Hello Taiwan

by | Wednesday, May 14, 2008

Arrived at Taipei airport and got through immigration and customs quite quickly. I was received at the airport by Waiway Lin, a doctoral student at the Graduate School of Curriculum and Instruction at the National Taipei University of Education.

It appears that she (and others in their graduate program) have read Matt’s and my work and have had some interesting discussions. It appears that some of her fellow students do not think that TPACK is a different kind of knowledge. This is the same old argument, that Matt and I have heard multiple times—that all that gets subsumed under Pedagogy. I noticed that she had a GPS system in her car, and I pointed out to her that having that little box fundamentally changes how we drive. So yes, it is still driving knowledge but of a different kind, brought about by a new technology. I should remember to use this example in my talks. Maybe even tie it in with the discussion we have of Mechanical, Meaningful and Generative and how the GPS unit acts as a cognitive amplifier or tool. I hope I have the internets in the hotel I am staying at – ‘cos I need to work on my talks. I give 3 talks in 2 days, which means I have to be prepared today!

She also said that I looked younger than what she had imagined me to be (from my photograph). So I asked her how old she thought I was, and she flattered me by saying 30! As if!!! How diplomatic. She had guessed my age correctly from the photograph though. What can I say, my photographs do not do me justice ?

Finally, I saw a funny sign at the car park of the National High Speed Rail terminus, something along the lines of “Kiss and Drive” written in English and its equivalent in Chinese. I asked Waiway what that means and she said it means drop and go. I NEEDED to take a picture of that but when I pulled out my camera it didn’t work.

Sadly the battery of my camera is dead, and I think I left my charger back in Delhi in Hartosh’s apartment. Arghhh… I feel horrible about this lapse on my part, because it means that I can’t take any more pictures. I do have my tiny Sony Cybershot, but that is a just a terrible camera that I don’t know whether I have the heart to use it. Maybe that is all I will have to work with. We shall see…

Lots more to write but it will have to wait until tomorrow…

Topics related to this post: Personal | Photography | Teaching | Technology | TPACK

A few randomly selected blog posts…

Ads in Video Games

A couple of people have emailed me about the Obama campaign inserting advertisements into video games. Check out this Flickr set with screenshots of these advertisements. Most of the press is reporting that these ads show up in just racing games but as these...

STEM teaching & leadership for urban educators

STEM teaching & leadership for urban educators

The MSUrbanSTEM project was one of the best projects I have ever been part of.  We worked with 124 Chicago Public School STEM educators over three years, in an effort to develop their teaching and leadership in the STEM areas. We have written about this...

TPACK (and friends) in T.H.E. Journal.

Matt Townsley sent me an email this morning informing me about a TPACK sighting in THE journal. Well... actually it's a journal whose title is THE journal! Does that make sense? Anyway, T.H.E. Journal (Transforming Education Through Technology) has an article by Dian...

Obama at MSU

Soham and Shreya make it to the Lansing State Journal's website photo gallery... Smita and I pulled the kids out of school today to go see Obama at Michigan State. Leigh Wolf joined us... and frankly it was a long and tiring day: reaching campus at 9:30, standing in...

Martin Gardner, RIP

Martin Gardner, 1914 - 2010 Martin Gardner died five days ago. Gardner was an influential writer about mathematics and was one of the greatest influences on me (and my friends) as I was growing up. His recreational mathematics column was the main reason I subscribed...

Teachers ARE designers (in many different ways)

Teachers ARE designers (in many different ways)

One of the pleasures of academia is working with awesome graduate students. This paper is an example of such a collaboration. Melissa Warr, for some reason or the other, decided to do a network analysis of some of the top-cited papers related to teaching and design....

Teaching to learning styles, what hogwash

There is an article in today's Chronicle titled Matching Teaching Style to Learning Style May Not Help Students. I have been somewhat skeptical of the learning styles literature for a while, not the least for hearing the phrase being bandied about without much...

Creativity & Flow: New article

Creativity & Flow: New article

180-degree rotational ambigram for "Flow" by Punya Mishra The next article in our series Rethinking Technology & Creativity in the 21st Century just got published by the journal TechTrends. This article features Susan Perry, social psychologist,...

New TPACK themed book on English Education

My friend Carl Young of NCState recently released an edited volume (co-editor, Sara Kajder a the University of Pittsburgh) titled Research on Technology in English Education. It is a volume in the series: Research Methods for Educational Technology, edited by Walt...

3 Comments

  1. Hsueh-Hua

    It is now in your msu mail account now with a bunch of other pictures I (or we) took.

    Reply
  2. Punya Mishra

    Please send me that picture since I didn’t even see it the second time around. Most probably my only regret of my visit to Taiwan 🙂

    Reply
  3. Hsueh-Hua

    Last night, back to Kaohsiung from Taipei, I noticed the kiss and ride sign. I was not even aware of the sign before you mentioned that. I took a picture of that sign (Did you catch that later on? Or I could share the picture with you).

    Reply

Submit a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *