User talk:Sarah Carratt

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Revision as of 16:44, 17 January 2011 by Kam D. Dahlquist (talk | contribs) (continued week 1 feedback)
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Week 1 Journal Feedback

  • Thank you for submitting your assignment on time.
  • Your assignment is complete with a couple of minor omissions/suggestions:
    • Please let us know if you have any worries or concerns about the course or if there is anything else you want us to know. If the answers to these questions are "no", then please let us know that as well.
    • You have completed all of the wiki skills, I have a couple of suggestions for improving your page:
      • For your external link to the Passions magazine, use the magazine title as the label for your hyperlink so that you hide the URL. It's OK the way it is, but it will make your paragraph look nicer if you do it this way.
      • Ditto for your link to your PDF schedule. It will look nicer with a label instead of seeing the wiki syntax for the link.
      • For your Week 1 Assignment, you linked to the Class Journal Page. For this first week of class, we didn't have an individual assignment because it was to create your User Page, but for subsequent weeks, you will have an individual journal page to link to. You can create a separate table of links for the Class Journals to make that distinction clear. Also, you could add this table of links to your template so that anytime you use your template on subsequent journal assignments, it will make your life easier.

Responses to Instructor Questions

You asked: "Hey there Dr. Fitzpatrick! How did you become interested in biology and math? What inspired you to teach both? Sarah Carratt 16:58, 16 January 2011 (EST) "

I answered: Ben G. Fitzpatrick 17:19, 16 January 2011 (EST) My dad's a veterinarian, so I have long experience in "applied biology," especially biological waste products. I went to college planning to study engineering, but I found math (and the math professors) a lot more interesting. I returned to an interest in biology as a grad student. My adviser was collaborating with some biologists and agricultural engineers, and those problems were very cool. When I came to LMU, the math department was eager to re-energize biomathematics, and the faculty in bio seemed interested in collaborating. In both disciplines, puzzling out the structure and function of things is at the heart of inquiry. Such questions always seem to draw me in. Bringing biology concepts into math courses seems very natural to me in that regard.