A word to the wise:
Laura Gibbs
Hi! As you have probably figured
out by now my name is Laura Gibbs - please just call me Laura. Okay, some
students call me Dr. Laura. Go figure. But I'm not a professor (I'm an instructor), and you certainly
don't need to call me "doctor" anything... :-)
I've been teaching online at the
University of Oklahoma since 2002 - so that makes me a seven-year online
veteran. In the world of fully online courses, that is a long time! The first
time my Mythology-Folklore Online course was offered
online was back in Fall 2002. In addition to Mythology-Folklore, which I
teach every semester, I regularly teach two other other fully online courses: Frame Tales
in World Literature and Epics of India: Ramayana
and Mahabharata. I have also taught Biblical
Greek and Medieval Latin online.
I used to teach in a regular classroom,
but I don't think I could do that again - I like teaching online so much
more than teaching in the classroom! Being online allows me to be a far better
teacher, and I also think that it brings out the best in the students too.
Have you heard of The Cluetrain
Manifesto? This is a book/website that expresses many of my personal
beliefs and hopes about how the Internet can help bring people together.
Internet technology has given us a way, at last, to realize the ideals expressed almost one hundred years ago by John Dewey in his book Democracy and Education, published in 1916. This is the book that had the single greatest influence on my decision to become a teacher - and you can read the book online at ILTWeb, if you are curious (it is a truly a great book!).
You can find links to some of my
other web projects at MythFolklore.net and at the Bestiaria
Latina websites.
In the course evaluations from past
semesters, I was asked to provide something more like a biography profile
on this page, so here it is if you want to know about my life offline...
- Growing up. I
was born in Austin and my parents live there now (they are retired), but
we moved all around when I was a kid - I lived the longest in Tucson and
in Nashville. I graduated from high school in Nashville in 1980 - and yes,
that means I had graduated from high school before most of the students
in my classes now were even born. Life in olden times: no personal computers,
no internet, no CD's or DVD's or VCR's, no cell phones. But somehow we
managed... :-)
- B.A. from Berkeley. I
got my B.A. in Classical Languages (Latin and Greek) and Slavic Languages
(Polish and Russian) at the University of California in Berkeley. That was a really great
time to be a student there, and one of the things I am most proud of is
that during my senior year I was the director of an office called DECal:
Democratic Education at Cal, which helped to students to create and offer
their own classes, for regular university credit. And DECal is still going
strong, 20 years later, as you can see at the DECal website!
- M.Phil. from Oxford. After
graduating from Berkeley, I did a Master's degree at Oxford University.
My main interest then was in Polish literature, and I wrote my master's
thesis on a Polish Renaissance poet, Jan Kochanowski (1530-1584), who wrote
poetry in both Polish and in Latin. At Oxford, you only had to be in school
for 24 weeks during the year. So I was actually away traveling a lot of
the time! Since Kochanowski had gotten his education at the University
of Padova in Italy, I used that as an excuse to go to Italy as often as
I could, while also spending a lot of time in Poland.
- What to do? After
finishing my degree at Oxford, I had no idea what I wanted to do. Bilingual
Polish Renaissance poetry does not indicate a clear career path! I lived
in Poland for a while, and left just before the communist government fell
in 1989. Then I came back to the United States, and lived in Nashville,
working at various jobs (interesting jobs! I learned a lot about computers),
while taking classes at Tennessee State University to get a high school
teaching certificate in English. And then... I discovered Aesop! I started
doing a lot of research on my own, trying to understand all the complicated
connections between the fables of Aesop and storytelling traditions from
India and the Middle East. I decided it was time to go to graduate school
and get a Ph.D. in Comparative Literature.
- Ph.D. from Berkeley. I
ended up doing my Ph.D. in Comparative Literature at Berkeley, with an
emphasis on Greek, Latin and Polish, but I also learned Sanskrit, plus
I studied some Persian, Hebrew and Arabic also. I wrote my dissertation
on Aesop's fables and did research work with a professor at the University
of Siena in Italy, which meant that I was able to spend a lot of time in
Italy again. I also translated one of his books into English: The Portrait of the Lover by Maurizio Bettini. And in my very last semester of graduate
school, I learned how to publish webpages!
- Oklahoma. After
finishing my degree at Berkeley, I came to the University of Oklahoma.
I started out teaching in the Classics & Letters department, then I
went to work for OU's department of Information Technology, so that I could gain the professional IT skills I needed to achieve my personal goal to become a designer of online courses. Now I am
back teaching again full-time, but I'm teaching online, working with the
Online Education program in the OU College of Arts and Sciences (although I no longer live in Oklahoma - in summer 2007, I moved with my husband to rural North Carolina, where you are most likely to find me on our back porch enjoying the benefits of wireless Internet surrounded by trees).
- Books.
While at OU I worked very hard on a translation of Aesop's fables into
English, which was published by Oxford University Press in 2003. You can
find out more about my Aesop book at the Aesopica.net website.
I've also publish a collection of Latin proverbs for beginning Latin students: Latin
Via Proverbs: 4000 Proverbs, Mottoes and Sayings for Students of Latin.
Last semester, I published another book for beginning Latin students: Vulgate
Verses: 4000 Sayings from the Bible for Teachers and Students of Latin.
My current book project is a Latin reader based on the 17th-century edition
of Aesop's fables illustrated by Francis Barlow; it should be coming out
in the Fall of 2008.
© Copyrighted by Laura Gibbs. Kaleidoscope images created with Kaleidoscope Painter. Last updated:
August 20, 2008 9:46 AM
.