Minor in Red Tape

From my friend Christopher Coonce-Ewing

First the fact that we pay full tuition to teach irks me a bit. But then, because it’s only nine credits we have to get a special form filled out, signed by the Dean of Education and bring it to the Registrar that tells them to accept the total of 10 credits as full time. Given that I earn 3 credits for spending 2 hours and 40 minutes a week on campus for 15 weeks, would it really kill them to change student teaching to 11 credits for the 40 or so hours a week I’ll be in the school for 13 weeks? This is just another example of the hoops that we need
to jump through. There are times when I think I should graduate with a BS Ed Secondary History and a minor in Red Tape Navigation.

Ned Lamont

S, S, K and I went for a visit with Ned Lamont in Simsbury yesterday. It was an interesting evening at the public library and, I guess, a typical political gathering of local democrats, Lamont supporters, and opposers of Joe Lieberman. What I found interesting about the gathering was the sense of uncertainty and hope in the crowd and that people’s questions reflected the typical disconnect between the world as reported and the world that people experience first hand. One we know, the other is beyond understanding.

Some asked about nuclear proliferation (I think we have no capacity to treaty with anyone anymore and find the whole business naive); Kyoto (the damage has been done and the answer is in mass-scale smart energy and people-oriented development–good luck since heavy energy is still the future); and the war (another case of neglect); immigration (I’m from El Paso and really don’t get why people are so angry about this). Lamont provided sensible and idealistic answers, including some refreshing “I don’t knows.” I don’t know what to say beyond this.

From Neha Bawa

A message from Neha Bawa on the future

And guess who got accepted? Yup. Me. This kid right here. I’m off to my
deluxe apartment in the sky. Well almost. Just to let y’all know, I’ve
been accepted to the M.F.A in Creative Writing and Publishing Arts
program at the University of Baltimore, much to my delight, because
now, I have a plan! I know what I’m going to do after a B.A. in
English! I may be starving, ruining my credit because of unpaid bills,
wearing clothes that were “in” fifty years ago, but I’ll be in grad
school, darn it, and I’m going to love every minute of it!

Diane Greco in Fence

Diane Greco’s story “Alberto, A Case History,” a Summer Seminar contest winner, is in the Winter/Spring 2006 issue of Fence. I met Diane at a conference way back when and we’ve stayed in touch ever since. She’s a tremendous person all the way around. So grab a copy of Fence and enjoy.

William Sloane Coffin

I am a great fan of William Sloan Coffin, whose death is written about here. As to the piece in the Hartford Courant itself, here are some interesting interpage connections.

“You know the axis of evil is not Iraq, Iran and North Korea,” he told an audience at Yale in 2002. “It is environmental degradation, pandemic poverty and a world awash in arms.”

He had an interesting perspective on causes. Then we have another front page article with this in its content

The U.N. nuclear watchdog agency already knew that Iran was capable of, and had done, some enrichment on a smaller scale than that announced Tuesday, said Anthony Cordesman, a military expert at the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington.

It’s the “world awash in arms” part from Coffin that touches a cord. It’s not just Iran.

Grades and Rankings

I had a wonderful conversation with students in Brit Lit after returning an exam on the Victorians. The discussion focused on outcomes, grades, and plans to expand outcomes-based learning across the curriculum at Sixnut U. This semester, in a few select courses, I’ve avoided discussion of grades, while in others I’ve been giving them out in the usual way. Accompanying the former method are lists of outcomes and their breakdowns into descriptions that focus attention of the abilities I’m attempting to engage in the course, namely historical and literary analysis, technical reading, and communication, fundamental building blocks that will come in handy for future teachers, English majors, and other people pursuing the Liberal Arts. The evaluation of student work is on

1. What people know
2. What people can do
3. What they can apply

all in a sustained and intensive 15 weeks, minus holidays. If elements are not being expressed or applied in work and discussion, then explanatory notes, margin comments, adjustments to discussion, and one-to-one talks provide suggestions for study, reflection, and other opportunities to explore and demonstrate learning.

This abilities approach is a method of sustaining a learning environment that demotes rote and lecture instruction and promotes extended discourse on the “stuff” we learn and make, from equations to comics to tunes to bridges to plastics.

I’ve written about grades here and here, with many more posts on the subject deeper back in the archive and in other contexts, such as learning spaces. My problem with the tradition of grades is not that they are rankings based on performance. Rankings are important place makers. The derivation typically points back to place in definition: in line, in society, in a competative context. We’re a society of rankers. Some things need ranking for convenience and all ranks have their context. The problem is with their confusing use and scale in high stakes environments.

The grade as a rank based on performance places one into position. It doesn’t inform what to do next, and what to do next often takes a lot of energy and reflection. What an A is vs an A- is interesting guess work, but depite this, someone made my jeep in such a way that it works, and we’ve all heard the jokes about brain surgeons with C avergaes.

A grade does not necessarily imply progression or continuum: its a place, after all. Grades are necessary institutional statistics and convenient “moveable” information, but these days in education the grade has become an “end.” Ranks are ends–a higher rank is a desired end in the miltary. But in learning, the learning and its consequences are the end (hopefully the consequences can be excellence in diplomacy, better tools, and design). Job postings, likewise, ask for tangibles, not grades. This is why portfolios matter. They don’t demonstrate a grade. The point is not slender or benign as those struggling with NCLB, standardized tests, and college entrance are finding out and already know. The students I speak to get this quite clearly. They understand the outcomes approach, but they still want to know what transfer institutions will see on a transcript. Fair enough.

More problematic and complex is scale. Even top students hit college with false expectations based on scales and even highschools that profess outcomes-based learning do strange things in their evaluations, such as informing students of grades without explaining what they mean, other than higher is what we want, and disencouraging applications of learning that promote meaningful performance. One “end” of solid education is this–the habit of independent learning. Worries about rank and what rank means in comparison to the past and to other standards simply gets in the way of the content and the practice, all of which matter. And that’s just the top rank student issue.

Numerous kinds of people come to college: dropouts, people who put college off, people looking for other ways of earning a living or just living, people with children, people who want to contribute in other ways, people who find an area interesting and want to pursue it, people looking for themselves and for what they may do well, people looking for a way forward, people just unsure what else to do with themselves. Most students, despite the claims of Alfie Kohn, have a false impression of the meaning of a grade since a grade (inflated performance measurement) does not express the complex abilities that people typically carry with them and often hyperexpress the abilities people acually possess. I remember Neha Bawa and Susan Gibb not really worrying about grades; they worried about the material and their relationship to it. Both these “students” are highly successful. Indeed, my most successful students never wondered about their grades; they obsessed over the extent of thier grasp of material. The students I worry about most obsess over their rank.

None of this means that grades are by nature false or corrupt. If accompanied by systematic reflection and exposition and discursive evaluation, grades do just fine. But when pedagogy, curricula, and human identities adjust to them, then we have a common complaint: “I got As all through highschool. What do you mean I got a D.”

“What do you mean what do I mean” is the response.

A focus on abilities calls for a different kind of discourse between those involved in learning and that’s more to the point: constant talk about Blake or Borges or Cantor’s infiniy of infinities is much better conversation than “Could you change my C- to a C+” for whatever reason. Sure, how about a B+, now demonstrate your understanding of isomorphism in both set theory and Victorian poetry, please.

Intentions

I like the idea behind this from Doc Searls

The Intention Economy is about markets, not marketing. You don’t need marketing to make Intention Markets.

The Intention Economy is built around truly open markets, not a collection of silos. In The Intention Economy, customers don’t have to fly from silo to silo, like a bees from flower to flower, collecting deal info (and unavoidable hype) like so much pollen. In The Intention Economy, the buyer notifies the market of the intent to buy, and sellers compete for the buyer’s purchase. Simple as that.

The Intention Economy is built around more than transactions. Conversations matter. So do relationships. So do reputation, authority and respect. Those virtues, however, are earned by sellers (as well as buyers) and not just “branded” by sellers on the minds of buyers like the symbols of ranchers burned on the hides of cattle.

The Intention Economy is about buyers finding sellers, not sellers finding (or “capturing”) buyers.

Thanks to Hugh Nicoll for the link.

It’s one of those “should be” ideas that Amazon approximates. Let’s say I’m in the market for a miter saw, which I am, and I want to engage the intention. In almost all cases I don’t need to be sought out for stuff–because there are some items that I want to purchase for specific things and I typically don’t want or need anything else. I’d type my complicated request into an engine and I’d receive offers from Dewalt, Porter-Cable, and Hitachi.

Those things that I don’t want or need need not be addressed.

Networks and Competition

I remember when my Dell router suddenly failed a few years back. In looking into the matter, I found that numerous other people were complaining about the rapid failure, too, on the forums. Neither Dell nor Comcast would claim responsibility. That’s why I use a Linksys router. It was just one of those things: an operable devise just quit working and yet another worked just fine in its place. I could replace the router; but I couldn’t replace the service provider. It’s not that easy to do. (Now I’m locked out of my course at home and the response from support is, “It’s your fault.” No it ain’t. Yes it is, you dumbass, Texas hick.)

So what to make of this article in The Hartford Courant informing about the demise of Gemini Networks, whose millions were supposedly meant to provide 200 customers telecom service in West Hartford.

Gemini’s demonstration project, a 200-mile network serving about 230 customers in West Hartford, will be shut down and mothballed by the end of the month.

Jophn Moran’s article provides the complaints by Gemini, but very little detail about the actual narrative–this is a piece about telecommunication industry competition, which, as I illustrate above, is a joke in this state and, I’d imagine, in others.

Moran provides an either or case: either Gemini followed the rules or AT&T stiffled them.

Meanwhile, he said, the state Department of Public Utility Control and state legislators did nothing to enforce the order that AT&T lease the network or otherwise foster competition in the telecommunications industry.

A spokesman for AT&T called Chase’s claims “ridiculous.” A spokeswoman for the state Department of Public Utility Control said the agency had no comment.

Chase said Gemini’s inability to expand by leasing AT&T’s inactive network or putting more lines on utility poles doomed the company, which could not operate profitably on the small network it initially built. Lack of competition means that prices will remain high, he said.

“Everyone complains about the high cost of doing business in Connecticut. Yet when branches of state government have an opportunity to create real change, they ignore it,” Chase said.

But John Emra, executive director of external affairs for AT&T Connecticut, said competition in the state remains strong, despite Gemini’s departure.

You tell ’em John. Set us all straight. Tell me where to go when Comcast turns down the water pressure. At the bottom of the article, we have this

The DPUC ultimately ordered SBC [now AT&T] to permit Gemini to lease the network, but SBC appealed and no lease deal has ever been executed.

Typically, competition in any thing can be gauged by a balance of opposing forces. Team A can compete with team B if they are in the same league. How does one compete with AT&T? Yet, what’s the outcome of providing 250 units in West Hartford? On another note, how would someone compete with Comcast? Is inexpensive 56k operability competition? I’d love to see how a small firm would provide data, with what, and on whose backbone. What is Vonage competing with? Deregulation was supposed to, grinningly, promote competetion. It did not. Most users sit in a faily complex space of technology and service provision that amounts to Kafka’s castle.

Housecleaning

So, after many years of things “not functioning properly,” S brought home a Dyson. We’ve gone through about two vacuum cleaners in the last six or so years, which is pretty silly. We realized pretty quick, however, that this thing isn’t for the casual user and gives new meaning to the word suction and complex home care.

Logins

For those of you wondering, I’ve been unable to login to WebCT Vista from home. I’m not ignoring you, but I’m wondering if you’re having the same problem.