Articles Written Within Education

Awesome Things College Professors Say

January 26th, 2011 by Sarah Ward

Sometimes college professors say the darndest things. One of your favorite back to school activities may be listening to awesome things that your college professors have to say. If you have a cool college professor, you’ve likely heard things like…

  1. “Don’t cheat in this class, you will fail this course and then you will die.” The first words of my class this morning. That woke me up. - Audrey
  2. “Our professor strapped a teletubby to a bouncy ball to show us how we can only view a certain part of the sky from different places on earth. Gotta love Discovering the Universe.” - Jessica Banks
  3. “In Kingship, I am the king. I love you. You love me…..we’re a happy family.” - Deecue‘s Government Teacher
  4. “Yesterday, my Math 1B GSI (Graduate Student Instructor) compared integration by parts to pirates and ninjas.” - feendaffaire
  5. “It may seem a silly reason to go to war, but put it in modern terms. Imagine if Michelle Obama ran off with Kim Jong Il. That would be….God that would be so weird…” - rycitycentral‘s Literature as Art professor on the Torjan War
  6. “I’m in intermediate microeconomics. My professor is using Harry, Ron, and Hermione as examples of different levels of productivity.” - theycallmeaviendha
  7. “So Harriet Tubman was — that was my hip by the way. I didn’t just fart in front of you guys.” - talkingshrimp‘s History teacher
  8. “Dear Students, Please consider using our office hours as an opportunity to learn. It feels lonely sitting in my office when nobody shows-up.” - confusedquark‘s Logic Systems professor
  9. “You’ve never seen Mickey Mouse stop a dialogue sequence to groom himself. But real mice WILL do that.” - nashhha‘s Neuropsychology professor
  10. “In today’s class, my professor said she would give anything in the world for two minutes to be in the mind of her cat.” - xphosho‘s Professor
  11. “Student: Is there a participation grade?
    Professor: No, I think that only rewards the bullsh!tters that drone on and on and on.” - yaej‘s Ethics and International Relations Class
  12. “What the hell is wrong with you guys? Why the hell are you depressed? Barely in your 20s! Be happy! You are young, beautiful, handsome, brainy, you have the world at your finger tips! These are your golden years. It is beautiful in this world; California weather, eh? God has blessed us! Be happy!” - arrajane‘s Professor Spyridakis
  13. “I’d like to live with Bill Murray.” - bccrayolamakher‘s Composition professor
  14. “If you haven’t found the textbook yet you guys might also want to try Wal-mart.com.” - fornowjustcarryon‘s professor
  15. “Facebook is the Internet meat market.” - lizshutterbug‘s professor, Dr. Phillips
  16. “I just wish I was younger. You wouldn’t be sitting there looking so complicated.” - casenpoint‘s professor Billy Turner
  17. “Facebook makes me feel like a pervy, voyeuristic old man and I don’t allow it in my class. However, if YOU have an addiction and needs to check it every 30 seconds, just put up your hands and explain to me and I will excuse you outside to check your Facebook or porn or whatever it is you need to do.” - anniesapphire‘s professor
  18. “Toast is appropriate for any meal.” - fistflight‘s Psychology of Gender professor
  19. “Citing yourself in a paper is like intellectual masturbation.” - witty-‘s writing professor
  20. “I will expect at least a few anecdotes of sledding on unusual objects…” - fistflight‘s poetry professor

Care to add to the list?

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Win a New Ipod Touch From My Colleges and Careers

October 7th, 2010 by michaelm

click here to enter

My Colleges and Careers is giving away a free iPod Touch, called the “greatest iPod to date” by IGN’s Scott Lowe. To enter click here. Then all you need to do is like us on facebook and follow us on twitter. Don’t pass up this opportunity to win one of the most amazing mobile media platforms ever designed. It will be a perfect thing to take with you when you go back to college.

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Online School Programs: Online Education Degrees

August 9th, 2010 by Sarah Ward

We’ve all had teachers who have had a big impact on our lives, that have encouraged us in our pursuits, given it to us straight, and been great mentors in the process. If you want to pass on this gift to others, consider an online education degree which can qualify you to teach at a elementary, secondary, or even at a post-secondary university level.

Online Education Degrees

Education has a myriad of opportunities. In education, you can teach history, special education, health science, geography, among others. You can also choose whether to specialize in teaching children in elementary school, teenagers in high school, or adults in post-secondary education.

If you are committed to a particular topic, you can start a teaching career within this focus, providing valuable support and mentorship for students. Graduates with education degrees can seek careers as teachers, professors, special education teachers, and school administrators.

If you’re considering going into education, read this interview My Colleges and Careers conducted with University of Cincinnati professor LisaMarie Luccioni where she shares advice for those contemplating a career in teaching.

Explore different online school programs in education at My Colleges and Careers and start charting your career today!

A Student’s Guide to Computers for Online School: Desktop vs. Laptop

July 29th, 2010 by Sarah Ward

Fall presents an opportunity for a fresh start for students as it begins a new school year. One of the benefits of online school is that most programs allow you to start anytime — you don’t have to wait for September.

As an online student, one thing you can’t do without is a computer. If you aren’t familiar with technology, choosing a computer may seem like a daunting task, but things will seem simpler with today’s blog as we break down computers into digestible pieces that make sense.

When we strip everything else away, computers comprise of two parts: hardware and software. Hardware refers to the physical components that can be seen and touched, whereas software refers to the systems working when the computer is on. The first part of purchasing a computer will require getting the right hardware and type of computer which we will look at today.

A Students Guide to Computers for Online School: Desktop vs. Laptop?

Brands aside, you can choose from two types of computers: desktops and laptops. Desktops are stationary and usually used on desks at offices and schools, while laptops are a portable computer that can sit on your lap, as the name implies.

Laptops are a popular choice among students as they provide flexibility and freedom, allowing them to take notes directly onto their computer. Laptops are typically more expensive when compared to their desktop counterparts and can be harder to customize. Since a laptop is so mobile, it’s easy to find yourself easily distracted on the couch in front of the TV trying to study on your laptop.

Graduate student Siddharth Batra. Photo c/o Stanford

Desktop computers have one obvious drawback — they can’t go anywhere. While that can be a negative, it can also be seen as a positive since the set up computer workspace can be dedicated to online school, helping to prevent procrastination. Desktops are more affordable and customizable with many possible options for monitor, keyboard, and mice. Desktops typically have better quality built-in speakers compared to the onboard speakers on a laptop.

Which computer you choose for online school will depend on your preferences, budget, and personal work style. Personally I have used both laptop and desktop computers for education and see the benefits with both.

What is your preference? Desktop or laptop?

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Interview With The Image Professor, LisaMarie Luccioni

June 24th, 2010 by Sarah Ward

Teachers have the power to impact the world by imparting knowledge and wisdom with their students. This week we had the pleasure of connecting with one such influential educator, LisaMarie Luccioni, a communications and etiquette professor with the University of Cincinnati. An image and etiquette expert, LisaMarie is often referred to as The Image Professor and is a certified image consultant with AICI, the Association of Image Consultants International. LisaMarie has been featured on NPR, CNN’s Anderson Cooper 360 Show, and blogs regularly for Psychology Today. An educator at heart, she blogs about important image and etiquette issues from a social, political, and cultural framework, empowering her readers to project their visual and verbal best.

MC&C: What is your job title / description?
LML: I’m a twenty-year adjunct professor of Communication at the University of Cincinnati. I have two teaching appointments: (1) teaching communication in the College of Arts & Sciences and (2) business etiquette/professional image in the College of Business.

MC&C: Describe a typical day on the job.
LML:

  • Drive to campus and hope to find a free parking space.
  • 12:00-12:30 Greet colleagues, check faculty mailbox, try (!!) to check email inbox
  • 12:30-1:45 Teach a Day Class Session
  • 2:00-3:15 Teach a Day Class Session
  • 3:30-4:45 Office Hours (advising, meet with Students)
  • 5:00-6:30 Continue advising students as needed, grade papers/speeches, prepare for my evening class/future class sessions, try to read emails, walk to our university center for dinner
  • 6:30-9:10 Teach a Night Class Session
  • 9:30 Leave campus! Parking lots can be far from one’s building, so I’ll usually switch into my comfortable walking shoes.

During this whole day, I’m in high-energy mode. Classroom is interactive lecture. When class has formally ended, students pose various individual questions. Future teachers? Prepare yourself for questions galore. Your job is to answer them.

I try to get most of my grading done on campus, but when necessary, will bring home with me. I pride myself on returning work quickly. You get it to me on Tuesday, it’s returned on Thursday.

MC&C: What is the most rewarding part of being a professor?
LML: My students are my loves. They keep me young, teach me new words, and make working a pleasure. Fall quarter on a college campus is a cool occupational gig.

Students learn. Students improve. Students remember. They take what you share as they move into their futures. In that way, you’re always with them. Many will write years later emphasizing what they learned in your class and thanking you for it.


I become attached to my students. In fact, when they take their final exam, it’s sad for me because I know that’s the last time I might see many of them again. God love Facebook. I receive updates there.

Moreover, your students leave school to make their own contribution to our world and man, my students are doing some really cool things. They’re now dispersed across the globe doing what God planned for them to do. For a brief period of time, I had the pleasure of being a part of their lives. What value and honor in that.

MC&C: What advice would you give a student considering education?
LML:

  • Know your subject. Students rightly expect teachers to be well versed in their subject matter. Begin with your foundation and build from there. I’m a better teacher now than I was twenty years ago and such is to be expected. Trial and error can be your best friend. In life, school is never out.
  • Students learn in different ways. Acquire an understanding of learning theory; research the different teaching methods and experiment with them all.
  • Learn student names. Learn them and use them in class, in the hallway, and in unexpected encounters in the community. Indeed, discover what’s important to individual students (ALL of them) and make reference to those interests/those plans/those dreams as you lecture. Students will love you for it.
  • **Have a CLEAR electronic policy in place. My policy is written on my course syllabus. During class, I don’t allow cell phones or computers. If I see someone check their text message, I mark them absent for the day. Obviously, if someone is expecting an important phone call/text, I’m fine with that as long as they relay this to me before class begins. If you determine your policy, have it in writing, and enforce it, you won’t have to compete against gadgetry.

MC&C: What is most challenging about your profession?
LML:

  1. Maintaining stamina. Capturing and maintaining your students’ attention demands energy, passion, and enthusiasm. The demonstration of all over a period of ten hours can leave you (at times) mentally and physically depleted.
  2. Grading can be surprisingly hard work, especially critical essays. Subjective grades (speeches and papers) must be defended. If a student receives a low grade on a speech, you need to give him/her an explanation for why this is.
  3. Maintaining cultural relevance. Some of my best course concept examples are no longer understood by the current generation (although my middle-aged students immediately get them).

MC&C: In what way did your education prepare you for your career?
LML: I’ve always loved school and never feared working hard. Graduate school was a demanding time, one of the roughest and most humbling of my life. I learned that no matter how “good” you are in high school and indeed, even in college, when you’re at the graduate level, you can struggle to even be the mid-level grade.

But.

The silver lining is that their excellence raised the level of my own game. I’m a better speaker, writer, and teacher because of the quality of students in that academic population group.

I’d also add that good teachers combined with my work ethic better prepared me. A teacher who can simultaneously clarify and motivate is a treasure. Become that type of teacher.

MC&C: If you could do it all over again, would you still become an educator?
LML: This quarter alone, my students complimented my classes, wrote me thank you notes, triggered some speaking engagements, bought me my dream-list sterling silver pen from Tiffany’s (pictured at right), and allowed me into their lives for a period of ten weeks. Place students in a classroom and add a teacher. Magic can happen. I want to be there when it does.

MC&C: Thank you, LisaMarie, for sharing your thought-provoking experiences with us!

If you’re considering a rewarding career in education, depending on the grades you teach will determine what type of education is required. For example, to teach elementary school requires a bachelor’s degree in elementary education, while teaching high school will require a bachelor’s degree in secondary education. Finally, teaching at a college or university will typically require you to earn a master’s degree in the subject you will teach.

Keep up with LisaMarie Luccioni on her blog, The Image Professor, follow her on Twitter @imageprofessor or visit her online at The Image Establishment.

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Interview with Automotive Journalist, The Car Girl

June 22nd, 2010 by Sarah Ward

This week we caught up this week with The Car Girl, Alexandra Straub, an Automotive Journalist from Vancouver, Canada. In her glamorous career, she travels to exiting places to test drive impressive cars including SUVs, luxury vehicles, and sports cars. In addition to being an automotive journalist for seven years, she also hosts a cable show called “Shifting Gears” that airs in the greater Vancouver and Calgary areas. On her blog, The Car Girl’s Garage, Straub keeps people up to date about what’s happening in the automotive market.

My Colleges and Careers: What is your job title / description?

Alexandra Straub: I’m a freelance Automotive Journalist so I test drive cars and write reviews. I sometimes also write automotive news to let people know what’s going on in the automotive industry.

MCC: Describe a typical day on the job.

AS: It is a very part-time gig so I usually write from home. If I’m on the road, I’ll write in the hotel or if I have someone driving, I’ll type away in the passengers seat. I usually sit down with a bowl of buttered popcorn and munch away as I search for inspiration.

MCC: What is the most rewarding part of being an automotive journalist?

AS: There are a lot of rewarding aspects to my job. If I had to pick one it would be that I have the opportunity of testing new cars every week. Whether I’m driving a $10K subcompact or a $100K luxury sedan, each week is different and that keeps things interesting.


MCC: What advice would you give a student considering automotive journalism?

AS: Be patient!! If you don’t get the job of your dreams right off the bat, keep trying. These kinds of jobs don’t come around very often but if you’re dedicated and passionate you’ll find your way. Send copies of your work to different publishers or online auto sites just to get a feel if you ‘have what it takes.’ If one person rejects you, again, keep trying. Also, be prepared to have a second or third job.

MCC: What is most challenging about your profession?

AS: When I’ve driven the same car more than 15 times, and there haven’t been any significant changes, it’s hard to come up with something new to say. Sometimes I also suffer from writers block so I can stare at my computer for hours with not even a word on the page.

MCC: In what way did your education prepare you for your career?

AS: I have a Bachelor of Arts degree with a major in English Literature. A lot of writers out there are terrible with grammar, but I don’t! I’m just being cheeky. But it’s true. Learning the basics of grammar and sentence structure are so important to good journalism. It pains me to read a review that uses “their” instead of “they’re” or “your” instead of “you’re.” Drive me crazy!!!

MCC: Are there other fields related to automotive journalism that students may want to consider?

AS: Journalism is so broad and so specific at the same time. One style of writing might be great when writing about cars but a catastrophe when it comes to breaking news. Try everything you can possibly get your hands on. Freelance for various industries and get your name out there. Becoming a great technical or creative writer in one field can generally transfer over to the automotive field relatively easily.

MCC: Are there recommended continuing education opportunities for your profession?

AS: Taking creative writing workshops or any kinds of writing courses is always a great asset. I’m not sure if there are any specific courses directly related to automotive journalism but I encourage people to always be willing to learn something new!

MCC: What misconceptions do people have about being a automotive journalist?

AS: A lot of people think that driving around cars is easy work. It’s not. Yes, I drive great cars but I also have to photograph them, shuttle them around AND write a review. It’s time consuming work and can often times be very arduous.


MCC: If you could do it all over again, would you still become a automotive journalist?

AS: Absolutely. Even though I am just freelancing at the moment, I love what I do. I will keep doing it until cars don’t exist any longer!!

MCC: Thanks, Alexandra, for sharing your terrific insights about your career as an automotive journalist!

Wouldn’t you love to have that job! If you’re interested in pursuing a career in broadcasting and journalism, you’ll need to earn your degree in writing and consider a degree in broadcasting to start an exciting career. If your dream job is conceptualizing and designing cars, consider a computer aided design technician program and launch your dream career today!

Keep up with Alexandra through her blog, The Car Girl’s Garage at http://thecargirlsgarage.blogspot.com/

Military Appreciation Day

June 1st, 2010 by Sarah Ward

In honor of Memorial Day, Lake Placid Middle School students were exposed to living history during their second Military Appreciation Day as veterans set up in the school gym and shared their war stories and memorabilia with them, helping them gain a greater appreciation of the price paid for freedom.

During the Military Appreciation Day, students interacted with veterans like Kelly Meier, an aircraft mechanic in WW II, Louis Brough, a second lieutenant and pilot in WW II, and Fed Arbelo, a Marine who was wounded in Korea, received the Military Order of the Purple Heart and went on to be a school teacher.

“Don’t be a follower,” Arbelo advised the students. “Stay in school. Education is most important.” For those considering joining the military, he said, “Take at least a year of college before you join. That way you can become a lieutenant.”

The Military Appreciation Day event was planned by Principle Derrel Bryan and 7th grade teacher Beverly House as an opportunity for them to personally meet people who had served in the military and gain an appreciation of the military and a deeper respect for Memorial Day.

Did it work? “I appreciate the veterans for what they’ve done,” said Alejandro Cantarino, a seventh grader.

Looks like Military Appreciation Day accomplished its goal.

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Registered Nurse (RN) Career Spotlight

August 12th, 2009 by alexi

Becky, a university graduate with a Bachelor’s of Science Degree in Nursing, took time out of her busy week going through hospital orientation as a recently certified Registered Nurse, to answer some questions about the world of nursing.

When did you become interested in nursing?

I became interested in nursing after my freshman year of college. I was Pre-Med and the fit just didn’t seem right for my long term goals. I knew I wanted to be a mom, but at the same time, I wanted to have a career. I love that nursing will afford me the opportunity to identify with something outside of mothering. Also, after a few years of work experience, I plan to go back to school and get my master’s degree and become a nurse practitioner, or possibly even get my Doctorate in Nursing Practice. I love that I have these choices!

What is your favorite part of being an RN?

I love that I am always learning! It can be frustrating at times to not know everything, but the learning and growth can be so rewarding because you really see the impact in people’s lives! As a nurse you get to be with your patients during some of their most vulnerable times-being a part of that and helping them through the process of healing, loss, whatever their situation may be is really fulfilling.

What has been particularly memorable about your job now or nursing school?

I can’t pinpoint one single patient. You see everything in nursing! Really, everything.

“You see everything in nursing! Really, everything.”

I love the growth that I have seen in myself throughout nursing school, and even now as a RN- I learn something new each day, and have so much left to learn. I also love knowing that I really helped someone in my day.

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Education Careers: Quality Education is both an Art and a Science.

July 2nd, 2009 by admin

Ronald Wolff, superintendent of Morgan School District in Morgan, UT is well versed in reading, writing and arithmetic. With more than 30 years in the education industry as a coach, teacher, principal and now as superintendent he has learned much from the best teacher of all: experience. As superintendent he watches over thousands students in his district and has an impressive educational pedigree of his own. He gave us some tips on careers in education. Here are ten things you should know according to Wolff.

Good teaching is both an art and a science. The best teachers are born with personal traits that can’t be learned. Every teacher can become better if they are determined to be a “student” of the learning process.

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Attention College Freshmen: Get to know Ratemyprofessors.com or Perish

June 11th, 2009 by Kate Lehnhof

One of the biggest advantages of being an upperclassmen is being “in the know.” Upperclassmen know where all the campus building and offices are, they know which vending machines are always getting stuck, who the hottest cheerleader is and so on.

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