Showing posts with label New Hampshire. Show all posts
Showing posts with label New Hampshire. Show all posts

Monday, November 14, 2016

Back to School

Four weeks ago today, I started Graduate School at Southern New Hampshire University. I'll be going for an MA in Communications. 

We had a paper due the first week, and mine is posted below. In the paper, we first had to compare and contrast our undergraduate experience with what we expect our graduate experience to be, then give a very brief overview of our chosen program. 

I got full points (45 out of 45). In the comments, my professor, Dr. Gabe Willis, said, "Excellent work here, William! I really enjoyed getting to know a little more about you throughout reading this paper. Great job! Dr. Willis." 



Like most people, when I graduated high school, I looked forward to going off to college. It would be my first real time away from home, and a chance to have some real experiences. I went to school at the University of Maine-Farmington, about 5 hours from home, and it was exciting.  While there, I met people from all over New England and the country. As a science/education major, my days were filled with all manner of scientific equipment and theory mixed with educational methodology.  In between, I took the chance to do some things that I had never done before: go downhill skiing and have my own radio show on the campus station. My undergraduate program was very difficult, but it offered an opportunity to grow and learn in whole new ways.

That sense of growing and learning is a similarity between the undergraduate and graduate level experience, however there are also many differences. The infrastructure, for instance. In Maine, I had actual classrooms and laboratories. Now, twenty-two years later, I am an on-line student. This is something I have to learn how to do. Online learning did not exist back then; the Internet itself barely existed.  In a classroom there are other students right there with you and you can get instant feedback; with on-line learning, you are more alone, and have to wait for feedback—even if it is only for a few minutes. Another difference is I have to take more responsibility for scheduling my work. This program has due dates, but there are no specific class times. I have to be sure to set a schedule that fits with work and life. I have a full time job, so school work will be nights and weekends.

The expectations of graduate school are more specific. As Dean Belanger says in his video, we are here to “become experts in [our] chosen field.” My chosen field is Communications. In order to become an expert, it is important to take seriously all of the assignments, and even use outside experiences. For example, interviewing members of our communications team at work, Blue Cross Blue Shield Massachusetts, to find out how they handle communications in the health field. 

For each of the first two terms, I will be taking only one course. Intro to Graduate Studies this term, and Communication, Media, and Society next term.  The former will give me a good foundation on on-line learning and a solid step back into being a student, while the latter will start my program courses by giving me an overview of what we can do, and have done, in the communications space, which includes Marketing, New Media, and Public Relations, and Health. For the remaining courses, I will first check for prerequisites, and sequence accordingly, remaining with one per term. 

 The Communications program uses the APA (American Psychological Association) citation standards.  These standards are used in such places as business, social science, and nursing.

 Ethical standards vary slightly from field to field. For instance, in the public health space, digital health is coming into the forefront. Practitioners, and all of us, really, must keep in mind the realities of modern technology, and the pitfalls. In his 2015 article ‘5 Do’s and Don’ts of Digital Communication in Healthcare”, Eric Swirsky gives very practical advice to medical professionals on how to handle this technology. For example, if you encourage the use of this technology, explain the risks.

Resources to use in the program include the writing coaches, the Shapiro Library, and all the professors and fellow students. I predict a very successful time here, and a successful new career in health communications.
   
Citations

Belanger, Matthew. (2014, Nov. 24).  SNHU-501 [Video File]. Retrieved from https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jICMlNn_SEs

Swirsky, Eric. (2015, July 16.) “5 Do’s and Don’ts of Digital Communication in Healthcare”. [Web Log]. Retrieved from https://www.elsevier.com/connect/5-dos-and-donts-of-digital-communication-in-healthcare


Friday, April 1, 2016

Dude With Thoughts: The Book

Well, I always had it in mind. And now, it's happened. This blog is now a book.

Chock full of updated and expanded essays taken from this blog and other sources, this 120 page book  also includes full color pictures and a list of selected websites.

Published on the CreateSpace platform, it is printed on demand and is also available on Kindle.

So, if you still believe in the power of an old fashioned book, pick up Dude With Thoughts: The Book! Available now for $17.00 for the book and Kindle for $3.00.



Sunday, December 20, 2015

He Came From New Hampshire

And who is "he"? Well, none other than H.H. Holmes, America's first serial killer.


In The Beginning

Born in Gilmanton, NH, on May 16,1861 with the given name Herman Webster Mudgett, Holmes grew up with a father who owned a store and was postmaster. Both his parents descended from the first English settlers in the area.

Soon after graduating high school, he married the first of three wives, Clara Lovering. His college career began at age 19, when he enrolled at the University of Vermont--Burlington, eventually graduating, in June 1884, from the University of Michigan Department of Medicine and Surgery.

Holmes' life of crime began while he was in school in Michigan--with an insurance scam. He would steal cadavers and collect the insurance money on the policies he took out on them, claiming they were killed accidently. After leaving Michigan his travels took him around New York and Philadelphia, scamming store owners and building a career as a suspect in various disappearances.

Then came Chicago, the site of his most active years. First, he changed his name to Dr. H.H. Holmes, then scammed a store owner right out of her business.

The "Murder Castle"


Across the street from his store, at 601-603 West 63rd, Holmes built a massive three story, 163 foot long, 50 foot wide hotel, which local people called "The Castle". It was the official hotel for the 1893 Chicago World's Fair, with hotel, office, and retail space.

Holmes used the hotel to kill his victims by building rooms with various torture devices like metal walls embedded with blowtorches for incineration, or a special solid brick room with a trap door in the ceiling--people would fall in and that's it. He had another room with gas pipes to be opened and victims would asphyxiate in their sleep.    This was clearly not a normal guy.

Most of his victims were women, including his second and third wives and many female employees.


In The End

Holmes left Chicago in 1893 and disappeared, eventually finding himself in Fort Worth, Texas, where he endeavored to build another Castle. Soon abandoning the project, he travelled throughout the US and Canada, finally winding up in St. Louis, where, after all he had done, he was arrested for the first time after being involved in a horse swindle.

When he got out after posting bail, a long series of other cons, swindles, and murders are attributed to him, including the murder of a long time criminal and supposed new partner whom he had met during his short time in jail.

In 1894, his life finally caught up with him when he was arrested again on suspicion of another horse swindle and insurance scam, this time in Boston.

He confessed and was sent to prison in Philadelphia for the insurance scam. At the same time, the authorities in Chicago were investigating his activities there, and in 1895, he was found guilty of murder of his one time associate Benjamin Pitezel, and was hanged in Philadelphia on May 7th, 1896.

Before the sentence was carried out, however, Holmes confessed to killing 30 people in Chicago, Indianapolis, and Toronto--even though several were in fact still alive.

It's hard to  say how many were killed, but most estimates range from 20 to 200.










Sunday, November 2, 2014

Invented In New Hampshire

New Hampshire is my home state, the state with the first Presidential primary, and the "Live Free Or Die State".

It is also the state where these 10 inventions were first created.

1. Paper Towels
     
         Inventor: William E Corbin
         Year of Patent: 1920
         Place: Gorham

The story goes that when Corbin became general manager, in 1904, of the Brown Co's Gorham Cascade Mill, he got the idea because he was tired of wiping his hands on the then old-fashioned rolling cloth towel. "It was always sticky and greasy," he said.

His paper towels were made of Kraft paper, the same paper that today's paper grocery store bags are made of.

2. The Knitting Machine

      Inventor: Herrick, Walter, and Jonas Aiken
      Year: 1836
      Place: Franklin

Herrick and his sons were inventors as a family business. Their original machine could knit the tube of a sock, from knee to ankle.

3. The Sewing Machine

     Inventor: Elias Howe, Jr.
     Year: 1843
     Place: Nashua

It all started with an overheard conversation. After his first design didn't go over that well, Howe's second design was a big hit. For one thing, it had a needle with an eye at the point--an idea that came to Howe in a dream: an evil king threatened him with execution if he didn't complete his work within 24 hrs.

4. The Apple Parer

     Inventor: David Harvey Godell
     Year of Patent: 1863
     Place: Antrim

Goddell was a former New Hampshire Governor (1889-1891) who grew up on a farm. He invented the apple parer while working at the Antrim Shovel Co; at the height of its initial popularity, 24,000 units were sold in three weeks.

5. Tupperware

     Inventor: Earl Tupper
     Year: 1946
     Place: Berlin

The ubiquitous kitchen storage containers came after Tupper worked at the DuPont Chemical Company where he designed unbreakable and light masks and containers used during World War II.

Today, a Tupperware Party happens every 1.4 seconds.

6. The Alarm Clock

    Inventor: Levi Hutchins
    Year: 1787
     Place: Concord

Although it was never patented, and it was developed for his own personal use, Hutchins is still considered the inventor of this convenient yet somewhat annoying device. At least in the US, anyway.

7. The Spork

     Inventor: George Laramy
     Year: 1907
     Place: Enfield

This much maligned member of the silverware family did not have a name when the patent was accepted--the word "spork" didn't come about until 1909. However, the reason for its invention was so that the combined knife, spoon, and fork could be "adapted for use by persons with one arm," according to the patent application.

8. The Segway

     Inventor: Dean Kamen
     Year: 2001
     Place: Manchester and Bedford

In popular culture, the Segway is most famous its appearances in the movie Mall Cop, and the video for Weird Al Yankovic's "White and Nerdy." The two-wheeled, self balancing, electric transport is now used in tours, college campuses, and other tourist destinations.

9.  The Measuring Tape

     Inventor: Hiram Augustus Ferrand Jr.
     Year: 1922
     Place: Berlin

The measuring tape started life as the Rapid Rule, but it was very similar to what we have today. Commander Admiral Byrd even had one on his expedition to the South Pole.

10.  The Artificial Leg

       Inventor: Benjamin Franklin Palmer
       Year: 1846
       Place: Meredith

About 5 miles away from the Weirs Beach area of Lake Winnepasaukee,  Meredith is the center of activity in the Lakes Region.

Palmer's wood artificial leg was intended to weigh less than 3 1/2 pounds for the full leg, or less than 2 pounds for below the knee. He also created articulated joints in order to mimic the natural motion of a leg.


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Source material for this post is the article "In Praise Of The Spork And 14 Other Inventions" published in the Oct. 9-15 edition of The Hippo.