For those who didn't make it earlier

Tuesday, October 20, 2009

Poking the Ashes

Oh my poor little bloggy – I have deserted you.

And I guess anybody who used to follow my ramblings thinks that after donning a funny hat and gown I am now in regular employment, realising the faith the government has shown in me by diligently repaying my student loan out of the vast monthly earnings expected from a first-degree graduate with many years of real-life experience.

The truth is a little different to that. Suffice to say, when I heard that the eighties were making a comeback I didn’t think they meant the unemployment numbers.

So if you’d like a little journey back through the past 12 months sit back and tune in. I’ll scatter the old stuff with the new, so it’s not like your listening to Aunt Ethel talking about the war.

Actually I think I’m going to start a new blog. Here’s the address:
http://laterstarter.blogspot.com/

Follow me if you want.

Monday, July 14, 2008

Results day today and I did it...a first

I'm pretty chuffed considering my sole ambition when I joined was to keep up with the younger students.

Will write more...I must remember the no:1 blogging command

'Thou shalt not post whilst under the influence of several glasses of wine'

Tee Hee

Sunday, May 11, 2008

Look at the muck in here

Oh dear

Bit dusty around here isn't it?

Well, I never realised that when I wrote my last post the next frightening thing would be posting to this blog again. And it would be in May.

I guess my absence is a reflection on just how hard the third year is.

So I'll grab my Mr Sheen and tell you what's been going on.

The radio documentary went very well considering my lack of technical confidence. The batteries lasted. People wanted to talk to me. And I looked damned professional with my headphones, (sorry that should be 'cans'), on and brandishing a microphone. For a moment I entertained the fantasy of me presenting my favourite radio programme - Saturday Live. The witty repartee. The interesting guests.

Then I listened to the playback and heard myself speaking.

Farmer's wife? Heather the Slack Jawed Yocal?

All I know is that I can roll my r's better than a bellydancer on doubletime.

I also say 'uh ha' an awful lot, which made for some interesting editing - think the late Kevin Greening's creation, Raymond Sinclair and you'll get the picture

But I did get a good mark. Which is more than I expected for fireworks on the radio.

More soon. I need to wash these nets...

Wednesday, October 24, 2007

A clear round



Well, I'd hate to give the impression that all third year mature students were flapjack-scoffing, library-chair breaking, youth-seeking individuals so I'll get back to the course. Or more correctly a module I'm currently studying - Broadcast Journalism. Or more correctly, given that the college doesn't have the facilities of a TV station, radio journalism.

To make it through the hoop at this stage of my degree circuit I have to complete an essay, (OK), tape an interview using a minidisk and edit it so it contains only the interesting bits, (err, Okie, Dokie) and create a 10 minute radio feature on a compelling subject, (Sh*t).

Adding to my anxiety about the various recording/digital technologies involved, (my father wouldn't even allow me to change batteries 'in case you get them the wrong way around'), I've decided to base my effort around an event that happens very soon. 5th November to be correct. My lecturers kind-of-agreed that it was better that I gave it my best shot rather than miss the opportunity of covering such a unique event. So after a five minute crash course I'm interviewing the organisers tomorrow.

Well as Mr Luhrmann says: Do one thing everyday that scares you

Thinking of tomorrow, I'm sure my next scary thing must now be scheduled for February...

Labels: ,

Things you shouldn't buy from 'the shop' #1

According to scientists you consume 122 calories an hour studying, so after a sesh in the library, thoughts will inevitably be turning to matters gastric. Abandoning the fascinating tome on gender and cyberspace, (you know the crux of the argument anyway - 'it's (also) a man's virtual world'), you beat a path to the college shop. You know what you should buy - an apple, a packet of raisins, but somehow you can't stop your eyes from searching the shelves until they make the discovery that will seal your snacking fate:

They've had a delivery of handmade JUMBO flapjacks.

Then begins the process of justification. They're made from oats so they're better than the chocolate bar next to it. You'll break it in two and have the other half tomorrow, (tellingly my bag remains crumb free). You'll buy a Fruit one - it'll be one of 'five a day' then.

Nearly three years on and you wonder why shops can't make clothes in the right size anymore.

Apparently you can burn even more calories by twitching as you study.

(Interesting study that - what exactly is the difference between moderate and active sexual activity, and more importantly are the extra 14 calories really worth the extra effort? ?)

So to retain your pre-student sylph-like figure *cough*, learn from this Laterstudier's mistakes. Either turn your back on the flapjack, or continue to fall for his *all-natural ingredient* charms whilst you jig around the library on the wheely chair looking like you've plugged yourself into the mains - the choice is yours.

What do you mean. 'How about my dignity?' Admit it. You lost all that remained of your dignity the day you thought buying a college Hoody from the same shop was a good idea...(my advice - keep the receipt and say it didn't fit your daughter...)

Labels:

Sunday, October 14, 2007

Really?....

20 August...well that is appalling. So a quick update

I experienced a general feeling of gloom in the weeks before third year registration. I was sure that after two years of climbing up the degree helter skelter the only way now was down. Reading an article by a gradulate suggesting that a dissertation should be started in the second year further convinced me that not only was the matting on the slide, I could also smell the hotdog waiting for me at the end.

Surprisingly, Registration was not the usual bun fight. In previous years I've had to wait up to an hour for the privilege of paying my course fees. This year it was with some satisfaction that the staff were waiting for me to arrive. I wondered if it was a reflection of the number of students who drop out by the third year or, more specifically, the number of students with surnames S-Z who just can't hack a degree course.

Hmmm..Interesting dissertation idea...Perhaps.

The first week back was the usual anticlimax, particularly with one module. I wont whinge too much, but suffice to say that if you paid to see a two hour film and the projectionist went home after 30 mins you'd probably complain...wouldn't you?

Labels: , ,

Monday, August 20, 2007

Well I never

Morning TV. Apparently responsible, according to my son, for more waistine inches than McDonalds. But I was stood up ironing - so does it count? And I am a student. Besides, if I'd been down the gym I wouldn't have heard a gem this morning.

Discussing Hurricane Dean the presenters asked the weather forecaster what she would do if she was caught in a similar storm.

'Hmmm.' (You could see she was thinking hard.) 'Well, I think I would shelter in a sturdy structure - nothing that could blow down in a strong wind.'

Laughed so hard the children thought I'd eaten vodka-frosted cornflakes for breakfast again...

Labels:

Wednesday, August 08, 2007

Summer Assortment



1. Sign outside Spar: ‘Couple given dog’s muck ASBO.’ I just hope they put it in an envelope before serving it.

2. Campsite Unwritten Rule #1:

You will always realise that your towel is languishing back in the van just as you are about to step into the campsite shower.

3. Two senior lecturers seconded or on research leave next semester = 0.5 lecturer position advertised in local paper. Just another one of those HE things that make you go humm…

4. Campsite Unwritten Rule #2:

Remember: sweatshirts are totally unsuitable as impromptu towels. A brisk rub down with the newest, bright- red addition to your wardrobe will ensure sniggers from the waiting queue, as an Elmo lookie-likie flip-flops past them. It is an embarrassment matched only by the moment someone shouts: ‘Are these yours?’ and points to some intimate item of apparel that has managed to escape your clutches and is now going down for the third time on the floor of the shower cubicle

5. I shall be forever grateful to the Surgery for introducing me to the word: ‘Otorhinolaryngology’ meaning ‘The branch of medicine that deals with the ear, nose and throat.’ Doesn’t it just roll around your mouth like the finest sherbert lemon? A close runner up in my recently expanded medical repertoire: ‘Phlebotomist’, although, on reflection, it does sound like something Johnny English might have said:

Sunday, July 22, 2007

The people you meet in cyberspace

Wednesday, July 18, 2007

Killer Questions

Around this time of year, when a fresh crop of graduates are ripe and ready for harvesting, employers start to dust off their list of difficult interview questions. Apparently Google are well known for their off-the-wall enquiries including: 'Why are manhole covers round' and 'What gives you joy' - which all sounds like fun, if a little perspiration-inducing.

However, I think that I can top that by a question I was asked recently:

'Tell us about yourself - what does your husband do?'

I did look around the room to check and no, I'm pretty sure I hadn't entered a time portal to the Victorian age...

Labels: ,

Tuesday, July 17, 2007

Me, Me, (Me)

So I’m into my 32nd day of a three month ‘holiday work’ filing stuff at a local doctors’ surgery.

I was warned at the interview that it was mind-numbing stuff. And it has certainly lived up to its billing. It's the kind of thing I was doing in my first job 20+ years ago - and at the same hourly rate, I'm sure.

During my shift I file about 40 pieces of paper. Everyday another 50 make their way onto the pile. There is a six month backlog. I’m sure there is a proverb or wise saying by a Greek Philosopher/Deity/Native American/Peter from Family Guy that encapsulates my situation perfectly, but at the moment I can only think of a large Scottish bridge and a pot of paint

I've become one of 'The Girls,' a homogenous group of females that aren't Doctors or Nurses. Pre-degree I would have accepted this title without further thought. During my darker hours, however, the older, (grumpier?) Student Me sometimes reflects that it is in fact a semantic device used to perpetuate a hierarchy and keep us all in our place – but I won’t mention that at tea-break time.

Still, for all the connotations attached to the title 'Doctor,' the bottom line is that they do appear to spend most of their time examining the wrong end of the alimentary canal. Sometimes I feel mightily pleased to be a 'Girl' who only has to contend with the internal workings of a photocopier...

Of course, Student Me is interested to see the marketing that goes on in a surgery, and in common with other workplaces, mugs seem a popular way for manufacturers to advertise their products. This strikes me as odd, as, even at the best of times, I’ve always considered them a pretty feeble method of advertising. I mean - has anyone ever lifted a promotional mug to their lips, seen the product name and felt compelled to place an order? And in a surgery there must be some things you don't want to think about as you eat and drink? But I guess that it is more subliminal than that, with reps clinging to the hope that Doctors will unconsciously absorb their product names as they sip their coffee. They probably don't realise that the mugs are used mainly by ‘the Girls,’ - and most of us are blissfully unaware that we are advertising the latest innovation in haemorrhoid creams as we dunk our chocolate hobnobs.

Of course, I say that I have become one of 'the Girls' but I haven't gone through the final part of the initiation ceremony - the uniform. Apparently after a three month stint you are given this outfit to make your disappearance complete. I tried not to let my disappointment show as I explained to a colleague that I wouldn’t get to wear the fetching homage to polyester and nylon.

'Oh I said that,' she replied, 'but I've been here two and a half years.'

‘The Girls’ are the friendliest, nicest group of people I've ever worked with. The tea is plentiful and the chocolate biscuits never-ending. But, try as I might, I couldn't suppress the shudder that went through me. And it wasn't because navy blue doesn’t suit me.

Labels: , ,

Monday, July 16, 2007

Results so far

Year 2

Semester A

Media and Cultural Theory 71
The Photograph 73
Written Journalism 70

Semester B

Writing for the Stage 71
Magazine Cutures One 70
Interactive Media 72

Final Mark: 71

Year 1

Semester A

Creative Media Practise 80
Media and The Modern World 72
The Craft of Writing 72

Semester B
Reading the Media 68
The Creative Project 79
Writing for PR Purposes 68

Final Mark: 73

Friday, July 06, 2007

Less mud than Glasto...



Folk singers - they used to look like this didn't they?


Oh, how times have changed

Seth Lakeman - Parklife 2, July 1 2007

I vaguely remember volunteering ‘us’ to organise the food and stalls for a local live music event in July. But in November 2006 it seemed an age away. And then came assignments, revision, exams, more assignments and then - it was June. Luckily the other half had been busy schmoozing local businesses in the mean time, but as soon as my final assignment was handed in I let him know exactly what he should have been doing in the intervening months. I’m sure he appreciated my input…

In PR they call it event planning; in fact students dream of a Summer work placement coordinating an occasion like Parklife. What they usually end up with are a couple of weeks answering phones, updating client databases or making tea. And perhaps that isn’t such a bad thing when you are at the start of your career. However, when you are a mature student finding useful work experience is often more problematic. You’ve been at the reception desk, done that photocopying and sorted the magazine collection before and what is more you know that you could be paid for your efforts as well. Perhaps getting involved in something voluntary might be the answer?

Though you can forget glamour. Think instead of struggling to right blown-over mobile toilets, 6:30 am starts, picking up the parts of a burger that someone didn’t want to eat, putting up tents in wind and lashing rain, pushing 7 tonne lorries out of the mud, fetching bark chips to spread in front of stalls from a pile that has been visited by every cat in the neighbourhood and trying to swing a sledgehammer when the heaviest thing you usually wield is a pen. It’s enough to make you wish you’d stuck to reorganising the paperclips.

Still, it was a very satisfying day. Even Seth Lakeman, (the man who puts the phw into phwoar), made a surprise appearance. And who knows - networking with local businesses might lead to things in the future – even if the impression I left them with was of a mud splattered, gherkin collecting mad woman smelling of blue loo and cat pee..

Labels: , , , , ,

Hold the Front Page




For a couple of weeks I’m holding the fort for the editor of Behind the Spin. So, of course I’m wearing the visor, those strange metal bands around the elbows of my shirt and slamming the table with my fist demanding that I have a story worthy of the front page by midday – Goddamit!

Actually I’m composing some very nice emails to a whole load of people who would like to submit an article for the next issue, but I’ve written before about my vivid imagination.

I’m also reading some back issues of the magazine and an article by Alison Theaker in February 2005's issue caught my eye. Entitled ‘How to keep students interested,’ she advocates Charles Bonwell’s technique of stopping lectures every 8 to12 minutes and allowing students to compare notes. Apparently, because lecturers talk at a rate of 120-240 words per minute and the average student can take down notes at just 20 wpm, we are bound to miss something. Taking a peek at what your neighbour has written can help you fill in the gaps.

Which all seems like perfect sense until I looked back at some of the notes I’d taken in lectures.

Does: ‘Dog food’ underlined ten times, a pattern of randomly coloured cubes, the date: 12 April 1967 surrounded by a fluffy cloud shape and the calculation 102 – 123, (which I think related to the state of my bank account at the time) really going to help anyone remember what Derrida said about logocentricism?

I guess it’ll work for some people. And stopping every now and then to let what you have just heard get past ‘the voices’ organising the other parts of your life is a good idea.

Interestingly the article continues:

‘Bonwell also suggests using a mid-term evaluation. At the end of a seminar about 6 weeks into the semester, ask the students to split into groups and agree on three things that they like about the teaching on the course and three things that they would like to change. The problem with most evaluation is that it is done at the end of the semester, so the students on the course don’t benefit, apart from a nice warm feeling that they may have made things better for the group that follows...it gives an opportunity to raise the issues and state what, if anything, will be changed for the rest of the time you spend together.’

Hang on, I think I feel a pillion passenger climbing onto my hobby horse…

For more on keeping those brain cells awake whilst all around you are asleep look at www.active-learning-site.com

Labels: , , , ,

Wednesday, July 04, 2007

Sweet Memories



Spangles - the cola ones were the best. No debate

It’s been a busy weekend. A 40th birthday party and helping out at a local music festival.

The birthday party was based around a disco where the DJ played hits from the 70’s and 80’s – the Sunday Dinner era of music, before songs were mashed-up, remixed and reheated for Monday tea in the Noughties. Most guests were happily wallowing around in nostalgia – think Glastonbury but with slightly cleaner memories of a time when scabs were thick, flares were a health and safety hazard in anything more than a light breeze and you could proudly announce to your friends that you’d had your hair done at a place called Shaggers.

The party’s theme continued right up to the end, (although this time my Dad didn’t come to pick me up in his slippers), when I was issued with a Party Bag that was full of all those sweets that so flavoured my childhood.

Today, my daughter insists that the only chocolate she eats is dark, organic and fair-trade. Not so the 'Spangles Generation,' who knew that the 5p back from the Corona bottle could buy you a bag of sweets that were reduced to just a few waxed paper wrappers by the time you got home. I was transported down my own Sweet Memory Lane lined with Sherbert fountains, Mojos, Fruit Salads, Blackjacks, Toffee Bon-Bons and Pineapple Cubes – and like all reminiscences of the good ol' days it was a bit tacky underfoot. I mean - I enjoyed them, but I did have to ask myself how I didn’t end up doubling for Shane McGowan.

However, it was a mistake to consume all that sugar and E numbers just before going to bed. Eating flying saucers? – I thought I was in one of them…

Labels: , , , , ,

Tuesday, June 19, 2007

D Day



They say that Normandy is one huge open air museum of the D Day landings. It's true but, as I travelled along the bright, quiet roads flanked by fields full of vegetables or spotty cows chewing long grass, I found it difficult to imagine the sights and sounds that must have accompanied the invasion in 1944. I felt the same when I visited the Commonwealth and Canadian cemeteries that were full of birdsong and sunlight as well as heartbreaking rows of white crosses.

Arromanche was different. That day the sky was the colour of gunmetal and the wind threatened to pull the car doors off their hinges. A furious sea crashed over the remnants of the Mulberry harbours built to supply the Allied forces 63 years ago.

We visited Arromanche 360 - a ‘wrap-around’ cinema showing a wordless film contrasting footage of the area during the war with the peace that exists today. It was a humbling experience, even though I did find the T shirt and baseball caps in the shop outside a little disconcerting.

The Memorial Pegasus provided more evidence of just how we have changed in sixty years. The reliance on the written word: soldiers’ pleas to families for more envelopes and stamps. Handwritten letters of condolence from commanding officers. The note to his mother found on a soldier’s body telling her that he would be returning a changed man. He never knew that his brother had been killed just two days before.

The pre-consumer society was brought to life by a soldier's letter in which he wrote that he was worried that the War Office might find out that he already had a pair of shoes. Drug use in the form of half-squeezed tubes of morphine in first aid kits and tins of amphetamines issued to fighter pilots

Pointe de Hoc provided, for me, the most graphic illustration of the terror of war. The barbed wire is still there, as is the twisted steel from the blown apart concrete gun emplacements. Huge grassed over bomb craters. The cliff sides that ‘couldn’t’ be climbed, gradually crumbling into the sea. Even with the sun, it was difficult to stifle a shiver.

But perhaps the greatest change in society was revealed in the comment uttered by a visitor as they made their way back to the car park.

‘I’m amazed they can keep it like that.’ they said. ‘Someone might trip and hurt themselves.’

Labels: , , ,

Monday, June 18, 2007

Viking Viagra



It was a delicate situation. We both knew the French word for it, but was it entirely appropriate to use it in conversation with a woman we’d only met 30 seconds ago?

‘Our apartment it smells of, err, it smells, umm….’

‘Ne pas bien,’ I interrupted, quickly

We trotted behind her as she walked to the apartment and opened the front door.

‘Merde,’ she muttered.

Quite.

After apologies our accommodation was changed. The new apartment was clean and the sofa cushions weren’t a ‘Souvenir from the Battle of Hastings, ’ so we considered it a 'result.' Happy, we set off for nearby Houlgate.

That day the town was hosting a ‘Normandy Fair.’ This involved natives in traditional Normany costume selling various handcrafted products to tourists in traditional holidaymaker costume of raincoats and soggy sandals. There was also a covered market where, as my daughter excitedly pointed out, they had the ‘cutest’ rabbits for sale.

I was just glad we hadn’t gone to Peru

Later a Viking ship powered by Ye Olde 4 x 4 and copious amounts of Normandy cider made its way around the town. As the Longship bumped around the corner an 80 year old ‘Norseman,’ fixed me with a bloodshot eye and waved his drinking horn in my direction.

‘I think you're on a promise for a bit of pillaging later,’ said the other half.

Well, it's good to know the old magic still works…

But in the end it wasn’t the Vikings, but the third downpour that made these Brits retreat to the nearest creperie for a healthy lunch.

Well, there must be some vitamin C in Calvados?

Labels: , , , , ,

Saturday, June 16, 2007

Hmmm...Is that you?




Camembert seems to defy the basic evolutionary premise that something is made to smell disgusting in order to avert us from eating it. If anybody has found a meal to match a baguette smothered in the ripe stuff accompanied by grapes and glass of wine I want to hear about it. But there is no denying it. It stinks. So as I tucked into our first night’s repas I chose to ignore the not-very-nice aroma, placing the blame firmly at the good Monsieur Bert’s door.

Yes, I thought as I looked around our hired surroundings, there was no denying that the apartment was basic. Nevertheless, I consoled myself that with only a week in Normandy I really wouldn’t be spending much time looking at the scuffed paintwork, chipped bathroom tiles or faded picture on the wall.

When the smell continued despite the fact that I’d double wrapped the remains of the indomitable cheese and placed it in an airtight container on the balcony, the search for other suspects began in earnest.

Well, the crossing had been calm, but perhaps someone’s digestive system was still going up and down?

The search included an impromptu game of ‘Match the Fart’ initiated by my son, (as always), who ended up the sole contributor to said game. And, with my judges hat on, I can categorically say that, in this event, he didn’t come anywhere near.

Everything was revealed when I opened the door to the Master Bedroom – a room just big enough to accommodate Barbie and Kens' double bed.

Anybody who has studied science will tell you that a gas is a gas because the atoms lack the cohesion to form anything else. Anyone who has ever smelled raw sewage will confirm that this particular gas can hit you full in the face.

(Raw sewage? Why do we call it raw sewage? Has anyone ever experienced the cooked version…?)

Anyway. I digress.

Of course, this discovery was made, as all discoveries of this kind are, just as the apartment caretaking staff were themselves heading for the delightful Pays de Rêve.

So, a restless night spent on the sofa ensued, during which I tried to forget about the suspicious stains I’d spotted on its rather worn cover earlier in the evening.

And as I tossed and turned, I suddenly remembered The Amityville Horror and the smell of excrement that apparently accompanied every unearthly incident. Don’t be so silly I told myself. But then I thought I saw the doors to the balcony shake. Phantasmagorical apparition? Or the Camembert? I shall never know.

Labels: , , , , , ,

Friday, June 15, 2007

Knickers to Normandy



Half term. Yes, you pay more to go away at half term, but it is better than the two alternatives; re-mortgaging the house for a week in August or being tossed into the fire-y pits of bad parenthood by taking your offspring on holiday during term time.

That is why I found myself this Whitsun attempting to slide, with all the grace of a hippo with hives, into the three centimetre gap between me and the neighbouring car on the packed ferry deck. When I booked the holiday I didn’t appreciate I would actually need the stuff those other channel-crossies in swimsuits use.

Of course all modes of transport seem to have their traditions associated with them. For example train travel involves the first person to their seat placing the newspaper, all the supplements from said newspaper, Notebook, sandwiches, mineral water, iPod, Blackberry and executive briefcase on the table and sighing loudly as later arrivals attempt to claim a two inch space for their coffee cup.

Air travel requires that you buy something from the Duty Free that changes from an elixir that can transform you into the glamorous, sexual predator featured on the advertising into something that reminds your partner that they haven’t checked the outside drain for a while.

And ferry travel means beating a hasty path to the top deck, where the men-folk hang over the edge trying to work out how a piece of rope the relative thickness of a cotton thread can hold a mega-tonne ferry to a quayside. Women, on the whole, are content to gaze at the lifeboats and dream of Leonardo, knowing that the real mystery is how, when they have spent the last seven days continuously washing and ironing they have packed themselves only one pair of pants.

But, of course, even the shortest jaunts can start to drag, so a visit to the ‘retail areas’ is a must. And during those boredom-filled sojourns it is amazing how certain items for sale can suddenly appear to be must-have buys: something green and viscous in a strangly-shaped bottle. Sides of salmon. The Daily Mail. Fudge you know is produced in only one factory in the world but is transformed into a ‘traditional product’ by the addition of a 4p postcard and the words ‘Greetings from.’

Soon you’re at the other side. And there is a warm welcome awaiting you in the form of two machine-gun toting French army personnel wearing stares that could shatter the glass on your freshly-purchased bottle of Sirop de Melon. And as you look around the queue at the women contemplating the forthcoming five-hour journey in the company of children who haven stopped arguing since Portsmouth, and husbands who are giving 'that bloke' who cut him up looks reminiscent of Denis Weaver in ‘Duel,’ you wonder just how many are tempted to make a run for it...

Labels: , , , , ,

Thursday, June 07, 2007

Don't remove the gherkin



OK, so most of the final days of semester B are a bit of a blur. Plenty of all-nighters and the 2:30am exhaustion that leaves you convinced that the early morning air has turned to see-though treacle.

Looking back at it now, the dying moments of Semester B produced some of the most upsetting moments of the course so far. And they all revolved around the thorny issue of:

honest feedback.’

Hmmm. Does anybody really mean it when they say they want ‘honest feedback?’

I’m beginning to think not. When the class was asked to comment, ‘honestly’, about a newly created module, this laterstudier did as she was directed. Well - I thought I’d been kind. You know. The old criticism sandwich idea. But from the lecturer’s response I’m not so sure it went down as intended.

Perhaps I should’ve taken out the gherkin?

Take another room, the same week. Add one anonymous student complaint, (not mine), to the head of department about the harshness of criticism given by a lecturer to create, well, a double ‘honest feedback’ situation of mega howl-round proportions. Introduce said lecturer, (upset), to the room to create some really awkward moments. Continue to boil students in tense atmosphere until they are well and truly stewed and the module is completely ruined.

I dunno. I guess it isn’t a good idea to ask stressed-out students for feedback just as they are frantically working on final assignments. I mean - who really wants to spend that precious half an hour at the end of twelve weeks shooting the breeze with lecturers for the benefit of the next lot of students? And just how accurate is that feedback going to be when the person tasked with marking your assignment is sitting in front of you?

Perhaps the answer is to encourage students to approach lecturers with ideas and concerns as the module progresses? It’s the end of my second year and I’ve known only one person ask a roomful of students if they felt that the preceding three hours were useful.

And I should mention that this semester I’ve also been on the receiving end. I thought that my shoulders were broad, but when someone - who should have made more sandwiches than Subway - called one of my images a ‘shitty little photograph’ I definitely felt something ‘slide.’

And I always thought I liked gherkins...

Labels: , , , , , ,

Saturday, May 05, 2007

Are you a mature student?

1. Do you attempt to take library books out using a Boots Loyalty Card?

2. Have you bought the green pack of crisps because you wanted cheese and onion flavour?

3. Is the only lock-in you experience these days when the librarian forgets to check the silent study area before going home?

4. Do you think that you might have been at school with some of the researchers you now have to quote in essays?

5. When you last did the type of jobs the agency are now sending you for the Summer were you wearing a) a jacket with shoulder pads b) 2 cans of hairspray c) neon-bright shoes

6. Does your idea of 'going wild' when the next installment of your loan comes through include: paying for the dog to be wormed, buying the bin bags that aren't made out of rice paper and flinging a pack of 'Bestest-ever-look-at-me-aren't-i-the-one' digestives in with the weekly shop?

7. Does the 4 month Summer 'travelling, discovering and learning' break translate into travelling to the local dump to get rid of two-semester's worth of 'drafts', discovering that in large enough amounts, dust can be fashioned into wearable garments and learning that Hillary could've scaled your ironing mountain. If he'd been brave enough.

8. Whilst appreciating the youthful exuberance of your fellow coursemates singing Natasha Bedingfield's 'I want to have your babies' is your enjoyment rather tempered by memories of colic, projectile vomiting, temper tantrams, 'that' incident when you were potty training and the fact that you have just fallen over your son's size 9 trainers - again?

9. Are you constantly amazed at your fellow students' ability to be late for lectures when you have to pass their accommodation block to get to the class?

10. Does your waistband tighten whilst looking at the breakfasts other students pack back?


Answer yes to any one of these and you might just be a laterstudier...

Labels: , , , ,

Wednesday, May 02, 2007

Remember, remember

Oh boy.

Life is fun at the moment.

Two assignments due in on 18th. One on the 25th.

Oldest child sitting mock mock exams, (no that isn't a stutter, this is what they do at school now - and they say they don't coach them to pass..)

Application forms for Summer work, helping to organise community music event, planning a family holiday and thinking about dissertation.

Is it any wonder something has to give?

And like the novelty blue draft excluder in the shape of a daschund, that present from a dear relative you haven't got the heart to get rid of, (the gift that is, not the relative), what 'has to give' usually sits behind the door waiting to trip you up when you least expect it.

This evening for example. Phone call to Mum

(Hang on a minute whilst I shine my Brownie Point)

I thought I'd remembered everything.

Then she said
'I got the birthday present'
Me: (thinking frantically) Birthday present? Birthday present? It's someone's birthday soon?
Me:
'Ahh yes. Good. Good'
Mum: Yes. I got what I said I would
Me: Whose birthday is it?
Me:
'Well done. Great. Super'
Mum: 'Thanks for the idea'
Me: What idea?
Me: 'Glad I could help'
Mum: 'Yes, I managed to get him the right size'
Me: 'Him' 'Right size' - must be socks. Dad's birthday?
Me: 'Great. Errr. What colour did you get?'
Mum: 'Well - the multicoloured ones. Orange, green and blue. Like you said'
Me: Dad has changed his preference for footwear
Mum: 'Yes. I think they'll look great out in the garden. And the glow will help if you need to go out at night'

To which I had to own up and admit to a rather peeved parent that I hadn't a clue what she was on about.

Garden lights. For my nearest and dearest's forthcoming birthday.

Apparently I suggested them.

Excuse me whilst I go and sit behind the door and swap stories with the daschund...


Monday, April 30, 2007

Ronald and the Folk Devils

America. Land of contradictions. Only the other day I was spouting on about the size 0/00 dress size favoured by some US celebrities, and then last night Steve Daly, 30 stone, 46 year old American comedian was on the box warning us about the US obesity epidemic expected the reach our shores within 4 years.


Although featuring the usual suspects of McDonalds and Burger King, (yawn), the documentary also featured more home-grown delights, including doner kebabs. The comedian’s message was targeted at the young. He fitted four classmates into his trousers to illustrate the realities of an 80 inch waistband, and shared chips, cheese and gravy with teenagers after lessons whilst trying to convince them that snacks like that in his youth made him into the man-mountain he is today.


The disparity between English and American Portion sizes was also under a rather large microscope. Anyone who has ever been to America returns with their own fantastic stories of eating out there, so here is mine. When my son asked for a double ice cream in the Animal Kingdom he was told that it was, in fact, a five scoop version. He settled for the smaller single version – with two portions of ice cream.


And isn’t this the point? That it doesn’t have to come from the Golden Arches or the Land of the Flame-Grilled Whopper to pile on the pounds. Perhaps the concentration on these Folk Devils is distracting us from the real point: that too much of anything will make you fat? Ronald was chased from my town and yet we have not become the lightest/fittest community in the UK. The burger van outside the Town Hall continues to do a brisk trade. And even farmers-market, organically grown, hand-picked, local sausages are still full of the saturated stuff and shouldn't be eaten at every meal.


Anyway I fear that, honourable though his intentions are, Daly’s mission is doomed to fail. Because, like the pictures used to persuade my generation not to smoke, images of 30 stone men in a swimming pool won’t stop children from eating crisps or chocolate. Just like the people I know who sat through lessons featuring images of slime- filled, blackened lungs

simply itching for a fag behind the bike shed, I’m sure that the children who watched Daly put away 12 school dinners didn’t think twice about the Snickers they had on the way home from school. Because being 46 when you are 13 is unthinkable – literally a life-time away. And if we smoke/stuff our faces now there’s plenty of time to give up, isn’t there?


So perhaps we ought to just embrace the approaching health crisis as a way to solve the energy shortfall. Did you know that 1000 calories is enough to heat one kilogram of water to one degree Celsius? Just imagine if we could take all of the energy created in all of the gyms we are going to need and plug it back into the National Grid. A couple of stone and you’ve got a pot of tea.


Problem sorted. Next week, world poverty…





Labels: ,

Tuesday, April 17, 2007

Grubbing Around

First it was Morgan Spurlock asking Maccy Ds to Supersize Me. Last night it was some restaurant critic wondering why the Edwardian diet of meat, meat and more meat was causing his BMI and cholesterol to soar. In contrast, the efforts of Louise Redknapp to reduce herself to size 0 from her usual ‘curvy’(!) size 8 were the subject of a TV documentary. But that seems distinctly ‘last year’ when size 00 is now THE label dwarfing the waistband of designer jeans. In fact a TV programme on Sunday called ‘Superskinny Me: The Race to Double Zero’ will feature two female journalists attempting to do just that

Whilst not demeaning their efforts to expose the health risks associated with this trend, I really wish they hadn’t bothered, because I’m sure that it’ll be more of the usual fare. Images of size 00 jeans. Shots of astonished journalists pulling at the waists of size 00 jeans. Pictures of size 00 celebrities sporting the only rack of ribs they’ll ever get near. Treadmills. Sweat. Carrot sticks. Glasses of water. Midnight camcorder diaries. Tears. Close-ups of a bespectacled Harley Street doctor announcing the full extent of the self-mutilation. And, of course, to the ‘heroic’ journalists 5 minutes of fame via interviews with Fern, Philip, Richard and Judy.

Frankly, like smoking, I think we’ve all got the message by now. Anyone who thinks that a diet of burgers or toenails is a good idea must have a Venusian passport. School dinners are different now. Even McDonalds have changed.

But still we continue to be obsessed with weight - putting it on and taking it off. We follow the diets of the poo-examining, tofu-obsessed Gillian McKeith, Dr ‘you’ll look so slim on the heart attack ward’ Atkins and the mastication free Slim Fast all with little chance of success.

And in the week when Oxfam announced an £5m appeal to help the world’s greatest humanitarian crisis in Darfur, where people have just 3 litres of water per day on which to live, (the minimum ration should be 15 litres) I find the focus on what we eat obscene.

And no - I don’t think these programmes are in any way 'useful' for those suffering from eating disorders. The last thing that people struggling with food need are people telling them how difficult under/overeating is - as if anorexia and bulimia were a simple lifestyle choice.

But still. Perhaps there may be a gap in the documentary market. ‘Normal-Size Me. Captivating shots of someone eating a couple of Weetabix for breakfast. Gruelling shots of people walking briskly to the shops to buy some veggies for the weekend. Perhaps the occasional ‘shocking’ image of someone eating just one chocolate biscuit. Because when it comes to food the one thing we all need to follow is the Commonsense Diet.

Isn’t it?

Tuesday, April 03, 2007

Farming life




I’ve just got back from the local cattle market. I've lived here over eleven years and although I've heard the auctioneer’s unintelligible spiel floating up from the town, I hadn’t ventured there until this morning.

Despite being born and raised in the Westcountry, my experience of livestock is limited to the animals I see in the fields nearby and the ‘agricultural shows’ that are part and parcel of life here. I now realise how sanitised these are when compared to farming life 'in the raw.' There wasn’t a man in pristine white overalls wiping the ‘manure’ from the back end of a cow before parading it around a show ring. There was fear, spittle, gallons of the green stuff and a bull that had an uncanny resemblance to a hippopotamus. Surprisingly, the farmer had only to tap this huge beast on his coal-black rump gently and he obligingly walked into the trailer - 'though I guess if you had to be a farm animal, being an intact bull is one of the better ones to be...

Although feeling a bit like Kate Moss at an ‘all you can eat’ buffet, I took lots of photographs and tried to soak up some of the atmosphere, (the discoloured soles of my trainers are testament to that). I didn't realise that there were so many different colours and textures of cows, from blue-grey smooth to black dreadlocked. Some of the animals had tufts of curly hair on their heads that gave them the look of high court judges. And I never appreciated how well the smell of dung would mix with the aroma of cooking eminating from the local cafe.

According to our Magazine Cultures' lecturer good articles have an appeal to the senses - descriptions of sights, sounds, smell, touch and taste.

Hmmm. Taste?

Manure and Bacon bap anyone?

Labels: , , , , , ,

Friday, March 30, 2007

Wassup

Ok, so what the hell have I been up to during my two weeks away? Well, as I started this blog in order to chart my path through HE I'll try to remember:

1. The Guinea Pig is ok - thanks for asking. Sprained foot apparently. He is now not allowed out in the morning until he has done his warm-ups - you know the thing - lunges, grapevines etc

2. I have been one out of three people to turn up for a lecture.

3. Watched some great Harold Pinter (Celebration) and Alan Bennett (Chip in the Sugar and A Woman of Letters) plays.

4. I have been the only one to turn up for a lecture. As it was a student-lead presentation it started out as a little toe-curling. Still, how much would you usually pay for a three hour, one-to-one tutorial with an ex-advertising executive-turned-graphic designer whose photographs have been published and exhibited widely?

5. At the aforementioned student lead presentation I was told that what I thought were 'arty' photos of shoes looked like the aftermath of a crime scene. Good job I'm not a sensitive soul isn't it..

6. I have been reintroduced to Flash. I'd forgotten how much I hated and enjoyed it in almost equal parts.

7. I've had to choose my modules for next year. The last year. Dissertation year. Oh how my stomach turns as I write those words...

Labels:

Thursday, March 29, 2007

Yumbo Chocolate Prize

So I'm cruising around the blogosphere, trying to resist the urge to Myspace again when I spot this chance to win a gorgeous Hotel Chocolate Easter Hamper on Julia Buckley's blog.

If you haven't tried anything from Hotel Chocolat I urge you never to do so. Once you've tasted their Nibbly Milk Slabs or Deeply Dark Dippers there is no going back. Besides, if too many people buy their stuff they might run out...

Have a go if you must but I have to warn you. Resistance is futile...

PS Comp ends 2 April

Labels:

My name is Heather and I am....

Ok, so it's been a long time.
So long in fact that when I went to logon to the computer at uni I realised I'd forgotten my password.

Anyhow...

I've blown the cobwebs from those particular braincells and I'm back in Blogland - and I have something to say.

Yes, (stands up and prepares to confess all), I'm now the owner of a Myspace account and I'm Facebooking all over the place.

It started innocently enough. Research for an assignment into 'on line social networks.' But now I'm doing ten logins a day. I'm following complete strangers home to their profiles (the shame). I've had all sorts of requests from people I don't know. I've even, (sniff), tried

But at least I'm not a hopeless case - no, thankfully I'm not in Second Life. I'm not ready to make a pact with the trident carrying one yet.

Labels: , , , ,

Wednesday, March 14, 2007

Children and Animals



My offspring and guinea pigs. Two parts of my life that keep me 'busy'.

Evidence: two guinea pigs let out into their run to enjoy the sunny weather this morning. Cue one highly delighted gp running around squeaking 'Oh what a wonderful morning' in a way that Howard Keel could only dream of, the other hobbling around the grass doing his best 'Tiny Tim' impression.

'Looks like there is something wrong with his leg' said other half, with all the wisdom of someone who has watched Animal Hospital twice.

We took a look at the offending limb in the same way a person buying a second hand car lifts the bonnet; we had no idea what we were looking for, but felt we owed it to the children to look as if we did.

He then said the words no mature student ever wants to hear

'We'd better take him to the vets...'

Oh well, there goes my loan.

Later we told our story to the man who shares a lift with us. It provoked an 'animals we owned in our childhood' type reminisance - the pets that went on 'holiday' only to come back bigger, less friendly or a completely different colour. They tended to be hamsters.

'We used to keep our hamster on the windowsill', said our passenger. 'It was in the days before central heating and I remember my Mum used to rub Vick into their fur and dose them up with disprin...'

By the time I'd stopped laughing we'd got to college. Fastest 20 minutes of my life.

Labels: , , , ,

Monday, March 12, 2007

Are you still here then?

Monday.

I have this said to me a lot on Monday.

No, I don't have any lectures or seminars on Monday, but still I come into uni and work a 9 to 5 day, researching, reading books in the library, staring out of the window gathering my thoughts - creating a space in the day to let my mind wander and be creative.

Why do I do it? Because at home I'd be distracted. Instead of finishing the chapter, walking down to the refectory and buying a cup of coffee, I would be finishing that cup of coffee BEFORE starting that chapter. Then I'd have another cup of coffee and then find clothes to wash and then a complicated recipe I would just have to make for tea.

I guess in the way looking after the home wasn't (and still isn't considered) work, being at uni legitimises study for me.

And anyway, why should it be so unbelievable that I would work what is after all a normal day for the majority of the population?

Is it because I is a student?

Friday, March 09, 2007

Howl around

Feedback. As welcome, to quote Billy Connelly, as a fart in a spacesuit when you’re at a concert. Essential when you are trying to write creatively.

So why is it so difficult to give and take?

In my experience not enough time is spent helping students to negotiate the tricky subject that is ‘creative criticism.’

I believe that good writers do put a bit of themselves into everything they produce. If they’re careful it will be an earlobe or strand of hair - something that won’t hurt too much when the results come in.

The problem is: we know what we should do, and then end up offering up work containing our most tender parts. The story based on a real life event. The trauma that you’ve tried to come to terms with through a short story - only the names of the people concerned have been changed.

The result? A room full of upset writers who believe that the criticism is personal and not aimed at the story. But we all need feedback, or else how do we grow, (apart from the packets of choccy digestives at the side of the keyboard), as a right-er?

So what makes for a good workshop? Here are my thoughts:

Spell out the rules of the game
Are you going to get students to write down feedback and get someone else in the group to read it out? One criticism to one positive comment?

It aint personal, but it is
Don’t make generalisations. ‘I think’ is better than ‘It is…’ Keep referring to the story not the writer. ‘The story seems to struggle here’, rather than ‘Having a hard day when you wrote this, were you?’

Make sure everyone agrees to the way the workshop is run

If they can’t, perhaps they oughta think about joining the mutual appreciation class down the corridor.

Be consistent
If you offer one author the opportunity to address the criticisms raised, make sure everyone has that opportunity

When the session ends, the criticism ends
Don’t let things descend to the ‘Hemlock in the canteen coffee’ stage. Ever

And remember
Wisdom doesn't necessarily come with age. Sometimes age just shows up all by itself.
- Tom Wilson


Thank you and Goodnight

Thursday, March 08, 2007

A day of two halves

So, it was all going well until I started to do some research for my Magazine Cultures assignment.

The March edition of my chosen magazine is out and nested within the pages of the esteemed publication I found my article.

Only I didn't write it.

Cue hysterical laughter.

Well, it seems that great minds do think alike. Although it appears that the greater mind thinks quicker

It all added up to a bit of a dilemma.

I did have the idea before the magazine came out, but if the module leader spotted it whilst browsing the racks at her local Smiths she might just think I copied.

So I did the honourable thing and told her.

'What a drag' she said. Yep I thought. Think drag of Titanic-anchor sized proportions.

The second half was better. Met a graphic artist who bought in a wad of 'creative' magazines. The idea of starting with a photograph and writing from that had not occured before.

I saw some memorable images, although one of a naked man with a pigs head sticks rather too firmly.

So I'm going to do something arty with daffodils, baby rhinos and stilletos.

Now I bet DL won't publish that...

Sunday, March 04, 2007

Article of Association

After last week's look at various glossies to discover who buys them, the type of stuff they feature and how they are put together, we had to pitch our idea for an article in the seminar this week.

Being a young group, magazine choices included More, Nuts, Metal Hammer, Company and Cosmo. So article ideas ranged from how to live the celebrity party life on a budget to an investigation into the true average number of sexual partners a 20-something female has had.

And then we turned to my chosen publication:

Devon Life. The pipe-and-slipper-wearers-magazine-of choice

Devon Life is a county magazine. Its intended customers are, apparently, incomers and second-homers. It sells a 'Dream of Devon,' complete with blue skies, cottages made from gingerbread and local, wild-eyed artisans crafting things from recycled sandals.

It's important, we were told, to pinpoint the target customer to ensure that any article is written to appeal to them.

I've come up with a range of ideas:

How to live the celebrity party life-Devon style:
Forget Bollinger and Beluga- think Jail Ale and Cornish pasty

Sex and the Combine-Driver

Welly-boot fashion - wedges or stilletos?

So why did I choose it?

Well, county magazines pay for articles. Or they did until they read this blog...

Tuesday, February 27, 2007

For M



私は愛する