Aside

Continuing the theme started by the list of books that I feel sum me up, I am now moving on to events from history which share my birthday, and which sum me up, of course!  As before, I leave it to others to guess why I chose them.  Again, in no particular order, but ten as required by the activity:

  1. Robert I was born.
  2. Keats wrote: “Written in the Cottage Where Burns Was Born“.
  3. To Kill a Mockingbird” was first published.
  4. Space Oddity‘ by David Bowie was released in the UK for the first time.
  5. The opening night of The Vortex Club.
  6. Apollo 11 left the Earth‘s atmosphere.
  7. Waterloo (Bridge) Station was opened.
  8. Pope Clement VII excommunicated England’s King Henry VIII.
  9. The US invaded Canada (although some records state this was 12th July 1812 – maybe time-zone issues!).
  10. Skylab crashed into the Earth’s atmosphere and disintegrated over Australia.

Happy birthday to me, happy birthday to me… 😀

Aside

Number 2 in my longitudinal survey of myself using pictures.  Charts courtesy of http://personas.media.mit.edu/personasWeb.html

How the internet sees me 28 June 2010

Aside

Continuing the theme started by the list of books that I feel sum me up, I am now moving on to films (or movies for my American readers!). As before, I leave it to others to guess why I chose them.  Again, in no particular order, but ten as required by the activity:

  1. E.T.: The Extra-Terrestrial
  2. Солярис
  3. Det sjunde inseglet
  4. Tous les matins du monde
  5. Bill & Ted’s Excellent Adventure
  6. Le Roi danse
  7. Star Trek: The Wrath of Khan
  8. もののけ姫
  9. Offret
  10. Monty Python and the Holy Grail

Now, as with the books,  it’s your turn…

😉

Aside

I’ve decided to carry out a longitudinal survey of myself using pictures.  Charts courtesy of http://personas.media.mit.edu/personasWeb.html

How the internet sees me 20 June 2010

Aside

Just for a change, I thought I’d make a list of books that I feel sum me up, as I see myself.  I leave it to others to guess why I chose them!  This can also be a fun activity for teaching too, using the idea of “Ten ___ that sum me up”. Get students to write their lists anonymously, then distribute and try to find the person…

In no particular order, but there are ten of them (as required by the activity!):

  1. The Wee Book of Calvin
  2. Music and the Mind
  3. Gödel, Escher, Bach – an Eternal Golden Braid
  4. The Crest of the Peacock: The Non-European Roots of Mathematics
  5. Principes de la Flûte traversière, ou flûte d’Allemagne; de la flûte à bec, ou flûte douce; et du haut-bois, Divisez par Traitez. Par Sieur Hotteterre-le-Romain, Flûte de la Chambre du Roy
  6. The Bumper Book of Bunny Suicides
  7. Klingon
  8. Barbershop Arranging Manual
  9. Use Your Head
  10. The Republic

Now, who would you be?

😉

Aside

If you have arrived here because you followed the link on my Twitter profile, then thank you for taking the time to check me out.  If you arrived here because someone else directed you, thank them too!  If you are here just because you are poking around in my blog, then welcome!  The blog is still in its initial stages, so please come back later and poke around….

It seems like a good idea to set out some guidelines about how I use Twitter and how I choose who I follow and what I post.  At the time of writing, I have been using Twitter for 2 weeks, and I think I have a fairly good feel for how I want it to work for me.

For advanced/experienced users, I have a number of interests.  I usually post my music quotes using #acappella and/or #music.  My education-related posts usually go to #edchat, sometimes to #edtech and #scichat and/or other specialized/specific tags at the time of posting. If there is no #hashtag and I have not replied or referred to someone using an @person, then it’s just me having a mind-burp…

For new users/people new to following me:
I am not a marketing opportunity, I do not automatically follow people just because they follow me.  I also stop following people whose tweets becoming persistent or annoying for me.  If you are new to Twitter, I strongly recommend getting something like TweetDeck or HootSuite to help you organize your Twitter experience.
I usually only follow #FF (#followfriday) people recommended by those I am already following.  I don’t always follow all of them, however.
I check my followers’ profiles and websites, if listed.  I would expect you to do the same with me. If you don’t have a website and your past tweets seem totally irrelevant, I will probably not follow you.  If you seem to be concerned with selling stuff I may even block you…. be warned.
I have charities or groups in which I am interested and about which I make occasional posts.  If you decide to support them too, that’s great, but not a requirement.

I believe in interacting with people when I am monitoring tweets.  I will send out comments to people and if they choose to respond that’s fine.  If they choose not to, that’s ok too.  Some of my tweets are going to be social interactions, not ‘serious educational issues’ and not everyone wants to interact with me socially.  I try to adjust my engagements accordingly – it is a difficult balance to achieve.  Just because someone is my friend on Facebook or elsewhere, I don’t get all huffy or have a hissy-fit because they don’t follow me on Twitter.  I understand they have their accounts for different purposes, as do I.

I think more people should explain how they want/expect to use Twitter, and Facebook etc. to help improve their use as a means of true social interaction.

I retweet anything I find interesting, useful, supportive or helpful.  I try to personalize retweets and always make an effort to include the original Tweeter.  I also try to remove any #hashtags which have already been included, especially if the RT is only one or two minutes after the original.  It gives me more space to personalize or redirect a Tweet to other Tweet-streams or people I am following or who follow me and may have missed the original.

I don’t expect thanks for RT, but it is appreciated when people do, by the same token I will not always thank or follow people for RTing me.  I think RT is probably most effective if you are operating in a different timezone i.e. after about 4 or 5 hours.  I appreciate anyone who takes a minute or so to consider and edit Tweets before they RT.  I always try to respond to anyone who takes the time to interact with me, even if it’s only once for one particular problem – we are all here to help each other.

If you don’t understand anything, ask on Twitter, #edchat and #edtech are great for educators…

And if you read this far, bless you!

Colin

Aside

It has been about 5 months since I left Japan and I am surprised – although maybe I shouldn’t be – at how much not being constantly exposed to a language causes it to disappear.  I have had the occasional phone call in Japanese since leaving, but then I never was very good with phones anyway – whatever the language!  I have also received and read on or two e-mails and blogs in Japanese, but again it seems to be taking me just that little bit longer to process meaning.  It’s not just old age either!

The interesting thing for me is that, having returned to Europe and having to rebuild a (new) network, I have been exposed to sites in French and German that I probably wouldn’t otherwise have investigated – and it all came back to me.  I can’t say that I could converse or pontificate on the subject-matter in either of those languages, but I was mildly surprised at how little I had to reach for a dictionary.  I also started work on an opera written in ancient Greek shortly after returning to the UK, mainly to stop me from going completely mental, and remembered quite a bit of that from school too.  As work on the opera progresses, I am noticing that my reading speed is increasing and that I am having to refer less and less to the English translation.  It is weird having to relearn my touch-typing for the Greek input, though!

I am left with a couple of questions:
Is there a critical mass in language learning beyond which the language is never lost? and if the answer is yes…
What is it and how do we best achieve it?

Going back to move forwards?

I attended the BABS annual convention at Harrogate,  28th-30th May,  for the first time in 14 years – having been out of the country in the interim.  It caused me to reflect on the nature of progress and how things evolve (or devolve).  The last time I attended convention, I was in the judging pit, and the last time I competed at convention was almost 20 years ago to the day: at the same venue, with the same club and the same (recently returned) director.  As I sat in the audience, during the quartet semi-finals and finals, and for a goodly proportion of the chorus contest, I was left with a number of though-provoking questions/comments…

  • how do quartets and choruses choose their contest songs?
  • has the style ‘advanced’ so far that it is acceptable to end on a dissonance
    (deliberately rather than singing out of tune…)?
  • abandoning prelims for choruses seems to be much fairer and overall standards seem to have grown
  • what happened to the ‘Monday Morning Fun Show’?

I am not going to answer these now, maybe I’ll revisit them around the same time next year, it’s always good to reflect from time to time… however, I do think it would be worthwhile for some of those who have been in this ‘for the duration’ as it were, and may have allowed some things to go too far (in my view), to go back and reexamine where Barbershop Harmony singing came from and consider where they’d like to see it in 15 years time.  Maybe I’m just turning into Burt Szabo!

Thanks for visiting

This is a random collection of my thoughts and musings.  Previous visitors may notice I have adopted a black-based theme.  This is to try and save energy – however small the impact!

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Comments welcome, enjoy! 😀

Aside

It always seems difficult to decide the best way to begin a new venture such as this.  The idea of exposing yourself publicly to the world is not necessarily something to be considered lightly.  There is also the feeling that I am going to be writing largely for myself and using this as a kind of edited diary of sorts.  I am always impressed by the volume of output that some of my teaching colleagues are able to generate, but initially I am going to aim at one or two posts per day.  No point in being too ambitious!

If you are reading my posts, then please feel free to make comments – but you’ll have to be ‘signed up’  and ‘approved’ to do so.