Hello, CLASSROOM-AS-ORGANIZATION Comrades!
No world-shattering news in what may be a long message; you can come back to it.
First off, a Rip van Winkle type of confession: the (M)OBTS listserv has migrated to Facebook. I have looked at it but find that its content has become chitchat. I have looked at Facebook but never sent a general message, and my children tell me not to. So I am using this old listserv (XBTR), which reaches most of the colleagues I care about anyway.
XB, I can report, is alive and kicking. XB itself is running at UCMO (as always), St. Michael’s College (where my colleague Paul Olsen revived it last year), and Mount Mansfield Union High School! At MMU David Alofsin has been running it for several years. During this past year, despite all the COVID kerfuffle at MMU, they made a promotional video and had to open a second section of the course! I would love to see David explain how he runs it with high school kids. An idea for a web gathering? Matt VanSchenkof has resumed his academic career at Western Kentucky and is planning on running XB there.
As for the other classroom-as-organization efforts, I am not up-to-date. Across the border, James Lapalm told me that he is designing a cao to teach at l’École de technologie supérieure ÉTS (Montréal). I will try to get up there in December.
When I last communicated, Debby Thomas had just taken over as the new dean of her school when two minor distractions occurred: COVID and the massive forest fire that came very, very close to Newburg, OR. Also, she wrote me, her mother died at the same time. Had it been anyone but Debby, I would have been worried. Debby, I hope that you kept a journal of your experiences and will share it. Are you still teaching? Have they made you provost yet?
Stacie Chappell is (from my vantage point) near Debby, being in Nanaimo, BC in an administrative role. Not teaching? I hope that the ocean protected you, Stacie, from the heat there. Please report.
Elyssebeth keeps publishing. Her latest is “A Journey to the Role of Facilitator: Personal stories unfolding alongside world trends” for her simulation and gaming fans (who have recognized her with a lifetime award). Liz, are you still teaching? What’s happening in Finland?
There are other rumblings but nothing firm to report. Our literature gets a good number of “reads” and some citations on Researchgate.
I am about to submit a paper on delegating rank-order grading to an education publication. It takes effort to prepare an article when one is retired. When I fix my tractor, it either starts or doesn’t. I don’t have to wait and don’t have to make sure the diesel fuel meets APA standards.
My wife Georgette is in Italy taking a course on the anthropology of the theatre (that’s all I know). In a couple of days I will join her. We’ll be in Sicily for a few days, then visiting a relative in Rome, then back to France to be with her mother – who is now 101 years old!
Please give your news, any and all.
Warm greetings from
Roger Putzel
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On 19 Oct 2021, at 11:31 am, Elyssebeth Leigh <elyssebe...@gmail.com> wrote:During
Hello XB Group,
Thanks for getting this conversation started Roger! You are correct, I am dean of the college of business now, and in difficult times. I’m glad to serve my school and colleagues as we get back on our feet after some difficult leadership issues with our past two deans, and losing about 2/3 of our faculty either in downsizing or “the great resignation”. This year our incoming student population is at an all-time high, and just after a year of downsizing. I have five open positions to be posted any day now.
I am back to teaching halftime this year along with the role of dean. Stacie and David Bright and I created our own form of CAO, and that is what I’m teaching. I have a combined class of upper division undergraduates and MBA students all in one CAO classroom of 21 students. It’s been a great experience so far. I’m training a new professor in the methodology and she will be teaching this same class in the Spring. I created a doctoral level OB class in CAO style which went very well. I had a colleague pick it up and teach it that way with great results as well. We are considering CAO for our Part Time MBA program, but are a bit short handed on people who can design and teach it. That might need to be for another year.
Stacie and I are still plugging away on conference presentations and articles related to CAO. We are on our THIRD revision of an article now, and will work on a literature review and future research agenda next. After our book came out on CAO, I received the researcher of the year award at my university and got to give a faculty lecture on the topic. That was fun!
So YES, CAO is alive and well in my world. I’m thankful for those of you who came before me, patiently taught me and answered my questions. CAO is a blessing to me personally (love to teach it) and to my students (they enjoy the challenge of it, and the break from ‘regular’ classes).
Debby Thomas, Ph.D.
Dean, College of Business
George Fox University
414 N. Meridian Street #6252
Newberg, Oregon 97132
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