Showing posts with label learning. Show all posts
Showing posts with label learning. Show all posts

9/13/2017

Trust the Process

We’ve all been there. It’s midnight the night before a big paper is due. The coffee is percolating 6 hours too early, and I know I’ve got at least 7 hours of work to do before I can submit this bad boy—bad, here, being the operative word. Despite my efforts and my long hours and my sleepless nights, I never got the grades I knew I could earn on my writing until I learned to slow down and trust the process.

Tired memes may be a result of sleepless nights.

I’m talking about the Writing Process: a step-by-step approach to writing that all good writers, in their best moments, employ in different and often unique ways. In its most basic form, the Writing Process starts with prewriting – the steps you take before you begin composing a draft. These steps might include jotting down your ideas, brainstorming, asking questions, doing research, reading, annotating texts, taking notes, concept mapping, outlining, and talking about your ideas with peers and colleagues.

After prewriting comes drafting, and this stage takes on innumerable forms. For most writers, the important thing is to get started. It has been well established that one cannot complete a piece of writing without first sitting down to write. The key is not to become attached to any of the material you produce in the drafting stage, because more likely than not it will get cut to shreds before the end. That’s because the next stage in the process is revision, and many a poorly written sentence has succumbed to its wrath.

Please, metaphorical wrath only.

Revision is a difficult task for almost all writers, in part because it’s nearly impossible to do it alone. Writers need interested, engaged, and knowledgeable readers with whom we can share our work and find out how it sounds in another person’s head. The goal of writing, after all, is to be read by someone else. But how to revise it to make it fit for human consumption? You need the writing process! And that’s where the Writing Center comes in.

We will help you find it.

When you bring a draft of your work to the Writing Center, you’ll work with a peer who faces the same internal struggles as you do whenever they sit down to write. What shall I say? Will my professor think it’s dumb? What’s the best way to organize this discussion? Do my sources even support this thesis? How do I cite a documentary film? Do you think this cheese is safe to eat? While our Writing Consultants don’t claim to know the mysterious workings of professors’ minds, and we probably can’t advise you about the contents of your fridge, we can help with everything else.

So make an appointment at the Writing Center, no matter where you’re at in your work. Your consultant will be happy to talk with you about your thesis, your sources, your organizational strategy, your citations, and even your writing process. We can help you discover new strategies for building an essay from the ground up, and once your process is in place, you can slow down, too, and learn to trust where it will lead you. Writing will still be hard work, but with a little help from the Writing Center, you can get to sleep at a reasonable hour, and get your coffee drinking back in the morning where it belongs.


Coffee and pie not included.

8/08/2017

New Semester, New Workshops!

Langsdale and the ALC are thrilled to brag a little about our Fall 2017 semester offering of workshops. We're gearing up for this semester with a full staff and a full list of workshops FREE to UB students.

Whether you're looking to prepare yourself for a statistics course, strengthen your Adobe Creative Cloud skills, learn about plagiarism and APA citation, or set yourself up for the semester with goal setting and time management--the ALC has you covered!

Check out the full selection at ubalt.edu/workshops. Locations and RSVP details can be found at ubalt.edu/calendar.

Make sure you drop by our fall open house and learn about all of services at a Taste of Tutoring:

6/12/2017

Academic Support @ Langsdale

Langsdale Library and the ALC are open all summer long and we're here to support you through all your tough summer courses!





Working on a research project? Make an appointment with a Reference Librarian or drop by the reference desk on the fourth floor of Langsdale. We can help you organize your research project, plan your project, find credible sources, and more!

Need to start writing your research project and don't know where to start? The Writing Center can help you outline your writing project, organize your thoughts, and support a thesis or hypothesis. Consultants can meet with you at any stage of the writing process and review writing on any topic.

Taking a tough course this summer? We have one-on-one and group tutoring to review core course concepts and best meet your needs. Depending on the tutor, you can even meet in-person or online! Sign up using the online appointment system. If you don't see your course listed, let us know!

If you're struggling with a computer program, we're here to support you with that too! Not sure how to change your Running head in Microsoft Word? Scheduled for a design course in the fall and need to brush up on your Adobe InDesign/ Illustrator/ Photoshop? Need to make convert a file to a PDF? Not sure how to navigate Sakai? Sign up for an appointment on the Computer Application Skills schedule and we'll get your questions answered!

Research, writing, course, and computer skills support appointments can all be made using the online appointment system. We look forward to working with you!

6/01/2017

Credo: New Database @ Langsdale

http://proxy-ub.researchport.umd.edu/login?url=http://search.credoreference.com





Check out the new materials at Langsdale! We've recently added Credo Reference to our list of databases. Credo covers all of higher education's primary disciplines, with over 650 titles to search. It includes publications like encyclopedias, atlases, dictionaries, and reference books.

Credo also offers over 1000 videos, almost 300,000 high-resolution art images, plus thousands of other images from all subjects. Another unique feature offered by Credo allows you to create a visual mind map, which can help you brainstorm and plan your research projects.

The database, Credo Reference, can be accessed through the Databases guide on Langsdale's web site. Visit here
 to get tips and additional information on how to search Credo.

12/06/2016

It’s Here -The Touchjet Pond!


There’s new technology in the library and we’re ready to show you what it can do!

At its basic level the Touchjet Pond is a portable projector. But ultimately it’s a portable touchscreen tablet that can be projected onto any surface. 

The Pond has wireless and Bluetooth capability. It can project an image from 12 to 80 inches on any surface. With the power of 80 lumens it can produce a nice display that allows its users to interact with it via the stylus pens and the air mouse that come with it.  

There are several ports on the back, one that allows you to connect it to a USB drive for external storage. It has 16 GB of internal storage, but the external option gives more flexibility for sharing. Which comes in handy for libraries! Plus, there is always the cloud! Also, there’s an HDMI adapter that allows you to connect the Pond to laptops and desktops so they can be mirrored and projected onto a larger surface. It has both AC and DC power. Once it’s charged it can move around for a few hours without the bothersome cord.

The Pond comes equipped with an Android operating system, so you can connect and download apps from Google’s Play store. This gives you the flexibility to choose between the wide varieties of apps to suit your needs. We’ve taken the initiative and preloaded apps like, Word, Excel, PowerPoint, and Adobe. There are many educational apps as well as fun gaming apps that may be useful in a classroom. Its interactive capability gives you many options. You may also choose to login to your Netflix or Hulu account and watch a movie, just don’t forget to logout when you’re done!

We are giving a demo for librarians next week and then for faculty in January. Once we’ve educated them, be sure to ask about it and learn how to see what it can do for your class!

For more information on this technology www.touchjet.com

1/08/2014

It’s Not Rosetta Stone, but…

Growing up, my best friend was (and still is) Bharathi Vallalar. We were two years old when we first met. The story goes, I was sitting inside the rinky-dink apartment I called home, staring off into space and feeling suffocated by boredom. I whined to my mom about how I had no friends, and she looked out of the window and as usual gave great advice.

“You have to be friendly to make friends,” she announced as she pressed her pointed finger against the glass. “So why don’t you go outside and play with that boy?”

A friendship was born.  Fate brought Bharathi and his family out of South India and into the Twin Oaks apartment complex in Lafayette, Louisiana. His father knew a fair amount of English and took the time to practice the language with his son. We spent every waking day together and more often than not got into some kind of mischief. (One time we used my watercolor-paint set to decorate the neighbors front doors.) When we turned four, Bharathi’s mother came to be my weekday sitter. Unlike her husband, Mrs. Ponita had never studied English and had to pick up the language day-to-day. Many times my bosom buddy served as a translator for his mother. As a little kid, I remember listening to Bharathi and Mrs. Ponita converse in their native tongue of Tamil and feeling jealous.

What are they saying? Why can’t I understand them? I want to learn speak like them too. 

10/21/2013

Mindfulness in Education


Ali Smith of Baltimore's Holistic Life Foundation. Photo by Noel Hidalgo.


Something in my news feed caught my eye this morning: A Classroom in the Now, a brief article about the rising popularity of mindfulness meditation and its potential to help students learn. It highlights the work of Jon Kabat-Zinn, founding director of the Stress Reduction Clinic and the Center for Mindfulness in Medicine, Health Care, and Society at the University of Massachusetts Medical School.

Mindfulness is a hot topic right now. Drawing on meditation techniques from Buddhist spiritual traditions, secular forms of mindfulness are cropping up in corporate offices, college campuses, and public schools. Closer to home, researchers from Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health teamed up with Penn State and Baltimore's Holistic Life Foundation to bring mindfulness to urban youth. (Brief article in PDF)

Want to know more? The web (and our library!) are brimming with information on mindfulness, but one place to start could be this handy research guide, put together by University of Kentucky Libraries.