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singularity6

Experienced Members
  • Posts

    958
  • Joined

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Personal Information

  • Martial Art(s)
    Jidokwan Taekwondo and Hapkido, Yoshokai Aikido, ZNIR Iaido, Kendo
  • Location
    Michigan
  • Interests
    Cooking, martial arts, guitar, reading, astronomy, music, hiking and video games
  • Occupation
    Math Instructor

singularity6's Achievements

Pre-Black Belt

Pre-Black Belt (9/10)

  1. I prepare for battle by logging into Battle.net, then starting Diablo 3. ;-D
  2. Happy birthday, man!
  3. That's certainly quite a journey! While I have not walked in your shoes, I do realize that a lot of folks have a hard time understand things that aren't binary. Thanks for sharing, Joe.
  4. Oh, let's see here... 1. Math instructor at a community college 2. I've "played guitar" since I was 16 (I'm 40 now.) Never in a band... I'm not that good 3. Hiking 4. Astronomy (when the urge strikes me) 5. My friends and I burned 72 Christmas trees on NYE at their house which is right on Lake MI.
  5. I've felt burnout a few times in my career while teaching (13 years now.) Sometimes it's just a rough class. Other times it's external things. Either way, the best way I can describe it is a greatly reduced interest/motivation to do my job. I've always been able to power through, and based on my student evals, they haven't noticed when it does happen. Sometimes you just need to put on a game face! Here's some ideas (mostly based on my experience as a MA student, as well as a math instructor.) Anything that involves a long-term commitment can suffer from burnout. This is why it is important to always mix things up. Keep a journal about what worked well in your classes, and what could stand some tweaking. Doing the same thing each day gets boring for you (and to the students!) A class full of disengaged students makes things that much worse. The internet should be able to provide you with a number of ideas to keep things fresh in your dojo. Changing the warm-ups or changing the drills a bit will force the students to pay more attention to what they're doing, and it'll force you to interact more with them.
  6. Heh, now McGreggor and Nasukawa have something in common!
  7. Best of luck on the tenure-track job! I'm not sure what the market looks like in your field of study, but things are pretty flooded for mathematicians. Thanks Singularity! Right now it's seeming like even the small biology tenure track jobs are getting at least 150 applicants each. For that reason when I only made the short list for 1 of 10 jobs I applied to last year, I wasn't super surprised. I'm trying to get some manuscripts out and at least double my number of applications in 2019 to boost my chances. In the past week I've applied to 5 more positions, and I plan to submit two more applications today. Fingers crossed! One day at a time I guess. It would be really great to start my own university club too. Undergrads are my favorite group to train. Unlike little kids, every single one of them wants to be there and is ready to go at the beginning of class. Many students are also looking for the community and friendship that a dojo can offer. It can be an outlet for the stress university or graduate life puts on people. It's nice to have a place to diffuse all of that. I have many fond memories and lasting friendships from my college karate club(s). It'd be great to be able to start that somewhere new. I'd love to give more people a chance to experience this. Well, I landed a tenure-track job at a community college 5 years ago (it took 2 years of applying.) Since then, I've been on a couple search committees. Feel free to PM me if you'd like some advice!
  8. Yeah, I don't know what the organizers were thinking... Floyd looked like he was gonna be having fun the whole time (until he got hit.) This was the only match where I felt that Tenshin was nervous for. He did seem to go into the match with a lot more trepidation than he usually does. To be honest, I expected it to be over even quicker.
  9. "Punch'em in the face" is what I always say!
  10. Best of luck on the tenure-track job! I'm not sure what the market looks like in your field of study, but things are pretty flooded for mathematicians.
  11. Happy holidays to all! I will be traveling this evening, through the 27th. Be well. Cheers!
  12. That pretty much says it all. Treat other with the same respect you expect them to give you. I'm just wondering when it became so bad to have different idea's? Didn't we use to celebrate this? To the bold: It seems like different ideas have always been frowned upon (in general, by the masses.) Things like major world events and major social changes always tend to polarize people. These polarizations have been exacerbated by our ability to communicate with the masses, while surrounding ourselves with too many like-minded individuals. The world is experiencing a lot of change, and at a very fast rate. I think most of the bad stuff we're seeing is mostly due to fear and a natural resistance to change. If one want to keep growing as a person, one must always seek discomfort (if it doesn't hurt, you're not learning!)
  13. My style is a blend of taekwando and hapkido. Having studied aikido before, I have seen some similar principles being applied. So yeah, I think karate and aikido should supplement each other nicely!
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