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Proverbs 4:7 Wisdom is the principal thing; therefore get wisdom: and with all thy getting get understanding.

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Tag Archives: Doctoral Research

Señora, ¿podría firmar nuestra petición? ¡Por supuesto!

Posted on November 30, 2014 by Dr. Lisa R. Brown

SignPetition

This has been a tough week for me following the #Ferguson fiasco and non-indictment for trial of the officer who killed Michael Brown in Missouri. Not only has that particular non-indictment contributed to my sadness this week, but also what seems to be a national crisis in the United States of police brutality resulting in the death of black people groups in our country’s urban centers.

So, I decided to just go to the park and reflect on my thoughts and feelings this beautiful Sunday afternoon here in Talca, Chile. It warmed my heart when a group of teenagers approached me on their bicycles asking me to sign their petition for the city to create a bike park for them. Awwwww, ❤ that was just what I needed at that moment. An act of civic engagement by today’s youth (tear). Their interest in becoming involved in their community politically, was just the inspiration booster shot I needed today. So I pulled out my Chilean resident  identification RUN number and happily signed their petition. It felt really, really, good to share in that experience with them today.

Burrito-Ride-5-19-13-Salinas-here-boys-at-the-lead

These were not the exact kids that approached me, as I didn’t have me camera with the at the time. However, you get the point. 🙂

However, shortly thereafter entered the negative voice in my head. I began to wonder, if I were in the United States and this was a group of young white teenagers, would they have even felt comfortable approaching me? Moreover, if again in the United States and this was a group of young black teenagers approaching for the same purposes and I was a white woman sitting alone in the park; what would be the outcome? Would memetic imagery override reason and could said woman becomes in fear of her life? What if in the last scenario, everyone was living in a conceal-and-carry gun law state, and the park visitor (e.g., white person) pulled a gun out of her purse and starts shooting because she felt threatened by the black teenagers?

I know these hurt feelings that I hold are still very tender, and perhaps at some point (when justice prevails) my thoughts will return to “normal”. Maybe, such scenarios and questions will not dog my mind or make appeals in my head as normative (like they currently do).

So here is to seeing the rainbow after the storm, to being inspired by the political activism of the young Chilean teenagers I experienced today, to all those here that have just looked at me quietly and smiled in solidarity as #TheStruggleIsREal. To all of those types of people, I say thank you today. 🙂

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Doctoral dissertation data collection: A test of a graduate student’s patience

Posted on October 9, 2014 by Dr. Lisa R. Brown

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I am diligently trying to collect the Part II data for my mixed methods research study and it has been very slow going.  Getting people to complete surveys in this day and age is getting a lot tougher to do, in my opinion.  Particularly due to our being in this “microwave”, “iXYZ…”, and “Digital native” culture.  People have gotten used to taking these 2-3 minute BuzzFeedish surveys and most don’t have the patience to complete a doctoral dissertation research instrument containing more than 10 quick-click items.  Nevertheless, knowledge creation marches forward.   I am encouraged by the support I am getting this go around through making direct appeals to academic coordinators in each graduate programs’ departments.  The response has been great and today, I regressed back to my days as an admissions recruiter, I set up an information table to recruit volunteers for my survey and also do a little UGA side recruitment handing out bookmarkers I was given from the Graduate School.  I was also giving out these little Zumba bracelets (pulseras) I brought back with me from the US.  They seem to generate a smile when I offer them to guys. Ha ha.  I also took a bunch of my business cards where I pasted the internet address to my survey on the back.  I think that was a creative idea.

Optimistically waiting for the completed surveys to start flooding my inbox. :)

Optimistically waiting for the completed surveys to start flooding my inbox. 🙂

 
Tome

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Time to Degree of U.S. Research Doctorate Recipients

Posted on September 1, 2014 by Dr. Lisa R. Brown

cap-and-gown-for-graduation

Time to Degree of U.S. Research Doctorate Recipients – nsf06312.pdf.

I thought this (click on above PDF link) was a very insightful information article–in light of academic capitalism themes–related to pressuring adult learners to get in and out with their degrees as quickly as possible. In essence, the mantra of “Obtain your credential and get to work!!” is always looming in the air for graduate level students.   However, why are we looking to pursue “terminal” degrees in the first place?  What is our civic and social obligation, as future highly educated individuals, to speak to the existential problems of everyday people (life)?  According to the statistics in this article I would most certainly be considered an “outlier”  based upon age as I returned to graduate school after having raised a daughter and proudly watched her graduate through law school.  It was then “mommy time”!  I sit as an example of what I believe to be true adult education and lifelong learning (as I am closing in on the completion of my PhD credential having entered candidacy last summer).

I welcome the new month of September being excited that I am near the end of my doctoral journey and motivated by the thoughts of what I plan to do as a scholar/practitioner in the area of Adult Education Learning and Organization Development (AELOD).  I spent all of August working with my dissertation research data, preparing for my October return to Chile, and pumping out two manuscripts which I hope to submit for publication in the next few weeks.  My academic program is under the auspices of the department of Lifelong Learning Administration and Policy (LEAP) at the University of Georgia and I personally have come to view adult learning as never-ending.  There are so many ways adults continue to learn formally, informally, and non-formally (AE folks will know these subtle distinctions).  Most of us maturing adults have come to realize that adults learn differently from children and adolescents; but typically we don’t give it much attention because in large part most academic educational research (especially in the areas of outreach and community engagement) is more attentive to early childhood and undergraduate learners.  I hope to make a big contribution toward changing that aspect of educational research and highlight the developmental nature of adult learning that in my field has been somewhat neglected.  Understanding the adult learner of the twenty-first century must be interdisciplinary in scope, accounting for the complexities that surround the realities of what are now arguably “digital natives” among adult learner groups.  Adult education, in order to remain relevant, must also be engaged in scholarship  that speaks to the cognitive aspect of learning with appreciation for the multiple domains of knowing (e.g., spiritual, cultural) people bring in creative ways to the space of knowledge generation.

In summary, I want to be able to speak to the most pressing social issues of today, in a timely way, through my scholarhship.  At the same time, I want to be able to teach (and encourage) my parents for example,  to use Skype and cellular phones so as to remain in communication with their adult children spread about the international world.  I want to see my siblings and friends stay attentive to health and fitness themes by taking a Zumba class or maybe step aerobics at a local “Y”.  There is so much to learn because adult learning truly is a open-ended never ending quests (Graves, 1970, 1974, 2005, 2009) and I am excited to be a passenger (and as the need may be conductor) on that journey. 🙂

I actually started out just planning to post this PDF (as a press this item) after waking up unusually early.  I guess this is now my new nature as an emergent scholar which is that sleepless or unexpected early risings will now result in writing muses. Ha ha!  Nonetheless, my apologies for the OSU image of a cap and gown, but it was the best one I could find on the internet to go with this blog post this early morning.  Plus, I am originally from Ohio, and the image does also represent my UGA black and red colors.  Therefore, I have achieved the elusive win, win, and win with this post. Deal with it! 😉

Graves, C. W. (1970). Levels of existence: An open system theory of values. Journal of Humanistic Psychology, 10(2), 131-155.
Graves, C. W. (1974). Human nature prepares for a momentous leap. The Futurist, 8(2), 72-87.
Graves, C.W. (2005). The never ending quest. In C. Cowan & N. Todorovic (Eds.). Santa Barbara, CA: ECLET Publishing.
Graves, C.W. (2009). Clare W. Graves: Levels of human existence. In W.R. Lee, C.C. Cowan, & N. Todorovic (Eds.). Santa, Barbara, CA: ECLET Publishing.

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