BACK TO SCHOOL • FALL 2024

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How To Fly During A Pandemic... DON’T!

Have you seen the numbers?  In your city or state? At your destination? Have you seen the unsettling uptake in cases, hospitalizations, and deaths since March? Have you read the literature surrounding the current Stay-At-Home orders, and are you aware of the current ICU capacity (or lack thereof).  This is a SERIOUS MATTER. If you DO NOT have to fly, I am not at all advising you to do so.  However, some of us, during the last (almost) year of quarantines and rising numbers, had to travel.  This was my situation and I have been on four cross-country flights, and I did it minimizing risks, and keeping those around me safe.  I want to share my process with you in...

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HOME FOR THE HOLIDAYS

Between my mother’s perfect passion for holiday decor, and my dad’s gift wrapping with the world’s strongest tape, I find myself stuck to the warm memories and nostalgia that being home for the holidays brings about.  I also find comfort in my brother and I honoring each other’s quest for minimalism and non-consumerismo approaches to life, yet trying to find the perfect gifts for each other.  The holidays bring about a welcome kind of busy, one that completely contrasts from my chaotic life as a doctoral student.  I hear a lot of doctoral students saying that their family “just didn’t understand” and it was really hard to create boundaries of space, time, and expectations during this period of doctoral studies. ...

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Moving Abroad: Good for the Seoul

When I was in my 20’s I fantasized about moving abroad. I dreamed about moving to a Spanish-speaking country, spending my days at the beach, dancing my nights to salsa or bachata, and regaining fluency of the first language I ever learned. I spent so much time researching ways to move abroad. Looking for companies or people that could help me achieve my dream. I didn’t know what to look for or who to ask and I cursed myself for not learning about the wonderful world of study abroad until after college. I would start applications for jobs in the Dominican Republic, or Spain, or Colombia, but I never got around to completing them and taking the first step towards...

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Soliloquies of Persistence While Pursuing a PhD

By Katherine Casey Spengler, PhD October 11, 2019, a phone call from the breast care clinic confirmed that the lump I had found in my left breast – 7 months after a clear mammogram – was malignant. At the time, I was a doctoral candidate in SDSU/CGU’s Joint Degree Program in Education, striving to complete the rough draft of my dissertation by the January 7 deadline.  The call came when I was in Los Angeles for work and I spent the three hour drive back to San Diego in silent shock. My first thoughts went to my husband Joel, and daughter Anna, and then to my mother, who had lost our beloved father to laryngeal cancer twenty years ago: how...

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Scholarly Sewist Squad

Reka Barton The Scholarly Sewist Reka is both a doctoral student and a Lecturer at San Diego State University.  She teaches Literacy Methods for teacher credential candidates and Visualizing College for undergraduate students. Prior to her doctoral studies she obtained a Bachelor of Psychology and a Master of Teaching at The Scholarly Sewist.  She then spent ten years as an elementary classroom teacher in dual language and inner-city classrooms.  Her research interests include dual language education and educational experiences of Black students via multimodal research methods. Reka is the Founder and Creative Director of The Scholarly Sewist. David Burroughs II Graphic Designer & Brand Strategist David is a Tony Gaskins certified life coach and brand strategist working at the intersection...

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