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Sheen Rajmaira (CSUCI) 2015-07-29 00:04:33

unicorn

An Intro to Cooks Natural History

Today we were fortunate to be able to hang out with the great Gerald McCormick.  Our group was too big to fit into his office, so we set-up shop on the patio of Trader Jacks.  Gerald ran through his history with the Cooks, discussed black rat (Rattus rattus) and Mynah Bird eradication projects, the downsides […]

Off to London!!

Los Angeles, USA 4:00 PM PST

Hello CI and friends! My name is Lisa Marie and I am a senior majoring in Political Science and Communication. I will be graduating this December and I feel so lucky to have been chosen for this opportunity to travel abroad before I leave CI! It will be such a unique experience being in a different country and being able to talk to the locals. This will be the first time using my new “adult” passport and I think a Heathrow stamp is the perfect first addition to my passport pages. As I write this I am waiting at LAX in front of our gate and excited to board. It will be a 10 hour direct flight from LAX to London Heathrow airport. Today is Monday July 27th and we arrive in London at noon Tuesday the 28th. Walking around in our terminal I can already hear native British accents and a few families speaking French around me. Just sitting at the airport gives one the chance to observe intercultural interaction; something that I have learned about in several Communication classes at CI. When I arrive in London I am most looking forward to the amazing shopping. I have done my research on all of the great shops in London and cannot wait to visit places like Harrods and Oxford Street. Of course, I will be updating everyone back home on much more than shopping! For my next blog post I will be writing from London, England. Get pumped!

London Excursion

To start off I am so excited for this trip and im ready to go site see and make the most of this experience. I have been waiting for an opportunity like this nearly all of my life and can’t wait to share it wih individuals who over the past few weeks have gotten to know in class and through group messages, testing out whatsapp. One   of the more exciting parts of this trip will definitely be going to Oxford and seeing one of the oldest English speaking universities in the world. It’s about an hour before our plane departs and I am looking forward to this excursion we all are about to experience together. This is the beginning of many traveling experiences for me and one thing im definitely hoping to do while I’m there is to visit the memorial and burial spot of author JRR Tolkien who was a famous British author. Well I’m about ready to head out and im so excited for this trip to begin. By the way be sure to keep an eye out for one of the posts of the most historic building, at least I think what is the most historic building in London because it hold so much history. The building was built in 1099 and it is the Westminster Anbey which by the way holds the coronations, funerals, serves as a memorial, and wedding spot for all of the Monarchs and those who are in the royal blood line. Keep an eye out for the many pictures and posts to come!  

 

Safe in the Cooks!

We’ve landed safely, the students have had their first quick snorkel, and we’ve just let them off to go explore the BCI Trade Days for a few hours in Avarua (on Rarotonga).                  

THE PLAN – London July 27 – August 3 // Amsterdam August 3 – August 10

July 27, 2015 – 6 hours prior to departure.
  
Hello friends and family,

I’m going to Europe for the next two weeks and I created this blog so that I could share my experiences with the world. If you don’t already know, I’ll be going to London with California State University Channel Islands (the school I just graduated from) from July 27th to August 3rd, then Amsterdam from August 3rd through the 10th. While in London, 15 students and I will be studying British architecture, intercultural communication, and going on tons of guided tours. Some of our main points of interest include:

Wednesday: Parliament, Big Ben, Westminster Abbey, Buckingham Palace, & The London Eye
Thursday: The Tower of London, The Shard, & Borough Market
Friday: Natural History Museum & Hyde Park
Saturday: Stonehenge, Windsor Castle, & Oxford University [and Fabric Nightclub]
Sunday: St. Paul’s Cathedral & Trafalgar Square
Monday: Pack up and head to Amsterdam

As my colleagues prepare to head back to the states, I’ll be hopping on a plane headed for Amsterdam. My mother was born in this wonderful little city, and we have lot’s of friends in The Netherlands (or as we call it, Holland), so I extended my stay in Europe so I could spend some time with them. As you might guess, the Dutch portion of my trip is a little less organized, but this is my tentative plan:

Monday/Tuesday: I land in Amsterdam Monday afternoon. My cousin, Bryce is picking me up from the airport, so I’ll hang out with him and his parents (his mom is one of my mom’s best friends) for a day or two. They live in a suburb of Amsterdam, about 20 minutes out.
Wednesday: Wednesday at some point I hope to head to my cousin Donny’s house, just outside of Amsterdam. He used to be deep into the nightlife scene in the city, so I’m hoping we can hit the town together. Donny is a successful hairdresser who has cut several famous DJ’s hair including Tiesto’s!
Thursday: I plan on spending the entire day Thursday in Amsterdam, visiting museums, etc.; perhaps with Donny if he’s free.
Friday/Saturday/Sunday: As the weekend approaches I will migrate to a family-friend, Mitchell’s house. Mitchell is my age and is in a similar scene as I am in Hollywood. He is going to show me the underground electronic music scene in Amsterdam. I’m really looking forward to this. If possible, we might even be able to find a festival we can attend.
Monday: I’ll stay with Mitchell for the remainder of the trip and head back to the US on Monday morning.

The last time I was in Europe I was only 15 years old, so I’m really excited to go on this adventure for the first time as an adult. I’m also really excited for the guided tours in London since I would probably never organize these type of activities into my own trips. I can’t wait to touch down in London and start exploring!

Thanks for reading!

Taylor

5 Ways to Support Faculty who Teach with Emerging Technologies

“We must support both sides of the chasm.” –Phil Hill

As online and blended learning reshapes the landscape of teaching and learning in higher education, the need to encourage and support faculty to move from delivering passive, teacher-centered experiences to designing active, student-centered learning increases.  Our new social era is rich with simple, free to low-cost emerging technologies that are increasing experimentation and discovery in the scholarship of teaching and learning. While the literature about Web 2.0 tools are impacting teaching and learning is increasing, there is a lack of knowledge about how the adoption of these technologies is impacting the support needs of higher education faculty. This knowledge is essential to develop new, sustainable faculty support solutions.

Driven by my own experiences as a full-time and part-time faculty and early adopter of VoiceThread — a Web 2.0 tool that fosters asynchronous voice, video, and text conversations around media — I designed my dissertation research study to investigate the how the use of Web 2.0 tools is impacting the support needs of higher education faculty. I performed this action research study in collaboration with the VoiceThread organization with the purpose of improving the support needs of their higher education users.

The study’s sample included 50 higher education faculty members, comprised of a mix of part-time and full-time faculty from 2-year and 4-year institutions in the United States with a VoiceThread account (free, an individual Higher Ed account, or a site license). The interview and reflection data revealed unique support needs of faculty who teach with emerging technologies, a growing demographic. These include:

  1. Just-in-time resources. Faculty support programs comprised of face-to-face workshops and consultations will not meet the needs of faculty. The issues underlying this finding are related to the significant changes in the demographics of faculty. Today, most classes are taught by part-time faculty and many of these individuals also have a full-time job and teach at multiple institutions. Online resources that can be accessed from anywhere at anytime from multiple devices are essential to supporting innovations in teaching and learning.
  2. Non-linear PD experiences. Faculty who adopt new technologies desire non-linear professional development experiences to support the integration of technology into their classes. Faculty noted that accessing an eBook to learn new strategies to teach with VoiceThread was “less risky” than spending the time in a workshop, as the eBook provided non-linear pathways, allowing a faculty member to engage with the topics that align best with her/his needs.
  3. Community. The adoption of emerging technologies by faculty is resulting in pockets of innovation on campus. As a result, faculty who integrate emerging technologies into their teaching feel isolated from their peers. Professional learning networks designed to connect faculty and promote sharing of practices and ideas will be key to supporting faculty. Social technologies like Twitter, Hangouts on Air, and Google+ Communities will continue to play important roles in connecting faculty innovators across campuses.
  4. Funding for accounts. The freemium model employed by most edtech companies provides faculty with a low-barrier entrance and encourages experimentation. However, as the adoption cycle for Web 2.0 tools matures, many faculty are finding themselves paying out of pocket for the premium version(s) of their tool(s) of choice. While will need to consider new funding approaches for supporting faculty within these pockets of innovation. 
  5. LMS integration. Learning Management Systems (LMSs) remain the most pervasively used technology in higher education. Learning Technologies Interoperability (LTI) is an industry standard that provides a simple way for web-based technologies to integrate with major LMSs. offering streamlined teaching experiences that may eliminate the need for students to create accounts and provide the ability to grade the activity inside the LMS. Faculty see LTI integration as an opportunity to save them time and promote more adoption across campus. However, faculty have the perception that administration want to see strong adoption rates prior to considering an LMS integration. This tension is evidence that faculty use of web-based tools is reshaping the teaching and learning landscape.

Faculty support must be understood as a dynamic process that needs to adapt to the changing needs of instructors. Colleges, universities, and edtech companies exist within a new edtech ecosystem. Organizations within this ecosystem have a shared interest in supporting faculty who teach with emerging technologies.  In my next post, I will discuss the potential that co-created faculty support resources hold for providing continuous support for faculty, as well as empowering instructors to be leaders in teaching and learning innovations. 

The very early morning of! 

Oh my goodness, I feel like a kid on Christmas Eve! (To quote Adriana ;).  With all of my TSA  approved carry on bottles, jeans, all the Beatles shirts I own, and some Belvita breakfast bars I think I finally finished packing. 

I cannot believe that by this time tomorrow we will be in London, England.  A city crawling with history and beauty!  I’m most excited to see all of the building’s Dr. J has been teaching us about.  Seeing them in person and truly appreciating the architectural genius behind them.  Especially that of Stonehenge, The Shard, and the Gherkin.  I’m also so excited for the culture of London.  Of course I’m looking forward to all the touristy things in London, how could you not be? Having taken a Shakespeare class at CI I am bursting at the seams to get to Shakespeare’s Globe Theatre and actually see a play!  I want to go to Platform 9 3/4 from Harry Potter and of course, Abbey Road.  

I am so thankful for this opportunity. 

Ready to fly

Everyone is at gate 132 waiting on this here jet plane.              

Smooth Sailing From Here

July 26, 2015 At home in California
Getting ready to go on this trip has been quite the experience for me considering the furthest I have traveled is to Davis and it was only for a weekend. Prior to leaving I made sure to do my research even if that meant being a little nerdy and stocking up on books. Determined to make the most of my trip, I bought books on what the “must sees” in London were and bought enough maps to ensure I never get lost (although I know I probably will still get lost). 

 

I think the most challenging part of the process though, was the packing. Keep in mind, I have never been away for a week let alone in another country! It seems that London has what we in California call “spring weather” so that meant packing a lot of layers. Being a California native, I’m embarrassingly used to the stereotypical jeans, t-shirt and sandals. Layers is something I hardly ever have to worry about. That being said, it was definitely interesting trying to sort through the list of “needs” and “wants”.

  

After a little help and several mini panic attacks, I was all done with the getting ready process and find myself beyond excited for the upcoming week. I cannot wait to emerge myself into a new culture and compare the normalities of their every day life to ours. At this point everything I know about Lonodon has been from books and while it’s useful information I am thrilled to finally get to experience some of it personally.  I am even more excited to experience the architecture that London has to offer. Doing my report on the London Eye and researching the Borough Market has only made me more anxious to visit these places especially the market. I am a big foodie and look forward to everything it has to offer! My only reservation is that I wish I was going for more than a week! Regardless, I am certain that I will not be disappointed in the time that I do spend there.