Wednesday, September 30, 2009

NYSHA Staff Member Today

Today, was an exciting day because my assistantship went from being paid by SUNY Oneonta to being paid by the New York State Historical Association.  The reason this is exciting is because I go from having 2-3 assistantship hours a week to having 7-10 hours a week, which is a lot more money, and being a grad student every little bit helps.


Now, I can't remember if I talked about what I was doing as my assistantship, but basically my assistantship is Special Projects, which basically means that i do what needs to get done.  Right now that involves me writing and sending out letters to all the professionals who wrote letters of recommendation for students, inviting them to share our program with other students they think might be interested.   Basically, I just writing letters and sending information packets out.  Besides that I am going to be working on developing the CGP wikipedia page, so we get more information about the program out there, and I am also going to be working with a few other girls in developing the opening event for the new CGP building next Spring.  

All and all it seems like a lot of fun, and some interesting work, especially with the opening event stuff that needs to get done.

Tuesday, September 29, 2009

Wordle

I was stalking Jenna's blog and I found this cool program called wordle, which puts in picture form what words you use most, so as of today, this is what mine looks like:




Were has the time gone

Sorry for the delay between posts, life has been busy, and of course back to the doctor again, now its hives in response to the medication, but everything appears to be ok.  


OK, some interesting things of note that have happened in the last week...and there really aren't that many...besides the hives.  Classes have been pretty much normal, we have started studying oral history in Research and Fieldwork and Fabrics in Culture and Collections.

Next week, I do my Intro to Museums presentation based on visitor experience.  I am still looking for a museum professional to interview in order to complete the assignment, but I guess there is still a week left.

Today, I set up my volunteership with the Farmer's Museum.  I am going to be working with the education departments, doing a financial analysis of their programs.   This will be a good way to keep my accounting and finance mind sharp.

Our class also started working on a feasibility study for the Oneonta World of Learning, a group of mothers who want to start a Children's Museum.  Surprise, surprise I am doing the financial/budget compiling and analysis for the group.

While I do not want to pigeon holed into Finance, it is a skill that can disappear without use, and I want to keep my accounting brain sharp, because I feel like its one of my best assets, so everything has been working out pretty well.

Sorry it took so long to write

Thursday, September 24, 2009

Home Sick and Listening to Music

I was home this afternoon sick, so I was laying in bed listening to a lot of music, and running across other peoples favorite songs, and so I decided...hey I didn't do anything that exciting today, so what am I going to write about....MUSIC...so here as of September 24, 2009 is what I consider my favorite songs...though this is likely to change by tomorrow...since I love music... (I linked the songs to youtube videos)



2. Push - Matchbox 20 (they were still 20 and not twenty then)
...after this it gets tricker...
3. Say it Again - Maria Digby
4. Knock You Down - Keri Hilson
5. Broken - Lifehouse
6. Playing with my Heart- Kate Voegele
7. Angel - Kate Voegle
8. The Chain - Fleetwood Mac
9. You Find A Way - Graham Colton
10. Letters from the Wasteland - The Wallflowers
....I am going to shoot for top twenty...
11. Wonderwall - Oasis
12. Closer to You - The Wallflowers
13. Lost - Michael Buble
14. Show Me What I'm Looking For - Carolina Liar
15. Heart of Gold - Neil Young
17. Lovestone/I think she knows - Justin Timberlake
18. Use Somebody - Kings of Leon
19. Landslide - Fleetwood Mac
20. Closing Time - Semisonic


Well thats the list I came up with while recovering...knowing me it will change tomorrow. 


Wednesday, September 23, 2009

Oral History and Shared Authority

Today in our Research and Fieldwork class we began to discuss oral history in preparation for the oral history project we are doing later in the semester.  Many questions and debates arose about oral history as we discussed the topic and research methodology.  Many people believe that oral history is important because it allows alternative stories to be told, not just the standard the winner writes history ones.  Oral history is highly dependent on the interviewee, the person narrating the story and providing the information.   Questions start to arise when as researchers we question the validity and the "truth" of different statements made.  Some people consider oral histories to be less reliable because they are stories that are often recalled years after the fact, and many researchers probably are just not that comfortable using oral histories.  Oral History has only become big in the last half-century and most college students are still taught how to conduct research with written records.  How much more valid are written records though, is a diary all that different then an account from a person taken orally? Are newspapers tell the truth or just trying to get a good story? When a person writes a letter are they guaranteed to tell the whole truth and nothing but the truth? NO.

Oral histories don't need to be used to nail down facts by themselves, but they can be used to determine the meanings of actions and events.  And really, not to get to philosophical, but is there really one truth out there.  The stories are often the truths according to the narrator.

The big question we had today was, however, about shared authority.  The best definition that we were able to come up with in class seemed to be that shared authority is trying to share the interpretive authority, and that both the interviewee and the interviewer should have a say in the final product.  The problems that arose were could you use information that would but the person in a bad-light?  Do you have to respect their wishes if they don't want something that they said publicized?  Do you have the right to contradict their statements as a researcher if you find opposing evidence? etc.

I think one of the problems of our class was that we entered with a very scientific mindset, that the "Truth" is always the ultimate goal, and it was our duty to seek it out and share it as much as possible, even if it meant contradicting an interviewee, telling the bad side of their story that they themselves did not want to share, or blatantly saying that what they said was a lie and analyzing what they said.

As researchers who are used to manipulating and twisting all the information we can get from sources, sometimes I think it is easy to forget that the interviewee is a person, a person who deserves our respect on many levels.  First and foremost though, they are taking the time to sit down with us an tell us a story, time that they did not need to share.  If we start presenting negative images that they don't want presented we are breaking a level of trust that they put in us when they agreed to do the interview, we are also could be causing harm to them, by releasing something that they did not want release, they still are living people with lives, friends, families, and communities to go back to.  On a more professional level is getting the whole exact story out of every person so important that we are willing to alienate people in the process, or is keeping people comfortable and having a good reputation whereby many more interviews can be done better? That seems to be a personal question for every researcher?  I think there is a degree of ethics, empathy and humanity that is needed to be a public historian, one needs to actually remember and consider the public and those being interviewed are people, and in a museum class that is devoted to public services, sometimes not sharing the whole truth, and thus saving people pain, might be a better plan, at least initially.

Monday, September 21, 2009

Meet the Cooperstown PD and Hospital Staff

Today...well lets just say it was an interesting day.  I woke up with an infection and needed to go to the emergency room/clinic.  I hopped in my car and started driving and of course wound up calling Jay, I mean really a paramedic should know medical things.  The problem was that I was doing my freak out about needing to go to the hospital on my cell phone and drove past one of the two cop cars in Cooperstown, which of course resulted in me being pulled over.  


The cop got out of the car and we talked a bit, and I told him I was on my way to the hospital, and he said that as long as I have a clean record he would let me off with a verbal warning.  Being a pretty safe driver I was cleared and he made sure I knew how to get to the hospital.  I really appreciated his kindness and understanding because I was a bit scared and dealing with a ticket was the last thing I needed. It seems that small town cops are understanding, and I really have to say he was a nice guy.

Next I went to the Basset Hospital Clinic.  Except for the service being a little slow at the beginning because it was busy, my experience was definitely positive, probably the best hospital experience I can remember having.  Since I was a new patient and a walk-in the registration and making an appointment took an hour or so, but once I was finally sitting in the waiting room, they actually got me in 20 minutes early (surprising for a doctor).  The MA and Doctor were fantastic and easy to talk to, and had me diagnosed and prescribed with the proper meds quickly and efficiently.  The doctor even got me hooked up with a more permanent physician since I will be in Cooperstown for two years.  The hospitals system even made it so I only had to pay the co-pay for visiting a primary physician and not the ER or walk-in clinic fee.

Later while talking to my dad, he said that one of his bosses had surgery there and the doctors replaces took a nerve from the guys leg and transplanted it into his hand.  Furthermore the hospital is a teaching hospital associated with the Columbia-Presbyterian network, so seems to be staffed with highly educated and innovative staff members that cover almost every health area you can imagine.  Not to mention the hospital complex itself is huge.  

In other words, I am very satisfied and a fan of the emergency and medical services of Cooperstown and would give them five stars.   

Sunday, September 20, 2009

Museum MacGyver

As part of orientation week our class was required to create a video about Cooperstown and CGP that could be posted on youtube and used to promote the program.  To make the challenge more difficult and to get us to meet more people, we were given a series of clues that we needed to find answers for and then include the answers in our video.  After figuring out the clues we then divided into committees.  I got places on the script writing committee and was involved in a little bit of the acting.  The video took a couple of weeks to shoot and another to edit; we had a fantastic editing team.  

The link below is to the final project.