Thoughts on International Education

This blog intends to discuss issues related to education from an international perspective. Libraries will be a highlighted topic as well. Enjoy!

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Wednesday, May 13, 2009

A Foreign Perspective

All Foreigners Beep

As an expat living abroad, you are never able to fully immerse yourself into the local culture and this creates a unique perspective... the yabanci lens.  The article above was a nice reminder to me that I need to do my best to understand local culture but to remember to not be too hard on myself when I don't.

The adventure of living abroad...


Monday, August 20, 2007

Great Cheney Video

Hey There,

This video is being passed around by moveon.org and it is pretty amazing so I thought I'd pass it on to anyone interested. The video is a portion of a taped interview by Cheney in 1994, discussing Iraq.

Take a look!

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YENbElb5-xY

Sunday, July 29, 2007

It's True!

Hi! I had to post a very quick blog entry since I just saw the coolest thing. I am sitting in an internet cafe in Edinburgh Scotland... posting homework and working on my webpage (fyi - this is extremely difficult in an internet cafe). I just looked over and saw a young guy paging through a comic book using Google Scholar. It is too cool! I realized he was not a native English speaker and he was using the comic book to learn English or at least improve his English. It was really cool to watch him sound out the words and see him using the page through technique. The images and digital quality was excellent and it totally made sense to see this in action. Big kudos to google!

It was a big librarian moment for me, even if I did have to keep it to myself.

Too cool for school!

Friday, July 27, 2007

See Ya Later Alligator!

It's a big goodbye as we fly off into the friendly skies this evening! We've really enjoyed our time trying to live on the cheap, cheap in DC. Today was the highlight of the trip as far as I'm concerned with our tour of the NPR studios on the edge of Chinatown. It's nice to hear the reinforcement again that they are not for profit and they do not stand for influence from politicians or anyone else. Yeah! My husband even recorded a sound bite to hopefully be used at a later date. We explained how we live out of the country and we use NPR for their music and video clips in the classroom to teach students about American culture and other great things. They were excited to hear we were expats and asked us to record another clip about living abroad. We'll see if John's voice was authoritative enough for real radio.... we can only hope.

See you in a few days in Edinburgh.

Sunday, July 22, 2007

Let the Good Times Roll

I wanted to post a note to express my thanks to the staff and my fellow members of cohort 7. The time that we spent getting to know each other and the time taken to review concepts and connect the dots, was invaluable. I was a little hesitant before arriving but I was assured as soon as I met everyone and realized we were all here for the same reason. For that reason, I think the bond we formed is true and I'm glad to be a part of it. I'm definitely looking forward to the next few weeks in class.

We are also sadly leaving Pittsburgh tomorrow morning (at 5:30am ugh!) for the muggy heat of DC. We'll see the sights and make some memories and then hit the skies for some international seat time.

Stay tuned for an update on those adventures!

Tuesday, July 17, 2007

Get to Know Turkey

Here's a good general summary of some of the common mis-perceptions of Turkey.
http://www.turkeycentral.com/country_of_turkey.html

Monday, July 16, 2007

Do I have boogers in my nose?

Just checking. Now that I am on site for the residency portion of the UPitt MLIS program I hope everyone else is enjoying the opportunity to meet their peers as much as I am. It's always so important to put faces to names and really get to know the people that I am going to rely on heavily for the next 2 years. Good thing they all seem fun and friendly!

During the lecture today, we were talking about technology and the resistance to change that some library professionals seem to exhibit. As we discussed, perhaps the best approach to warm objectors is to present examples and real life situations where they might use technology and sophisticated tools and that would help with the comfort level. I can understand the resistance but I think the lure to be "innovative" and "cutting edge" is more alluring to me than remaining static and unchanging. Go figure, my past life revolved around redesigning processes and tools that employees used to make their experience better and offer as many things through a self-service model as possible.

Here are a few humorous examples of general everyday people using technology in interesting ways.
1. As we were leaving Turkey on a bus to reach the town where we would fly from, we witnessed a wonderful, inventive phenomena. People that want to send packages or boxes locally to towns that are close by will often stop a dolmus (small bus) and just give them their package and a small fee and the recipient will pickup the package from the bus station at the other end (or from the side of the road as the bus travels through). My husband and I watched an enterprising young man hand off his package, pay his fee, and then whip out his cell phone and take a digital photograph of the license plate of the dolmus to presumably send to the recipient so they could identify the bus (and more likely to have proof in case of foul play). Ingenious!

2. At the end of this trip, we stayed for one night in a hotel and left very early the next morning to catch our flight back to the US. Upon arrival to San Francisco, I realized I had left my precious school notebook with the passwords and user account names for all of the tools we've used in LIS2600. Major trauma! I send an email asking the owner of the hotel to please type the information in an email and send it to me. I begged and pleaded and explained the importance and how I would absolutely DIE without this information. A few hours later I received an email and opened it to find a .jpg attachment. My wonderfully helpful host had taken a picture of the page I needed and then mailed my folder on to our new home. Again, what a clever and insightful way to use technology to save time and reproduce images.

Bravo to my creative Turkish friends!