock put options placed on American Airlines on the days before the attacks, and the Trade Tower owner’s unusually high insurance policy protecting against terrorism a short time before the attacks. He also bolstered his argument with statistical nuggets. Did you know that approximately 60,000 people have died from car crashes since 9/11. Only 3000 died in the 9/11 attacks. Which event is more dangerous to human life? Car crashes or terrorism? His arguments covered the broad spectrum of possibility and rationality. Perhaps most interesting in his evidence were the omissions in the government’s 9/11 report. Why is tower 7 never explicitly addressed?

Perhaps the most important issue at hand was not his views on 9/11, but academic freedom. People have been brandishing torches demanding that Barrett leave his post at UW-Madison. George Bush stated that 9/11 was the defining moment for this generation. Are places of higher education not the place to talk about this defining moment? Are we to believe everything that has been told to us by the government when they have lied to us in the past? Is not the purpose of higher education to promote the deep exploration of these defining moments? College is the perfect place to define this defining moment for what it is. To let the 9/11 commission and other government bodies define what these attacks meant takes the power of voice away from the people.

It has been said that Barrett is an embarrassment to the UW system. The problem with this is that Barrett does not represent the UW system. The administration and not the faculty officially represent the UW system. Professors are free to express their own ideas, beliefs, and ideologies. If a university were to hire professors based on an approved ideological rubric, higher education would cease to be. It is impossible to regulate free thought. After stringent review by UW-Madison, it was found that the introductory Islamic History course he teaches not only meets excellent standards and in some cases exceeds them. The intense pressure from the media has forced Barrett to keep his ducks in a row. His course, according to UW administrators, is beneficial to academic development students. This course does not require you to spend a great deal of time on 9/11. The small component of the course that does deal with it does not require a stand on either side of the issue. His course is not exclusive to the 9/11 conspiracy, as many believe.

Before entering Reeve to attend the speech I ran into several people protesting Barrett’s presence on campus. This was well within their right and I applaud their voice. However, three protesters made a stand during Barrett’s speech. I knew it was going to be an intense night when I was asked three times if I had a ticket by staff working the event. There were also three police officers and several media cameras on hand. When Barrett began speaking three protesters stood up, turned around, and were a distraction to the speech. The police promptly escorted out, these people without incident. I knew one was going to do something beforehand because I spotted the tinfoil under his hat. The action, however, did not phase Barrett one bit. He kept on speaking without interruption. I gather he’s had experience with this before. It is my impression that most people who protest Barrett do so based on what others have said about him. They jump on the bandwagon because it is easier than critically analyzing the claims. These people missed a fantastic opportunity to actually get the facts straight from the horse’s mouth.

Before leaving I had the opportunity to ask a question. I stated the observation that there were people who dismissed him out of hand and did not attend. I asked what he thought these people had to gain by not entertaining the government conspiracy side of the 9/11 debates. His answer was very poignant. In many ways, Barrett said, the events of 9/11 have become sacred mythology. It is heretical to question the finite details of such mythologies. Doing so constitutes a violation of the memories of the people who were killed and undermines the justifications for everything that has since happened. Without 9/11 there would be no Patriot Act, NSA wiretapping, Department of Homeland Security, justification for war in Iraq, sanctioned torture, the suspension of habeas corpus, and whatever else lies ahead. This puts the current administration at an almost inconceivable disadvantage when trying to gain public support if proven to be true.

One note before I wrap up my opinions. Critics of Barrett state that he compares George W. Bush to Adolf Hitler. As a student of German I listened very carefully when Barrett mentioned the Nazis. For clarification, Barrett compares the events of the Reichstag Fire in 1933 to the events of 9/11. The Reichstag was set ablaze a month after Adolf Hitler was named Chancellor of Germany. The Nazis by themselves were not a majority party in 1933. To win the support of the populace and control of the government the Nazis torched the government building. The public was outraged and the Nazis used the fire as an excuse to round up undesireables, communists, and other anti-Nazi supporters. Remember, the Nazis were an extremely conservative party. The connection here is that the government of the people and political right used conspiracy to win support for their deplorable actions. Not once did Barrett state: “George W. Bush is Adolf Hitler.”

I attended this speech because, admittedly, I did not know very much about the conspiracy. In many ways, I was disappointed by Barrett. In my head I imagined a vociferous conspiracy loon preaching fire and brimstone at a pulpit. Instead, I listened to the substantiated claims of a casual and worldly professor who promoted critical thinking. After five years of listening to the government and media’s position, I decided to balance out the equation. When making an informed decision it is best to know both sides of the issue. It is common sense to study the opposite side, to question their assertions, in order to formulate a valid counterargument. To put it into dogmatic terms “know thine enemy.” So what is my take on the events of 9/11? There is so much information out there to decipher. Some of it is true and some of it is, unfortunately, false. It isn’t important for me to justify them to you. I’m content with my own pursuit of truth. I hope you find personal truth. Ask questions.

Loyola Recap

Good news folks. UW-Oshkosh did very well at the Loyola Academic Debate this weekend. In the Open Division Matt and Tim took first place. In the novice division my partner Christopher and I took second place. This is a considerable improvement over the last debate tournament at Northern Illinois University where we did not win a single round. Not bad of an improvement for only two weeks time. Second place wasn’t the only thing I won on the trip though. I won $50 on a lottery ticket on the way home.
You can find some of the pictures taken on the trip at my flickr.com set.

Loyola Here We Come

If you are reading this I’m on my way to Loyola University in Chicago for three days. I am part of the UW – Oshkosh Debate Team for a class. The last debate at NIU in Dekalb did not go so well. My partner Christopher and I only won one debate out of six. We only won because the other team did not show up. Hopefully, this time around, our results will be better. Debate though is something that I, admittedly, am not yet good at. You have very little time to craft a logical argument against the other side. My brand of rhetoric is more calculated, slow, and exacting. If only this was a competition of sarcastic wit.

Expect fun Flickr photos when I get back because we are headed into Chicago after the rounds.

Master Becomes the Apprentice

Today I had a rather unique experience as a professor whom I respect very much asked me how to download videos from youtube.com. He knew that there was ‘some trick’ to doing it. He wanted to know because he can find content there that relates to course content. Streaming this content has a distinct disadvantage in that once the youtube.com user deletes the video from his collection, it is no longer available for reference. I basically drew up a simple two step rundown on how to download and convert the video to a format more palatable. Despite the legal grey area youtube.com wallows in regards to copyrighted content, I figure it is okay to offer this advice. Under the Fair Use doctrine in copyright law using copyrighted material in an academic setting is 100% legal. I hope I have contributed to someone else’s classroom learning experience.

Deutschland, Deutschland ?ber alles

My study abroad plans have changed slightly. I have narrowed my choices down to two universities. One is the Johann Wolfgang von Goethe Universit?t in Frankfurt and the other is the Philipps-Universit?t Marburg. Frankfurt is the central transportation hub of Europe and a bustling metropolis. Marburg is a explicitly labeled an Universit?tstadt (college city) and remains in touch with its old world style. After much deliberation and shining recommendations from two professors I really respect, I wish that my application gets accepted for Marburg.

Ich habe Lust f?r Marburg, weil sie eine Kleinstadt ist. Ich bin der Meinung, dass sie am besten f?r mich ist. Ich freute mich zu finden, dass die Stadt sicher von allierten Bombardierungkampagnen des zweiten Weltkrieges am meistens war. Fast alle Frankfurt war zerst?rt und umgebaut. Die H?user sind in Marburg doch altmodisch und ich will sie fotografieren.

Education Technology – Part 1

The little green wagon chugged along the yellow stained monochrome green monitor with wood panel accents, making its way down the trail to Oregon. If your party of four managed to survive the trip you may have been able to leave your mark in one of the ten spots, assuming your score at least displaced #10. There was only one name that monopolized the screen displaying a thin spread of only 100 points from first to last. In the back of the 5th/6th grade classroom I was the undisputed king of the Apple ][‘s Oregon Trail.

This is my first real memory of utilizing a computer in the classroom for education purposes. Oregon Trail, under the guise of a videogame, taught important mathematical concepts and financial responsibility. Your character’s social status played an integral role in determing how much money for supplies was at your disposal. The banker, with a think wallet, could make it easily across the untamed wilderness with little point gain. The farmer, with an extremely tight budget, could not afford extra wheels, axles, or food. It was a matter of luck, stringent supply management, and wise feduciary decision making that allowed a farmer to successfully make the arduous trek. Not to mention a crack shot at the deer running by. If the farmer made it to Oregon the point return was huge. It got to the point where if I wanted to leave my name on the scoreboard everything had to go right. As soon as I lost an axle, didn’t have enough food, or someone died the Apple ][ was restarted.

Computers in classrooms today can render that wagon in three dimensions, utilizing tremendous numbers of CPU cycles to draw millions of triangles, pulling colors from a palette that only Crayola knows the names to. The idea is the same, but the aesthetic quality of presentation has changed.

My fascination with the technology wagon has been in sync with technology trends in the past 15 years. When I was in grade school the Apple ][ was at the end of its life as Microsoft 95 unleashed a world of multimedia possibilites. Apple had fallen on hard times in the 1990’s and its foothold in the classroom gave way. As a part-time salesman I laughed at Mac users who came into Software Etc. looking for a piece of software. I too touted the wonders of Windows throughout high school and into college until one catastrophic, years-worth-of-work-destroying, Windows Blue Screen of Death. Mac was making a comeback with OS X and the G4 processor. Apple’s prodigal son returned with a 17 inch flat panel 1 gigaherz multimedia monster. Four crash free ?ber productive years later the iMac is only now beginning to show its age. The eight year old G3 350 megahertz companion I bought for $25 is chugging along just as well serving full episodes of television shows via iTunes. The Mac is making a huge comeback here at the University of Wisconsin Oshkosh. This time I was ahead of the trend.

Writing in German is easier and more cost effective on a Mac than Windows. Support for the language is built right into the operating system at the very beginning. No special German version and no additional support drivers. Applications that would cost me hundreds of dollars if I were to purchase them for Windows have free counterparts for the Mac. OpenOffice, NeoOffice, Pro Voc, voice recognition, and a series of translators help me catch those critical errors in my communication skills. It is my hope that I will be able to incorporate this programs into my curriculum. The cost should definitely agree with any school district’s budget. I’ve been able to create reports, presentations, and multimedia projects that ensnare the imagination rather than “tag and release” like my Windows using companions.

Today’s tech is no longer embodied by the overweight, dungeon dwelling, lives with mother, sustained by Cheetos, pale-skinned virgin. Today’s tech is ubiquitous to the current high school generation regardless of social stratus. To them there has always been an internet and cell phones. Understanding the implications of these technologies and utilizing them in the classroom is a mandatory skill for today’s education professional. Our goal is getting kids on that wagon.

Tutoring Second Grade

Now if only the sequels to Oregon Trail were just as fun as the original.

Editor’s note: This post fulfills a requirement for Instructional Technology 325 under the Technology Blog assignment. This is the first of four entries. If it is good enough to hand in it is good enough for public consumption.

K?rperwelten

Once a semester I try to get out of Oshkosh and make a mini road trip. I think I’ve found what I want to do. The Science Museum of Minnesota is hosting Gunther von Hagens exhibit “Body Worlds.” This contraversial German doctor from the former Deutsche Demokratische Republik perfected plastination for education purposes. He discovered, however, that his life’s calling for creating medical specimens held the macabre interest of the common man. With donated corpses preserved, flayed, and masterfully posed Body Worlds creator Gunther von Hagens has created one of the most intruiging and contraversial modern art exhibitions. If you are interested in this experience please contact me through the comments.

[edit:] You can view a public autopsy that Herr Doktor von Hagens conducted by clicking here.