25 Nov, 2008

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Since this blog is feeling a little multiple-personality-syndromey, I’m starting a new blog over at wordpress called Chemistry Learning, where I will, from now on, put all my posts about teaching and environmental chemistry and education-related geek stuff. This blog (the one you’re reading now) will be more specifically a personal blog. I know, I don’t post often enough to have two blogs. But, I wanted to make the teaching posts more of a project, so that will hopefully pick up. In the meantime, I ported some representative posts from here to there, so that it isn’t empty. The header image is stock, and will hopefully change once I have a spare minute to think about graphic design.

The wild wild world of web!

 
 

25 Nov, 2008

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Wifey and I will be spending Thanksgiving in Poultney, VT this year! We’re hosting, and her dad and stepmother are coming out from Minnesota. I like cooking, so this should be fun (though, judging from last time we did this, the dishes will not be fun – we have no autoelectric dishwasher). I’m going to try something wild and crazy: brining the turkey (aka soaking it in salt water for a day). I refer to this culinary approach as “wild and crazy” because it is not mentioned anywhere in Minnesota’s great Betty Crocker cookbook. So, that says to me it must be, to some degree, not well established. We’ll see how it goes!

The menu will include, in addition to Turkey (not the country, capitalized because that’s his name), green bean casserole (wifey’s favorite), mashed potatoes boiled Rochester style (ie in saturated salt water) with caramelized shallots, apple rye stuffing (ala Real Simple), wild rice, cranberry sauce (congealing in the fridge right now), salad, and squash soup. Mmmmm. In the meantime, I have no food in the house I can eat. :)

Happy turkey holiday!

 
 

18 Nov, 2008

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I so want to try this. XMas present hint: plane tickets to Wales. And a Kayak.

(Via Ben’s googleshares)

 
 

18 Nov, 2008

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It’s been almost a month since my last post! What’s been going on lately? I voted for Barack Obama, and I won! At least, I feel like I won something. Voting in Poultney, Vermont was interesting. There are about 1000 people in this town, but the polling place was packed! It went quickly, though–the old ladies had it streamlined. And we were the first state to report our presidential results! Probably because there are so few people, it didn’t take long to count them all. Poultney is a nice town. We have a pub (pictured; not my photo), and a fancy 5-star restaurant. Wifey and I have tried both of them out, and both were good! We were most recently in the pub, which has a goofy long name something like “Back to Vermont, a Lovely Adventure in Lots of Beer and Casual Pub Fare.” But, it’s the only establishment in town, so everyone just calls it “the pub.” Despite the dilapidated exterior, it’s surprisingly warm and quiet inside, with lots of good beers on tap. Poultney also has a real grocery store, which is a rarity among the small towns of Vermont; and a source of pride and convenience.

Teaching is great. It’s lots of work, but rewarding. My Monday/Wednesday schedule right now is: Wake up at 4:30 am; Get to work before 6 am; hopefully have a decent lecture ready for 9:00 am (General Chemistry I); then finish up the lecture for noon (Analytical Chemistry); Panic for the rest of the day about what we’re doing on Friday in Analytical Chemistry Lab; try to take care of some kind of professional development or service task; go home and grade stuff; go to bed. But, Tuesdays, Thursdays and Fridays are much less stressful and more easy-going, so it’s alright. The students are really great. One of the other new professors described them with a really appropriate word, “earnest.” They are earnest–they work hard, and are really kind and honest, and they understand that going to college is a big deal.

More on those labs for Analytical Chemistry: I’m making them up as I go! I really want the course to be built on what the pedagogy-savvy folks call “inquiry-based learning.” The basic idea is that students get more out of science courses if they’re designing experiments, asking questions, and taking responsibility for their own learning. That makes it interesting to write labs. Rather than spend time writing up an accurate and complete step-by-step cookbook (which would be boring for me and for the students), I spend my time looking for research questions and things we can explore with the scientific tools we have available in Analytical Chemistry. Then I write up an introduction to provide some background/motivation, and a bullet list of goals and questions students should address. In the writeup I make some suggestions of different options they might consider for their experimental design. But, really, most of the guidance is live, in the classroom, in group discussions. The art (which I could use plenty of improvement in) is to guide the conversation without giving people step-by-step instructions. In the end, I’d like the students to be able to design analytical chemistry experiments, carry them out, and analyze the data intelligently (using lots and lots of spreadsheets!). Every day, I have to repeat to myself, “What do I want them to be able to do?” Wifey taught me that line, and it really helps focus the learning goals. Maybe I’ll post some stories from labs we’ve tried. So far, they actually have been working really well!! The only lab that didn’t work was the one lab that I copied from a lab manual. Bah!

 
 

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