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The EdTech Bites PodcastThe EdTech Bites PodcastEp. 145: iCollaborate: Building a Powerful Personal Learning NetworkIn this episode, I chat with Kelli Coons and Ainsley Hill while at FETC. They share their story on how they met and built a powerful course, iCollaborate, all virtually! They then met in person for the first time to get this thing off of the ground at FETC. We also discuss how this session helps instructional coaches build and learn from their PLN. Us coaches often times work in silos and need that support group to grow and learn with. And what’s an episode without some food talk! Listen to hear what dish has been their favorite in...2023-02-2120 minEdTech Bites PodcastEdTech Bites PodcastEp. 145: iCollaborate: Building a Powerful Personal Learning NetworkIn this episode, I chat with Kelli Coons and Ainsley Hill while at FETC. They share their story on how they met and built a powerful course, iCollaborate, all virtually! They then met in person for the first time to get this thing off of the ground at FETC. We also discuss how this session helps instructional coaches build and learn from their PLN. Us coaches often times work in silos and need that support group to grow and learn with. And what’s an episode without some food talk! Listen to hear what dish has been their favorite in...2023-02-2120 minThe Include Software PodcastThe Include Software PodcastHow to sell unsold work in Asset and prepping for the iCollaborate Virtual ConferenceLisa, Wendy and Miles talk about a couple ways to upsell unsold work in Asset via Proposal Manager or CX. There are some interesting nuggets to take away and apply to your own business! They also talk about what to expect from the completely Virtual iCollaborate user conference this year. If you want to register, please register at this link!2020-09-1433 minThe Include Software PodcastThe Include Software PodcastReal world tips on how to use Asset and iCREWtek for Snow and more with Bret AchtenhagenLongtime Asset user Bret Achtenhagen comes onto the podcast and chats with Lisa, Wendy and Miles about how Bret Achtenhagen's Seasonal Services implemented Asset and iCREWtek successfully. He gives tactical tips on how to prep and use Asset for snow and how his company uses the software. Other topics covered include: Bret's own radio show, balancing work and family and iCollaborate! 2020-08-3153 minCollaborative EdgesCollaborative EdgesAeternum Press: Peruvian Dark Fantasy/Fiction (Spanish)Aeternum Press is a Peruvian independent literary publishing house that specializes in dark fantasy/fiction (literatura oscura), a genre that welcomes works of horror fiction and dystopic science fiction.  In this Zoom-podcast, we  talked with Tania Huerta, Aeternum’s Editor in Chief, and editorial team members Luis Bravo and Kristina Ramos, about their editorial initiative, projects, and myths about authors of dark fantasy/fiction. Aeternum Press’s publications are available in digital edition and can be downloaded from its digital platform Lektu. This podcast has been conducted in Spanish. 2020-05-2748 minCollaborative EdgesCollaborative EdgesEpisode 24: Comics and Graphic Narratives from Latin AmericaSince 2019, the MSU Comics Forum is a multi-day, annual event for scholars, creators, and fans of the comics medium. In this podcast, we talk with Brittany Tullis, Associate Professor of Spanish and Women’s and Gender Studies at Saint Ambrose University, and María Fernanda Díaz-Basteris, Assistant Professor of Spanish at Cornell College, who present their recent work on Latin American visual cultures, literary studies, comics and graphic narratives in this year’s Comics Forum.2020-02-2141 minCollaborative EdgesCollaborative EdgesEpisode 22: “Lulú en el jardín”: an experimental documentary on LGBTQ+ issuesFeatured in the 2nd edition of the MSU Latinx Film Festival, “Lulú en el jardín” is an experimental documentary project that explores the personal narrative and historical events surrounding the institutionalization of José Luis Benavides’s Latina lesbian mother in the 1970s. In this podcast, Alejandra Márquez Guajardo, Assistant Professor of Gender and Sexuality Studies in Latin America and the Caribbean at Michigan State University, and José Luis Benavides, artist, writer, educator, and Director of “Lulú en el Jardín,” talk about the film, LGBTQ+ issues, and a very personal story.Visit : https://msulatinxfilmfestival.com 2020-02-1419 minCollaborative EdgesCollaborative EdgesEpisode 23: Latinx Music and Political ActionOne of the features of the MSU Latinx Film Festival is music as a vehicle for political action. These day, we’ll enjoy the live performance of RicanStruction, a musical journey through the Spanish-speaking Caribbean and other regions of Latin America with its significant Afro-Hispanic presence. We’ll also enjoy “Singing our way to freedom”  a film that chronicles the life and music of Ramón “Chunky” Sánchez, César Chávez’s favorite musician. In this podcast, Scott Boehm, Assistant Professor of Spanish and Director of the MSU Latinx Film Festival, interviews Osvaldo Ozzie Rivera, educator, activist, musician, and Direc...2020-02-1441 minCollaborative EdgesCollaborative EdgesEpisode 21 - MSU Latinx Film Festival 2020Websitehttps://msulatinxfilmfestival.comSocial Mediahttps://www.youtube.com/channel/UCW3NOqspHGr0ex90rlWBR1A/videoshttps://www.instagram.com/msulxff/https://twitter.com/MSULxFFhttps://www.facebook.com/MSULatinxFilmFestival/2020-01-2221 minCollaborative EdgesCollaborative EdgesEpisode 20 - Writing and Performing Violence in Latin AmericaThis podcast brings us back to projects related to memory, activism, and archives in the Spanish-speaking world and Latin America. Our two most recent Ph.D.s in Hispanic Cultural Studies at MSU Andrew Bentley ('2019) and Osvaldo Sandoval ('2019) visited our studio to talk about violence in contemporary Latin American and Spanish literature and performing arts.  Bentley and Sandoval give us a glimpse into their doctoral projects, why they decided to work on violence and trauma in contemporary writing, performance and material culture in Postwar Guatemala, Spain and the Southern Cone respectively. This podcast continues the conversation we h...2019-06-0136 minCollaborative EdgesCollaborative EdgesEpisode 19 - Passing, Identity and Self-RepresentationMSU professors Catherine Ryu, Japanese and Korean Studies, and Kirsten Fermaglich, History and Jewish Studies continue the conversation about the notions of passing, identity and (self) representation, across diverse languages and cultures. In December 2018, apropos “Passing” in Russian cinema, we talked about Zainichi Koreans who would like to pass as Japanese. Professor Ryu shared her understanding of Passing as “an authorized movement between and through different identity categories that are not assigned to you."  How has our learning community experience about "passing" this year expanded or opened new possibilities for our own research and pedagogical approaches to global identities?2019-05-0232 minCollaborative EdgesCollaborative EdgesEpisode 18 - (Spanish) Juan Acevedo: Peruvian Comics and Politicsand presenter in the 2019 symposium of the MSU Graphic Narratives Network. Juan, Bruno Takahashi, MSU professor of Journalism, and Claudia Berríos-Campos, a Ph.D. candidate in Hispanic Cultural Studies at MSU share their views about and experiences with comics and cartoons,  and their impact in Peruvian and Latin American readers.  Special appearance of "El Cuy" (the guinea pig), the most renown comic character created by Acevedo and widely read in the Spanish-speaking world: https://elcuy.wordpress.com/ While at MSU, Juan was interviewed by Wayka News.2019-04-1036 minCollaborative EdgesCollaborative EdgesEpisode 17 - (Spanish) Mayra Santos Febres: Conjuros and Festival de la PalabraGracias a una invitación de la iniciativa Womxn of Color en Michigan State University, conversamos con la escritora puertorriqueña Mayra Santos Febres acerca del acto de crear y escribir, magia, conjuros, la historia de nuestros nombres y de nuestras jornadas como impulsos creativos.  Novelista, poeta y ensayista con más de 25 libros publicados, varios premios en su haber, y profesora en la division de Humanidades de la U de Puerto Rico, Río Piedras, Mayra se especializa en literatura africana, caribeña y feminista. Es además la directora ejecutiva del “Festival de la Palabra,” el festival literario a...2019-03-2936 minCollaborative EdgesCollaborative EdgesEpisode 16 - Digital Analysis of Early Modern Captive Letters/Portugal & SpainThis is our third podcast on DH projects in the Spanish and, on this occasion, we talk also about Portuguese epistolary writings. Leila Vieira, Doctoral candidate in the Studies in the Portuguese Speaking World Program at the Ohio State University shares with us her textual analysis of 23 letters by early modern Spanish and Portuguese captives by means of digital archives (P.S. Post Scriptum) and visualization tools such as https://voyant-tools.org/2019-03-2914 minCollaborative EdgesCollaborative EdgesEpisode 15 - (Spanish) Borderlands Archives Cartographies & #TornApart/#SeparadosEpisode 15 - (Spanish) Borderlands Archives Cartographies & #TornApart/#Separados by iCollaborate2019-03-2826 minCollaborative EdgesCollaborative EdgesEpisode 14 - Postwar Guatemala's Digital Archives: GAMAlex Galarza and Mariana Ramírez speak about Postwar Guatemala’s Grupo de Apoyo Mutuo Digital Archive. At Haverford College, Alex leads the development of the GAM Digital Archive. Mariana has been involved with GAM digitization project since fall of 2017 and sees her work as an important way to promote historical memory. For more information, visit: http://ds.haverford.edu/gam-archive/index2019-03-2120 minCollaborative EdgesCollaborative EdgesEpisode 13 - Passing to the Other's Side in Russian FilmCatherine Ryu, Camelia Suleiman, and Jason Merrill talk about the notion of “passing” in Zainichi cultural production, Arab culture, and Russian cinema. Tied to ideas of racial, ethnic, and cultural identity, “passing” takes place when an individual of a racial/ethnic group is accepted as a member of a group different from their own. In this context Prisoner of the Mountains (1996), the story of two Russian soldiers who are held prisoners by their enemies during the Chechen war offers an example of “passing” in Russian film.2018-12-1720 minCollaborative EdgesCollaborative EdgesEpisode 12 - (English) Taiwanese Cinema: "Dear Ex"Welcome to our podcast about 2018 cinematic success “Dear Ex.” Tze-lan Sang and Catherine Ryu hold a lively conversation with Filmmaker Chih-yen Hsu, one of the two Co-Directors of “Dear Ex” along with Mag Hsu. Winner of Best Narrative Feature, Best Actor, and Best Actress at the 2018 Taipei Film Festival; nominated to 8 Golden Horse Awards, and Official Selection at the 2018 Asian Pop-Up Cinema, “Dear Ex” delves into the lives of Song Zheng-yuan, his wife (and later widow) San-lian, their teenage son Cheng-xi, and Zheng-yuan’s lover Jay. Gender roles, sexual identity, motherhood, communication, and love are some of the themes we discuss in...2018-11-0722 minCollaborative EdgesCollaborative EdgesEpisode 12 - (Chinese) Taiwanese Cinema: "Dear Ex"Welcome to our first podcast in a language other than English! Tze-lan Sang, Taiwanese Filmmaker Chih-yen Hsu, and Sophia Wong Boccio, Executive Director of Asian Pop-Up Cinema (Chicago) joined us to talk about Taiwanese cinema and “誰先愛上他的,” film co-directed by Chih-yen Hsu and Mag Hsu.2018-11-0722 minCollaborative EdgesCollaborative EdgesEpisode 11 - Legacies of the Enlightenment“Legacies of the Enlightenment” is a research initiative jointly developed by faculty and graduate students from MSU and Penn State University. Valentina Denzel and Ellen McCallum join us today to talk about this collaborative initiative, why studying the Enlightenment matters today, and their forthcoming interdisciplinary workshop.2018-10-0418 minCollaborative EdgesCollaborative EdgesEpisode 10 - Puppet PowerBetween May 14 and September 14, 2018, Pia Banzhaf and Steve Baibak, organized the exhibit “Panoply of Puppets” in collaboration with the MSU Museum. Puppets from different parts of the world were featured. In this podcast, Banzhaf and Baibak talk about the power of puppets and how they integrate them into their projects and, in collaboration with MSU Abrams Planetarium, their classes. Visit: http://kaleidoscopia.ca/2018-08-3117 minCollaborative EdgesCollaborative EdgesEpisode 9 - Locating Muslim Cinema(s)In April 2018, Michigan State University held the Muslim Studies Program 11th Annual Conference and Film Fest with a special focus on “Locating Muslim Cinema(s): The Politics of Cultures and Identity.” MSU faculty Camelia Suleiman, Marc Bernstein, and Swarnavel Eswaran Pillai talk about the festival, films “The Nightingale’s Prayer” (Egypt 1959), “Close Up” (Iran 1990), and “Firaaq” (India 2008), and how 60 years of Muslim cinema(s) contribute to our understanding of Muslim cultures and society.2018-04-3019 minCollaborative EdgesCollaborative EdgesEpisode 8- Picturing Others: Photography, Representation, and IdentificationMary Vogl (Colorado State University), Candace Keller (Michigan State University), and Rocío Quispe-Agnoli (host) share their approaches to study indigenous photographic practices from Morocco, Mali, and Perú. Who were/are their viewers? for whom and why did/do they take photographs? what agendas are activated when building representations of others and themselves? How did these photographers and the subjects they photographed want to be represented? For more information: www.picturingothers.com2018-04-1231 minCollaborative EdgesCollaborative EdgesEpisode 7 - Picturing Others: Indigenous Photography and ArchiveJorge Coronado (Northwestern University), Laura Smith (Michigan State University) and Erika Nimis (University of Quebec, Montréal) share their reasons to study indigenous photographers of Perú, the United States and Mali and the construction of photographic archives by native people of these nations. The construction and preservation of photographic archives bring the stories of indigenous peoples and their (self)representations to the center of interdisciplinary studies. For more information: www.picturingothers.com2018-04-1221 minCollaborative EdgesCollaborative EdgesEpisode 6 - Migration Studies and the Humanist PerspectiveWhat does the censorship of bilingualism signal about how we construct our world? Is popular culture depicting or misrepresenting migration communities? How are the refugee crises presented in social media? Evelyn Alsultany, Madelaine Hron, Ana Celia Zentella, and Miguel Cabañas, guest presenters and organizer of this symposium meet to talk about human rights and refugees including their right to practice their religions, use their language, and retain their own features. Humanities research in these areas can inform the law and transform the policy to create a conversation on the impact of migration policy on the human experience.2018-02-1728 minCollaborative EdgesCollaborative EdgesEpisode 5 - What Happens to a Dream DeferredWhat Happens to a Dream Deferred is an intimate portrait of a day in the life of José Adrián Badillo Carlos and Osvaldo Sandoval, two DREAMers who are graduate students at Michigan State University. Scott Boehm, Assistant Professor of Spanish and Film Director, and Peter Johnston, Cinematographer and Film Editor, join José Adrián and Osvaldo to talk about the making of this short film and the impact on their lives after the Trump administration’s decision to rescind the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals policy. The film was first released at the MSU Latinx Film Festival.2018-02-0620 minCollaborative EdgesCollaborative EdgesEpisode 4 - Latinx Film Festival: 40 years of Mexican-American musicA conversation with Charlie Vela and Ronnie Garza, directors of As I Walk Through the Valley, and Scott Boehm, Assistant Professor of Spanish and Global Studies at Michigan State University and Director of the MSU Latinx Film Festival. Featured at the MSU Latinx Film Festival, As I Walk Through the Valley is the first comprehensive look at rock music in the Rio Grande Valley. Vela, Garza, and Boehm talk about documenting 40 years of musical history and Mexican-American culture.2018-02-0218 minCollaborative EdgesCollaborative EdgesEpisode 3 - Blurring BoundariesWho are ‘we’ and who is the ‘other’? This is a question that has become increasingly complex in late modern times due to the effects of globalization. In the Arabic world, another force is driving this question. Guests Camelia Suleiman, Marc Bernstein, and Safoi Babana-Hampton talked with us about this force and its effects in the Arabic world across and beyond the Mediterranean. See also Blurring Boundaries. A Global Perspective Symposium2017-11-2027 minCollaborative EdgesCollaborative EdgesEpisode 2 - The Language of Self and Italian CinemaPhilosophy, aesthetics and post-realist media productions have unseated conventional politics, blurring boundaries between fiction and documentation, the self and the Other, autobiography and biography. Italian cinema had identified subjects of the global Italian world to convey the changing positions of the director and the viewer. Guests: Marcia Landy, Distinguished Professor Emerita of English and Italian Studies at the University of Pittsburgh, in conversation with Joseph Francese, Distinguished Professor at Michigan State University.2017-11-0128 minCollaborative EdgesCollaborative EdgesEpisode 1 - African Arts and PhotographyThe West African country of Mali has long been home to a creative community of photographers. Since 2011 the Archive of Malian Photography addresses the preservation, cataloging, and digitization of works by renowned Malian photographers. Guests: Malick Sitou and Youssouf Sakaly in conversation with Candace Keller, Associate Professor of African Art History and Visual Culture at Michigan State University.2017-10-2624 min