I wear many hats at Miami University. The most important of
these hats are:
Director of the ILRC (Interactive Language Resource
Center)
As Director of the ILRC, I provide
assistance to students, instructors, and staff in the
Foreign Language Departments at Miami Univeristy
(Spanish/Portuguese, GREAL, French/Italian, and Classics)
by (a) Coordinating new support technology within the
Foreign Language Departments (b) Maintaining and upgrading
computer technology in the ILRC (c) Providing secondary
technological support to the Foreign Language Departments
(d) Seeking out Grant Opportunities to incorporate
technology in foreign language education (e) Present and
assist in regular combinations of workshops, conferences,
video conferences, public relations and promotional
activites involving the ILRC, I also head daily operations
of the ILRC and supervise a staff of graduate assistants
and undergraduate student assistants in the ILRC and
maintain yearly budgets, annual reports, advisory committee
meeting reports, etc. of the ILRC. The overall purpose of
my mission is to lead the ILRC and the Foreign Language
Departments into an age where self-supporting,
computer-trained faculty will provide the university
community with an academically hospitable environment for
the promotion of foreign language learning, teaching, and
integration of Computer Aided Language Learning into the
evolving curriculum.
Director of the Austrian Summer Scholars Program
For the Austrian Summer Scholars Program,
visiting Austrian university students come as guests of
Miami University to participate in a “leisure
learning” program. In addition to informally
attending classes at Miami, students participate in several
field trips to area and regional businesses. I ensure that
the program runs smoothly, that the visiting Austrians stay
alive during their visit to the USA, that the bills get
paid, field trips coordinated, well... you get the idea.
Assistant to First-Year Summer Orientation
During the summer, I work with the Advising Office of the
College of Arts and Science as an assistant to the annual
first-year summer orientation. Incoming freshman students
enrolled in the College take Foreign Language Placement
Tests and talk to advisors before registering for their
first classes. It is my responsibility to administer the
foreign language tests, pull placement results for students
and the staff in the Advising Office, and to assist
sophomore- through senior-level students in taking or
re-taking placement tests during the academic year.
Technical Liaison to CALICO (the Computer Assisted Language
Instruction Consortium)
At annual CALICO conferences, I represent Miami University
as the chief technical support coordinator and liaison to
participants attending CALICO conferences and academic
institution staff that host the conferences each year. I
coordinate the needs and wants of up to 200 presenters with
the host institution staff to ensure that CALICO flows
smoothly every year. I don't officially get paid for this
position, but I get to go to the conference for free, get
my airfare and hotel paid for, and get a thank-you gift
each year for the effort.
Test Proctor for SPEAK Testing
Four times a year I assist the Department of Speech
Pathology in administering SPEAK tests. This oral test
format, created by ETS (Educational Testing Services) is
geared for graduate students who do not speak English as
their native language. The tests are done via computers in
the ILRC and are scored by a committee of three people from
various departments at Miami University. It is my job to
administer these tests throughout the year and ensure that
each student taking the test has a valid test before they
leave the testing area. I then compress each audio
recording into MP3 format and send the tests for archive to
the Department of Speech Pathology.
Computer Technical Support Volunteer
Sometimes a job turns into a chore, especially when it's
10:00pm and university folks want you to work on their
personal computers when they can't get their Windows or
Macintosh machines to work. Of course, they never have
things backed up and they call 24 hours a day, 7 days a
week, and want help even when I'm at Death's door. But I do
selective technical support of university machines and
SOMETIMES personal machines when time allows. My rule of
thumb is when I can troubleshoot it or fix it in five
minutes, I have to pass the problem on to the people
supposed to be referred to.