The Long Weekend

Just got back from the first public showing of The Long Weekend, a short film by our own Tunxis English professor Patrice Hamilton. It was a fantastic party, with music, food, a big crowd, and an excellent set of introductions and presentations. The more I watch the film the more I like it.

Congratulations Patrice!

Poverty and Facade

Here’s a possibility brought to the front by Anne. This time Trip leaves. Poor Anne. All she wanted was some good drink and to catch up on old times.

TRIP
I’m — I’m just… af — afraid of… of being poor.

GRACE
Poor? Trip, we have so much! What do you —

ANNE
why

TRIP
It never feels like enough!

TRIP
As a kid… it — it was… My family was always on the edge.

GRACE
So you weren’t rich, but —

TRIP
We even spent six months in a shelter once.

GRACE
Oh my God…!

ANNE
wow

TRIP
All of this stuff…

TRIP
Is a kind of protection from that ever happening again.

TRIP
uhh…

GRACE
uhh…

GRACE
Oh my God…!

TRIP
Wait, Anne, Grace, there’s more…

(ANNE comforts trip.)

GRACE
More?

ANNE
more

TRIP
Grace…

TRIP
uhh…

TRIP
See… I’m… ashamed of my parents.

GRACE
What!? Your parents are great.

ANNE
ashamed

GRACE
I love seeing them…

TRIP
I know, I know. But compared to yours… they’re so … ignorant.

ANNE
why

GRACE
But they’re real. I hate how my parents are pretending to be something —

ANNE
why

TRIP
I’ve tried hard to be like your family —

GRACE
Trip… really? … I don’t —

TRIP
But I feel like a phony. I feel like I can never get rid of my past.

ANNE
why

TRIP
It’s kind of like I don’t know who I am anymore.

TRIP
uhh…

GRACE
uhh…

GRACE
Oh my God…!

GRACE
Anne, I, uhh…

GRACE
This changes everything…

TRIP
Yes, it does change everything.

ANNE
you love each other

TRIP
I think it’s over.

GRACE
Trip, what —

TRIP
No!!

ANNE
why

TRIP
It’s over, Grace, can’t you see that?

GRACE
Wha… You just told me —

ANNE
no

TRIP
I just told you something about us I should have said a long time ago:

TRIP
You think I’m phony for hating my parents, and wishing they were like yours.

More on Façade

There have been further, and very interesting developments with Facade. Susan Gibb at Spinning is showing that she’s much more dexterous with the work than I. She’s been able to find other means of helping to resolve Trip and Grace’s dilemma.

What to do with the results

My good friend Professor Christina Gotowka emailed me an article by Jeffrey Young from the Chronicle of Higher Education on the results of a survey conducted recently by U of Illinois professor Steve Jones. The article is titled “Professors Give Mixed Reviews of Internet’s Educational Impact.” It’s that kind of a summary article that sort of wants you to go after the original survey (or is it a study?) to get at the real meat. Here’s a snip from the piece:

Browsing library stacks could soon be seen as old-fashioned. Most of the professors surveyed, 83 percent, said they spent less time in the library now than they did before they had Internet access. But professors said that online journals, e-mail lists, and other Internet tools had become critical for keeping up with news and research in their disciplines. Ninety-four percent said they allowed their students to cite Internet sources in their papers.

Sixteen percent of the professors who responded said they had taught at least one online-only course. Of those who had taught online, 43 percent said they thought such courses took more preparation than did face-to-face courses.

Mr. Jones said that the survey suggested differences in technology’s effects on different disciplines, though he said he would like to examine that issue more closely in a future study. “We need to be much more precise at how we deploy” technology tools, he said.

He suggested that college technology leaders offer discipline-specific workshops on how to teach with technology, rather than general workshops for all disciplines. “I think we have some real need for that sort of specificity when it comes to getting technology out there for teaching,” he said.

While the original survey may make lots of sense, Young’s persistent use of terms such as Internet and technology and his selection of quotes don’t serve to illuminate anything of substance. What “technology,” what of the numerous aspects of the Internet are we dealing with here? Students and professors are now using the “Internet” to do lots of school stuff, like “communicate.” Huh? As far as I know, arXiv is alive and cooking with real hardwood charcoal.

Jones’ issue of discipline-specific teaching workshops is something that I would suggest only as a means of helping different disciples understand each other. By the way, what does “getting technology out there for teaching” mean? Out where?

I think that people still misunderstand the nature of teaching tools. There’s a sense that learning and teaching will improve, an idea I’ve never understood. Now that we have the Internet (whatever that means?), the world will just smell better and all the poor folk will have bread to eat. I don’t think that’s the point. If you begin teaching with say PowerPoint, learning changes and people “may” learn new things about sea travel in different ways than they did before.

“Educational impact” can mean lots of things and it can pertain to chalk and blackboards, which are technologies. Does a Flash presentation help people retain the information better than a lecture? Is a lecture still better when you’re also trying to teach people to listen? A forum discussion may be a piece of the larger pie of a course on literature. But we still have to see that one piece in the context of the larger dynamic of the learning process. And a good piece of chalk is still a part of that.

Taking stands

I’m with the ones who have a sense of humor

In conclusion, thank you for taking the time to hear our views and beliefs. I hope I was able to convey the importance of teaching this theory to your students. We will of course be able to train the teachers in this alternate theory. I am eagerly awaiting your response, and hope dearly that no legal action will need to be taken. I think we can all look forward to the time when these three theories are given equal time in our science classrooms across the country, and eventually the world; One third time for Intelligent Design, one third time for Flying Spaghetti Monsterism, and one third time for logical conjecture based on overwhelming observable evidence.

From Bobby Henderson via Bad Astronomy.

Deeper into Facade

I’ve probed deeper into Trip and Gace and have generated further stageplays. The last few times I tried to take on more of a persona, such as the lonely Nicole, who wants to revive a relationship with Trip they experienced so long ago, and that Nicole who wants to leave the apartment and take a walk.

But I keep coming up against this:

GRACE
Nicole, I’ve actually been paying close attention to what you’ve been saying tonight.

GRACE
You’ve really been pushing me.

GRACE
It makes me wonder if you’re really my friend…?

TRIP
Grace!

GRACE
Nicole, I’ve got to ask you — yes or no…

GRACE
Do you really think that…

GRACE
praising me…

GRACE
praising Trip…

GRACE
telling me to make art…

GRACE
and what you said about listening too much to your spouse…

GRACE
that it’s all supposed to make me realize something about myself?

These are responses to a Nicole who has come to the apartment with light-hearted responses and lots of questions. But Grace has not been “paying close attention.” And there’s not much else I want to do.

I’d love to hear about more experiences with Grace and Trip.