Monday, September 20, 2010

8 Days a Week

So I thought it would be a good idea to take online courses in Educational Technology Integration so that I could get a certificate which could somehow lead to the job I'm trying to create for myself at some point in the near future. I've jumped into the world of online classes, Grad School a la Chat, with reading assignments up the gazork. I feel like I'm in a 24/7 conversation. It's a bit maddening, and quite different from my previous grad school experience.

But then again, my previous experience was a delicious, self-indulgent soak in poetry. The all night conversations included, at times, visiting artists, and shared bottles of wine. The connections made in that environment were bone deep, and have continued over these many years. The connections I'm making in my current class are through Skype, and can so easily disappear with the last click of the mouse on my final exam.

This class isn't a bad thing, but it feels like a necessary thing. Something to get through. It's difficult though, to do homework of my own, after sitting down to help my children with their homework. I'm ready to discuss "Tuck Everlasting," or write about the Cheyenne Indians, rather than a comparison of the educational value of Learning Today's Smart Tutor program to Math Missions Spectacle City Adventure.

So if I haven't responded to an email, or given you a call for a while, it's because I'm trying to make a deadline, and figure out how to write coherent sentences. I'll come up for air when this class is over, or when I'm out of chocolate, whichever comes first.

2 comments:

teridr said...

I think you should come visit some of your old bone-deep friends from grad school, instead. We would make you nice food and talk all night long.

We would never use words like integrization and optimal classroom lead-time energizing.

Just sayin'.

Naomi said...

And of course, when my bone-deep friends came here, I was out of town!

Teri, you can use those nasty words, but only if you can somehow put them in a poem. Integrization alone is the first line of a haiku! Actually, that whole thing could be a haiku.
Integrization
Optimal classroom lead-time
Energizing. Wow.