Thursday, August 31, 2006

What a week. Kathy’s fall schedule:














Monday
Nothing scheduled. A good thing, too, considering how much reading is expected for the rest of the week.

Tuesday
7:30 am - Be at library to work on online classes in the grad lab with its highspeed; print out any of the week’s readings still needed. Count on downloading and reading 50 – 100 such pages a week, and that’s just articles, not books or sections of books.

9:30: - 10:45 am - English History 1714 - 1840

11:00 am – 12:15 pm - Latin American Film

Have lunch and work in the IPH office computer lab

2:00 – 3:15 - Fear, Identity and Gender in Film and Literature

Back to either computer lab

5:00 - 8:00 pm - Word & Image


Wednesday
4:45 – 5:45 pm - Grad Seminar in English History

6:45 – 9:00 pm - Screening for Latin American Film

Sometime today put up the week’s quiz for Multicultural Film (course I’m teaching)

Thursday
Same as Tuesday without Word & Image

Friday
Read articles and support materials for next week's film, and then attend the 3:30 screening and discussion; make lots of notes.

Sometime over Saturday and Sunday
Create written lecture and questions for Multicultural Film and upload them; start reading and recording assessments for the 80 responses to last week’s questions (I try to post a personal response to about 25 - 30 each week and to be sure each student gets a personal response at least every two to three posts. Impossible to do otherwise, unfortunately!)

And in and around this schedule, do the readings/writings for the four courses I’m taking. Two of them are Grad Seminars (the Wednesday part of English History, and Word & Image), which means that there is a lot of reading and you have to come to each class session (you only miss a grad seminar class if you are dead and have exhausted any possibility of reanimating your corpse through the Dark Arts) thoroughly familiar with the material and ready to expound at length. There are not many students and it would be immediately apparent if anyone came unprepared (I’ve never had the nerve to try it). No faking it here. Plus everyone gets a shot or two at conducting the class. It’s intense but very, very interesting.

I love the English history class. The professor is highly knowledgeable and a great lecturer – I’m pretty much spellbound the whole time. Then I have fifteen minutes to run uphill about two blocks to Latin American Film. I guess I’ll get used to it in a week or two but in this heat (with the backpack full of four courses worth of stuff), it wasn’t much fun this week, especially with the air conditioning not working in the LAF classroom. It makes for a sweaty day.

The director of the program agrees that I have enough courses for an M.A. in English -- a requirement I had to satisfy because my master’s is interdisciplinary. So that’s one more fence taken on the way to the finish line. Huzzah!

2 Comments:

Blogger Kathy said...

If I survive this semester -- and I mean to -- things will get much easier. It's worth it to keep on track for a spring '08 finish.

Don't be put off about going back to school by me being on the Torture Track -- I did my master's one leisurely course at a time. Lots more fun.

What in the wide, wide world o' sports is that a picture of?????

11:23 PM  
Blogger Kathy said...

Just like your ever-changing middle name! I know Le Petomane by his amazing reputation but don't think I ever saw a picture of him before.

8:24 AM  

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