
Wandering the West
Finding a new job–the right new job–took half a year. Longer than I’d anticipated. I’m very happy to have held out for a strong fit, and I’m looking forward to Continue Reading →
poetry • technology • pedagogy
Finding a new job–the right new job–took half a year. Longer than I’d anticipated. I’m very happy to have held out for a strong fit, and I’m looking forward to Continue Reading →
The following slides and resources are collated here in support of a talk given at Portland State University on June 3, 2016. They explore key ed tech experiments in my history and Continue Reading →
The content in this post builds off of Re-Imagining A Large General Education Course. The following slides and resources are collated here in support of a talk given at the Continue Reading →
The following slides and resources are collated here in support of a talk given at Pacific Lutheran University, on April 8, 2016. They highlight some of my favorite recent efforts in Continue Reading →
Slides Download as PPTX Download as PDF Bibliography Books Boettcher, J., & Conrad, R. (2010). The Online Teaching Survival Guide: Simple and Practical Pedagogical Tips. San Francisco, CA: Jossey-Bass. Miller, Continue Reading →
Video Bibliography National Center for Academic Transformation, “Five Principles of Successful Course Redesign.” Expanding LMS Content Danielson, J., et al. March 2014. “Is the effectiveness of lecture capture related to Continue Reading →
I passed through Seattle this December in both directions–with a weeklong layover in Minnesota in between, for the holidays. It was an excuse for a short vacation in a new Continue Reading →
The state of Oregon subsidizes an intercity bus system. The POINT is meant to fill in the gaps between other modes of mass transit (Amtrak, Greyhound, and local public transit Continue Reading →
The thirst for gold leaves us without water. In July I went back to Montreal, the first proper trip to one of my old haunts since I’d departed for the Continue Reading →
Part satire, part nature documentary, to be sure. I’ve been slow to warm up to Eugene. I admit it. The university campus is delightfully green, but it stands apart from Continue Reading →