Wednesday, February 22, 2017

Tirebiter and the Winds of Change (or Change of Wind), by George LeRoy Tirebiter XII

The sleep apnea’s getting more severe—I think that’s the worst of it. It’s something I’ve been able to more or less control for a number of years, but I’m nodding off more and more, and not just because I’m boring the crap out of myself.  I’ll see if I can get some treatment over spring break.

I had a nice moment during office hours today—I’ll get to it. It stems from our department’s current major basket-weaving project, a subset of basket-weaving that isn’t my specialty, but I’m finding myself more and more immersed in it, since our department is putting together a graduate program in this kind of basket-weaving. The project has unearthed a few concerns, which I’m having trouble articulating except in a place like this.

So the project is a kind of basket-weaving that the participants devise over a period of weeks and then present, and it’s never been my thing, exactly. And I’m not in a position anymore where I could just say, well, I admire the concept, but it’s not my kind of basket-weaving, or I’m not the intended basket-weaving audience—I pretty much have to cheerlead for it. I’m learning some of the vocabulary, but I’m not sure my heart is in it. And I’m starting to worry a bit that our department is going to break its arm patting itself on the back with regard to how “courageous” this kind of basket-weaving is. Some of it really is courageous, and some of it is kind of… basket-weaving wanking, I think. (I suppose there is some courage involved in wanking, at that.)

I find myself at a great loss in terms of how to explain it or put it in context for the non-basket-weaving majors, and yet there may be a key—remember that “nice moment” I mentioned 215 words ago? A non-major from my intro to basket-weaving lecture course expressed concerns about giving a written response to the project, since the project confused her. My admission was pretty simple: “You’re not the only one, sweet cheeks.” (For the record, I did not really say “sweet cheeks.”) I assured the student that she didn’t have to get the details “right” or “wrong”—most of it was perception and opinion. We talked through a few of the basics of the project that I knew about, and we came to some plausible conclusions. “That was very helpful,” she said. “Thank you.”

Lately, I’ve been feeling not quite part of the basket-weaving team—more like I’m “basket-weaving adjacent.” I can take steps to improve that. But a word or two like that from a student who really wants to take intro to basket-weaving seriously—it’s something. Some of my other students, who get most of their philosophy from Pixar (as do I, I must readily admit), tell me to “just keep swimming.” I’ll do that, too.

Finally, I read a Yaro piece—something about a goodbye party thrown by his grateful and loving colleagues and former students. It was sweet.

5 comments:

  1. I had to use The Google to discover that George Leroy Tirebiter was the Californian equivalent of Texas A&M's Reveille. And I'm glad the author found the piece about Yaro's good-bye party to be sweet. There are real people behind these avatars and nicknames. Yaro was pretty magnificent.

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    1. I'd heard of G.L. Tirebiter but forgotten he was replaced by a horse.

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  2. It's interesting to learn the background of GLT--I'll admit I was only thinking of the protagonist of Firesign Theater's "Don't Crush That Dwarf, Hand Me the Pliers."

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  3. Welcome, Dr. Tirebiter. Based on the information above, I will have to google your name. In the meantime, I wanted to say that I like your profile pic. It reminds me of the family backstory early in Charlotte Temple, where we meet a gentleman in reduced circumstances.

    I'm glad you had a good moment with a student. I find puzzling things I don't entirely understand through with students who don't entirely understand them either (though from a somewhat different perspective) can often be rewarding. This is fortunate, since I'm a literature scholar mostly teaching writing to scientists these days. Some combination of nurturing intellectual curiosity (I know a surprising amount about driverless cars, cybersecurity, and assorted other technical subjects) and reminding myself that I'm not teaching them a subject, I'm teaching them how to learn on their own, seems to work (at least on some days. For the other days, I recommend patting that nice dog beside you.)

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  4. Thanks, Dr. Cassandra... as it happens, I didn't choose the picture--probably the work of the RGM, but I like it a lot, too. And I spend a lot of time petting my real-life cat.

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