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UK's new law dean founded and edits a professional blog
Check it out: the new Dean of the UK College of Law, David A. Brennen. Brennen is joining the University of Kentucky from the University of Georgia School of Law where he has been a professor since 2006 and from the Association of American Law Schools where he is completing a two year term as deputy director.

Along with more than 15 years of experience in the classroom, Brennen is regarded as an innovator in the field of nonprofit law.  He is a co-founder and co-editor of Nonprofit Law Prof Blog

Together with the College of Design dean, Michael Speaks, (he is using NetworkBlue for his regular blog for students to see), it looks like UK's academic leadership is taking on a whole new generation!

Drop downs? Reverse Transfers? Swirling Enrollments?

Sara Goldrick-Rab, UW-Madison, has reported in this month's Sociology of Education on college transfer students using the latest numbers from the National Educational Longitudinal Study (students who graduated from high school in 1992 are followed through 2000).  She found that first-generation charactistics were even more telling than socio-economic when understanding why a college student -- enrolled first at a 4-year institution -- would transfer to a community college and then drop out.  Goldrick-Rab says she was surprised to find that money was not the key issue for this cohort and she recommends that 4-year institutions offer advising for those students who.  Check out the summary of her report (and the intriguing comments) at http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2009/04/17/transfer  

Interestingly, academic advisors and faculty have been saying to our at-risk students for years to "reverse" transfer to LTI- LCC-BCTC-whatever... but we have no idea if this is good advising.  Are we saying to our students that they need to "drop down" in the hopes that they don't "drop out"? Are we promoting the "swirling" enrollments that every support staff member dreads?  The latest statistics on transfers into UK are not good on this possibility.  This kind of advising is endemic, however.  How can we raise the faculty and staff's awareness of this problem? 

DSP110 and Second Life ethnographies - blast from the past
Talking with people today in the Drop-Into-Second-Life session today, I started talking about the wonderful experience last semester with my Discovery Seminar students in Second Life.  I learned so much from them, and I hope that they know it.  Several faculty and staff worked with me to come up with the ideas in the course and we thought so hard about the syllabus - measuring out each class period as if we had control over what was going to happen.  Well, somehow the syllabus worked, and yet the experience itself was so much richer than we had ever imagined.  I highly recommend you trying it out yourself - get lots of supporters around you as you go.
University of KY Second Life Drop-In Info Session on Friday, April 10th

So what is Second Life? Have you heard of it but you're not sure how it can be used for education?

 

Please come to a drop-in information session held in room B-35 in Young Library, University of Kentucky.  Stop in any time on April 10 between 9:00 AM and 4:00 PM.  Members of the UK community who are active in Second Life will be available for questions and demonstration throughout the day. 

 

Tour the University of Kentucky island in Second Life!  Feeling adventurous?  Sign-up for an account on the spot and try your hand at navigating the virtual world.

 

See http://ukisland.wordpress.com/2009/03/11/april-10-sl-session-on-campus/ for more information and directions.