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Showing posts from April, 2012

My Best Learning Experience

This is my second writing assignment for the doctoral program I am starting in a couple of weeks. I would like to preface this essay with this observation:   there are positive learning experiences and positive “being taught” experiences.   I have been blessed with many wonderful teachers over my undergraduate years and two graduate programs.   Those were positive “being taught” experiences.   Sometimes, our learning experiences do not involve an actual teacher or facilitator.   My best learning experience falls into that category.             In the mid-1990s I began working in the technical college system.   When I began my career there, I had minimal knowledge of computer technology, and that only because I could type.   This was the time of transition to Windows products and also the beginning of the Internet really becoming a part of everyday life; it was also the beginning of online courses.   Employees in the technical college system were required to use as much informat

My Worst Learning Experience

I am beginning doctoral work at the University of Georgia in two weeks.  At 56, this is daunting, but the opportunity is too great to pass up and if I buckle down, I can be done in a little of three years and thus fulfill a lifetime dream.  So I am going to use this blog to post my writing for the program with the hope that it will help others. So far for our first class I have to read a book entitled Action Research and Reflective Practice, which cost my $140 USD and had to come from England (published by Routledge).  I also have two short personal essays due.  I am posting them here. I already know my dissertation area, in general.  We have a four-day retreat in a couple of weeks and then a summer class that is mostly online.  This works for me.  I hate driving to or through Atlanta, which is what killed me (almost literally) on my last foray into doctoral work at Georgia State. My Worst Learning Experience (first writing assignment) My first thought when contemplating th