An edublog space for all academic, admin, sessional staff and postgraduate students of the School of Behavioural & Social Sciences & Humanities at the University of Ballarat.
Tuesday, 5 October 2010
October Book Group
This is it. We've finally waded through Joyce's Ulysses. We meet on Sunday 10th October at The Known World Bookshop in Sturt Street for a 2pm start on the last section of Ulysses. With any (Irish) luck the coffee machine will be fixed.
Thursday, 9 September 2010
Virginia Woolf: The Patterns of Everyday Experience
Staff, students, and interested public are invited to the book launch of Lorraine Sim's Virginia Woolf: The Patterns of Everyday Experience (2010). Published by Ashgate.
Where: Ballarat Books, 15 Armstrong Street
When: 5:30pm on Thursday 9th September 2010
Book cover: "In her timely contribution to revisionist approaches in modernist studies, Lorraine Sim offers a reading of Virginia Woolf's conception of ordinary experience as revealed in her fiction and nonfiction. Contending that Woolf's representations of everyday life both acknowledge and provide a challenge to characterizations of daily life as mundane, Sim shows how Woolf explores the potential of everyday experience as a site of personal meaning, social understanding, and ethical value. Sim's argument develops through readings of Woolf's literary representations of a subject's engagement with ordinary things like a mark on the wall, a table, or colour; Woolf's accounts of experiences that are both common and extraordinary such as physical pain or epiphanic 'moments of being'; and Woolf's analysis of the effect of new technologies, for example, motor-cars and the cinema, on contemporary understandings of the external world. Throughout, Sim places Woolf's views in the context of the philosophical and lay accounts of ordinary experience that dominated the cultural thought of her time. These include British Empiricism, Romanticism, Platonic thought and Post-Impressionism.
In addition to drawing on the major novels, particularly The Voyage Out, Mrs. Dalloway, and To the Lighthouse, Sim focuses close attention on short stories such as 'The Mark on the Wall', 'Solid Objects', and 'Blue & Green'; nonfiction works, including 'On Being Ill', 'Evening over Sussex: Reflections in a Motor-car', and 'A Sketch of the Past'; and Woolf's diaries. Sim concludes with an account of Woolf's ontology of the ordinary, which illuminates the role of the everyday in Woolf's ethics."
Lorraine Sim is a Lecturer in Literature and Film at the University of Ballarat.
September Book Group
The book group will meet at our usual haunt, The Known World Bookshop in Sturt Street, for another session on James Joyce's Ulysses. We're almost there folks! Just another session or two and we'll be able to move on to lighter readings (The Brothers Karamazov :-) ?). We commence at 2:00pm so nip in early for your pot of tea.
David Suzuki returns to Ballarat to give a public talk on his new book The Legacy and his Legacy Project. I was lucky enough to catch him at UB a couple of years ago and found him to be both inspiring and sobering with regards to environmental ethics and activism. I think Ballarat is most fortunate to have another such opportunity.
From the promo: "Based on the premise - 'If I had one last lecture to give, what would I say?' -The Legacy presents a critical and candid exploration of a period of human history which includes David Suzuki's own life journey - an era which has overlapped and converged with many of the most important social, scientific, cultural and political developments of the past seventy years. His focus also acknowledges the wisdom of his grandparents and moves forward through to the promise held in the birth of his new grandson."
Held at the Wendouree Performing Arts Theatre
Sunday 17 October 2010
Please book following the link here.
Here is the link to the David Suzuki Legacy Project
Thursday, 26 August 2010
Open Day 2010
Yes its that time of year again when staff spruik their courses for the public on Open Day. The School of Behavioural and Social Sciences and Humanities (BSSH) information booths will be located on level 2 of the T building (above glam ITMS with their cool VR lab).
Chipper staff will be on hand to answer all manner of questions including the ever popular "what job can my kid get with philosophy?", "why should my [insert name here] know stuff about other cultures and ways of doing things?", even the oddball, "No, you can't do philosophy [bleated at young adult within earshot of a number of people], the priest at school said not to!".
Here's a link to the Program of Events across the University's campuses. Please do come along and have a chat about the possibility of studying what we think are a range of interesting, informative and frankly, life-changing courses. Our School offers a wide variety of programs and courses and can a number of entry paths into university study (be sure to ask about the FAST Program).
Wednesday, 16 June 2010
Thinking Philosophically with Plato
Session four in the Thinking Philosophically with Plato series was concerned with the ideas of 'Citizenship and Disobedience' and focused on Plao's 'Crito'. As this was the last session in this particular series run by Jane Mummery for the U3A Hepburn Shire, we finished up with dinner at Franco's in Vincent Street, Daylesford. Vying for position next to the pizza oven (it was 2 degrees outside), it was a great way to end this short jaunt with the gadfly.
Wednesday, 2 June 2010
What is a philosopher?
A recent New York Times (16 May 2010) opinion(ator) piece by English philosopher Simon Critchley of The New School suggests that philosophers are indeed curious creatures of academe. Critchley grazes lovingly over the curious assortment of philosophers such as Thales who fell into a hole whilst gazing at the stars, the gadfly Socrates who reportedly had a face only a mother could love, the philosopher as buffoon or eccentric, as one one who spends years returning to the same topic or moves in and around a topic based on fascination, curiosity or perplexity. These characters and more are set out in this reassessment of an ancient art - the first in a series of writings by contemporary philosophers to be published by The New York Times.
Thursday, 27 May 2010
Thinking Philosophically with U3A Hepburn Shire
'Living the Good Life' was the theme of this week's meeting of the Thinking Philosophically with Plato series delivered by Jane Mummery for the U3A Hepburn Shire in Daylesford. Participants read and responded to selections from 'Gorgias' (468e-479e) and The Republic.
Thursday, 20 May 2010
Australia Koala Foundation
The Philosophy programme is honoured to have Rolf Schlagloth present a guest lecture on Wildlife Management at 8:30am on May 21 in T127 for the undergraduate course PHILO1004 Practical Ethics. Rolf is the Victorian liaison officer for the Australia Koala Foundation as well as a member of the University's Animal Ethics Committee (along with Jane Mummery). In addition to his duties at the Foundation, Rolf has studied at the University of Bonn and the University of Ballarat, and is a member of the DPI's Animal & Small Institution AEC, the Bureau of Animal Welfare. Rolf's guest lecture on wildlife management and conservation is not to be missed. All staff and students are invited to attend. Here is a link to the United Nations Official Video for The International Year of Biodiversity 2010.
Thursday, 13 May 2010
Thinking Philosophically with Plato & U3A Hepburn Shire
The second seminar in the Thinking Philosophically with Plato series had the U3A mob engaged with the topic of 'Thinking without Illusions', which was no small feat given the chilliness of the evening's weather. A combination of woolens, coffee, hot chocolate or the pressed grape gave strength to the small group who braved the elements in the beautiful Daylesford Town Hall on May 11. Using selections from Meno and Phaedo (65b-77a), discussion gravitated around the possibility and implications of virtue et al, being taught or innate. We were undecided if Plato's metaphysical doctrine of recollection solved Meno's paradox or whether the Forms really offered a useful way to think about the Ideal and the practical. Jane held the audience captive with classical conundrums whilst Marnie took photos of members in various stages of winter-woolen undress.
Wednesday, 12 May 2010
VC's Mid-Year Report
The VC's Mid Year Report at the Mt Helen campus on May 12 was well attended by staff (to his surprise). However, it comes as no surprise to staff that UB is continuing to experience financial troubles given a range of factors (GFC, significant drop in International Students). In addition to the 54 million dollar deficit of this year, the University can expect to carry a deficit of up to 68 million dollars in the next financial year.
In the wake of the Auditor-General's assessment of the University, the VC has proposed a number of initiatives to combat the current difficulties being experienced, including that staff switch off lights and not using heaters (that went down well!). Of the initiatives proposed, the two stand outs seem to be the establishment of the UB Foundation and voluntary redundancies.
The Foundation, as I understand it, will be set up to strengthen the links between the University and the wider community, and specific individuals. The idea is to garner financial support in the form of establishing benefactors and scholarships. The other initiative that many staff anticipated are voluntary redundancies. While the VC did his best to carefully qualify the voluntary aspect of this new workforce initiative, the immediacy of the timeline for the process really alerted attendees to the importance (desperation?) of this particular initiative to senior management and the well-being of UB.
The Workforce Initiatives page at HR which includes a short video presentation of the VC's address. Only available via UB's intranet.
Recent VC's Blog entries related to this post: 'Hard Times' (April 29); 'Structural Adjustment for UB' (3 May); 'Establishing a Foundation for UB' (24 May). Only available via UB's intranet.
Tuesday, 11 May 2010
June Book Group
The June Book Group will meet at The Known World Bookshop on Sturt Street at 2:00pm on June 13 and plough onwards through Joyce's Ulysses. In the older Penguin edition (black cover) we read from pp. 425 -532. In the newer Penguin edition we read from pp. 561-703. As the chilly weather descends why not arrive early and peruse the shelves of the bookshop before ordering a warm beverage?
Thursday, 6 May 2010
Philosophy Series at U3A Hepburn Shire
Jane Mummery is running a series of philosophy seminars for the U3A Hepburn Shire from April through to June. The series is called 'Thinking Philosophically with Plato'. The inaugural seminar was held on April 20 and looked at 'Living the Examined Life'. Aided by her trusty philosophical side-kick Marnie Nolton, a lively discussion of Plato's Apology ensued between the twenty-or-so participants of the evening seminar series.
Wednesday, 5 May 2010
Fighting Proposed Programme Closure(s)
We are under the general impression that the closing down of programmes of study in universities is a consequence of drastic budget cuts. Typically, we hear of smaller programmes being cut or pressured into performing in a particular strategic way. You know the story, it hovers over us here in BBSH in various incarnations. Try this programme cut for size: Middlesex University is trying to cut its philosophy programme. Let me try that again for anyone not involved in the humanities and social sciences. Middlesex is trying to drop its highly successful and internationally renown philosophy programme even though undergraduate and postgraduate enrollments are high and research output by both postgraduate and tenured staff is also high.
Friday, 30 April 2010
Ballarat title has noses out of joint
Prof. Battersby has also responded to this issue in his VC's Blog. The entry is titled 'The Role of the Head of School' (April 21, 2010). It's certainly worth reading in conjunction with the Higher Ed story, as Battersby takes the time to unpack Senior Management's rationale for such a move - an opportunity he doesn't get in the Higher Ed. Having said that, Jeremy Smith's points amount to little but a soundbite and I wonder if this issue will be followed up by the Higher Ed community.
I've tried to link in with the VC's Blog previously, but as it is strictly an internal access blog, I am unable to place it in the right hand coloumn of Noteworthy Blogs in BSSH Bloggers (which is an external blogger site). I suggest people book mark it in their favourites to keep abreat of developments at UB. Meanwhile, here's the link to the piece in the Higher Ed:
Thursday, 29 April 2010
Overhead projectors & other Extinction Level Events
An extinction level event is usually classified as a catastrophic disaster in which the world as we know it is altered beyond our ability to survive the changes, indeed beyond the ability of other biologicals to survive the changes (and yes, I did make that word up). Think Tunguska and the end of dinosaurs and the subsequent arrival of the Ice Age. OK, yes, I am prone to exaggeration on the point of overhead projector removal at the University of Ballarat, and I haven't adequately demonstrated my rather tenuous link with extinction level events, but, hey, it seems like no one else in the University is listening to the people who still use these in classrooms. I'm not alone, I know of at least..er...one other staff member in my School who uses them on a regular basis. I feel like a dinosaur, a dinosaur waiting for the meteor strike. I'm a dinosaur on the edge!
Antiquated they might be (the overhead projectors, not dinosaurs like me) compared to mobile technologies but when you're modelling PHILO 1002 Logic & Reasoning on the fly, and have interactive lectures and tutorials in which student information needs to be added as you demonstrate, the old fashioned overhead projector is a winner. Plus I love using those snazzy coloured markers.
It's a technology that is already present, that is, you don't have to buy what you've already bought. It's reasonably reliable too, that is...if the bulb works, if the arm is still attached, if the power cord is still attached, if someone hasn't nicked off with it (like someone did 5 mins prior to my tutorial in week 5 - even though I had a legible A4 note on the glass plate) and if someone hasn't written all over the whiteboard with permanent marker...and done nothing about it. Ho-hum, back to the drawing board.
Wednesday, 28 April 2010
UB Pulse: tachycardia or myocardial infarction?
It's a good effort...if we were in the secondary school sector or possibly even TAFE. Oh wait, we are! The UB Pulse staff survey website promises to maintain a good working relationship, that staff feedback is needed, and that the results will be used to accurately gauge all manner of maladies and lead to action. I've mentioned previously that I'm teaching Logic & Reasoning this semester. Naturally, fortuitously, perhaps even ironically, this week's topic on hidden premises seems relevant to claims of UB having a pulse. There are, however, rules to attributing hidden premises, and they are firstly that one should do so only when the argument is either weak, completely invalid or utterly mysterious without attribution of the hidden premise; secondly, when attributing the hidden premise improves the argument's validity (an appeal to the Principle of Charity); and lastly, when there is reason to think that the author believes the hidden premise.
Take a look at the claims made above (taken from the web site's front page) and spot the hidden or implicit premises at work. Having spotted a number of hidden premises on the front of the survey, and having filled in a number of previous staff surveys over the last five years and seen little genuine effort to address serious issues, I'm not exactly filled with confidence about what this new survey might bring. And I'm not game enough to start unpacking whether it's all about UB having a pulse or the staff having a pulse. I'll leave that up to you to decide. Let's assume that something in/of the University has a pulse, and this is a survey about the state of that pulse. That way, we remain civil, if not collegial.
Now I know you're not enrolled in Logic & Reasoning (although you could if you really wanted to. Alternatively, you could gift someone else in the University with an enrollment, say, someone in Senior Management?) so, back to the survey. I might be guaranteed anonymity in filling the survey out as the FAQ page assures me, but I can't return and add things to the list. If I do, I'm told that I've already filled the survey out. I get one shot and one shot only to list and describe UB's strengths and weaknesses (only three of each?).
In my survey opportunity - throwing anonymity to the wind, given we have such a poor budget for it anyway - I griped about the heavy centralisation of IT generally, and the abysmal UB web presence specifically. I'm convinced that Ian Wright and his team are fighting with one arm tied behind their backs on this. UB's website is just plain embarrassing. Staff information is grossly out of date, crucial information is absent, and this is unacceptable given that a regional university such as UB is super reliant on what should be a formidable Internet presence in the highly competitive HE market.
I also commented quite freely on the lack of diversity in food choices on campus (another no-no when encouraging International students or acknowledging that many staff are vegetarian, coeliac or kosher), and I put a plug in for gardeners. With such a beautiful semi-bush location for our Mt Helen campus, why don't we have gardeners, horticultural students or our sustainability mob looking after and planting native vegetation - such efforts would employ locals, demonstrate a commitment to the workplace as habitat (for all manner of creatures, including undergraduates and staff) that has moral worth, and surely have a number of positive impacts on well being. The grounds, as they are, are positively slovenly. I'm confident that organising staff/student busy bees in conjunction with state/council re-vegetation programmes would be a successful endeavor.
I do like the health metaphor, it's just that I don't know whether UB's pulse will be gravitating towards tachycardia or the inevitable myocardial infarction we all dread given the current climate (not limited to UB, of course). At the bottom of the survey is the disclaimer that states "If we don't hear from you, we can only assume that your pulse rate is perfect". I wonder what you will be suggesting in your valuable feedback on UB Pulse? Will you be asking for a better security presence on campus (given we now start work earlier and finish later)? Better lighting in the car parks? Get your skates on and fill in (another) survey. Go on, you know its good for you!
http://www.ubpulse.com.au/
Wednesday, 21 April 2010
May Book Group
This coming month on May 9th, we meet to tackle a larger chunk of Ulysses. In the older Penguin edition we're reading until p. 425; in the newer Penguin edition, read until p. 561. We finish just prior to the passage beginning "The Mabbot Street entrance of nighttown" . We commence at 2:00pm at The Known World bookshop in Sturt St, where the coffee machine is back on and the hot chocolate can hold its own.
Wednesday, 17 March 2010
Meeting the Challenges of Change in Postgrad Education
This is a text that might be of interest to PhD supervisors and course coordinators in the School. Meeting the Challenges of Change in Postgraduate Education is an edited collection by Trevor Kerry and claims to take a radical look at the nature of adult learning in the postgraduate context and the implications of this for universities and their courses. Schools have had to undergo major re-assessments about how learning is developed into the curriculum, how learning is delivered to students, and how that learning is assessed. Universities has remained very largely detached from these pedagogical/andragogical issues.
However, the circumstances of higher education provision have changed. There is also real pressure now from vocationalism. Meeting the Challenges of Change in Postgraduate Education places these movements in both a UK and a wider context, examines the nature of learning and teaching in postgraduate education and opens up the debate for rethinking university provision. Trevor Kerry is Professor of Education Leadership at the Centre for Educational Research and Development at Lincoln University, UK. The book will be released June 2010 by Continuum.
Monday, 8 March 2010
April Book Group
April 11th sees the book group return to Joyce's Ulysses. We begin from the passage starting with "Urbane to comfort them, the quaker librarian purred:" (p. 235 in my Penguin Modern Classics edition, see photo above) and will read on up to the break at "The summer evening had begun to fold the world in its mysterious embrace" (p. 449). Depending on the edition you're using, it should be a little over 150 pages. For the time being, we will continue to meet at The Known World bookshop in Sturt Street at 2:00pm.
Wednesday, 3 March 2010
Argument Visualisation Software
I've included the official AusThink Rationale video above, but I've also tracked down a shorter video (below) that includes some testimonials from teaching staff as well as the programme's creator (a lecturer in critical thinking himself). Well worth having a look at these. It would be interesting to see if the University could get a site license for this programme. I'd be interested to hear what other staff and students think about this one.
Friday, 26 February 2010
Blackboard Info Sheets
As of this year, I'm no longer the School’s Blackboard and Moodle Support technician, so I thought I'd point teaching and admin staff to a range of resources for Blackboard. The uptake of Blackboard by staff and students has been swift and deft, so you should have no fears about going solo at this point. There are, of course, numerous resources available now in place since I first started supporting the School in 2006, and these resources will help you when shelving older courses and creating new ones for teaching this semester.
I've uploaded a 'Blackboard Info' folder on the School's K drive. You'll find a range of how-to sheets from (re)categorising a weblink; managing groups; backing-up sections; adding/deleting students, creating assessments; working with columns; and troubleshooting for staff and students.
You can use QWeb (My IT@ UB job logging) on the Gateway page to request Blackboard help when removing an old or installing a new course. The drop down boxes will guide you through relevant information you’ll need to include in order to log a job in with service desk (such as course codes, teaching staff, etc). You can also use QWeb to follow up on any ongoing issues you have with IT generally at the University.
Please also avail yourself of the online teaching and learning resources being created by the ever-helpful LEWS team. You get to their repository by going through myIT@UB and selecting ‘LEWS’ followed by ‘Staff Help’.
Lastly, I’d like to thank you all for throwing yourselves into the deep end with the range of new techno-thingys that the School and University has been updating over the last three years. Whilst the Teknia newsletter will no longer exist, I will keep the BSSH Bloggers going for those interested. All the best for the coming teaching year be it online or face to face. Ciao!
Wednesday, 24 February 2010
The Other E-reader: Apple iPad
As promised in my last post re E-readers, here's the official Apple iPad trailer. If you can live through the OTT first 3 minutes as marketing reps gush about how you 'don't have to change to fit the product, the product changes to fit you', the presentation becomes much more practical in terms of the possibilities for use re education and of course, the all important mobility factor.
The iPad challenges Amazon's Kindle in the lucrative market of E-readers. Given the price of these E-readers, it remains to be seen whether they can actually be adequately utilised in education or remain the domain of those who can afford shiny new toys. I imagine that the opportunities for use in education and the development of EduApps are certainly a high possibility in the E-reader market, however we have yet to see something that really has the ability to make a difference (in terms of access - a key drive of education and social reform) and not just an amazing gadget that impacts upon the household/school budget.
Having said that, Apple are still on friendly terms with educators and continue to offer discounts to staff and students on their entire product range, but it would be nice (dare I say heart-warming?) to see an effort go into the development of delivery to those marginalised by what is increasingly looking like elitist shiny toy syndrome. Don't get me wrong, I'm an Apple fan from way back and I'd LOVE an iPad, but I find myself increasingly wondering when a company with Apple's resources is going to develop a technology for people in real educational need. I'm thinking here of the XO Laptop, of course, which currently has a programme for Haiti. However, I'm also a realist - I know that technology like the iPad or the XO for that matter, doesn't sow crops, provide clean drinking water, or assist women with small business loans to support their families and villages, but it would be a nice sea change if we could put a lot more consideration into the churning out of devices and apps.
Thursday, 18 February 2010
What's on your Kindle? Understanding E-books and E-readers
The good folks at IPOL are running a seminar on understanding E-books and E-Readers for the University. If you haven't heard of Amazon's Kindle or it's upstart little brother the Apple iPad, then head down to this informative session with Deirdre Wilmott and Ian Knox to evaluate and come to better grips with the potential limitations and purposes of this mobile technology.
- When: Thursday 25 February 2010
- Where: Room F200, F Building, Mt Helen
- Contact: IPOL@ballarat.edu.au or 5327 9155
- Cost: [and I quote this] "No cost to UB Staff and Affiliates. $300 for Non-UB Staff and Affiliates" >:-0
Tuesday, 16 February 2010
International Student Safety Debate
With increased violence against international students in general and Indian students in particular on the rise in eastern Australia, the publication of of a paper directly addressing this issue by Nyland, Forbes-Mewett & Marginson in the latest edition of the HERDSA journal is timely to say the least. The HE sector in Australia is largely driven by a (previously) perceived reputation (asset) for being able to provide a safe study environment in the international education market.
Nyland, Forbes-Mewett & Marginson's ARC funded work suggest that the 'industry' is having difficulty coming to grip with how best to address the safety concerns of international students following recent demonstrations by Indian students & those concerned for their welfare, and the framework of management responsible for exporting Australian HE as a site of safe and reputable education for internationals. The ramifications of what has/is happening to internationals whilst in Australian HE is impacting on enrollment numbers and the business sector. Their report tracks developments across the USA, New Zealand and the UK before focusing on Australia.
C. Nyland, H. Forbes-Mewett and S. Marginson, 'The international student safety debate: moving beyond denial', HERDSA Vol. 29, No. 1 2010, 89-101. Routledge website here.