Thursday, March 12, 2009
Sunday, February 22, 2009
Great Lecture and Series from Yale University et. al.

Here is a video lecture on Machiavelli's "The Prince" by Dr. Steven Smith at Yale University.
I recommend that you explore all the other lectures from Ivy League level schools that the Academic Earth website contains.
Friday, December 5, 2008

How best to use electronic [internet accessible] media materials for instructional purposes
by John Freed, Ph.D. freed@chapman.edu
- Be very contextual with the material clearly relating it to a specific learning objective for the class.
- Be highly selective about the quality of the material itself. Do your homework about the reliability of the particular source for the material as well as the content of the material. Produce your own electronic materials when appropriate from other less accessible media.
- Be sure to critically question all virtual authority (Wikipedia case in point vs. Encyclopedia). A very specific assignment focused on this very issue should be incorporated early on with the actual use of an electronically accessible source. [Point out the essential difference between what a university library collects and distributes and what the internet gathers and provides open access to.]
- Be very specific and current with the actual hyperlinks that you provide. The goal should be direct connection with a single click. Check them out personally immediately before you direct students to them.
- Be sure to supply the “So What” epilogue to the exercise.
- Be sure to provide a re-accessible [asynchronous] environment for everything above. This invites an opportunity for review, reflection and later synthesis of the learning. This environment might part of a course-specific BlackBoard site or a more generally accessible professional blog.
- Be sure to expand the common-wealth of resources by contributing as well as borrowing – (join a viral academic community such as Rice University’s Connexions or iTunes University or post your own professional blog linked to iTunes or not [CF . Google’s blog creation site -- https://www.blogger.com/start].
Examples Sheet for Instructional Uses of Electronic Resources
1. The Open-Access Instructional Resource project at
a. Richard Baraniuk: “Goodbye, textbooks; hello, open-source learning”: http://www.ted.com/index.php/talks/view/id/25
b.
2. Example of Electronic Primary Sources:
Ian Johnston’s The Iliad and links to other class primary resources:
http://malaspina.edu/~johnstoi/homer/iliad_title.htm
and Ian Johnston’s Translation of Homer’s Iliad reviewed on NPR:
http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=6849615
3. Example of a Professor’s Professional Blog – (Expanding instruction beyond the classroom) such as this one.
4. Second Language Learning and Free University Courses:
- LiveMocha Free Language Courses:
http://www.livemocha.com/ [This site can also be used to refresh learning of Standard English as well as connecting globally to other English Language Learners.]
- BBC Spanish Course:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/languages/spanish/
- BBC Chinese Course:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/languages/chinese/
- General Language Resources:
- English as a Second Language Remediation:
http://owl.english.purdue.edu/owl/resource/678/01/
5. Guide to University
http://www1.chapman.edu/library/centers/GuidetoLibraryResources.pdf.
6. Ubiquitous Web Search Engine and Google Resources such as News, Books, Scholar, etc.
7. All Purpose Developmental Writing Tutorials
a. for Non-Purdue Instructors and Students:
http://owl.english.purdue.edu/owl/resource/679/01/
b. for use with Diana Hacker’s Handbook
http://bcs.bedfordstmartins.com/pocket5e/player/pages/Login.aspx?sViewAs=S&userid=
8. APA (American Psychological Association) Documentation and Style Guide (fifth edition):
http://www.vanguard.edu/faculty/ddegelman/index.aspx?doc_id=796
9. Academic Integrity (How to avoid Plagiarism):
10. Mathematics / Statistics:
a. Mathematics Tutorials from Beginning Algebra through College Algebra and GRE prep:
http://www.wtamu.edu/academic/anns/mps/math/mathlab/
b. Basic Statistics (MATU 203)
http://www.tufts.edu/~gdallal/LHSP.HTM
and
http://davidmlane.com/hyperstat/index.html
11. Miscellaneous Microsoft Office Tutorials:
a. MS Word Tutorial:
http://office.microsoft.com/en-us/training/CR061958171033.aspx
b. PowerPoint Tutorial:
http://www.iupui.edu/~webtrain/tutorials/powerpoint2000_basics.html
c. Excel Tutorials:
http://www.usd.edu/trio/tut/excel/index.html
and
http://www.micquality.com/excel_primer/
12. Free alternatives to Microsoft Office software applications.
a. Open Office:
b. Google Docs:
13. Other Free College Course Materials:
http://degreedirectory.org/articles/25_Colleges_and_Universities_Ranked_by_Their_OpenCourseWare.html
14. Study Skills and Adjustment to College:
Final Note: This listing of open-access electronic resources was prepared co-operatively by
Thursday, December 4, 2008

Lera Boroditsky
Listen to a conversation about the inter-relationships between world languages and human thinking
From
Entitled Opinions
Host Robert Harrison
Tuesday, November 4, 5:00 pm - 6:00 pm, 2008
Guest host Joshua Landy in conversation with Lera Boroditsky about language and thought.
Click here for instructions on downloading and listening
JOSHUA LANDY is Associate Professor of French at
LERA BORODITSKY is an assistant professor of psychology, neuroscience, and symbolic systems at
Boroditsky’s research centers on the nature of mental representation and how knowledge emerges out of the interactions of mind, world, and language. One focus has been to investigate the ways that languages and cultures shape human thinking. To this end, Boroditsky’s laboratory has collected data around the world, from
Friday, November 14, 2008

My Teaching Philosophy – Newly Revised
As part of a senior administrator application process, I was required recently to expound upon my “Teaching Philosophy” in a short essay. Thank goodness for old hard-drives and a compulsion to back-up files. And voila! Up came “My Teaching Philosophy” written some fifteen years ago in another state. A few nips and tucks and then back to other work.
What I wasn’t prepared for was that in this self-reflection I would see a very different teacher’s face looking back at me. Instead of time tested, knock ‘em dead print and lecture materials that I’d used for more than ten years, I saw dynamic electronic resources plucked from the infinite treasure trove freely accessible through Google.
Instead of stage worthy performance virtuosity, I saw facilitations of the expertise of my students and worldwide collegial partnerships through such agencies as
Instead of building fresh neuronal networks in new-to-college students, I was helping older, returning students restructure their denser neuronal networks into different patterns. My earlier Socratic classroom dramaturgy had mellowed to one that allowed both my students and me more time for consideration, genuine dialogue and changes of mind.
Although the “how I teach” has evolved significantly over the years, the “what I teach” relative to the primacy of the liberal arts really hasn’t changed. No matter what the subject, I still emphasize that nearly all contemporary human problems are more failures of imagination, introspection, observation, analysis/interpretation, common sense, cultural memory, integrity, moral outrage, courage to act, or compassion rather than insufficiencies of material means to solve them. And that the ability to absorb, critique and construct new knowledge is our best indicator of truly college-educated individuals. These are the competencies that engagement with the liberal arts provide. I fully agree with Cicero who said over two thousand years ago, "Not to have knowledge of what happened before you were born, is to be condemned to live your life as a child."
The three most significant indicators of my evolution as a teacher over the last fifteen years are 1) to write a “Lecture Epilogue” delivered to the student electronically a week after each class answering the “So what?” questions and including students’ contributions; 2) to focus on “learning by doing” by spending less time on what I am going to say in class and more time on imagining what the students could do to apply their prior learning and demonstrate their understanding of the material -- to become the change that I was envisioning; and 3) to project the learning beyond the classroom by maintaining an ongoing professional blog for my current and former students as well as my colleagues. This “Common-wealth: Art, Media and Western Culture” blog is my way of doing just that -- http://artmediawesternculture.blogspot.com/.
I also believe that every college class is a writing and critical thinking class and that every college teacher needs to model the highest level of effective communication. Monitoring those ends I wrote the expository writing-across-the-curriculum rubrics that appear on every
In this brave, new, electronically networked world we’re permitted to act more like teammates than competitors.
Saturday, October 25, 2008
Do facts have a built in spin?

and “Media Matters for

Question for the day:
Can you figure out which rolls on a liberal bias and which on a conservative one?
Sunday, October 5, 2008
Write Your Novel on a Cellphone During Your Commute

Rin, 21, tapped out a novel on her cellphone that sold 400,000 copies in hardcover.
She wrote her novel while commuting to her part-time job.
For the rest of the story link to the New York Times story:
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/01/20/world/asia/20japan.html?_r=1&pagewanted=all&oref=slogin
Friday, September 19, 2008
Don't Waste -- Create
Monday, August 11, 2008
Celebration of the Life of Aspasia
Husband Steven and daughter Celine held a moving event that celebrated the life and love of Aspasia on August 10th at Oakland's Lake Merritt Garden Center.

Aspasia Neophytos-Richardson (1943-2008)
Click here for more images of Aspasia from Steven's slide show.

(click on image to enlarge)
"Dance for Aspasia"
Friday, August 1, 2008
Free College-Level On-line Courses
Tuesday, May 27, 2008
From the MFA show in San Francisco
Saturday, May 3, 2008
Goodbye, textbooks; hello, open-source learning from the TED Conference in Monterey, CA
Richard Baraniuk from Rice University on the Open-Resource Instructional Revolution:
For a link to the talk itself click on TED.
For direct access to Rice University's Open-Resources click on Connexions and share the common-wealth of higher education instruction.
Saturday, April 19, 2008
Women Artists Strike Back
Sunday, April 6, 2008
Sunday, March 23, 2008
Zagar on Zagar I
Our congratulations to Jeremiah Zagar whose documentary of his father, Isaiah, has just received the Emerging Visions Audience Award from the SXSW Film Festival. "Over the past four decades, artist Isaiah Zagar has covered more than 50,000 square feet of Philadelphia with stunning mosaic murals. "In A Dream" is a documentary feature film that chronicles his work and his tumultuous relationship with his wife, Julia. It follows the Zagars as their marriage implodes and a harrowing new chapter in their life unfolds."
For more information about the film click In a Dream.
Julia and Isaiah are our friends.
Friday, March 21, 2008
Thursday, March 20, 2008
DVD – Double Feature Film Pick of the Week
Friday, March 14, 2008
Stanley Fish and the Neo Know-Nothings
I was so angry at his thoughtlessness that I wrote a whole new preamble for my section in the Chapman University College Catalog about why studying the humanities is so vital to perpetuating the very things that make us most human.
Here is what I wrote for Stanley and the semi-literate children who are currently mismanaging our potentially great nation.
Nearly all contemporary human problems are more failures of imagination, observation, analysis, interpretation, communication, common sense, integrity, courage to act, faith, compassion or introspection than insufficiencies of material means to solve them. These are the areas of competency addressed and developed in the study of the humanities. Literary critic Harold Bloom recently asked, "Where can wisdom be found?"
Tuesday, March 11, 2008
Hayden White from Stanford on Why the Humanities

Stanford Radio and available for Mp3 downloads.
Sunday, March 9, 2008
Saturday, March 8, 2008
A Lyric Poem from Kyoto
A Post-Card from Kyoto at Rush Hour
A perverse calm even at rush hour
even from battalions of uniformed teens
fearful of awakening warlord emperors
At the Pink Bunny Cafe, a pastel blue
elephant stylized into a ball
wraps around a raspberry bear
Old women squashed
into the shape of a Z
cross the streets glazed with rain
One thousand and one gold lacquered
radiantly female images of Kannon
have manifested erect for 733 years
Another wooden temple so vast
only rope braided from women's hair
could have dragged its enormous beams
A glass geometrical monolith
vaster than Blade Runner's
imagined future contains
The panther train
eager to carry me back to Osaka
leaving maybe a moved pebble at Rengeo-in garden.
Friday, March 7, 2008
Theatrical Film Pick of the Week

To make you feel relieved that you do not live in Buffalo, NY,
or anywhere along I-90 for that matter, watch "Savages."
Wednesday, March 5, 2008
Three Poems by Carilda Oliver Labra
Eve's Discourse
Today, I brutally greet you
with a grunt
or a kick.
Where are you hiding,
where have you fled with your wild box
full of hearts,
and your stream of gunpowder?
Where are you now;
in the ditch where all dreams are finally tossed,
or in the jungle's spidery web
where fatherless children dangle?
I miss you,
you know I do--
as myself
or the miracles that never happen--
you know I do?
I'd like to entice you with a joy I've never known,
an imprudent affair.
When will you come to me?
I'm anxious to play no games,
to confide to you: "my life"--
to let thunder humble us
to let oranges pale in your hand.
I want to search your depths
and find veils
and smoke,
that will vanish at last in flame.
I love you truly
but innocently
as the transparent enchantress of my thoughts,
but, truly, I don't love you,
though innocently
as the confused angel that I am.
I love you,
but I don't love you.
I gamble with these words
and the winner shall be the liar.
Love!. . .
(What am I saying? I'm mistaken,
because here, I wanted to write, I hate you.)
Why won't you come to me?
How is it possible
you let me pass by without requiting our fire?
How is it possible you're so distant, so paranoid
that you deny me?
You're reading the newspapers
passing through
death
and life.
You're with your problems
of groans and groin,
listless,
humiliated,
entertaining yourself with an aspiration to mourning.
Even though I'm melting you,
even though I insult you,
bring you a wilted hyacinth
approve your melancholy;
call forth the salt of heaven,
stitch you into being:
What?
When are you going to murder me with your spit,
hero?
When are you going to overwhelm me again beneath the rain?
When?
When are you going to call me your little bird,
your whore?
When are you going to profane me?
When?
Beware time that passes,
time,
time!
Not even your ghosts appear to me now,
and I no longer understand umbrellas?
Every day, I become more honest with myself,
magnificently noble. . .
If you delay,
if you hesitate and don't search for me,
you'll be blinded;
if you don't return now,
infidel, idiot, dummy, fool,
I'll count myself nothing.
Yesterday, I dreamt that while we were kissing,
a shooting star exploded
and neither of us gave up hope.
This love of ours
belongs to no one;
We found it lost,
stranded
in the street.
Between us we saved it, sheltered it.
Because of that, when we swallow each other
in the night,
I feel like a frightened mother left
alone.
It doesn't matter,
kiss me again and over again
to come to me.
Press yourself against my waist,
come to me again;
be my warm animal again,
move me, again.
I'll purify my leftover life,
the lives of condemned children.
We'll sleep like murderers
who've saved themselves
by bonding together in incomparable blossoming.
And in the morning when the rooster crows,
we will be nature, herself.
I'll appear like your child asleep in her cradle.
Come back to me, come back,
penetrate me with lightening,
Bend me to your will.
We'll turn the record player on forever.
Bring me that unfaithful nape of your neck,
the blow of your stone.
Show me I haven't died,
my love, and I promise you the apple.
My Mother You Are in a Letter from Miami
My mother, you're only in a letter
and in an old scolding that I couldn't find;
stay here forever in the center
of a blooming rose that never dies.
My Mother, so far away, tired
of snow and mist. Wait, I'm coming
to bring you home to live with the sun inside you,
My Mother, who lives in a letter.
You can give a date to mystery,
that would blend with bewitching shadows;
you can be the stone rolled away,
you can evaporate the circles under your eyes;
but remember, your small daughter, Mother.
Don't dare to do all you can do; don't die.
The Boy Who Sells Greens
You have no parents; it’s clear...I know
because of your indecisive look.
I can tell because of your shirt.
You are small but grown up behind the basket.
You respect the sparrows. A penny is enough for you.
The people pass dressed inside with steel.
They don't listen to you...You have shouted
two or three times: "Greens!"
They pass indifferently carrying packages and umbrellas;
in new pants and new yellow blouses;
They walk in a hurry toward the bank and the tedium
or toward the sunset through Main Street. . .
And you're not selling: you do the game of selling;
and although you never played, it comes to you without trying...
But don't get close to me; no, child, don't talk with me.
I don't want to see the site of your probable wings.
I found you this morning around the courthouse,
and what a blow your unhappy innocence has given me!
My heart which was an urn of illusion
is now like wilted greens, like no heart.
Tuesday, March 4, 2008
Some Great Downloadable Short Fiction

And Now for Something Completely Different
Monday, March 3, 2008
Other Sculptures in La Jolla MCASD
Wednesday, February 27, 2008
Lost Caravaggio Found
Here is the story of how this lost Caravaggio was found: The Taking of Christ.
Cactus grows leeward.
Naked bodies lie
random and sexless as birds
while the ocean's yeasty arms rush my shoes.
Five pelicans ascend with
the cliff's quick lift
into the child's idea of a squadron.
A pair of Navy jets erupt like steam from a cappuccino machine
heading out low over the Pacific;
wing tips nearly touch like sprinting lovers.
Fafnir, the Dragon Metaphor
Siegfried kills Fafnir, the man transmogrified by his selfish greed into the hideous guarding dragon, and liberates the wealth of the gods so that it gets re-distributed freely to his tribe. The poet of Beowulf narrates a similar story.
In our modern rendition, for “Siegfried/Beowulf” read “you, me and Google."
For greedy "dragons" read "textbook publishers and movie production companies."
For "wealth” read “open access intellectual and artistic works” from such sites as Art Museum Networks of the World, Internet Archive and the myriad of others that I will post in future blogs.
Tuesday, February 26, 2008

photo - J. Freed
HAMLET: O God, I could be bounded in a nutshell and count myself a king of infinite space, were it not that I have bad dreams.
taken from the very "best" open-access resource for this and all of Shakespeare's plays -- http://www.opensourceshakespeare.org/views/plays/play_view.php?WorkID=hamlet&Scope=entire&pleasewait=1&msg=pl.
Saturday, February 23, 2008
1. Listen to the speech, “Goodbye, Textbooks. Hello, Open-Source Learning,” given by Richard Baraniuk, a Rice University Professor, at the 2006 TED Conference in Monterey, CA:
http://www.ted.com/index.php/talks/view/id/25.
2. Exemplar Extraordinaire: Conducting Historical Research: The Case of "Oriental Cairo":
Start »
Summary: This course guides you through how to conduct historical research by conducting a case study on Douglas Sladen's "Oriental Cairo: City of the 'Arabian Nights'" (1911), a work included in the Travelers in the Middle East Archive (TIMEA). It introduces some standard research techniques used by historians, such as establishing a subject's biography and placing a work in context, and it also explores how to use library resources such as online catalogs and databases.
Rice University instructors and course web page: David Getman and Paula Sanders: Course Web page.
James' Faith
video - Stacy Alexander
My Friend James
I have my students carefully listen to and transcribe what James has to say in this video and answer the question whether he or they have a greater "faith in the Lord."
Jesus - homeless and
content - on the street
Oakland, California.
poem - J. Freed