Archives For November 30, 1999

Every once in a long while I come across someone who truly is blissfully unaware of how awesome they really are. Karen Ingram is one of those people. She has a level of brilliance and unrivaled sense of comedic timing that can make her a joy to be around or even just be a fly on the wall.

At times she can be very crass or a frustrating contrarian. She’s definitely rough around the edges, but she’s a Kare Bear on the inside. (She’ll probably accuse me of ruining her street cred because of this post.)

More often than not I find her to be an amazing sounding board and excellent friend. Her insights have been really helpful for me as I work to improve my writing and my outlook on life. (Karen having a completely differing outlook than anyone I’ve ever met.) She often jokes that my life will be spared when her species takes over the planet. I like to tell her to “Trek herself before she wrecks herself.”

Kare Bear

Karen and I at the spring Collegian pub crawl. The back of our shirts say “Wizard Emeritus.” Don’t ask.

Karen in my opinion is a very accomplished writer. She was recognized by the Society of Professional Journalists for a piece she wrote about zombies. As an editor she has made an excellent writing coach to many budding journalists. I’ve watched her make time for virtually anyone who walked into the newsroom in Kedzie Hall. This all being true, Karen will be the first to tell you that she wants to be a writer, not a journalist.

Recently Karen was recognized by the Department of English at K-State for her fiction writing. “The Suicide Artist,” tells the story of woman named Verity who makes a career out of committing suicide over and over again. In my opinion it’s the first of many works I’ve yet to read from Ms. Ingram. Good luck Karen, I wish you the best.

Follow Karen’s ramblings on twitter: @nerak1138.

I graduated. There I said it. Don’t expect me to be overjoyed about the situation. My collegiate career has come to a bittersweet ending.

On May 12 I walked across the stage in Bramlage Coliseum and was officially declared a graduate of Kansas State University. (That being said I still won’t actually receive my bachelor’s degree in the mail for about another month.) The commencement ceremony itself was long and full of tweets until the 3G went out in Bramlage. The university president did tell a great joke about the jayhawks though. However, I don’t really consider that to be the point in which my college career ended. Instead I like to think my K-State adventure came to a conclusion when I signed the acoustic drop ceiling in the Kedzie Hall newsroom, a tradition that dates back to the 1960s. The signatures include many former Collegian desk editors, Editors-in-Chief, staff writers and special guests from K-State and famous names in journalism like Bill Snyder and Bob Woodward. I’m really proud to be part of this Kansas journalism history found in Kedzie hall.

Be comfortable with the decisions you make… and have some fun too.

When I think back on my time at K-State, I truly feel blessed for the education, friendships and opportunities I received there. I’ve learned so much in these past four years that it seems impossible to quantify it all. I’m not sure I’m ready for this time to end. That being said I’m not sure there’s much left here for me as an undergraduate. (I have a terminal case of senioritis and I find freshman to be odd.) Sure I’ll miss the people, especially the folks at the Collegian, but most of my classmates have moved on to new and exciting adventures of their own. It’s time to leave Manhattan and see what happens next…

 

 

Well I finished writing my story for our convergence project. Here it is:

Bergman Elementary School teacher celebrates diversity by teaching international holidays
by Tim Schrag

Starting on Dec. 12 Anglea Blankenau’s kindergarten will be going on a nine-day journey around the world to learn about winter traditions. Her students will be given boarding passes, passports and luggage sets to learn about Las Posadas in Mexico, the history of the Christmas tree in Germany, New years in Japan, the English tradition of ornaments in the United Kingdom, St. Lucia Day in Sweden, Ramadan in Egypt in addition to the holidays of Hanukkah and Kwanza.

Mrs. Blankenau’s and her students will not actually be jet setting away from Frank V. Bergman Elementary to learn about holiday traditions first-hand. The boarding passes, passports and luggage are made of construction paper. The journey is metaphoric. Instead Mrs. Blankenau and her students will use their individual connections connections to these countries to do the teaching.

Though her students will not be going abroad, several already have. Jacob Bradley’s parents were stationed in Germany, Cristofer Gallegos is from Mexico, Jameela El Sotouhy’s parents are graduate students at K-State, Jameela and her family spend their summers there and Soren Peterson’s mother is from Japan over Thanksgiving break they went there to celebrate his fifth year of life as is customary in their culture.

“When it’s nighttime in Kansas than Japan would be daytime so it’s different,” Soren said. He enjoys telling his friends about Japan and can even speak the language.

“I know lots of words, but I need help with some of them because I don’t know all of them,” he said.

Blankenau is a certified English Language Learners educator. Of her 15 students five know a language other than English, four have an international connection.

Cristofer Gallegos, Jacob Bradley, Jameela El-Sotouhy and Soren Peterson are all bilingual students in Angela Blankenau's kindergarten classroom.

“I’ve spent quite a bit of my young adult and adult life living in different countries and so I know what it’s like to be a minority and I know what it’s like to not be in a culture that is same as everyone else,” She said. “I grew up in rural Nebraska and so I just think it’s important.”

Blankenau in cooperation with several of her students’ parents is preparing to teach her class about various traditions of this season. Blankenau, who has been teaching for 23 years, said she has taught this very learning unit for at least 10 years.

“I make it fit the kids I have in my classroom, last year I had a little boy from China, so we included China,” Blankenau said. “I just choose six countries that we go visit and we see how they celebrate their holiday around the world.”

Each day the class will spend several hours of their class time making a craft, learning about each country’s flag, locating it on a globe and then exploring the food and traditions behind these winter holidays.

Hikaru Peterson, Soren’s mother, said though she is still preparing to present about Japanese traditions, but she is excited.

“I can’t tell you how it will go on Monday, but I’ve had the opportunity to go to abeilene middle school and talk about japan for an hour,” she said. “I think I did actually pretty well talking to 6-8th graders, and after having Soren, I think I can tailor it to something they will be interested in.”

Peterson plans to teach the children about upcoming Year of the Dragon and show them the parallels and similarities of Japanese and American culture. Peterson said she believes it is important for her children to know about and appreciate their heritage, but also to have an appreciation and understanding of others.

“I think whatever he is exposed would help him appreciate about his friends and his family tradition, I promote my Japanese heritage and my husband’s norwegn heritage.”

Peterson also said she really enjoys the environment Soren is exposed to by being in an English Language Learners classroom.

“It’s helpful,” she said. “There are times when I question the value of trying to pass on my heritage it is challenging, but at the same time when he’s in a classroom where they affirm his diverse background it can only be helpful and I think it can be positive for this classmates too.”

The parents are not the only ones excited for this learning unit, 5-year-old Jameela El-Sotouhy said her family has been preparing to teach her classmates about Ramadan for a while.

“Even my brothers help me and my dad,” Jameela said.

Despite Bergman Elementary being a public school, Blankenau said she has had no problems teaching about holiday traditions.

“It’s not a problem as long as you’re not saying ‘this is what you should believe,’” she said. “Our kids are from all over and it’s kind of neat that we have in the middle of Kansas and the middle of the United States we have all of these different cultures.”

Some holiday tips…

December 6, 2011 — Leave a comment

I always seem to manage mixing my Collegian duties with my journalism classes. In today’s issue of the Collegian we have a Holiday Gift Guide. In that guide a wrote a column about decorating for the holidays. I think it fits in nicely with the project my group is working on so I thought we would include it. If you haven’t had a chance to take a look at it, here it is:

College holiday decorations can be more than traditional

By: Tim Schrag

College students have a unique opportunity to decorate for the holidays. It’s a time where domestic traditions can be put aside and decorations that exude school pride, alcoholism or campy irreverence can take center stage.

Over the course of my four years at K-State I have seem some pretty interesting decorations ranging from a Christmas tree adorned with purple Bud Light fan cans, to unique interpretations of nativity scenes. I remember decorating my house as freshman; we put decorations up before Thanksgiving and they stayed up until we got back from break. It was really fun bonding experience and we made a big event out of it.

Here in the newsroom, the Collegian staff has decorated for the holidays with a Festivus pole. None of us actually celebrate Festivus, but it seemed like an appropriate way to celebrate the holiday season without a pointless debate on religion. We took our own spin on it and printed off our own ornaments and taped them to the pole. It was a really great staff bonding moment. I proudly displayed my EcoKat ornament at the top of the pole, where I feel she belongs.

I asked my friends for some suggestions on what they do to decorate for the holidays on Facebook, and here are some of the more interesting tips and suggestions they came up with:
“I think smells are equally important to decor at Christmas time. Candles or oils with holiday scents are great for small dorms or apartments.”
“Since many of us can’t put lights up outside, just put a strand around your window(s) inside. Your neighbors will still be able to see your Christmas spirit. Plus, if you get purple, you can leave them up long after the holidays.”
“Paper chains to count down to the end of finals week are fun, too.”

In my opinion, there are many ways to go about decorating, and the best ones seem to work because the decorators really take ownership and make it their own. I have a Charlie Brown Christmas tree with a single red bulb and a Powercat in my room. Whatever you do this year to celebrate just remember to have fun with it.

Tim Schrag is a senior in journalism and digital media. Please send comments to edge@spub.ksu.edu.

One Stop Shop

December 6, 2011 — Leave a comment

Based on what the some of the other groups were doing for MC 580 my group has decided to create our own website for our final project cover the holidays in Manhattan, Kan. Check it out if you have an extra five minutes to kill.

Here's a glimpse of the site. Check it out if you get a chance.

“Oh the weather outside is frightful,”… but so is dead week. That being said we seem to be making some progress completing our final project. Here is the column I wrote for Tuesday’s issue of the Kansas State Collegian it’s about annoyances of the term Happy Holidays.

Debate on seasonal saying is pointless, actual actions are what matters

By: Tim Schrag

I’m just barely old enough to remember a time when the standard greeting during this time of year was “Merry Christmas.” People would place Christmas decorations, displays and trees up in their homes, stores and offices. “Happy Holidays” was nothing more than a song most commonly sung by Bing Crosby.

At some point in my childhood the trend changed and people began to replace the greeting “Merry Christmas” with “Happy holidays.” At the same time, the term “Christmas” was simply replaced with “holiday.” “Holiday” trees, lights and displays started popping up everywhere. Basically the only difference was the name; it was clear that these festive decorations were for Christmas.
In changing the name, we are mocking the less popular holidays and bastardizing Christmas. Occasionally there might have been a Star of David, but outside of that there was really no mention of other winter holidays. I guess the point is that there are people who don’t celebrate Christmas and those in charge didn’t want to offend them. Really though, what’s the point? Using the generic term “holiday” to seem more inclusive without actually including these other holidays seems more offensive, in my mind.
Being inclusive is easier said than done, especially in areas where there is a lack of diversity. My hometown hosts an annual lighted Christmas parade. I don’t see that ever changing, not because they are insensitive to others in the community, but because there really isn’t a need. Almost everyone in my hometown celebrates Christmas. Most of my peers come from middle-class, white, Christian families, many of whom may have only been exposed to other holidays through television specials on shows like “Rugrats.” I was fortunate enough to have gone to a grade school where the teachers felt it was important to educate us about other winter holidays like the Chinese New Year, Hanukkah, Kwanzaa, Yule and the winter solstice. Then again, I went to a Catholic grade school.

“It’s really hard because it depends on everyone’s personal view point,” said Candice Hironaka, senior associate director of the School of Leadership Studies. “It’s hard when your cultural frame of reference is steeped around one specific holiday. It’s just a matter of continuing to educate ourselves about what the other holidays are that are happening during this season of really good wishes.”

Hironaka says while she does celebrate Christmas, when she is greeting people around the office or in class she prefers the term “seasons greetings” because it is more generic and focuses more on well-wishing.

I’m totally on board with this idea. Still, I say “Merry Christmas” more often than not. I think it’s a good failsafe. In my opinion, “Happy holidays” is an empty statement. What most people are really saying is “Merry Christmas, but I don’t want to offend anyone so I’m saying this instead, even though I mean Merry Christmas.” I have run across very few people who say “Happy Holidays” and genuinely mean it.

Why not cut out the middle man and say “Merry Christmas” if that’s what the statement is meant to convey? “Season’s greetings” also works well, because it’s a greeting that could really be used at any time of the year.

Ultimately this season is a time for well-wishing and joy, and I sincerely hope people have an amazing December and January despite what they celebrate. The purple nation is a diverse crowd, and we should celebrate it, but not insincerely. Good luck with finals everyone, and when you greet each other, just say what you mean. It comes off less condescending.

Tim Schrag is a senior in journalism and digital media. Please send all comments to opinion@spub.ksu.edu.

A plan comes together

October 20, 2011 — Leave a comment

In an earlier post I mentioned that I was working on a group project for my MC 580 class. We are working on a convergence media piece about Fake Patty’s Day. Last night I uploaded a podcast that I worked on. Today I’m sharing a news package that my teammate Nick Weller. It’s a reaction piece taking the pulse of the K-State community to the recent debate about the possible changes in Aggieville for next year’s festivities.

Bobby the Bouncer

October 20, 2011 — Leave a comment
Last Chance

I may have to tip more and start going to Last Chance.

I often talk about how general education classes are lame, but this week one saved the life of my project. For about a week and a half or so I have been trying to tell the story of a bouncer in Aggieville for my MC 580 Media Convergence Class. I wanted to know what a typical night in the ‘Ville looks like and how it stacks up to Fake Patty’s Day.

Well… Ask and you shall receive. Today in my Biochemistry class one of my classmates struck up a conversation with me. After chatting for a while I discovered that he was in fact, a bouncer at a bar called Last Chance Saloon.

He agreed to do an interview. The rest is history. You can find my podcast here.

I’m not a huge fan of group projects. In fact I wrote an editorial about group projects around this time last year. They stick in my craw and I think on the whole they are unnecessary. I can’t seem to go a single semester without having at least one. The problem never lies in working with a group. I think group work is great. It will be impossible to be successful in the professional world of news media without being able to collaborate. The problem I continually see is scheduling conflicts. Trying to sync the schedules of three independent college students has proven to be rather difficult, if not irritating for everyone involved. These last two weeks alone, my media convergence group has tried to meet two times and failed to do so (not because we are blowing each other off, but because things just seem to keep hindering the process).

We may not even up to Ron Burgundy's standards of journalism, but we're getting there.

Luckily for us, the professor of the class has decided to cancel classes for the next several meetings to allow us to work on the project. Today, after another failed attempt to meet up, we all agreed the best time to work together is going to be during Thursday’s class meeting time. It is probably the only commonality among our schedules.

The good news is we do have a very well thought-out convergence package; we will be telling a sequence of stories about Fake Patty’s Day here in Manhattan, a fake holiday that dates back to the mid-2000s’. Currently, the City Commission in Manhattan is trying to change the way the holiday is regulated in the local bar district, Aggieville. We will create a print story outlining the history of the fake holiday and recent development surrounding it’s regulation. Additionally, we will do a podcast and standup package to go with the print story.

This is a set of stories I really want to do. I think we have the potential to tell them in a way that will captivate our audience.

Fake Patrick, pray for us. In Ron Burgundy we trust.