Monday, November 25, 2019

Honors, Assemble!


POSTER TIME!
late 14c., convocacioun, "assembly of persons; the calling or holding of a meeting, assembling by summons," from Old French convocation and directly from Latin convocationem (nominative convocatio) "a convoking, calling, or assembling together," noun of action from past-participle stem of convocare "to call together," from assimilated form of com "with, together" (see con-) + vocare "to call," from vox "voice" 

Consider this your official summons - I am calling you to assemble with me to celebrate the work that is being done across this campus under the auspices of Honors.  We have so much to show the world and this is one place that allows us to do just that.

It is time for us to come together.

The Fall 2019 Honors Convocation will take place in Stage 14 from 4:00 – 6:00 on December 3rd.
You are ALL invited to make a poster that showcases something you’ve done this semester in your Honors class.  You can focus on any of the following:
  • Class concepts
  • Journals or response papers
  • Research projects
  • Homework assignments
  • Course readings
  • Personal journey or growth
  • Connections with other classes
  • Honors overall
  • Seminar seating
In other words – take this opportunity to show off the hard work you’ve been doing all semester.  Show the world what Honors classes are like and why they should be appreciated and supported at FLCC and perhaps even convince another student to give one a try.

Not artistic?  Not to worry – you can use words to create something fascinating.

In order to help support this event, we will be gathering on the third floor of the library for Study-a-thon again this year.  I’ll have poster board, crayons, markers, pencils, colored pencils, and rulers.  We can make posters together and also take advantage of all the other amazing things going on in the library that day.

So, to recap:
MAKE POSTERS – DECEMBER 2nd, Library, third floor, 7:00
DISPLAY POSTERS – DECEMBER 3rd, Stage 14, 4:00

Think of the poster session as a way to not only showcase your own work, but also investing in your future.  How, you ask?  Poster sessions are common in professional conferences and conventions and are one of the easiest ways to get your work out there in the public sphere.  Our version might be small, but it is no less significant or valid because of that.  This is your chance to practice what it means to be a scholar who has moved outside the classroom and shared their work with a wider audience.  Come, answer questions, see what other students have done, ask them questions.  Mingle and interact with other invested students and then, when you get home, put on your resume that you did just that.  It's fun, it's professional, it's interactive, and it's a chance to show off a little as well.

Come play with us.


Wednesday, November 20, 2019

And it is beautiful.


The blog below was written by Brianna Smith ('19), who traveled with me to New Orleans for the National Collegiate Honors Council conference a week or so ago.  While  there, she presented with me on ways of encouraging students to talk in a seminar class, she moderated other presentations, and she attended many others.  We saw some of the sights and talked a lot about Honors at FLCC.  These are the thoughts she had after that event - and she will be coming to see us in the Spring 2020 semester to share what she learned and has experienced as an Honors Studies Scholar who has since transferred on to a four year school.  

Nurse, doctor – pediatrician, to be exact. An inkling of something more, words on parchment, a secret fostered but never able to fully manifest.

Writer, reader, uncertain fates, how do you take a hope and make it into something tangible? Journalist? Journalist! But, no… The pull of a well-worn cover calls, beckoning in the same manner of an open classroom door, an opportunity to offer something more lasting than any physical gift, a chance to educate, to open minds.

When you ask a child what they want to be, their dreams are often outrageous, aspirational. Dreams, after all, don’t need to be about reality, but about the deepest desires of the heart. I was the opposite, I bound by practicality, by fear. Honors taught me to dream again. Before crossing that threshold I had scorned those who chose majors of passion because I did not understand what it was to have faith in oneself, to see the potential in dreams. I had always loved to learn, but I didn’t understand how to learn only because I loved it.

Honors taught me I could. More than that, it taught me letting go could be safe, slowly weeding out the fears that had grown like cancerous ivy, blocking out the light.

But then, as we all must I stepped back to continue my education, knowing the transition would be difficult. I didn’t realize at the time how much I would struggle. Honors had provided me not only with a classroom, but a community. In the chaos of transferring and the adaptation it demands, I had lost my vision. When I set foot in the first session at the National Collegiate Honors Council Conference this November I wasn’t sure what to expect not only of the conference, but of myself. I hadn’t realized how much being back in an Honors-driven environment after certain constraints had caused me to take a step back, would truly affect me.

It was like seeing the sun again. The doubt I had been feeling, a common parasite in the education experience, was extracted. I had forgotten for a time what education was truly about, and fell prey for a moment to the dialogue that college is only here to provide students with job-training. In slipping into this trap I had forgotten to remember how much I loved learning. The spirit of inquiry had for a second faded as pressure to perform and assert myself in a new environment grew.
One of the sessions for which I moderated at the conference focused on how the university has become part of a capitalist machine, churning out students for the world of adult employment. It was this trap which I had fell prey to for a moment, and which students all around me lose themselves to. In pushing for college education as a necessity for success (a patently false narrative) we generate students who lack inspiration, who do not understand what it is to love learning. Rather they seek the same pattern that we see more and more in middle and high-schools: to find the right answer, to get the right grade, to make it through. This dialogue that we’ve created around higher education doesn’t empower the student to learn for the love of learning, but teaches them how to run through motions, dulling the beautiful landscape of education.

Honors is the solution. I think that often when students hear the word honors their mind bristles with fear and preconceived notions. They worry Honors isn’t for them, that it is unobtainable, that the students are high-achieving in a way that they never can be. But I’d like to believe the opposite. Honors doesn’t just draw in high-achieving students, it helps to create them. The Honors layout at FLCC is unique because it does not require students to have a specific GPA when they enter into the program, but only that they work towards an aspirational goal to receive their Honors Designation. This goal is often so much more obtainable than students think. But more than this, Honors provides students with a network of professors and faculty who are in love with what they do. One of the comments I often heard from professors in my years at Finger Lakes was that they were there to teach, not to research, not to publish. To teach. It’s funny how that can seem like a novel idea when you step into higher education.

As students I think we get caught up in simply trying to make it through in the quickest amount of time with the most success so that we can get a job and hopefully one day earn a livable wage.  This dialogue of college as a stepping stone to success forgets that the university was once designed to foster learning beyond its walls. Honors combats this amnesia because it sets out to create lifelong learners, instilling the ever-important spirit of inquiry. Because it teaches students that there is more to life than a right or wrong answer, that learning for the pleasure of learning is beautiful. own several shirts now that bear one significant reminder: stay curious. Because at FLCC that’s all you have to be: curious. We don’t force students to distinguish themselves by arbitrary measures of what they presume is their intelligence. Rather, the hallowed spaces of our classrooms are open-air arboretums, temples with no locks, no chains on the doors. Because learning has never, never been about a number on a scale. Learning at its heart is about the insatiable drive of curiosity.

When academia wonders how we, members of a learning community, combat the tidal wave of economically-driven students, I truly believe that Honors and what it stands for is the answer. Engaging students by creating a safe environment for them to ask questions not only of the material, but of themselves, is the first step. This brings up a number of questions: how do we make Honors accessible not only on our campus, but to all students across the educational landscape? How do we appeal to students who might not know that Honors is for everyone, not just a select few? I don’t have answers to these questions, not yet. But what I do have is a belief, something I had forgotten for a moment, but which is singing deep inside of my soul now with an sound which cannot be silenced: Honors works. Honors matters. Honors is how we remind students to learn. Not because it has a pretty title, not because it requires success as a pre-requisite – it doesn’t. But because Honors believes in students. Because it gives them a goal. Because it asks them to look inside of themselves to find the answers.  We talk a lot in Honors about the importance of reflection. Often times, the first question students are asked is: why are you here? There is no right answer. More importantly, there is no wrong answer. And always, always there is hope that Honors can remind students of something crucial: learning is for everyone. And it is beautiful.



Wednesday, November 6, 2019

"Nerd should be bigger...." - Honors Dinner Report



Vol 4 No 7

On the day of the Honors Studies dinner, I decided I wanted to pose a freewrite prompt in my two Honors classes to find out what Honors meant to them.  In one class. I had 19 students who were mostly all first semester students.  In the other, 8 students who ranged from brand new to the college to about to graduate.  I then went through I made a list of the general tenor of each response = grabbing phrases and sentences that stood out to me for whatever reason.  I tried not to overthink it, but rather grab what felt like the heart of each response.   The results were powerful to me for a variety of reasons – all of which hit the heart of what Honors means to ME. 

As I looked at the list, I was suddenly struck with an idea.  Rather than share the list with you, I’ll share the idea.  I threw all the phrases a I grabbed into an online tool that created a picture of the most repeated words.  This is the result.
I love this for so many reasons.    Look at the biggest words – learning, community, sharing, deeper, comfortable, knowledge, enthusiasm.  And things.  I’m not sure what that last one is doing there, but all the others, as well as the rest of the image, really capture the power of Honors.  And yet, when I took the image to the Honors dinner and invited those in attendance to share things they thought were missing, they added these things:
  • Enthralling…twice
  • Judge-free zone…
  • Resourceful…
  • Intersectional…
  • Awesomeness…
  • Making dreams come true…
  • Our own Disneyland…
  • Home…
  • Hugged stuffed animals…
  • Redemption…
  • Everything…
Quite the list of ideas inspired by what was said and heard - and the emotional support badger that helped when courage was needed.   Redemption is powerful.  Intersectional is amazing.  Everything is telling.

There isn’t much else I want to add to this description of the dinner – it was everything it always is and yet it was also its own unique version.  Someone cried, someone they didn’t know joined in, voices shook as one by one people pushed themselves to add their thoughts to the evening.  Provost Jonathan Keiser challenged each student to find a friend to sign up for Honors classes.  We threw people under the bus and ‘made’ them speak and, each time, they said something profound and beautiful.  We laughed, we ate too much, we packed take home containers, we milled about and afterwards, we met new people and forged plans for the coming semester.  And we got rocks.

And later, when a class reflected on the experience, they added even more to the larger conversation of what Honors means. 
  • safe, supportive, and understanding
  • we all care about our identity as Honors students
  • we are all really connected
  • a sense of home and safety
  • right away I felt included
  • part of the in group for once
  • could help you come out of your shell
What an amazing experience for all of us. For the staff, the faculty, and the students who gathered together to share food and laughter and stories of inclusion and community, one thing became abundantly clear and it can be summed up with three words with which one student ended their response paper….

WE ARE HONORS!!!!!!