Tip-Top Design Skills

I meant to publish this on Ireland by Chance, but it ended up on RoboSlam.

RoboSlam

Meeting with John McGrory, Fionnuala Farrell, Una Beagon, and Ted Burke to discuss teaching design. Meeting with John McGrory, Fionnuala Farrell, Una Beagon, and Ted Burke to discuss teaching design.

What does a skilled designer do? How does she act? How does he know what will work? 

My colleagues at Dublin Institute of Technology and I want to know. 

We all have design and teaching experience. We have a feel for what good design practice looks like. 

But we aim to be more precise. We want to explain this well to our students. 

So a group of us — who are teaching design on the new “common first year” course that all engineering students in DIT’s four year honors engineering program are now taking — got together Wednesday morning to mull it over. Before meeting, we all read an excellent and comprehensive article by David Crismond and Robin Adams that was published in the Journal of Engineering Education. It is called The Informed Design Teaching…

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Sunnyday in Edinburgh

€14.99 flight to Edinburg. Thanks for a lovely day, Ryanair! My hip architect friend, Tarrah Beebe, and I truly enjoyed the Sunday sunshine.

And to think she arrived in Dublin from LA just yesterday….

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Shifting Powers

My colleague from William and Mary, Dr. Jim Barber, bought the Qualitative Research book I recommended to his students.

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Yesterday I learned that the EU wants to support interdisciplinary research by including qualitative researchers on science and technology research teams.

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Here’s an example of one of the panelist’s interdisciplinary research.

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This information session was held at the art museum, IMMA, which is housed in the former Kilmainham Royal Hospital. The facility is beautiful.

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Colleen Dube, the executive director of Fulbright Ireland–who has been a strong supporter of my work–moderated a panel discussion.

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I enjoyed the transfer of power underlying the picture posted above. The royalty no longer hold the power to shape society’s future: those researcher on the floor do!

Likewise, quantitative research has reigned central in the sciences, but this session provided evidence that qualitative work is gaining credibility. It’s being seen, more often, as an important perspective that is an essential part of good research.

Stepping Back in Time at Sweny’s Chemist Shop

A colleague suggested I stop in at Sweny’s, an old chemist shop (what we in the States call a pharmacy) just to see the architecture.

Sweny’s hosts readings of texts authored by famous Dubliners. It also displays old books and artifacts as they would have been a hundred years ago.

The place reminds me of the old general store my parents photographed in, I think, Virginia’s Giles County, when I was a kid. (It may have even been near Dublin, Virginia — which would be a fun coincidence!)

Their clients were building a detailed model of the general store, to scale. I loved perusing the shelves and investigating the old-time shoes, not yet sold, looking for a home.

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Focus on European Research

I’m going to try giving you a panoramic view of life here, working and living as a researcher in Dublin. I’ll make a stab at posting a panorama or reflection shot every few days. As a Fulbright, I tried to catalog my experiences. These days, I have to reserve my computer time for solid work. But a quick post from my phone shouldn’t take much time….

Today I’m learning about programs and achievements of the European Research Council (ERC). The organization’s president has been speaking at the Royal Irish Academy (RIA).

The RIA headquarters includes a lovely library about property ordinance surveys and the history of Ireland and Irish architecture. Before the event, I was flipping through a book and happened across a house that I think I’ve seen next to the Joyce Tower.

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Discussing Development… of College Students

I just made my annual appearance at the class on theories about college students’ development taught by Dr. Jim Barber. Last year I got to be there in person, but this year it was back to Skype.

Fortunately, the new version of Skype allows for screen sharing. It is always a bit disorienting for me to deliver guest lectures online, but I don’t think it was too painful for the audience tonight — on account of this new technology.

Presentation to W&M SoE

Today at DIT, my research project is fully underway, and every day I’m drawing from the theories I learned in this very informative class that I had the good fortune to take, way back in 2006, at The College of William and Mary.

Tonight, I discussed two research methods I’ve been using — the first using template analysis and the second using descriptive phenomenology. If you’d like to view the Prezi I presented, you can click here.

The best part of the evening was that the William and Mary grad students — 22 in all — had lots and lots of questions. I couldn’t gauge exactly how well I was connecting with the folks in the back row (who contributed lots of great questions) because the resolution was only so/so, but I have been loving that the fact that my Skype/Messenger/iMessage/MagicJack technology has been improving every day!

It’s five hours later in Dublin than back in Virginia, so the evening is quite well worn here. And since I’ve got a researcher “media training” workshop in the morning, I’d better hit the sack now…. Adieu, Adieu, To you and you and yo-u!

Prezi cover shot

Equal Chances? Not Today in the USA. Not on Your Life.

Today, I mourn for my country. A place where systematic, institutionalized racism reigns strong. 

I’ve always been thankful that I was born after the 1960s racial-awareness raising events that precipitated the 1968 Fair Housing Act, the proclamation in Virginia that interracial marriages were finally legal, and laws that enabled kids of all colors to attend the same public schools.

Incidentally, I was born just after we landed on the moon and after my alma mater, Virginia Tech, started admitting women into fields like architecture. (UVA started this the year I was born.) 

I benefitted from ALL these American achievements and civil rights. 

I was allowed to attend desegregated schools and learn from and with people from all walks of life.

We, as Americans, achieved all this but then we stopped short. We let ourselves believe all things had become equal. We actually kid ourselves into believing that any American-born person can succeed equally based on merit. That we all have an equal chance at birth. 

It simply isn’t true. And we can’t stop trying until it is.

TV News Feature

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Yesterday, RTE aired a piece on RoboSlam that features Ted Burke (I previously blogged about the filming).

The piece describes preparations for the Dublin Make event, to be held Saturday, July 26 on the grounds of Trinity College.  The news segment is available to view for seven days.

Click

http://www.rte.ie/news/player/one-news/2014/0724/#page=3

and then drag the slider to 23:12.  Getting to it takes a bit of effort since the internet version sometimes opens with commercials, but it’s a very cool and fun news pieces.

Great news work by Sinead Morris!

 

I’ve also found announcements about the Marie Curie fellowship in DIT’s spring Research News magazine (see pages 34-35) and on The College of William and Mary’s School of Education Alumni News webpage.

 
DIT Research News  http://www.dit.ie/media/ditresearchenterprise/dredocuments/Research%20news%20Vol%207.1.pdf

DIT Research News feature, see pages 34-

WM SOE almuni page https://education.wm.edu/news/alumninews/chance-2014.php

W&M School of Education alumni page announcement

Globetrotting with Missouri Engineers

University of Missouri students and their dueling robots.

University of Missouri students and their dueling robots.

For the past three summers, Dr. Robert O’Connell has conducted study abroad programs here in Dublin.  His programs engage engineering students from the University of Missouri.

A fight to the finish.

A fight to the finish.

This year, when Bob asked Dublin Institute of Technology lecturer Gavin Duffy to tour the students around the engineering facilities at DIT, Gavin leapt at the chance to apply Problem-Based Learning (PBL) techniques.

Gavin rallied his colleagues, and our RoboSlam team provided the Missouri students with a three-hour workshop on robot construction.

Since we had limited time to deliver what normally takes a day, Drs. Ted Burke and Damon Berry had pre-programmed the micro-controllers for the students. As a result, the students were able to focus on assembling the components and then streamlining their robots bodies for improved performance.

We culminated the event with a heavy weight Sumo competition.

Drs. Damon Berry and Bob O'Connell chatting after the RoboSlam event.

Drs. Damon Berry and Bob O’Connell chatting after the RoboSlam event.

In this event, the robots compete in a circular  “sumo ring” in pairs. Each robot attempts to locate its opponent and push the other robot out of the sumo ring.

After the paired competition, for additional fun, we placed all the robots in the ring at once, and cheered them on as they valiantly defended their positions in the ring.  In the end, only one robot remained.

Several of the lecturers in DIT’s Electrical Engineering program hold deep affinity for the coordinator of Missouri’s study abroad program, Dr. Bob O’Connell.  Bob was one of DIT’s first Fulbright scholars in Engineering Education (the post I later held).  While he was here as a Fulbright, Bob completed DIT’s Post-Graduate Certificate in Learning and Teaching.  He also helped teach courses and he was part of the faculty learning group that discussed ways to implement hands-on learning in the Electrical Engineering curriculum.

Upon returning home to the Electrical and Computer Engineering Department at the University of Missouri, Bob implemented a number of the Problem-Based Learning techniques he discovered in Dublin.

I had the pleasure of interviewing Bob last year, to learn about his experiences with the faculty learning group.

The fact that so many of DIT’s former Engineering Education Fulbrighters return for ongoing projects provides testimony to the learning community and sense of belonging these Irish scholars have created.  DIT is a very special place, indeed!

My Sis Celebrating the Innaguration

Although I spent Monday in bed, I lived vicariously through my sister. Heather drove from New York to DC to witness another historic inauguration and hear Mr. Obama’s address. Thanks for representing our little branch of the family, Sis!

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