A chilly, damp Thursday of meetings on campus to learn more about how we might integrate artificial intelligence into our teaching and learning practices plus a few meetings with students, who have only now (the end of Week 13) chosen to worry about -- and attempt to renegotiate -- previous project grades. Keep in mind, next week, Week 14, is very short due to the US Thanksgiving holiday weekend, which on the calendar is four days. For many students, that has morphed into 10-14 days, and they simply are not around. Once we return, it is Week 15, courses end on Friday, December 6th, and Finals Week follows that. After which, the university, in all its wisdom, leans on us to evaluate everything quickly, tally course grades, and post those through the online system used by the Registrar's Office. The final weeks of any semester are a real gallop filled with every possible reason why people wouldn't, couldn't, didn't, or shouldn't have to do X, Y, or Z. Je
A rainy, chilly day here today. Perfect November weather and ideal, as such, for tweed, corduroy, and oxford cloth. The first wearing this season for this particular jacket and necktie by the way. The jacket was purchased a dozen or more years ago at the thrift/charity shop run by the big hospital in town, a few blocks away from our old Craftsman house (1925). The shop must have procured their merchandise from all of the deceased doctors, attorneys, and the few other white collar professionals lurking around Bloomington-Normal, Illinois because it reliably had quality items for very reasonable prices. Proof positive that you can assemble the basics of a professional wardrobe, along with a few less commonly seen items, without the need to splurge. While there really is not anything I "need" now, I do miss occasionally perusing that establishment since we have nothing like it here in our part of Central Michigan. But maybe that's a good thing, since part of dev