Chapter 3-Stress, good? wtf.

Just some food for thought

 I can’t tell you how much this didn’t make sense at first. I had to watch it over. But this woman makes such a good point. Throughout all of this anxiety and stress this past year I always thought that it was a bad thing I need to rid my body of. Understanding that it is a part of life makes things slightly easier, for me anyway. She mentions how the belief alone of stress makes the chances of dying (for those who are obviously older and need to pay attention to these things) 43%! I am a firm believer that your thinking affects your actions. If you continue to have negative thoughts and surround yourself with worry some thoughts the more you will worry and choose to make decisions out of fear instead of actually living your life.

Typography

Check out these great websites for fun typefaces. Typography is trending!

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FIT Studio Sign-In 2.0

Believe it or not the seventh week of the semester is already here and the FIT Studio is buzzing with activity. As most of you know the studio opened just before  the Fall 2014 semester. During the first semester there were over 275 visits from faculty, staff, and guests. In 2015, there have been over 130 total […]

Microsoft Research: Data Science Summer School

To learn more about DS3: http://bit.ly/1olKUlV
Applications Deadline: April 17, 2015

Apply for the Microsoft Research Data Science Summer School in NYC.
“The Data Science Summer School (DS3) is an intensive, eight-week hands-on introduction to data science for undergraduate students in the New York City area. As we are committed to increasing diversity in computer science, we strongly encourage women, minorities, and individuals with disabilities to apply.

Each student receives a $5,000 stipend for participating in the program, as well as a laptop.
DS3 includes both course work in data science and group research projects. The summer school is taught by leading scientists at Microsoft Research, and is held at the new Microsoft Research office in the heart of New York City.

Updated willow map 3/2/15

Completion of a preliminary map showing the distribution of Willow (Salix sp.) trees within Quemada Creek on Santa Rosa Island.

Data was gathered south of geomorphic cross-section 10 (map coming soon). Our total count was 38 individuals as of Nov. 2014.

Framework for How to Read and Critique a Research Study/Article

Critiquing the research article

  1. Title – Does it accurately describe the article?
  2. Abstract – Is it representative of the article?
  3. Introduction – Does it make the purpose of the article clear?
  4. Statement of the problem – Is the problem properly introduced?
  5. Purpose of the study – Has the reason for conducting the research beenexplained?
  6. Research question(s) – Is/are the research question(s) clearly defined and if not, should they be?
  7. Theoretical framework – Is the theoretical framework described? If there isnot a theoretical framework, should there be?
  8. Literature review – Is the literature review relevant to the study,comprehensive, and include recent research? Does the literature review support the need for the study?
  9. Methods – Is the design appropriate for the study? Does the sample fit withthe research design and is the size sufficient? Was a data collection instrument needed? How were data collected? Were reliability and validity accounted for?
  10. Analysis – Is the analytical approach consistent with the study questions and research design?
  11. Results – Are the results presented clearly in the text, tables and figures? Are the statistics clearly explained?
  12. Discussion – Are the results explained in relationship to the theoretical framework, research questions, and the significance to nursing?
  13. Limitations – Are the limitations presented and their implications discussed?
  14. Conclusion – Are there recommendations for nursing practice, futureresearch, and policymakers?
  15. Decide if the study is applicable to your practice: Can you use the results and recommendations in your practice?

Prepared by Louise Kaplan, PhD, ARNP, FNP-BC, FAANP
Senior Policy Fellow, Department of Nursing Practice and Policy Louise.kaplan@ana.org

Day 3: A Reflection on Research Presentations

Twenty-six years ago–in April 1989–I attended and presented at my first professional conference. I was finishing my second year of graduate school. Much of my second year in graduate school was invested in working the project that I presented with my advisor, mentor, and friend Larry Dodd. In my first year at Colorado Larry was gracious to involve me in a project that he began a few years earlier looking at the presentational styles of state legislators in California and Indiana. The heart of the argument in the paper is that presentational style is influenced by the professionalization of the legislative institution, and the state’s political development.

Working on the project with Larry was a formative learning, and professional experience.

“Legislators’ Home Style in Traditional and  Modern Systems” was my first exposure to research. Sure, as an undergraduate I scoured the library for literature related to research projects assigned by professors. I even produced a 30 page research paper about political conflict in Northern Ireland during my senior year. Searching the secondary literature and synthesizing competing theoretical approaches is certainly part  of the research process; but these activities do not encompass the research process. Research, in my view, is about creating new knowledge, or new ways of understanding politics (in my case, the world you are studying in your case). Traditional undergraduate research does not achieve this goal.

Working with Larry I learned about data collection, data management, and data analysis. For the first time I used statistical tools in service to a project that really interested me, rather than using them to complete projects with “canned” data. For the first time I struggled with how to interpret statistical results in service of understanding a larger theoretical question. And I wrote. And wrote. And wrote.

In short, research allowed me (forced me?) to pull all the elements of my learning together. I learned at least as much doing research as I did reading research. Among the things I learned is that research is hard. It is full of stops and starts; more failures and dead ends than successes. It forced me to rethink many assumptions I made about myself, and about the political world. It simultaneously satisfied and stimulated my curiosity.

***

Larry Dodd is one of the world’s greatest mentors. His skill is as much in what he does not do and was he does do. He pressed me to produce my best work with his data, then stepped in to gently demonstrate how to write a (masterful) conference paper. Rather than insist on presenting or co-presenting, he left the job to me. Flying solo at my first conference taught me a series of valuable lessons.

It is your research. Chances are that you know the material better than anyone who is listening to your presentation. This means two things: 1) be confident, you are the expert; 2) explain your  research in sufficient detail that the audience can understand your research, even though they have never read your work.

Develop the ability to be self-critical. Know where the weaknesses are in your work. This will help you to anticipate the questions audience members are likely to ask; and be prepared with answers to anticipated questions. This exercise will help to strengthen your research as you incorporate responses into your written work, making it more difficult for reviewers to criticize you (though no matter how hard you work, you will still be subject to criticism).

Be prepared to talk about the applicability of your research. The most common question to be asked is how your research is important in an applied setting. If your research centers on “how many angels can dance on the head of a pin,” be ready to answer the question “who cares?” If you cannot answer that question, you may want to reconsider your research. If you cannot answer the question in front of an audience, you may experience considerable public discomfort.

Guide the audience through your research. For my first presentation (and for many that came after) we did not have the luxury of PowerPoint. Paper handouts were the technology of the day. Audience members became distracted by the material they were handed, and did not listen to the presentation. PowerPoint provides more control over the flow of information to the audience. Use it to your advantage.

  • Do not distract your audience with word-filled PowerPoint slides. Use bullet points to emphasize your talking points, but do not “script out” your talk on the slide and end up reading it to your audience. If they can read, why do they need you?
  • When it is appropriate, you can display an extended quote on a slide; but be sure you plan to read it. Human nature is such that the audience will be caught up reading the quote (thereby missing your explanation). Reading it, and explaining why it is there, will bring your audience back to the reality you are creating for them.
  • Do use PowerPoint slides to display pictures, figures, tables and graphs that are important to your presentation. A picture is worth a thousand words–that is true–but do not expect every person in the audience to understand your picture, figure, graph, or table. It is still your job to explain the display and relate it to your larger research project.
  • Engage with your PowerPoint slides. Point to important information. Your presentation and your slides should be completely, and physically integrated.
  • Use multi-media resources sparingly, if at all. Embedding video, relying on connections to the internet, and the like, is risky business. Failed technology can throw you off your game and, if your presentation revolves around the technology, your presentation may fail completely. Keep it simple, or make sure it is 100 percent guaranteed to work.

Over the years I have come to realize that there is not a fundamental difference between delivering a professional talk, and teaching a room full of undergraduates. In both cases we are striving to get people to understand something important to us. A professional presentation is a teaching exercise. Yes, you are usually presenting at a slightly higher intellectual level, and you can assume more foreknowledge of your topic, but not by much.

***

Like my first foray into research, presenting research is about developing a presentational style. Professionalism is paramount. Your written work, and your PowerPoint slides, should be properly formatted, and free of common spelling and syntax errors. Professional does not need to equate to being stuffy. Be excited and enthusiastic about your work. Avoid jargon and excessively baroque language; it is off-putting. If you are comfortable with it, try to employ humor–it is a great way to relieve any tension you have, or any tension in the room.  Finally, accept the fact that, from time to time, a presentation will fail. Failure is an opportunity to learn how to become a better presenter. Take the time to reflect on your presentations, both successful and unsuccessful, and learn from the experience.

This is a test post

blah blah

Sunday 11:30 am

Here is a new test post

Russell Advocatepic 03-31-13

I wonder how this works?

Promotions

Promotions

In the promotion of All of My Sons and Cat on a Hot Tin Roof, we have decided to go with advertising through Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter. These are very inexpensive ways spread the awareness of these two productions.

In each social media outlet we have decided to go on a different path but very similarly tied together.

FACEBOOK

Because we are under the impression that the demographic that we are shooting for are most familiar with Facebook, we will keep all of our newsletters, updates, news alerts, photos, and videos of what we are working on all on the Facebook page. We will have our Facebook page linked with our Instagram and Twitter page. This would be the most efficient way people stayed tuned with us.

TWITTER

We have already created the Twitter Fan Page, and because we are always so limited on characters per tweet, we will use subliminal text in each tweet to draw curiosity to the play.

We will use phrases like:

It would be smart to listen to Live 105.5 on Wednesday morning at 9AM” and that’s when we give away the free tickets that we mention earlier in the budget summary.

INSTAGRAM

We love Instagram because you can instantly upload photos onto the web at the click of a button. We thought that it would be a great idea for the fans to stay updated with the plays if they could see all the “behind the scenes” work in anticipation prior to the opening date of the play.