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IT Removes Constraints of Traditional Learning: Klein

Posted on Sep 17, 1999

In

1965, before most people had seen a computer, Doug Klein had a high school

summer internship writing FORTRAN for a defense contractor.

“I like to point out that I was programming

computers 10 years before Bill Gates was,” said Klein, professor of

economics, who seems an obvious choice for the new position of associate

dean of information technology.

Now, two decades after the first microcomputers arrived

on American campuses, a national survey by UCLA finds that two-thirds of

faculty say they are stressed trying to keep up with emerging technology,

surpassing even the stress of traditional pressures from teaching and

publishing.

“I don't see faculty at Union who feel that

way,” Klein says. On the contrary, he finds that faculty are

embracing information technology – IT for short – and eager to explore

new ways to use it.

The web gives us access to vast information resources,

“maybe more than we know what to do with,” Klein notes. But, he

said, he is especially excited about the opportunities for communication

and collaboration that IT creates. “IT eliminates the traditional

constraints of time and space; class discussions can continue into the

night and across campus, or even around the world. As David Cossey

(executive director of OCS) once said about the renovated Schaffer

Library, “Even when it's closed, it's open.'”

Klein recalls a fellow economist at Miami University in

Ohio whose class was discussing an article on 19th century economic

history. After a number of questions arose, the professor arranged to have

an evening Internet chat with the author of the article.

“I view my initial responsibility in this job as

helping to administer several significant grants to enhance the use of IT

in teaching and learning,” Klein says. “Teaching with IT

requires quite different preparation, and it is not for everyone,” he

says, adding that he sometimes sees technology – things like Powerpoint

– used to the point of tedium. “Of course,” he adds, “I've

seen a blackboard used that way, too.”

Among the grants are two from the Andrew W. Mellon

Foundation – one received last year to integrate technology into the

Freshman Preceptorial, the other received recently to support

collaborative international studies programs with Hobart and William Smith

Colleges. Klein will work with Prof. Tom Werner on course development and

IT made possible by the National Science Foundation's AIRE grant. The

College also has received grants from the AT & T Foundation to support

U*STAR, a corps of students who assist faculty with technology.

“I also hope to help the College in its long-term

strategic planning for the use of technology,” Klein said. “In

IT, 'long-term' is measured in months, but this just underscores the

need to be quick and flexible in our planning.

“Union has a history of innovation, such as

incorporating the natural sciences and engineering into the

curriculum,” Klein says. “So teaching with and teaching about

technology are certainly consistent with Union's history.

“I came to this job with the firm belief that as

much as we have accomplished recently – the F.W. Olin Center, the

renewed Schaffer Library, electronic classrooms – there are many more

ways we can harness IT to further the traditional mission of the

College.”

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Rogers, Turner Works on Display

Posted on Sep 17, 1999

Mandeville Gallery in the Nott Memorial presents the

exhibition An Exact Spectacular – drawings by Ed Rogers and sculpture

by Henry Turner through Oct. 17.

The show is curated by writer, publisher and collector

David Greenberger of Greenwich, N.Y.

Included are about 120 drawings by Rogers and 49

small-scale wood sculptures by Turner. Both are “self-taught” or

“outsider” artists with no formal artistic training; their

motivation and frame of reference differ considerably from that of

mainstream, schooled artists.

Both men are in their 70s; Rogers lives in a nursing

home near Boston, and Turner was last known to be living in Schenectady.

Greenberger, called a “stand-up sociologist”

by Rolling Stone magazine, has spent two decades recording

observations and comments by nursing home residents and publishing them in

his magazine The Duplex Planet. He also has been a commentator on

National Public Radio's All Things Considered.

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Calendar of Events

Posted on Sep 17, 1999

Friday, Sept. 17, through Monday Sept. 20, 8 and 10 p.m.

Reamer Campus Center Auditorium.

Film committee presents The Mummy.

Monday, Sept. 20, 4 p.m.

Social Sciences Lounge.

Opening reception for German artist Gerlinde Grossmann, showing 17

abstract paintings through Oct. 10.

Tuesday, Sept. 21, 10 a.m. and noon.

Reamer 203.

Workshops on “Portfolio Tuning and Maintenance During Your Working

Years” with Robert Berenis of Kurchner Capital Management. Seating

limited. To reserve, call Human Resources at ext. 6108.

Wednesday, Sept. 22, 8 p.m.

Memorial Chapel.

Pianist Boris Berezovsky opens the Schenectady Museum-Union College

chamber music series with program to include works by Rachmaninov, Chopin,

Scriabin and Prokofiev.

Thursday, Sept. 23, 7:30 p.m.

Nott Memorial.

Joseph Ellis, the Ford Foundation Professor of History at Mount Holyoke

College, on “Why Jefferson Lives: A Meditation on the Man and the

Myth.” His talk is the first of four this fall in the Perspectives at

the Nott lecture series. (story this issue)

Friday, Sept. 24, 8 p.m.

Memorial Chapel.

Pianist Boris Berezovsky returns with cellist Dmitry Yablonsky for pieces

by Bach, Shostakovich and Rachmaninov.

Through Oct. 15.

Arts Atrium.

“The Time Between Dogs and Wolves: Paintings and Field Studies by

Keith Jacobshagen and Harry Orlyk.” Opening reception Sept. 30 from

4:30 to 6 p.m.

Through Oct. 17.

Mandeville Gallery, Nott Memorial.

“An Exact Spectacular,” drawings by Ed

Rogers and sculpture by Henry Turner. Curated by

David Greenberger, writer, publisher, performer, NPR commentator.

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Ellis Opens Nott Talks on Thursday

Posted on Sep 17, 1999

Joseph Ellis, the Ford Foundation Professor of History

at Mount Holyoke College, speaks on “Why Jefferson Lives: A

Meditation on the Man and the Myth” on Thursday, Sept. 23, at 7:30

p.m. in the Nott Memorial.

His talk is the first of four this fall in the

Perspectives at the Nott lecture series.

A nationally-recognized scholar of American history from

colonial times through the early decades of the republic, he is the author

of six books including American Sphinx: The Character of Thomas

Jefferson, winner of the 1997 National Book Award in Nonfiction. The

book has been the subject of great critical and public interest as it

explores the complexities of Jefferson's character and the central role

of his political philosophy in the unfolding of the American experience.

Other lectures in the Perspectives at the Nott series

are Victor Fazio '65, former Congressman, on “Rekindling Faith in

Public Service in the Quest for the Common Welfare of the Next

Millennium” on Oct. 7; actor Fred Morsell in a character portrayal,

“Presenting Mr. Frederick Douglass” on Oct. 27; and Houston

Baker, a specialist in American and African-American literature on

“Turning South Again – Rethinking Black Modernism” on Nov. 4.

All lectures start at 7:30 p.m. For more information,

call ext. 6131.

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Columnist Katha Pollitt to speak at Union College on Oct. 27

Posted on Sep 10, 1999

Katha Pollitt, feminist author, poet, and columnist for The Nation will give a talk titled “Why I Hate Family Values” on Monday, October 27 in Union College's Nott Memorial at 7:30 p.m.

Pollitt's “Subject to Debate” column appears every other week in The Nation and has been called by the Washington Post “the best place to go for original thinking on the left.” The column is also frequently reprinted in newspapers across the country.

Critics have raved about Pollitt's book, Reasonable Creatures: Essays on Women and Feminism, published in 1994. The New York Times Book Review said: “Funny and furious … Pollitt takes on the most compelling issues of our day concerning the sexes and turns them upside down. Along with her razor-sharp wit and her impatience with sound-bite solutions, what sets Ms. Pollitt apart from other feminist writers is her concern for social justice …. Cunning and complex.”

Pollitt is the winner of several writing awards, and her essays and poems have appeared in The New Yorker, The Atlantic, The New Republic, Harper's, and The New York Times, among others.

The lecture is free and open to the public. A reception, sponsored by the Women's Commission of Union College, will be held in Old Chapel immediately following the talk. The sixteen-sided Nott Memorial is located at the center of campus and parking is available on campus and on nearby sidestreets.

For more information, call 388-6131.

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