stormdog: (Kira)
It's a shame my phone ran out of power as I was riding around Syracuse with Endomondo tracking my trip. I'd love to see exactly where I was. Still, I'm pleased I got back home without incident. I was biking randomly around downtown, relying on my phone to get me home if I got lost. However, I didn't have the cord with me to connect my portable battery pack to the phone.

I was lost briefly, but I explored systematically until I found a street name I recognized and soon found I was not far from the old train station that serves as the local office of Time Warner. I can get home easily from there. During my trip, I saw the MoST (Museum of Science and Technology), the Landmark Theatre, the shot clock monument (the basketball shot clock was invented in Syracuse) and other downtown sights. I headed home, but diverted down Lodi to bike around the periphery of Rose Hill Cemetery. I headed homeward down Lodi just as a drizzle started. Looking out the window, I see that drizzle has settled in to stay for a while.

The last day of orientation was good. I was embarassed by the video of my presentation from yesterday. I was the only person who was consulting notes while presenting. It's because I've never really taught before; my public speaking experience has been restricted to presenting papers or a poster. I need to trust myself to know what I'm going to say and not keep referring to notes. I think over the course of the next year, I'm going to talk to other TAs in geography about doing some mutual coaching and see if they're interested. I want to get better at this. That said, I really do like the idea of teaching; it's exciting! I just don't feel very confident about doing it yet.

I got to talk with a few other members of the geography cohort today, both during the day and at the reception in the later afternoon when all the sessions were done. One of them has very similar interests to mine in terms of social justice and the city. I also seem to have scored points with a few with my "This Machine Kills Sprawl" bike placards. "You know you're an urbanist when you have that on your bike," said one of them. I'm really looking forward to getting to know all the geography people better during department orientation next week.

For now, though, I get a break. And with no more meals provided by SU for the next few days, I think I'm going to make one of my errands tomorrow a trip to the grocery store. I'm going to plan out a visit to school to pick up my ID card, to Melo Velo (a local bike shop and cafe where the bike advocacy group meets) to get a trouser clip, to the nearest thrift store for fun, and to Wegman's, a nice-ish grocery store where I expect I can find the cereal and yogurt that I want. I'm looking forward to continuing to learn the lay of the land.
stormdog: (Tawas dog)
Orientation has generally been pretty good. Each day has had two time slots with three concurrent events, allowing new GAs to pick two. I've gone to presentations on teaching. Today, for instance, were talks on creating a classroom persona and managing a class. I learned about the Future Professoriate Program, which offers a small stipent in return for working with your department and the the program staff to attain greater experience with teaching and constructing a portfolio. It seems to be more oriented toward doctoral students than masters' folks, but if I do a Ph.D here I'm definitely interested. There was a presentation for everyone on Universal Design for Learning, which included a little bit about disability theory; that was new and interesting to me.

SU has provided food for us. Light breakfasts, and tickets for lunch at a number of nearby food merchants, most of whom are located along a strip of nearby Marshal street that targets SU students. Yesterday I had pad thai, and today it was a gyro with some falafel. Tomorrow, I may try the Indian place. Yesterday evening there was a barbecue for everyone around dinner time at the top of the hill on the south campus. It was at a building called the Inn Complete, which is a sort of pub for grad students, faculty, and staff. Since the food was free, there was a lot of meat (protein!) and I'm still on a tight budget, I unashamedly stuffed myself.

I've had some good conversations with fellow incoming GAs and others. After the last session today, I spent a while talking about face-blindness and my experience with it with the resident grad student who is leading the group I'm a part of. I'm happy to spread awareness! There's a grad student from Wilmette I've gotten to know a little bit. She's involved in grad student union organizing and warned me about some health insurance changes SU might be making in regard to classification of grads. I expressed interest in learning more, so she added me in to the email loop this evening.

I've made a bunch of notes in the sessions, including some stuff to follow up on. Some suggestions were things I'd picked up on in undergrad classes when I began, later on in my time at Parkside, to think a little actively about how professors were managing their classes. I expect it takes some experience in the trenches to easily synthesize self-management, classroom management, and course content all at the same time. As I said to one of the other students, I also feel a little nervous about TAing in a field that is not actually what my degree is in. There's a lot of overlap between cultural geography and anthropology, but if I was going to TA even an intro class in geography, physical or cultural, I'd want some time with textbooks and some talks with the professor first. Especially if I had any class-leading duties.

I did my five minute presentation today. I brought a nicer shirt to wear and did a quick change in the restroom prior to the session, which was probably not necessary. As is typical, I only glanced at my notes and largely winged it. Especially when I got the one-minute warning. I didn't quite say everything I wanted to, but it was close. Not that the content really matters I suppose. Other students presented on some interesting things; prescriptive grammar and it's place in society, plate tectonics, a height and velocity problem in physics, and the Korean alphabet. It was interesting seeing snippets of other people's areas.

Tonight I'm feeling tired after reading another long piece on political policy making, I may take a break and play some Hearthstone.
stormdog: (Tawas dog)
I've made it to the phase of iterating through my presentation multiple times and adjusting my speaking notes to fit my five minute block for tomorrow.

I'm going to talk about my research on Pike Creek in Kenosha as a lens to understand how cities, often seen as a sort of bastion of order amidst the chaos of the natural world, are in fact subject to greater and more frequent change than the natural environment is. It's a lot to squeeze into five minutes! I have seven slides, but they're mostly just images that I hope will provide a visual reinforcement to the broad picture I'm painting with my speech.

This is a "microteaching" presentation for incoming TAs. It's going to be recorded, and then collaboratively critiqued by a small group. Should be interesting!

(So many thanks to my advisor and other professors at Parkside for whom I had to give presentations. I'd never given presentations before going back to school. Even at work. The ones I did at Parkside were *such* good experience for me. I was terrified four years ago. Now I'm actually excited about getting up and talking about things I know something about.)
stormdog: (sleep)
According to the radio, the humidity today is something like 95%. Oof. It was a hot humid night, too; I did not sleep well. But I'm up now!

This is my first day of orientation! There are events from 8 in the morning to 5 in the evening, and then a social dinner thing that goes 'till 7. And *then* I have to get a five minute presentation together for Wednesday. It'll be a long day, but I do believe it'll be a good one.

I was having trouble deciding between a nice t-shirt and a button-down. I'm going with the t-shirt and I'll see how other folks look. I'm still a little unsure about how I want to present myself in general over here.

Ok, off we go!
stormdog: (Tawas dog)
A form I filled out at SU today included lines for both sex *and* gender. That made me so happy! I told the folks doing the presentation so, too.
stormdog: (Tawas dog)
Achievement unlocked; acquire microwave! (See, even I'm doing that 'achievement unlocked' thing now...)

Picking up my Microwave

After a trip to campus to meet with my advisor, I biked over to Westcott to buy a microwave from another student. I'm so glad I got this trailer a while back. And that Robert Allen convinced me to find room for it in the trailer.

---

The talk with said advisor went just fine. We talked about the city and how I was finding it. We talked about grocery stores and restaurants. We talked about gender. We talked about weather and he gave me a copy of his book on lake effect snow. We talked about politics, crazy Republicans, international economics, climate change, and nuclear war. I talked about some of the things I'm interested in studying, as well as when I should get started on my RA duties (in a couple of weeks, before classes start). He suggested I drop by the department library and look at some previous masters' theses on topics I'm interested in. We talked a little bit about transportation geography.

So I'm relaxing a bit. Things are ok.

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