Bay to Breakers

The Bay to Breakers crowd. Photo from Flickr user Niall Kennedy.

This Sunday, May 15th, will mark the 100th consecutive running of Bay to Breakers, the quirky 12-kilometer race that crosses San Francisco, established in 1912 to lift civic morale after the devastating 1906 earthquake. The race begins at the Embarcadero, then climbs the Hayes Street Hill before gradually winding its way through the Panhandle and Golden Gate Park to reach the finish line at Ocean Beach. Although the course offers an interesting transect of the city, it’s the runners that draw crowds. Whether as a spectator or participant, the real sport is crowd watching. Many runners don elaborate costumes, while a smaller number opt to take it all off instead. (The year that I ran Bay to Breakers, our group was accompanied much of the way by a man sporting no more than sneakers and a leather thong.) The distance may seem daunting, but except for the serious runners at the head of the pack, the huge number of people thronging the streets keeps the pace slow enough that no serious training is needed to undertake this approximately 7 1/2 mile trek. Coming in the midst of graduation celebrations at Berkeley and the start of summer vacation, it can be hard to fit Bay to Breakers into your schedule, but it’s well worth the effort.

Are you running Bay to Breakers this year? Are you going in costume? What’s your favorite Bay to Breakers’ experience? Let us know in the comments!

Berkeley classroom. Image by amiz.

My classroom has two large, east-facing windows that magnify the mid-morning sun, and only open about six inches to provide breezy respite from the intensified warmth. This low crack is wide enough to attract curious squirrels, which understandably distract students whose desks butt up to the windowsill where the nosy creatures belly up. It is not, however, wide enough to cool off the room during any of the Bay Area’s rare but intense heat waves. The pale yellow of the walls just adds to the feeling of being trapped inside a rising soufflé, and students and GSI alike fall under melted-butter hypnosis, and focusing on the past perfect subjunctive rises from challenging to impossible on the difficulty scale.

After a few classes of sultry sighs and lackaday during the last hot spell, I walked into an exam review session to a full house. The chatter that had filled the muggy room vaporized as soon as I entered the room, and the students looked at me with wide eyes and held breaths. I looked at my immediately sticky sweater vest and regretted my wardrobe choice. Since I had no new material to teach that day and could probably get away with skipping the chalkboard, I suggested we take the class outside. Read the rest of this entry »

Summer Job Opportunity at the GA

The Graduate Assembly is looking to fill a part-time, temporary position to plan the 2011 New Graduate Student Orientation. In the capacity of Graduate Support Service Project Coordinator, this position would run from June 1, 2011 to August 31, 2011.

Responsibilities:

In collaboration with the Graduate Division, you will plan, coordinate, and implement the New Graduate Student Orientation. As the date and venue are already set (Tuesday, August 23, 2011 @ Dwinelle Hall), you will be responsible for the following details and other related tasks:

  • securing a keynote speaker
  • organizing a coordinating committee
  • weekly planning meetings
  • coordinating all logistics, including room allocation, trash &
  • recycling, lunch time activities, workshops, technologies, signage, etc.
  • communicating via phone and email with participants
  • creating an orientation packet that includes programs and other informational materials
  • other related tasks, as needed

Qualifications:

  • knowledge of UC Berkeley campus resources
  • experience coordinating institutional events
  • some computer skills (Word and Excel)
  • good time management
  • attention to detail
  • ability to work within diversity
  • strong communication skills
  • very organized

Interested parties should send by email a cover letter and current resume to gssp@ga.berkeley.edu. Please email the same address with further questions. We are looking to hire ASAP, so please send documents when you can. Position open until filled.

Off the beaten track: Hakone Gardens

The hill and pond garden. Image by Glenn Franco Simmons.

With tax time upon us and end of the semester responsibilities looming, graduate students may be seeking some much needed tranquility this month.  Tucked into the base of the Santa Cruz mountains, Hakone Gardens, the oldest Japanese-style gardens in the Western Hemisphere, could be just the ticket.  This 18-acre estate includes a koi pond, waterfalls, a zen garden, a bamboo garden, and a tea garden. Come in April and you’ll catch the wisteria blossoms at their peak. The entrance fee is $5 for adults. The gardens, which were the filming location for Memoirs of a Geisha, are a ways from Berkeley, so bring a picnic lunch and plan to make an afternoon out of your trek to the outskirts of Silicon Valley.

Be sure to leave time for the excellent koi pond.

To Err is Traumatic

Exams to grade. Image by olga.

I will never forget the fear I felt the day my most beloved undergrad professor raged about an exam my Latin American Poetry class had taken. Among the errors that provoked his outburst were someone who had repeatedly used the masculine article with the word for woman: “¡El mujer! ¿¡El mujer!?” My cheeks burned, and though I was fairly sure I was not the offender, I still prayed and crossed my fingers that I hadn’t, in some test-induced delirium, forgotten one of the most basic aspects of the language I’d been studying for three years.

He moved on to the word for image, imagen, which made frequent appearances in the literary analysis class. From this berating I did not, unfortunately, escape unscathed. The word is feminine. I had modified it with feminine adjectives in the essay I wrote for the exam; in fact, I got one of the few A’s in the class on the exam. But the trauma of the tongue-lashing has left its mark. I am now in the midst of a PhD program studying Latin American literature, and I avoid using the word imagen in spoken language at all costs. What if I get it wrong? I look it up in the dictionary every time I write it down to reassure myself of its feminine nature. I even checked wordreference.com before typing this paragraph.

I know my professor meant well, and the amount of liberating and inspiring learning my classmates and I did in his classes overwhelms this limiting slip. But the incident exemplifies an important part of the instructor’s work. Balancing constructive criticism, encouragement, praise, and downright disappointment is hard work.

This semester I graded one of the worst exam sets I had ever seen. I went back through looking for ways I might have miscounted, places I might give back points lost, and just couldn’t justify it. In fact, el mujer made several appearances. The grades were low. I tried lecturing my students when I gave back their exams, and gave them a lot of writing homework, hoping the practice would help them improve before the next exam. The class average did improve, but the range was wide, and the low grades were very low.

Further on in the semester I began to worry that I was traumatizing my students when their first compositions came in. Some of them were marvelous, even moving. Others were just unacceptable. After some tears shed in office hours, and mid-semester evaluations complaining that I “grade really hard,” I began to question whether I was holding my students to an impossible standard. However, there are as many As as Ds on the compositions and exams I grade, so I know it’s not impossible. And thankfully, as the semester has progressed, more and more of those straggling students have dragged themselves into my office hours, written several more drafts before turning in final essays, and generally improved not only their grades, but their Spanish and writing skills as well.

What it boils down to is that the same fear instilled in me as a student that day worrying about gender agreement remains with me as an instructor. What if it’s somehow my fault that they didn’t learn the material, didn’t understand the instructions, didn’t realize they needed to study? Do I teach poorly? Do I grade too strictly? The student has become the teacher, but I’m still frightened by the specter of imagen.

Students in Field Entomology (ESPM 147) explore the Hastings Field Reserve. Image by Ap2il.

On March 15th, Graduate Assembly representatives attended a meeting of the Environmental Science, Policy and Management (ESPM) Graduate Students’ Association to discuss the GA’s advocacy efforts and projects.

One student remarked that the GA had not been as active this year in the protests against fee increases and budget cuts to higher education. It was noted that in the recent past, the GA had been focusing on lobbying rather than mobilization, and while the GA has been sharing information about actions happening on campus, it hasn’t been actively involved in organizing those actions.

Students in attendance also discussed the importance of a departmental and campus commitment to diversity at both the graduate student and faculty level. Elizabeth De La Torre, the GA’s Project Coordinator Liaison, mentioned that we have had difficulty obtaining relevant diversity statistics at the campus level, and we are currently working with Graduate Division to get access to those.

The issue of Benefits Decentralization (a proposed campus policy change whereby departments would now be responsible to cover the costs of fee remission for their Graduate Student Instructors) and its possible impacts on the availability of 25% and 50% GSI positions was also discussed. Both the GA and the UAW2865 (the GSI union) have been actively working on that question.

Finally, students were interested to know about any changes to the health insurance plan for next year. In March, UC Berkeley decided to join the UC-wide insurance plan in 2011-12, which would increase the level of benefits and provide an opt-in plan for dependents (i.e., spouse or children).

The GA’s April Events

It’s the last full month of the semester and the GA has some fantastic events in store to round out the 2010-2011 school year.

  • Saturday, April 2, Graduate Women’s Project Study Hall, from 10 am to 5 pm in Anthony Hall. There will be coffee, tea, breakfast, lunch, and snacks, with vegan options available.
  • Sunday, April 3, Student of Color Study Hall, from 10 am to 4 pm in Anthony Hall. Coffee, tea, and lunch will be provided.
  • Wednesday, April 6, Sex Slaves: Minh’s Story: Screening with Q&A, from 5 pm to 7 pm in the Multicultural Center in the MLK Jr. Student Union. The Gender Equity Resource Center is screening an MSNBC film about Minh, a former Cal student who survived sex trafficking in the South Bay.
  • Wednesday, April 13, GMORR Brown Bag Seminar “Maintaining Your Academic Integrity,” from 12 pm to 1 pm in the Multicultural Center in the MLK Jr. Student Union. Dr. Zeus Leonardo from the Graduate School of Education and other faculty members will speak about the intersection of diversity and academic integrity.
  • Thursday, April 14, Catalyzing Knowledge in Dangerous Times, the Center for Race and Gender’s ten year anniversary conference, will be held from 9:30 am to 5:00 pm in 370 Dwinelle Hall. The conference explores “the ways in which knowledge is politicized, embodied, and imagined within a volatile political climate that targets education as a racialized and gendered battleground for defining legitimacy, visibility, and access.”
  • Saturday, April 16, Cotton Candy and Cal Day Open House at Anthony Hall from 11 am to 2 pm.
  • Thursday, April 28, Reception for Women Graduate Students and Faculty of Color, from 5:30 pm to 7:30 pm at the Women’s Faculty Club. Babysitting will be available.
  • Friday, April 29, the GSC’s Boat Cruise, will depart Jack London Square at 8 pm and return at 11 pm after cruising the San Francisco Bay. Tickets are $50 and include unlimited beer, wine, and appetizers. Berkeley graduate students and their guests are welcome to this 21+ event.

Email and Academic Freedom

History matters. Just ask Bill Cronon, a world renowned University of Wisconsin historian who now finds himself embroiled in the ongoing dispute over public-employee unions and an emerging debate over academic freedom.

A quick re-cap: During the weeks-long protests that shut down the Wisconsin state capitol, Cronon tried to situate the Republican’s anti-union bill in the state’s and the nation’s historical context. This effort culminated in two publications that have attracted the ire of Wisconsin’s Republican Party.

  • First, Cronon published a blog post about the secretive American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC), which is the architect of much of conservation legislation sweeping the nation.
  • Second, in a New York Times editorial, he argued that the policies of Wisconsin Governor, Scott Walker, are not only undoing a century of social reforms that are in large part the work of Republicans, but also break with the state’s bipartisan tradition of transparency and mutual respect.

On March 17, two days after the blog was published, but four days before the op-ed appeared, the University of Wisconsin-Madison received an email from the Republican Party of Wisconsin formally requesting under the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) all of the email’s from Cronon’s state email account (i.e., @wisc.edu) which reference terms such as “union”, “rally”, “Republican”, and “Scott Walker.”

In another blog post, Cronon makes a convincing argument that this request is intended to embarrass, punish, and a silence a critic—a misuse of FOIA that threatens academic freedom.

As academics and members of a public university, this is an issue that affects all of us. What do you think? Does this change how you use your @berkeley.edu email account?

Here’s a sampling of the relevant news pieces. For a more complete list, see Cronon’s blog.

Rainy day hike: Steep Ravine trail

Webb Creek in Steep Ravine Canyon. Image by dotpolka.

In the midst of a solid week of rain, venturing outside for fun may be the thing furthest from your mind. But the spring, even on those rainy days, is actually the perfect time to go for a hike in the Bay Area.

One of the best places to go is Steep Ravine Canyon on Mt. Tamalpais in Marin County. Tom Stienstra, the Chronicle’s outdoor guru, calls it “California’s best rain hike.” Webb Creek, which runs down the center of the canyon, comes to life in wet weather. Over two miles the trail crosses the creek eight times and culminates in a small waterfall that’s at its most spectacular when the creek is full. Towering redwood trees create a canopy that protects hikers from the worst of the weather.

On a nice day, combine the Steep Ravine trail with the Matt Davis trail for a seven-mile loop that takes  you from the side of Mt. Tamalpais down to Stinson Beach and back again.

Another good rainy day hike that’s further afield is to Little Yosemite in the Sunol Regional Wilderness.

First day of Spring

Spring is here! After a week of cold rain, it may not feel like it, but without a doubt longer, warmer days lie ahead.

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