Father-daughter bonding between takes.

That’s a prop knife in my right hand. Similar:The Geekling Worked a Shatner/Nimoy Tribute into GodspellMy geekling daughter, who in Willy Wonka…AmusingThe Dauphin (ST:TNG Rewatch, Season 2, Episode 10)A pretty 16yo destined to bring peace to…AmusingCameras and Masks: Sustaining Emotional Connections with Your Students in an Age of COVID1…There are some sound pedagogical reasons…AcademiaSeton Hill…

Younger friends, can you write or read cursive? I’m curious.

Similar:The Other 21st Century Skills User Generated Education.AcademiaGo Forth and Conquer, but Postpone the Selfie“We have about 850 graduates, and we hav…AcademiaA Beginner's Guide to HTML & CSSFiling this wonderful resource for the n…CybercultureBattle of Agincourt — 600 Year Anniversary of Henry V's "St. Crispin's Day Speech"Sure, Marty McFly Day is interesting and…CultureMore #steampunk control panel…

When we play Star Trek Monopoly, I am the Captain’s chair.

  Similar:Ray Harryhousen, visual effects pioneer, dies  The Harryhausen family regret to…AestheticsLet’s Make the Academic Job Market More HumaneIt’s been decades since I’ve had the “I’…AcademiaEquilibrium (#StarTrek #DS9 Rewatch, Season 3, Episode 4) Grumpy, newly musical Dax halluc… Rewatching ST:DS9 Sisko is cookin…MediaMy Review of the Charlottesville Tryout of "A Few Good Men" 30 Years…

Tonight’s Supermoon.

Similar:Did you like or share that social media post about two Camp Mystic girls found in a tree? From an article in the Houston Chron…Current_EventsBury Berry Family Members – a review of "Very Berry Dead" – 'Burgh VivantThe cast of comical, quirky characters a…AwesomeJon Bentley | My Life in ArtWonderfully weird retro pop art. Jon…

Using a Typewriter Simulator to Teach Media History

Working on the syllabus for my “Media and Culture” class on the history and future of the book. Similar:Like digging ‘your own professional grave’: The translators grappling with losing work to … While workers worldwide ponder how AI …BusinessMy more or less daily 10cm section of a #steampunk control panel. #blender3d #blender3dart…AestheticsReleasing a Tiny Game…

My parents doing their daily crossword.

I’m spending a few days visiting my parents in Northern Virginia. Similar:Contagion (ST:TNG Rewatch, Season 2, Episode 11)Picard faces aggressive Romulans and an …DesignIt's Science! Carolyn Uses Anastasia's Lip Balm KitMy friend Anastasia gave me a home-made …AestheticsFall 2022 Grades: SUBMITTED AcademiaSledding in Spring Break SnowMy wife suddenly decided I should be a G…Current_EventsSomeone seems…

Consciousness: Where Are Words?

Words, words, words. With the advent of the stream of consciousness in twentieth-century literature, it has come to seem that the self is very much a thing made of words, a verbal construction forever narrating itself and reconstituting itself in language. In line with the dominant, internalist view of consciousness, it is assumed that this…

Merry Christmas 2017

  Similar:Grades submitted.AcademiaI just installed the "Old Layout for Facebook" plugin for Chrome.I just installed the “Old Layout for Fac…CybercultureMy too-big Android phone stresses the pockets of one of my favorite shirts. My grandmother…PersonalMake a date with #HeartOurArt at The Westmoreland Museum of American ArtWhile our daughter is performing in Stag…ArtShe doesn't have keys or…

Mentoring skills, communication/listening, empathy, critical thinking define successful employees in Google self-study. (STEM knowlege? Not as important.)

A Google self-study found that its own most successful employees had soft skills, such as mentoring ability, empathy, and critical thinking and problem-solving. “Those traits sound more like what one gains as an English or theater major than as a programmer,” according to the Washington Post. [A]mong the eight most important qualities of Google’s top…

“Dammit Mom, I’m a daughter, not a theoretician!”

“Dammit Mom, I’m a daughter, not a theoretician!” — the girl, responding to a pointed rhetorical question. Know Your Meme Similar:Peter vs. the PenguinsFor the past hour, Peter (who is not yet…AmusingBeam me up, Chewie!AwesomeSpring 2023 Midterm Grades: Submitted!PersonalI saw this Friday night. Great fight choreography, lighting & staging, adaptation of t…Personal"Godspell" is sure to…

Very impressive mural has been installed in Admin for SHU’s Centennial.

Similar:Set design for a virtual production of R.U.R. (Rossum’s Universal Robots). Post-apocalypti… AestheticsFloating video windows depict the performances in my in-progress #unity3d simulation of a …PersonalSeeing the Barebones production of The Sound Inside. (Support the arts in your community!)PersonalPuns really matter to us over here in English.I swore I would wield my powers only for…AcademiaToday's…

The Last Jedi: Oh, the Feels.

No spoilers here. (I managed to avoid all spoilers, and hadn’t even seen the trailer. I did see still pics of porgs, though, and I knew the name of the character the StarWars Bros were hating on, so thank you to everyone who did their part to keep the secrets.) No intellectual critical distance for…

Pope Francis calls for “news communicated with serenity, precision and completeness”

Pope Francis recently addressed Italian journalists: Your voice, free and responsible, is fundamental for the growth of any society that wishes to be called democratic, so that the continuous exchange of ideas and a profitable debate based on real and correctly reported data can be guaranteed. In our time, often dominated by the anxiety of…

The Case Against Reading Everything

Right now, I’m teaching “American Lit 1915-Present” for the last time. It’s the companion course to “American Lit 1800-1915,” which I’ll also never teach again. They are required courses for English majors who need to cover American Lit, but they were also designed to serve as electives. My colleagues and I have trouble covering the depth that we know our English majors need, without overwhelming students who are just looking to sample a bit of AmLit to fulfill a course requirement. So we’ve revamped both these courses, starting next fall. One new course will be “American Lit 1776-Present,” which will obviously cover fewer works than we can fit into 2 terms, but the benefit is we can be confident that any student who’s taken the course will have a clearer understanding of the scope of American literature. Another new course will be “Topics in American Literature,” which will allow us to go into some depth, without needing to cover a little bit of everything. I’m thinking of picking the focus “Literature and Government,” which could include “Rip Van Winkle,” All the King’s Men, To Kill a Mockingbird, Invisible Man (Ellison, not H.G. Wells) and Farhenheit 451.