My Ecuador Higher Education/K-12 Leadership Study Abroad Trip: Thursday June 2nd, 2016

We all woke up early the next day to report to breakfast at our bed/breakfast locale. Here is a picture of the breakfast table.

Our Breakfast Table

Our Breakfast Table

We got to eat all types of fresh native fruits and juices. They was delicious. Farmers in Ecuador do not use pesticides. Personally, I found that the fruits were juicier and sweeter than the same fruits available in the US. I had been warned not to eat any fruits there before I left unless I could peel them or risk getting digestive problems. Nevertheless, I did eat a pear and an apple and did not have not have any digestive problems at all.

We spent the rest of the morning until noon, presenting to each other for the purpose of getting to know each other using a Pecha Kucha style of presentation. You can learn more about this type of presentation on this webpage: http://www.pechakucha.org/ . There is a great YOUTUBE tutorial on how to create this type of presentation using PowerPoint on this page. If the video does not show below this paragraph, just refresh this webpage.

After the presentations, we all went to a local restaurant for lunch, which was located in the colonial style area of Quito. Here we are at the restaurant and this is what I ordered. It was a coconut shrimp dinner with rice, plantains and native Ecuadorian fruit.

RestaurantSecondDayFoodSecondDay

We decided to spend the rest of the evening until 5:00 pm exploring the many Cathedrals  located in this area. Here is a picture of one of the amazing cathedrals that we visited. The name of the place is, “Iglesia de la Compañía de Quito”. Here is a picture of the outside of the church. Nevertheless, visitors are not allowed to take pictures inside this church.

Iglesia de la Compañía

Additionally, we also visited Quito’s Presidential Palace known as, “Carondelet Palace”. Here is a picture of part of the outside of the palace and  another picture of me posing next to one of the live guards outside the palace.

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Finally, we returned to Bed/Breakfast location, where we were also having dinner. As part of the dinner, a local attorney name Leonardo Sempertegui  who represents the main accreditation agency in Quito came to speak to us about the Current Issues and Laws regarding how colleges/universities in Ecuador earn accreditation status. This session lasted until 8:30 pm.

Here is a picture of my study abroad group posing with attorney Leonardo Sempertegui .

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My Ecuador Higher Education/K-12 Leadership Study Abroad Trip: Wednesday June 1st, 2016

I have been dreaming about this study abroad trip ever since I found out about the trip and signed up for it.  I was on Facebook on April 3rd when I noticed the following announcement about the trip on the public group,”LatinX in Students Affairs.

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I quickly posted that I was interested in attending and then sent it to my friend, Rosa. She responded to the post stating that the trip sounded amazing. Additionally, she posted  that she had other tentative plans but in the case that they fell though, that she would love to attend. On April 13th, I was elated to learn that Rosa had purchased her plane tickets and would be attending.

Before leaving, we were informed by our study abroad professor, who the other participants would be. Therefore, we set up a GROUPME account so we could all keep in touch. Additionally, we also friended each other on Facebook, created a Facebook group page and connected on Linkeln.

Fast forward to June 1st at 1:00 pm when I boarded my first plane from Orlando to Houston. Five of out of six study abroad students were supposed to board a United Airlines 5:30 PM flight to Quito,Ecuador at the Houston airport. I was the first person to get to the airport. Rosa was the second person to arrive. It was my first time at this airport. I found it enormous, hard to navigate and very disappointing. There was no place to get a nice meal and drink. Rosa and I had previously planned to get a meal, dessert and alcoholic drink.

Sadly, we had no choice but to eat at Wendys. I only had a Chocolate Frosty and Rosa had a Jalapeno Fresco Sandwich and coffee from Starbucks. She would also have eaten a sandwich from Starbucks, but to our shock we were were informed that this particular Starbucks location did not have a microwave oven to heat up the sandwiches.

FB_IMG_1465102816166Picture taken by Rosa Hanco rugal99.wordpress.com

Slowly others started to arrive. Lauren was the next one to arrive. She recognized us and quickly introduced herself. Valerie arrived next and did the same. Meanwhile, our Quito flight got delayed due to bad weather. Most of the groups initial flights were also delayed for the same reason. The Quito flight soon started boarding and our group of four participants started to panic. Our fifth participant had just sent us a message on GROUPME stating that her plane had just landed.  Nevertheless, the passengers on her flight were still not getting off the plane and her arrival terminal was very far away from the Quito flight departure terminal. To fast forward, she missed the flight. She took another flight to Bogota, Columbia and from there another flight to Quito and arrived the next morning at 10:00 am without her luggage. The airline promised to send the luggage directly to the Bed/Breakfast location where we were staying. In the meantime, the four  of us arrived in Quito at 2:30 AM in the morning and were picked our group leader, Dr. Raul Leon and driven to the hotel.

Here is a picture of our favorite flight attendant on the Quito Flight.

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Picture taken by Rosa Hanco rugal99.wordpress.com

Throwback Story: My Bad Hair Days and the Story Behind Them My Bad Hair Days and the Story Behind Them

When both of my sons were little, I noticed that the texture of my hair seemed to have changed overnight. Regardless of what shampoo/conditioner combo I bought, how many times I blow dried it and how many haircuts I got, I could not seem to control the unruliness of my hair.
The only time my hair looked good was after a beauty salon haircut and blow dry. This pattern continued shampoo after shampoo for around eight months. Needless to say, I was very distressed about this problem and thought that perhaps becoming a mom had changed the chemistry composition of my hair and that I was probably stuck with the new texture forever.
To make a long story short, this pattern stopped abruptly one day when I walked into one of my restrooms and noticed that my oldest son was pouring liquid hand soap into my shampoo bottle.
Me: What in the world are you doing?
Son: I was just doing an experiment.
Me: Why would you be using my shampoo bottle to do experiments?
Son: Well, my teacher at school mixes all type of liquids during science class, your shampoo bottle was handy and I wanted to try it myself.
Me: (Suddenly making a connection between my different hair texture and these experiments) How long have you been doing this?
Son: Since the new school year started.
Me: (Trying to remain calm) What else has you been mixing?
Son: Well, every time I take a bath, I mix things into your shampoo.
Me: What kind of things?
Son: Things like dishwashing liquid, mouth wash, hand lotion, toothpaste, laundry detergent, vinegar, hydrogen peroxide ext
Me: (Getting very agitated) Don’t you realize that I wash my hair with the shampoo and lately my hair has been looking like crap?
Son: Yes, I noticed that your hair looked messed up lately.
Me: (Trying to control my Puerto Rican temper) Well, if you noticed, didn’t it occur to you that you should stop this behavior?
Son: Well, I wanted to see how different your hair looked when I poured different liquids into the shampoo.
Me: Don’t you realize that I have a job and want my hair to look decent when I report to work?
Son: Well, mom, I did not think of that. I am so sorry.
Me: Omg, you better be sorry and stop this behavior immediately.
Son: I will and again I am sorry, but I really was hoping to find the magic ingredient that would make your hair look great.
Me: I appreciate the idea behind it, but perhaps you can use your own shampoo bottle to do these types of experiments.
Well, my son was grounded from playing video games for a week and as far as I know, stopped this behavior and never tried the same experiments using his own shampoo bottle. Gee, so much for quantitative style research. smile emoticon
So the moral of this story is that if you are a young mom and your hair starts responding differently to your shampoo, question your kids as I cannot believe that I am the only young mom that has had this experience. I can laugh about it now, but it really was not fun having unnecessary bad hair days.

Here is a picture of me and my kids on one of those bad hair days.
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Public Service Announcement for my Florida peeps. Wish I had known.

I wanted to share an incident that happened in my home last week involving an animal, which is not native to Florida. After my husband came home from work, I was sitting in my bedroom talking to him. I finished the conversation and stood up to leave. All of a sudden, I happened to see something moving on the floor near the foot of our bed, it was gray and looked like a mouse at first. It was approximately five inches long.

Me: Oh my God, oh my God, oh my God… screaming at the top of my lungs..not really believing what I was seeing. (At this point, the animal starts hopping and hops towards my clothing hamper, hiding behind it.)

Husband: What, what?

Me: (still screaming) I can’t believe it, it is a frog, a bug, I don’t really know…LOOK… as I pointed to the nearby clothing hamper.

Husband: What, where, I do not see anything.

Oldest son: (who came running into the bedroom holding a plastic disposable cup, he usually does this whenever I see a Lizard inside my home for the purpose of catching it and removing it from my home). What is it, Mom?

Me: Oh, my God (nearly hyperventilating), Oh, my God, THERE (pointing behind the hamper) it is a bug, frog, really do not know, please catch it…

Oldest Son: Sure (moves the hamper and catches the frog in the cup), wow, this frog is a big one.

Husband: Oh my God, it really is a frog. Man, it is really big and I have never seen one of those in this state at all. I wonder how it got into the house? ( he is a Florida native).

Me: (Starting to calm down and speaking to my oldest son) Thanks so much, you saved the day. Please take it outside NOW.

Youngest son: (who now walks into the same bedroom) Mom, it is just a harmless frog, you really did not have to scream so much.

Me: There is no way I will be convinced that the frog is harmless. Regardless of whether he is harmless, I do not want it in my home.

Later that night:

Husband: Wow, you made my day today.

Me: How?

Husband: Well, my day had been a boring one until you started screaming.

Me: (Smiling) Well, the frog scared me to death.

We then had company over for the Fourth of July and put the incident aside. However, today I finally did some Internet research to get some more information about the frog. I found a great web page on the University of Florida website, which addresses this type of frog and has some good pictures. I also looked at other websites.

http://ufwildlife.ifas.ufl.edu/cuban_treefrog_inFL.shtml

http://solutionsforyourlife.ufl.edu/hot_topics/environment/cuban_treefrogs.shtml

This is the scoop. What I saw is called a, “Cuban Tree Frog”. It eats Florida native tree frogs, as well as lizards and many invertebrates. They seem to have migrated to Florida by boat. They may cause electrical short circuits and clog drains. Some electricity companies have paid up to $10,000 to repair damage caused by these frogs.

These frogs also secrete an irritating substance and therefore should not be handled with bare hands. They can grow more that six inches. Florida residents who see one of these, should report the incident to the University of Florida, where researchers are trying map the migration of these frogs.

Nevertheless, the most shocking advice on the University of Florida website is that if Florida homeowners see one of these, they should euthanize them. The page explains how to humanely do this. However, this is something that I could never do.

Almost forgot, the scariest fact about the frogs is that their favorite hangout in Florida homes is inside toilets. Well, from now on, I am really going to inspect toilets carefully before sitting down on one. Hope that this story has been informative for my other Florida peeps. I have been living in this state since 1975 and I have never heard of this type of incident before, nor did I know what a Cuban tree frog was until now.

I really wish I had taken a picture of this frog, but I was really too upset to think of doing this. In any case, here is a picture of what the frog looked like.

Cuban Tree Frog

 

Social Reproduction, Cultural Capital and Habitus: How I Defeated the Odds

In my recent doctoral class at Northeastern University, I was introduced to the theory of reproduction framework for the first time. The major contributors to the framework were the French sociologist Pierre Bourdieu and the American sociologists Samuel Bowles and Herbert Gintis. The framework consists of Bourdieu’s theory of reproduction which states that the student’s social class pre-determines his/her level of school/workplace success and that they will probably wind up in the similar social class/occupations as their parents. Samuel Bowles and Herbert Gintis also contributed to the framework by claiming that the American theory of meritocracy does not exist.

In a nutshell, the framework states that the true function of the schools is to prepare students to assume a job in the same socio-economic status as their parents. Another part claims that the American theory of meritocracy in which people are rewarded based on their own merits is a myth. The framework uses the terms, “cultural capitol” and “habitus” to describe the dominant social classes of any society and assert that schools use these as a benchmark to reward school success and in this process reject the culture of all other social classes.

The term “cultural capitol” describes the language patterns, ideologies, skills, disposition, and interests of the dominant social classes. The term “habitus” describes the success-oriented mindsets and behaviors that the upper classes have toward institutional life and their educational/workplace aspirations. The framework also theorizes that students being raised in poverty cannot inherit either the habitus nor cultural capital of the dominant classes, therefore they are already behind before they start school and are less likely to pursue college bound tracks.

The class also introduced me to my first ethnography titled, “Ain’t no making it” by Jay MacLeod. This book examines the lives of two peer-groups of male teens growing up in US public housing projects in the 1980s’. One group was black and the other white. Most the black peer-group teen’s family’s valued schooling highly, these students behaved well in school, believed in the theory of meritocracy and graduated from high school. In contrast, most of the white student peer-group dropped out of high school, they behaved badly in school and had families that did not value schooling highly. Unfortunately, the majority of the members of both groups ended in dead-end unstable menial jobs during their adult lives.

I am so happy that I was not aware of any of this as I was growing up in the South Bronx section of New York City which is also known as the Arson capital of the World and was well known for it’s very high crime rate. For me, living in the projects would have been a step up. I am first generation born American born to a family from Puerto Rico. My father only completed the sixth grade and mother only completed the third grade. They were both raised on farms in Puerto Rico and had to drop out of school to help work the farms. My mom only spoke Spanish and my dad spoke both English and Spanish. However, in an effort to communicate with my mom, only Spanish was spoken in my home until I started Kindergarten and learned English after my first 6 months.

Only my father worked in my home and he was lucky enough to start off as a cook at the Sheridon Hotel and did so well that they sent him to chef school. Later on he managed to get a job as a chef at the Waldolf Astoria hotel. Like the black student peer-group in the book described above, my parents valued schooling highly and expected my sisters and I to behave well in school. They also expected us to do our homework and cooperate with our teachers. They also believed in the theory of meritocracy.

To make a long story short, there were two actions that I initiated on my own that helped me to beat the odds and that kept me from falling into the trap of social reproduction:

1. In 1964, I was a 4th grader and I found the book, “Diane Stories” by Betty Cavanna, in my school library. I loved this novel about an upper white middle class teenage girl growing up in the suburbs. I read the approximately 400-page book over and over. I started acting like her, dressing like her, adopting her patterns of speech and started to imitate the writing style in the book. Little did I realize that until now I was really teaching myself some of the cultural capital of the dominant classes.

2. In 1965, I was a 5th grader and was lucky enough to find the book, “Manchild in the Promised Land” by Claude Brown, also in my school library. I read the book, which was about a former gang member from Harlem who grew up and become an attorney. I was so inspired by the book that I read it over and over again. I decided right then and there, that if he came from that type of background and became very successful as an adult, then I was going to do it also. I also decided that I wanted to attend college someday so I started to pay more attention to my schoolwork and to dream big.

In elementary school, my transformation soon started to pay off. My teachers started to notice that I stood out from the other students in behavior, speech patterns, school related attitudes and writing style. Therefore, they started to recommend me for higher ability tracks. By the time, I started 10th grade, the teachers in my NYC high school started to question me as to whether I was really from a Puerto Rican family and really lived in the South Bronx. At that time, NYC changed their district zoning and I got assigned to Christopher Columbus HS, which was located in an upper middle class neighborhood. I told them that my school records were correct. I realize now that the reason for their questions was that I acted like the upper middle class teenagers, which attended the school instead of a teenager from the South Bronx.

After completing my first semester of 10th grade at Christopher Columbus HS, I moved to Puerto Rico with my parents. However, this is another story in itself. After completing my first year of college in Puerto Rico, I applied for admission, attended and graduated from a state university in Florida. Later on, after a few careers in social work and the legal field, I became a K-12 educator after earning my certification under an alternative certification program. I then earned a Masters Degree and transitioned to teaching at the college level. I am so happy that I took this class and finally realized the sociological explanations behind my unusual success; I guess it is never too late to learn new things.

Installing PowerPrep GRE Software under Vista OS

After an endless search using Google and Bing on how to install PowerPrep GRE software on my older son’s computer which uses the Vista Operating System, I have found bits and pieces on the puzzle on various websites. However, I did not find the entire solution anywhere.

Therefore, I played with the many pieces of the puzzle solution that I found, added a few of my own and finally came up with a complete solution to this problem.

I have decided to share this solution in this blog as I know that many college seniors to be, have the summer off right now and would probably like to spend some time preparing for their GRE exams which is required for admission to many graduate schools.

First download and install the great WinRar compression utility software from this site:

http://download.cnet.com/WinRAR-32-bit/3000-2250_4-10007677.html

It is free to use and try for 40 days.

Now, download the PowerPrep GRE test prep software from this site:

http://www.ets.org/gre/general/prepare/powerprep/download/

Ignore the install instructions listed there as they only work if your operating system is Windows XP operating system or below.

Instead, right click on the file and click on,”RUN AS ADMINISTRATOR”.

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Right click on it again and click on, “PROPERTIES”. Then click on the COMPATIBILITY tab on the top.

Now click on the square next to COMPATIBILITY mode so that a check-mark appears in the square. Click on the arrow below it and select, “Windows 2000”. Now click on the squares next to, RUN in 640 x 480 screen resolution and Disable Desktop Composition so that check-marks appears in the squares, Now click on APPLY and then OK.

Now right click on the file PGRE31 and select, “OPEN WITH WinRAR”. It is very important not to extract the files with another other program. Only the WinRAR compression utility will extract the files using the correct length names that will allow the program to work and install in compatibility mode.

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Select CLOSE on the window that appears.

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As  soon as you close the window, the window shown below will appear. Now double click on the yellow folder shown in the window right underneath the word, “NAME” and the green arrow. Then select Disk1 and then click on, “EXTRACT TO”, right under the main menu on top of the program.

A window will appear like the one shown below asking you where to save it to, select the DESKTOP and click on OK..


The software will create a folder called PPGRE31 and extract all files to that folder. Now find the folder, double click it and you should see another folder called DISK 1. Double click on it. You should now see a window like this one.


Close the folders and now go to the start menu and click on RESTART. Press the F8 key just as your computer is restarting. Select, “Restart in safe mode with Networking”.

When the computer finishes booting, right click on the icon of my Computer icon and select,” EXPLORE”. At the top of the screen, click the arrow pointing down to select, DESKTOP.

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If it does not appear on the list, just type next to the right arrow,” DESKTOP “. The following steps were also completed earlier in this guide and are repeated here and applied to a totally different file this time. This new file may or may not have inherited the same settings from the first time these instructions were followed.

Now scroll down and find the PPGRE31 folder and double click on it. Then find the folder named, “DISK 1″ double click on it and now right click on the file named,” SETUP” with the green color icon.

Click on,”RUN AS ADMINISTRATOR”. Right click on it again and click on, “PROPERTIES”. Then click on the COMPATIBILITY tab on the top. Now click on the square next to COMPATIBILITY mode so that a check-mark appears in the square.

Click on the arrow below it and select, “Windows 2000”. Now click on the squares next to, RUN in 640 x 480 screen resolution and Disable Desktop Composition so that check-marks appears in the squares, Now click on APPLY and then OK. Now double click on Setup and your software should install correctly. Now restart your computer in regular mode.

Now go to PROGRAMS, then click on POWERPREP and then on GRE_POWER_PREP. Your program will start, your screen resolution will change a bit and you can now run this software correctly.

If you followed this blog and the instructions worked for you, please consider leaving a message on this blog.

Solution for ATI Catalyst Driver Issue – Cannot Install – Error: INF File Not Found

Spent most of the morning today trying to figure out why my son kept getting a blue screen of death at random times while trying to watch a downloaded video or play any of this computer games. Other times, the problem would occur while my son was not even on his computer and the computer was in sleep mode. This problem has been happening on and off for months.

Occasionally, he also gets a message saying that his ATI Catalyst Driver was out of date and had to be updated. His desktop computer is a Gateway Model # GT5662, which comes with an ATI Radeon HD 2400 XT, 256 MB PCI video card.

After thinking about this problem, I suspected that the video driver that the Windows Vista 32 bit Operating System UPDATE utility had downloaded and suggested that my son install to replace the driver his computer came with, was not the right driver for his computer. I decided to go to the Gateway site to investigate whether my suspicion was correct.

I found out that the Gateway site had another video driver for download that was different from the one that my son was using. It also turns out that unfortunately, this driver was not a Windows digitally signed driver. Therefore, there was no way that the Windows Vista UPDATE utility could get it for us.

I decided to download it myself and try to install it. You can get the driver at this site: http://support.gateway.com/support/drivers/getFile.asp?id=21656&uid=269341864 It is considered one of the the ATI Catalyst drivers and downloads automatically with the Catalyst Manager Control Center software that must be installed at the same time as the driver. After downloading, it must be extracted and stored in the C:cabs folder.

Well, I first un-installed my son’s current driver, (which at the time that it was downloaded a long time ago was named, “9-6_vista32_win7_32_dd.exe”) using the PROGRAMS AND FEATURES control panel. The name of the file shows up simply as, “ATI”. At this time, Windows automatically substituted the generic VGA video driver.

I then installed the driver package from the Gateway site by going to the C:cabs folder and clicking on the folder titled, “D20235001-001.exe” and then clicking on the SETUP file. The install of the Catalyst Manager Control Center part of the package installed corrected but I then got a message that the driver itself could not install because an INF file could not be found.

Well, the main part of every driver is a file that ends with .INF and without it, nothing can be installed at all. As a matter of fact, if you happen to see one, you can usually just right click on it and a menu will appear that gives you several options. One of the options will state, “INSTALL” and if you click on it, that will install whatever driver it was supposed to install. Therefore, installing this package seemed to be a waste of time. Thinking that maybe the problem occurred because something went wrong during the first install, I then un-installed it using the using the PROGRAMS AND FEATURES control panel and re-installed it again, however I got the same message.

I started to research this problem and found out that it was very common. I found many tech supports forums where people were posting that they were at wits end dealing with this problem and that the Gateway tech support department referred them to the ATI tech support department and vise-versus. Some people even posted that they had given up trying to get help on how to fix the problem and just bought video cards from another company, installed them and were using the new cards instead.

I started to think about solutions to this problem that did not involve using the downloaded installer package to install anything. I remembered that in the early WINDOWS operating system days, I used to update my drivers using the DEVICE MANAGER control panel. I remembered that Vista still had the same control panel.

Therefore, I decided to try to install this driver using the DEVICE MANAGER. I selected the VGA driver, right clicked on it and clicked on the UPGRADE option. As the UPGRADE session started, the first step gave me the option to search the Internet or my own computer for the driver, I chose my computer. The next step gave me the option to browse my hard drive and chose the driver I wanted, I browsed and selected the driver folder from the C:Cabs folder mentioned above. It started the process of installing it, however I got a message at the end stating that it could not install it because the driver was not an official Windows digitally signed driver.

I started to research this new problem to find instructions for getting around this. I found that there was a option for turning this Windows Vista feature off on this site: http://www.mydigitallife.info/2007/08/15/workaround-for-vista-cannot-load-low-level-driver-signing-issue/ .

In a nutshell, the computer just needed to be rebooted with the F8 key pressed at start-up. This provides the computer user with a long list of boot options. One of the options states,” DISABLE FORCED DRIVER SIGNING”. So, I just selected it and continued booting. When the computer finished booting, I tried the above technique for installing the driver again. Wow, I was so shocked when it worked and I did not even have to un-install the Catalyst Manager Control Center software first or at all.

I then started to Google the actual driver that my son was using erroneously. It was indeed a digitally signed Windows driver from the ATI site but not one meant for our computer which was a Gateway brand one. It is for the same type of ATI video card that my son’s computer has, however the driver was not meant to run with all of the other Gateway propriety hardware. I imagine that this is why sometimes it played nice with the other hardware and other times, it decided to quit playing at all. 🙂

So far the computer has been working well this afternoon. I really hope it continues to work well. I did advise my son not to accept any new video drivers from the Windows Vista UPDATE Utility. To my surprise, just a few hours after I fixed the problem, my son informed me that again, the Windows Vista UPDATE utility found yet another video driver for my son to install.

I do plan to update this blog and possibly provide new troubleshooting ideas if the problem occurs again. In the meantime, hope this solution can help someone overcome this problem without having to invest money in a new video card. Please consider leaving a comment if this blog has helped you.

A Great Animoto Story

As a usual assignment, my Introduction to Computers class needs to create a multimedia presentation on one of the topics covered in the class and embed the presentation into their blogs.

The students usually enjoy this assignment very much especially since I always have them use the Animoto Multimedia Web 2.0 site is which is free to use and also provides royalty free music that can added to the presentation. If you are not familiar with this site, check it out here: Http://www.animoto.com.

Well, 2 weeks ago during the last class day, one of my students had a wonderful story to share with me. Apparently for the last two years, he has had a business working from home creating personal memory videos for people to show at anniversaries, retirement and weddings parties and memorial videos for funerals.

Lately he has been unable to keep up with the demand and was planning to hire someone to help him out with his business. He had been using a movie editing software to create the movies which had a really high learning curve and is not very user friendly. Therefore, it was a very time consuming task to create each video.

He wanted me to know that I really helped his business out tremendously since one of the options on the Animoto site allow businesses to buy a yearly membership and use the site for business purposes.

He bought a years membership and since then has been able to cut the amount of time he spends to create the videos in half and no longer plans to hire anyone to help him out. He has also managed to double his productivity.

Wow, this made my whole day. Not only had I educated the student as far as Computers are concerned, but by introducing him to this site, I was able to help his personal business grow.

I guess educators will sometimes will never know the full implications of an ordinary class assignment. In this case, my assignment did more for this student than I ever imagined. It is stories like this that just reinforce my love for teaching.