Posts Tagged ‘Week’

Time to Drop a Class

February 5th, 2011

I have felt during the first week of class that the instructor is not really engaging the students, certainly not me.  It’s during the first week of class that the immediate bond and relationship between a student and instructor are developed.  I’m not feeing good about this.

Last night after getting in from my working photo gigs I logged into class and saw a couple more posts from the instructor in my PH 699 course (Special Topics: MS: Concept & Critical Processes).  You can read some of it in the previous post.

I had my bad class at AAU and I will not accept another one.  Maybe the instructor is having a bad week, maybe the PH 699 course really starts to shine in a few days.  If I knew another student that had taken the same course/instructor pair then I would have more data points from which to make a decision, but I have to go with my gut and my previous class experiences.

All my other courses (with that one exception) have had very engaging and motivating teachers.  Each instructor has reached out to each student to make a connection.  All of these classes  have been A or A+ or A++ courses, and I have taken additional courses from some of these instructors because I placed higher importance on working with the person teaching the material  and less importance on the subject.

I have a friend that is a great conversationalist and chef. When ever I go visit her I know I will learn something and have a great meal.  I don’t define the meal I enjoy the experience.

Classes at a master’s level in art need to be an enjoyable experience.  For me they also have to push me and my limits, expand my thoughts and overall enhance me and my work.

I’m not feeling it in that class.

Tamara Hubbard deserves all the kudos I can send her. She is the Associate Director of the Online Graduate Photography Program at AAU.  She lead the Thesis Project Seminar class I took in the Fall of 2010.

Last night I wrote her, this morning she responded.  That’s remarkable and speaks to her dedication to the program and as a great student advocate.

She recommended two classes:

  • PH 611 Architecture as Landscape with Brian Parkin
  • PH 655 Digital Montage with Shannon Ayres

and she reminded me that today is the last day to make a change without a penalty or fee.

I’ve heard a couple good things about PH611 and I do want to take the course but I don’t want to walk into an unknown.  My friend Terri (who I teach workshops with in Midas, NV) has taken Shannon Ayres and has nothing but great things to say.

I called my advisor (WHAT! on a Saturday?!) and left a message, then I called back to the front desk and voilà! there are advisors working on a Saturday at AAU.  That’s great!

There are not enough words to say how wonderful the director and the advisors have been in guiding me and getting me into a new class.Online courses could seem daunting as I work in my own space and feel removed from the traditional classroom and university interactions.  Getting this type of support is very nice.

The take away here is I AM RESPONSIBLE for the classes I take.  If I’m not satisfied then it is MY RESPONSIBILITY to effect the change.

Onward to PH 655 Digital Montage with Shannon Ayres.






Throttled Back?

August 21st, 2010

Every semester I write about keeping pace and even working ahead, when possible.  It seems that AAU is happy to let you work ahead but thay are only going to let me see into the future by one module (week).

From the AAU site:

NEW ACCESS TO CLASS MODULES

Please note the new policy on access to course materials:
You can visit the entire syllabus and course outline at any time during the semester. In addition, students have access to the course materials for their current module, the next module and all past modules.

Please contact the Online Help Desk if you have questions regarding the new policy.


BTW: A module typically represents a week’s worth of online class material.  It doesn’t contain all the material as there are often assignments using physical books, and additional online media.  (Maybe I should write a module post?)

Modules are a great way of seeing what is really involved later in the course.  My experience at AAU tells me that some syllabi are weak or incomplete representations of what is really involved in an entire course.  Course outlines are slightly better yet they can also be vague.  The best instructors provide a detailed outline of deliverables at the start of the course.   I hope that AAU is toughening up their standards on outlines and syllabi so fundamental information about course work is well-defined across all classes.

I wonder why this is?  Are students downloading the material from all the modules during the first week or so of classes then dropping classes?  This new policy makes it more difficult to download content for future personal review and use.

As long as instructors tell me what they expect for mid-terms, projects, and finals I don’t see a problem.  Due to work assignments (Read: Austin City Limits Festival) I will have to ask my instructors for homework assignments that are more than a week out, a couple of times this semester.

Just more work for the student and instructor I suppose.


UPDATE: (8/21/2010): I’ve sent a request to the helpdesk at AAU for a comment on this post.  More later…

UPDATE: (09/01/2010) I’ve sent another request to the helpdesk at AAU as I have not received a reply yet.  More later…

UPDATE: (1/1/2011) BTW: I never got an update but I understand this is a generally unpopular idea withing the photo department.

Thinking about the Spring 2010 Semester at AAU

February 19th, 2010



Thinking

Thinking

I’ve been busy this semester and posts do fall off during school terms because I’m busy doing school work.  Some highlights from the 3rd week of this semester.

History of Photography GS 625 is kicking my ass.  In order for me to do better and do well I need to kick it back harder.  This class takes up more time that my other two classes combined.  I easily spend 25+ hours a week working on papers and reading for this class.

My Lighting class (PH608) is somewhat challenging I look forward to some of the more difficult assignments.  These will take up some more time but with good planning and some working ahead in class I think this course is very manageable.  This class is an elective for me.

PH 613 (was Color Theory) but the course title changed to ‘Color and Light’ during the third week.  This course has a lot of overlap with my lighting class, so far.  This makes sense as photography is all about light and light is about color – even if doing black and white work.  The instructor and I agree that the assignments later on in the semester will be more interesting for me.   BUT, it is really important that I don’t get jaded and do work to just get by for the first few weeks.  This is an opportunity to spend more time of creating a photograph for an assignment where I’m already well versed in the foundation that is being taught.  Don’t slack!

So that’s the update during week 3 of a 15 week semester.  I’d like to posts weekly but I find the workload of school (esp. History) and my day-to-day work to consume almost all my free time.

It is an adventure for sure!

Winter Break

January 14th, 2010
Taking a break

Taking a break

Classes finished up 12/19/09 and the next regular Semester begins 2/1/10

Six weeks off…from classwork. If you’ve read my other posts you know that most of time is already consumed with working and school.  This is also an off-time for my part-time job and I don’t expect to go back to that work until mid-March.

Stuff to do:

  • Time to catch up on blog posts over at weaver.net/blog
  • Clean house
  • Work on marketing
  • Start the job search (see my post on jobs for my mfa)
  • Clean out the storage container
  • Get some more exercise

Here’s the Spring schedule:

Attendance Periods: Spring 2010

Week

Module/Attendance Dates

Week 1 February 1, 2010 – February 8, 2010 (M-M)
Week 2 February 9, 2010 – February 15, 2010 (Tu-M)
Week 3 February 16, 2010 – February 22, 2010 (Tu-M)
Week 4 February 23, 2010 – March 1, 2010 (Tu-M)
Week 5 March 2, 2010 – March 8, 2010 (Tu-M)
Week 6 March 9, 2010 – March 15, 2010 (Tu-M)
Week 7 March 16, 2010 – March 21, 2010 (Tu-Su)
Week 8 March 29, 2010 – April 5, 2010 (M-M)
Week 9 April 6, 2010 – April 12, 2010 (Tu-M)
Week 10 April 13, 2010 – April 19, 2010 (Tu-M)
Week 11 April 20, 2010 – April 26, 2010 (Tu-M)
Week 12 April 27, 2010 – May 3, 2010 (Tu-M)
Week 13 May 4, 2010 – May 10, 2010 (Tu-M)
Week 14 May 11, 2010 – May 17, 2010 (Tu-M)
Week 15 May 18, 2010 – May 22, 2010 (Tu-Sa)

Let’s make lots of mistakes!

November 21st, 2009

06_EMOS_GUK

In a class discussion I was emailed this note:

David,

I felt the need to send you a message to address the debate between you and Xxxxx. I’m doing my very best to be constructive here, so please bear that in mind, if you could. (read: If this comes across bitchy even in the slightest way, that wasn’t at all how I intended it.)

You know I love your work. I gush over it every week. You’re amazing. You know it. XXXX knows it. We all know it.

We appreciate your feedback and technical help, but, at the same time, you can be a little heavy handed with the criticism. I don’t think you mean to be that way, which is why I haven’t said anything up until this point. I understand that in this program we communicate in a world of black and white. There are no intonations or instantaneous explanations during discussion when feelings get hurt. It is just the nature of the beast.

With that said, I sometimes cringe when I see that you’ve commented on my work (thought sometimes I get very excited when you like what I’ve done). I know it’s difficult to be one of the more advanced people in the class, but we aren’t all as versed in Photoshop as you are. That, too, is the nature of the beast. We’re all trying, and sometimes we have to sugar coat a little in order for our comments to remain constructive.

I get what Xxxxx is trying to say in her statement and I get what she is trying to do in her work. So do you, obviously, as you made her a further abstracted version of her work. I really liked it and I hope she does as well. I understand that maybe her statement isn’t lending to what she is doing, but there are much more constructive ways to say what you’re saying. I understand that sometimes it is difficult, but it’s worth a try. If something is unclear, maybe you could giver her an interpretation of what you think she is trying to do and ask if you are correct in your interpretation instead of insisting that she spell it out week after week.

Also, please take into consideration that if her work infuriates you that much, don’t comment on it anymore. You aren’t required to comment on everyone’s work every week.

I’m really sorry if this email has in any way offended you as that was, again, not my intention.

~~XXX

I responded:

Hi XXX,

Thanks for the note.
If I don’t like something because it fails or falls below the standards of the class requirements then I will certainly say so. Even if I’m wrong as I explain below.

This is a Master’s level course. Keep this in mind. This is a graduate course, not a high school course.

As such, the gloves should come off on every review. At times, there are certain aspects of work I see that I like but if they are not salient to the assignment and readily solvable – and there are often a multitude of solutions – then I won’t bother with the ‘bad’ or ‘poor’ aspects of someone’s work.

When I see that an image is a really good example of answering the assignment then I will praise that work and discuss, using the terms of the course and our line of study as best as possible, what and why I find makes the work successful.

During orientation we were specifically told not to make frivilious ‘oh that’s nice’, or ‘great job’ or ‘I don’t like that’ or ‘that sucks’ comments. Yet, I see it in posts in my classes. We SHOULD NOT sugar coat anything. This is a formal learning experience for everyone and there is not place for sugar-coating anything. There is no sugar-coating when our portfolios are reviewed by gallery owners, art brokers, agents, art directors, HR managers, bosses and our final graduation project committee. Heh…maybe our collective hobby groups are appropriate venues for sugar-coating, but not in class.
Again this is a Master’s level class.


As a former university instructor my greatest frustration with my classes is the discussion. Students get the chance to learn from each other and each others’ experiences in relationship to a topic. The asynchronous nature of online courses is good because it allows for longer thoughts to develop before posting and online is bad as it prevents spontaneous debates. I don’t see a lot of longer thoughts or engaging debate…yet.

While I appreciate XXX’s work I wish he would promote more engagement in bringing out more conversations and debate. We are here to learn, that’s why I’m here. I’m getting a lot out of these classes and I already see improvements in my work as a photographer, even if I’ve doing this for 40 years, I see improvements!

I have tried to get Xxxxx’s statement and I don’t. Other students don’t’ get it either. The instructor doesn’t get it. I took a stab at part of her statement to show her how difficult it was it interpret. It is unclear and one of her foundational concepts is just plain wrong.

Her problem in her responses are many-fold
1: She won’t take any criticism, not from me, not from other students, and not from the instructor.
2: She is reactive to any criticism: Her response to me was not well-formed; she didn’t understand some of the points I was attempting to make nor asked for clarification if there was a point she didn’t
Understand; She also attacked me personally which is really poor form in any course, let alone a Master’s program.
3: Her project statement is severely flawed which doesn’t make her work align, even closely, to that statement.

Nobody’s work infuriates me. I see she has done a really bad job matching her statement and I will comment on things I find correct and incorrect with the work of others.

I hope you see where I am coming from in this.
Now, as far as your suggestion that I don’t comment if I don’t like something and that I’m not required to comment on everyone’s work, Bah. If I wanted a lower grade I’d do the required minimum as many do. If I wanted to get a lesser paying job at a weaker art school I’d do the minimum. Don’t you find bar pretty low on required discussions? Really now, three postings to other students?

How do we expect to get better at this if we don ‘t attempt to participate as much as possible. Can your or my comments be wrong, certainly! Absolutely! We are here to learn and if we don’t make mistakes here we will make them in the real world. This (very pricey) Master’s program is our venue to make all the mistakes we can possibly make. I make a concerted effort to comment on everyone’s work. This is part of my training – it may or may not be part of yours.

Let’s go make lots of mistakes!
Cheers,
David

It’s All About Me!

October 16th, 2009
It's all about me!

It's all about me! (That's not me, but I did take it yesterday)

I’ve been pretty quiet updating all my blogs.  That’s likely due to working and studying is all I do.   That’s not quite true.  I’m attempting some weak effort to date and I may have set up a tentative date for about 2-3 weeks from now as that is when it will fit my schedule.

I’m in week 6/7 of the 15 week semester and my best take away from the program at this point is “It is all about me!”

What I mean is that doing an online MFA is a very demanding activity if I make it a very demanding activity.  I wouldn’t mind being a valedictorian, but I better work my tail off to get anywhere near there.

AAU admits near 100% of the applicants and thus your classmate mix will be…well…mixed.

I suppose this is no different from any other in-person or online class but the basic requirements are fairly simple to meet and some folks just can’t get them right.  Having completed my MBA in ’94 I remember well what student life wwas like and as an instructor/lecturer around the turn of the century I recall that some students just don’t get it too.  I’m not trying to get by,  I’m trying to do my absolute best so I can get the most out of this experience.  I’m paying a lot for these classes.  I pay for them in cash that I make from a part-time job  that eats into almost all my free time.  I damn well better make good use of my time and effort!

Some basics:
Submit stuff on time.  It’s better to so early during the assignment windows but poeple will be people and many turn them in on the last day.

Respond to your classmates work and do so in a meaningful way.  This means  thinking about the assignment, the work or the other student, and then constructing criticism aobut the work in a way that speaks to the course material.    Certainly, a comment that “I love that image” can be appropiate but when that is the bulk of hte comment it does not address the requirement of thoughtful discussion.  Online is potentially SO MUCH BETTER at doing this as you can look at the work of another student and then ponder it and answer it later.   You don’t have to respond to everything you see.  The more I respond to work in a thoughtful way the more I learn so I do that.  I try to make a point of responding to everyone that posts work,  I can’t always get to everything but I try.

There are no surprises so don’t be surprised.  There is a quiz at the end of every weeks’ work.  So do the quiz after you have turned in all the work for that week.

The basics are basically, show up (nice flexibility in an online course), do assignments (turning them in early gets you the opportunity to redo sometimes), do quizes, and get it all in by deadline.

Self-motivation is a huge part of taking online classes.  I thought this would be the case and it is!  I turn assignments in as soon as possible and as early in the week as I can.  I respond to lots of other work.  I mean how tough is it to do 10-12 reviews of a paragraph or two, sometimes it is tough actually, but it helps build discipline and that is something every artist can use.

I also blog here less and on my regular blog because I’m busy with classes…like I should be!

After all I’m doing this for me!