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3/8/2006
OPINIONBy Terry Calhoun I’ve turned into something of a homebody in my late 50s. My wife and I are now quite familiar with the buildup of stress I experience every time I am about to travel for business. Often, even at a really great conference, I start thinking about the possibility of taking a standby flight and maybe getting home a day earlier than planned. But I don’t usually give in to that temptation. The angst I feel prior to leaving is replaced by deep satisfaction once I get home and have had a little time to catalogue the experiences I had and the people I met. At many institutions, the fearsome budget cuts of 2003 are deep enough in the past that permission to travel is easier to obtain. So I urge you to find a conference you might enjoy and go to it! Sometimes you have to travel away from home to learn things
about home. I discovered this when I traveled to New Orleans
for the NLII (now ELI) conference three years ago. I will say about that connection only that it has been valuable and worth far more to my employer than the cost of my trip. The same could be said of all the professional development opportunities I’ve been lucky enough to experience in my employment. It is important to seek out new knowledge in order to develop yourself and become an even greater asset to your organization. Even a small thing like a subscription to Wired magazine paid off fast. When I first subscribed to Wired, my boss and I had a week’s worth of talks about whether we could spend the $50 for the subscription. When the first issue came, I found a tip in there about linking out to other websites that has since gotten SCUP millions of minutes of eyeball time on its website. So spend a little something on a magazine subscription and learn something that is powerful for your institution’s mission. Travel from Ann Arbor to New Orleans and make important connections that would never have happened if you’d stayed at home.
So, get going somewhere. This year I will definitely be going
to the Education Writer’s Association
(EWA; http://www.ewa.org),
to the Campus of the Future: A Meeting of the Minds
Conference (http://www.campusofthefuture.org),
and to the annual conference of the Association for
the Advancement of Sustainability in Higher Education
(AASHE; http://www.aashe.org).
I may go to others, as well. I have also been to a Campus
Technology Conference (http://www.campus-technology.com/conferences/summer2006/)
and I highly recommend it. |
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