Archive for May, 2012

King Street Station, Seattle

Miniaturized on a Saturday.

A cup of coffee …

can mean a lot.

Katie

Katie Licata

“Katie lived her life with a fierce commitment to joy. Her M.O. was to find amusement and humor in any given moment, and I feel so lucky to have shared some of those famous moments whenever our paths blessedly converged. Above all, Katie gave of herself generously. A loving, giving and loyal friend, she will be remembered happily and with gratitude by all who knew her.” — Richard Chon

“Be My Junkie Shadow”

Photo Stills of Kat Kosiancic and Denise Greyeyes, courtesy of photographer Chris Young

Kat Kosiancic’s 2002 documentary, “Be My Junkie Shadow,” is a loving but stark portrait of women who have lived and worked in the downtown eastside neighborhood of Vancouver. Some of the women who participated, including Denise Greyeyes, shown above [with the glasses], have passed away since the film was made. You can see this wonderful work at the 4th annual “Frames of Mind Mental Health Film Festival,” this Saturday, May 12, at the Pacific Cinematheque Theatre, 1131 Howe St, Vancouver.

You can read online versions of Kat’s documentary interviews here, in the archives of my great old ezine Ellavon.com.

Jenny Basil Recognized as a “Best Professor” by Princeton Review

Brooklyn College Associate Professor Jenny Basil

From the Brooklyn College News Release:

Jennifer Basil, associate professor of biology at Brooklyn College [and a sister of mine], is among the 300 best professors in the country, according to the newest book from The Princeton Review. The Best 300 Professors, which was released on April 3, presents the inspiring and challenging educators who make the most impact on students’ lives. The 300 were chosen from an initial list of 42,000 professors out of the 1.8 million postsecondary teachers instructing students at colleges and universities across the country. “I was very, very surprised when I saw that,” said Basil via telephone from Israel, where she is researching animals’ brains. “It came out of the blue. I thought that it was a joke!”

Basil, who has been teaching at Brooklyn College for 12 years, finds as much inspiration from her students as they do from her. “Students at Brooklyn College are hungry for knowledge, they work hard, they are humble, and they appreciate what you give them,” she said. “Standing in front of a class for one and a half hours can be exhausting, but I still leave the class full of energy that I get from my students.”

Among the classes that Basil teaches are zoology, animal behavior and the evolution of intelligent behavior. All of them incorporate at least four different approaches to the subject, because Basil believes that students learn through various techniques. “Some students just listen and remember everything. Others learn by doing,” Basil said, adding that story-telling is an important component of every lecture. “After all, for much of our history we did not have the written word.”

Basil’s lectures are full of interactive activities. One of them asks students to pretend that they are a particular animal that has to return home by using just one sense, such as the sense of smell or touch.

One of the most typical forms of examination in college classrooms — the multiple-choice test — is something that Basil simply can’t do. “As a student, I was terrible in multiple-choice tests,” she said. “I don’t like to give these tests. I don’t write them well.” Instead, Basil develops open-ended tests. She also asks students to do a series of critical-thinking activities, such as evaluating an article from the Science section of The New York Times. Basil asks students to compare the article to the original, scientific material used by the writer.

“Students catch amazing things that I don’t even see. It makes them critical thinkers,” Basil said, adding that she often gets e-mails from her former students who admit that this exercise changed their lives and that they read the Science section every day. She loves these e-mails, but reading the Times is not the best piece of advice she gives her students.

“The most important thing is to do something in life that you are passionate about,” she said. “Find what you love and do it. That’s what I did.”

The C-Free List

Kat Kosiancic in Costa Rica

My friend Kat’s wonderful website, The C-Free List, “consists of things that I have found helpful on my quest for well being after I was diagnosed with breast cancer over two years ago … things that I feel help the body, mind, and spirit to recover and maintain good health and balance through life. It includes recommendations for services, books, documentaries, diets, super foods, vitamins and supplements, alternative therapies and also touches on yoga, meditation, gratitude, forgiveness, love, kindness and more.” The site explores alternative & complementary therapies, books, music mantras & meditation, and natural highs, and much else, with Kat’s deep insight and intelligence.

Kat in Vancouver

Beauties on Bikes

One of my life’s greatest pleasures has been hearing about, and then seeing, the photographic projects of my friend Lincoln Clarkes as he’s working on them, before any of the work has been published. Late last year, during a visit to Vancouver in his high-up hotel room on Robson Street, he showed me his Toronto Cyclists photographs. I found them mesmerizing. Like much of Lincoln’s work, the charm of the individual portraits is intensified by their placement in such a grand series. (The same was true with the astonishing, heart-rending “Heroines” series, which changed the way our entire nation looked at our downtown eastside neighbors, hurting in our midst.)

Lincoln finally published part of his Cyclists series, 100 photographs, today, May Day.