A post to get something on the books as nothing has been done here since October 2023. Wondering whether to keep WP or move things elsewhere. That is all.
Author Archives: feynman51
Portfolio
Norman Brethouwer, M.S.S., GradCert.
University of Denver-Morgridge College of Education
Masters of Library and Information Science (M.L.I.S.)
Portfolio
Introduction
I am nearing the end of a 25-year career with the State of Colorado Courts. By the time I retire in July 2025, I will have a total of 28-years in this field. I had never planned on this career as I had my sights set on a career as an orchestra musician (trumpet), astronomer, or mathematician. My studies in the University of Denver Masters of Library and Information Science program has brought me back to my lifelong obsession with books and reading. Some of my earliest memories are from time spent at the Montrose Regional Library District. Life has brought me back to this same library as it is where I am completing my required internship for this program. Should I plan to begin work on a Ph.D, (Musicology-opera history) the DU-MLIS program has prepared me well for doctoral studies.My plans following retirement are not yet clear but wherever I go I will be a librarian and prepared to apply for a broad range of jobs within the library science field.
Professional Goals
- Following the completion of my M.L.I.S., I plan on continuing my library education by completing a certificate through the Rare Book School at the University of Virginia. One of my areas of interest are medieval manuscripts and the history of the book.
- I want to refine my areas of expertise by looking closely at job notices and making note of required skills where I am deficient. From this, I will seek out continuing education courses, online lectures, or in person opportunities to fill these gaps.
Assignments/Core courses:
The attached assignments for each of the courses represent a project, assignment, research paper, or final exam that demonstrates the work completed in the class and highlights a skill set achieved while taking the class.
LIS4000 Foundations of Library, Archival, and Information Science
LIS4010 Organization of Information
LIS4015 User and Access Services
LIS4040 Management of Information Organizations
LIS4050 Library and Information Technologies
Final project, request for proposal, RFP report
RMS4900 Educational Research and Measurement
Other courses:
LIS4320 Outreach
LIS4060 Reference
Reference interviews/final exam
Reference taught by Christopher Brown was one of my favorite classes. I have included my final exam in this class as it is an example representation of the skills I acquired during that quarter. Addressing a reference question, often in an academic setting, is a task I enjoyed and hope to do more of during my career.
Social Media:
Analog v. Digital, Old v. New
A mindset firmly placed in both the analog and the digital seems to be the place to be. For the purposes of this post, analog will be used jointly with classic when it comes to computer technology. While obsessing with the Sinclair ZX81 computer of the early 1980’s, a parallel obsession with holographic computer interfaces is co-occurring. Clunky and slow classic computers hold as much interest as a computer that appears right before your eyes, floating in front of you and manipulated with the swipe of a hand in the air. Thinking of and finding fascination with old 5MB peripherals that were the size of a refrigerator and a fascination with petabytes of memory the size of a postage stamp are equally interesting. Seeing a barrier between the two simply does not occur. This coexistence makes each independent topic that much more interesting. This works the same with the feel of a 19th century book bound in calfskin and a new e-reader that holds thousands of books. Each has its own history and each has its own optimal uses. One does not have to live in the world of being a borderline Luddite and one does not have to live in a world where usable technology has not yet been invented.
An area where this dichotomy does not exist is in the world of music production. This is different than music recording practices. It is just fact that producing a high quality recording, even when the music is played on original instruments several hundred years old, requires the latest technology. What is being referred to hear is music that is produced solely by technology on a computer and through a piece of music technology. This holds no interest and it is in this area that holding true to the value of producing music on actual instruments will forever be superior to music produced directly from a circuit board.
A major benefit of owning a large music recording collection is the willingness to embrace analog technology for playback purposes. This especially holds true for cassette tapes and vinyl record. Vinyl is now hip and finding its second wind within society. Cassettes have not yet made this leap. Recently, listening to recordings on cassette tape has brought great joy. It is remarkable how well cassettes hold up over time. Placing a tape in the Sony CFD-S70 and having pristine sound coming out is really fun and somewhat exciting. A playback mechanism that has not yet been explored, but needs to happen because of the seventeen recordings waiting to be played, is the 8-track player. This will soon happen but the expectation of pristine playback that has come from using cassette tapes is not expected.. This pessimistic outlook is a good place to start as the only place to go is up. Seeing CD’s as old technology is not in the forefront of personal thinking at this time. The movement away from CD’s to only listening to music through streaming services or iTunes is a step that mentally cannot be grasped as of March 2021.
Tolerant liberal
There are those on the right side of the political spectrum that enjoys wielding the term “tolerant liberal” as if it was a weapon that immediately ends discussions. Somewhere along the line, the notion that all liberals are meek and quiet wound it’s way into their tiny little brains. This occurred that by definition, liberals, based on policy and political platform, actually care about other people much more than those that call themselves conservatives. Or, worse yet, Christian conservatives. Here is how it usually works. A discussion is in progress in person or somewhere online. At some point, the liberal in the conversation will say something that is seen by the conservative as mean, angry, intolerant, or divisive. This is when they reach around to their back pocket of tricks and say something like, “you aren’t a tolerant liberal are you?” or, “so much for being a tolerant liberal.” What the liberal said is not even that bad, it is simply the opposite of what the conservative believes. It is a lame and poorly thought out attempt at ending the conversation or declaring themselves the winner. I know more than a few liberals, and I cannot think of one that wields that badge of “tolerant” as if it was their weapon. The liberals I know enjoy having worthwhile conversations even to the point where things get tense. This is the point where things get interesting and the conversation goes to another level. I would describe these people as intelligent, strong, independent, kind, aware, and goal-oriented. Tolerant is not the first word that pops up when thinking about these people. Disagreeing and saying something contrary, ferocious, derogatory, or even borderline mean does not equate to the speaker being intolerant. So, conservatives, right-wingers, and Trump lovers everywhere, your attempt to use “tolerant liberal” as a defense in a conversation is weak and makes you look like you have no verbal skills whatsoever.
Video games. Personal memories
This essay rant is a result of a flashback that was sparked by flavor and smell. An early morning walk to the kitchen and the consumption of 5 stacked Pringles Sour Cream and Onion potato chips started everything. As soon as they hit my mouth, I flashbacked to summer in the early 1980s. Playing video games hour after hour in the dark cool basement of my mom and dad’s house. A large console TV, Mountain Dew, a damp washcloth for sticky fingers, Pringles Sour Cream and Onion, and the Intellivision video game console.
First experiences with home video game consoles/computers occurred almost simultaneously. The first memory is programming the Sinclair ZX81 computer to play primitive games. Twelve to thirteen lines of code that produced something fun on the screen. About this same time, I was playing the Atari 2600 at the houses of friends. Each friend had different games, so I was able to experience twenty to thirty games in any given week. For me, there is a strong correlation between video games and the summer months. My first home gaming console was the Intellivision This bad boy was acquired in the fall as I remember clearly that I wanted to stay at home and play instead of going out to trick-or-treat. The console came with the game Auto Racing. Three other games were also purchased with the console; NFL Football, Triple Action, and Astrosmash. I still have my original Intellivision console along with the games listed below. Details of the Intellivision system to follow.
Between the Intellivision home console and the next acquired home console, the PS2 were years filled with intense, active, and expensive time spent in arcades. The arcade that saw the most action was Aladdin’s Castle at the Mesa Mall in Grand Junction, Colorado. Located at the junction of the long wide hallway to the bathroom, the food court, and the rest of the mall, Aladdin’s Castle was quite large and could certainly be heard before it was seen. On the left, just at the entrance, was the coin/bill changer. A $5 deposit resulted in a nice handful of octagon-shaped tokens. I remember there being 2-3 wandering attendants who would quickly address any machine issues, push the reset button, or do quick money/token transactions. One or two of them were experts at certain games and would always provide a few pointers.
Aladdin’s Castle may have been the best place to get an 80’s arcade fix, but it was not the only one. Other favorites in my world were the 7-11 by the swimming pool on S. 12th Street, the arcade that existed downtown for perhaps two weeks, and any arcade I could find while traveling with my family. Favorites were found at Circus Circus Hotel and Casino in Las Vegas, Nevada, and the massive middle of the man-made pond arcade at the Disneyland Hotel in Anaheim, California.
In my gaming history, I have some experience with three other computers that I did not own. During the summer of 1981, I took a basic programming class at Columbine Middle School in Montrose. We worked on an Apple IIe with dual 5 ¼” floppy disk drives. Entering code that made something happen on the screen was a huge thrill. The other thrill of this class was playing Oregon Trail on this wonderful early Apple home computer. Gaming also occurred on a friend’s Commodore 64. Early on I was a keyboard snob and the keyboard on this machine was junk. My gaming experience on this machine was minimal as a result.
A computer that I did own and that I used almost exclusively for gaming was the Texas Instruments TI-99/4A. The game cartridge inserted on the top and to the right on the keyboard portion of the computer. The game I most remember was a mountain climbing game. There were nine levels with the top-level being Mt. Everest. I never got beyond the Matterhorn. The attached monitor had a very vivid green-tinted screen. The sounds of that game were fantastic. If I squint my eyes and concentrate, I can still hear the sounds and see the 16-bit climber scrambling vertically up the mountain, dodging falling rocks and avalanches as he/she climbs.
Before coming back to the basement, another device/game must be mentioned. Sometime in 1982, I acquired an orange Nintendo dual screen Donkey Kong game. I must have played this thing for 750 hours. At some point, something fell on it and put a nice dent in the casing. The thing kept on trucking and didn’t lose a step in either play or performance. I still have this device 38-years later and all it requires is the occasional change of batteries. This device is one of my most prized possessions.
Returning to the basement of my childhood, the dark space where summers were spent absorbed in the Intellivision and all it had to offer. Off in one corner of the basement, between the recessed window and the fireplace, was a full-size pinball machine. I do wish that I could remember the theme of the machine, but I don’t. A few friends and I played this machine so much that it literally fell apart. Single-player game on the Intellivision, the other person was on the pinball. Two-person player game? The third or fourth party, if they were present, would be waiting for their turn while playing pinball.
The final memory of the basement doesn’t involve playing a game but designing a game on paper. My friend Bill Pleau and I decided that we wanted to take our hours and hours of experience on the Intellivision and parlay that into an attempt into designing our own game. There was a round poker table in the basement that had an orange felt top. We put a board on top so that we could have a writing surface. I remember taking turns writing down ideas and drawing some screenshots. The game was space-related and it involved battling your way through a series of octagonal walls to get to a central point. Most of the details of what we did are unfortunately very fuzzy. Oh, what I would not give to have these original papers back in my hands. Nostalgia is so strong that it makes you pause.
While living in Denver, my sister had a PC that I used for some gaming. The two most memorable games were Myst and Phantasmagoria. One was a fantastical search and find game, and the other was a very detailed and somewhat frightening horror game. Another way my sister is part of my gaming memories is her acquisition of the PS2 console in mid-2000. The PS2 console from Sony was released in early March 2000. At this time, I was living in Denver and only seven months away from moving back to Montrose after a 12-year absence. My older sister bought a PS2 and I remember going to Blockbuster Video to rent games. She bought two games because they were so much fun to play with. Spy Hunter and Silent Hill 2. These games were played for hours upon hours. About three years ago, she gave me her old PS2 console that was gathering dust in an outdoor storage shed. The console has been revitalized and still works beautifully.
One regret I have is that since 2000 and until about 2015, life brought me away from video games. For some reason, something that was always on my radar fell off and got lost in the shuffle of being an adult. That nonsense has come to a screeching halt. I own a PS4 and an XboxOne, each with multiple games that are listed below. I play multiple games on my old iPhone 6 (with a Game Vice attached controller), and multiple games on my iPhone 11 Max and my iPad 12.9” Pro. My old orange Donkey Kong is still in action as well as an old GameBoy, GameBoy Advance, Nintendo DSLite, and two small arcade uprights. I have entered a stage of hardcore nostalgia for games of the 1980s and a new love for games just being released. I am happy to have found my way back to video games of all kinds.
Video Game List (all devices):
Game Boy:
Dinosaur
Pokemon
Yu-Gi-Oh: Dark Duel Stories
Dragonball Z: Super Warriors
Jurassic Park
Super Mario Land
Rayman
MegaMan II
Judge Dredd
Grand Theft Auto (x2)
Disney’s Tarzan
Game Boy Advance:
Battleship/Risk/Clue
Star Wars Episode II: Attack of the Clones
Spyro 2
Megabots AX
Yu-Gi-Oh
Monopoly
Monster Force
Lord of the Rings: Return of the King
The Cat in the Hat
Dragonball Z: The Legacy of Goku II
Razor Freestyle Scooter
Charlie and the Chocolate Factory
Scooby-Doo 2” Monsters Unlimited
Donkey Kong
Dragonball Z: Buus Fury GT
Nintendo DS Lite:
Atari Greatest Hits Volume I
You Don’t Know Jack Volume I
You Don’t Know Jack Volume II
Call of Duty 4
Castlevania: Dawn of Sorrow
Castlevania: Order of Ecclesia
Castlevania: Portrait of Ruin
Casual Classics
Chess
Chess for Kids
Dragon’s Lair
Game Hits
Mario Kart
Mario vs. Donkey Kong 2: March of the Minos
Mega Man Battle Netu 5: Double Team
Metroid Prime Hunter
Monopoly
New Super Mario Bros.
Pipe Mania
Retro Game Challenge
Space Invaders Extreme
Space Invaders Extreme 2
Space Invaders Revolution
PS2:
Corvette
Baseball 2K6
Salt Lake 2000
Arthur
Agassi Tennis Generation
Top Spin
The King of Route 66
Aeon Flux
Terminator 3: Rise of the Machines
Bad Boys
Evolution Skateboarding
Fantavision
SpyHunter
SpyHunter 2
MLB 2K7
Suzuki TT Super Bikes
ESPN XGames Skateboarding
Power Rangers Dino Thunder
Superman Shadow of Akropolis
Racing Evolution
Tiger Woods PGA Tour 2001
Grand Theft Auto III (x2)
Silent Hill 2
Silent Hill 3
MLB 07 The Show
NBA Live 07
PS2 Combo El: WW2 Paratroop
High School Musical
RTX Red Rock
ESPN NHL 2K5
Tiger Woods PGA Tour 2005
Power Dormer???
Hannah Montana
City Crisis
Hot Shots Gold 3
NCAA March Madness 2003
NFL Gameday 2003
Getaway
American Chopper
Out of the Chute
MLB 2K7
Full Spectrum Warrior
World Championship Cards
Tony Hawks Project 8
MLB Power Pros 2008
Bode Miller Alpine Skiing
Tom Clancy Rainbow Six 3
NFL Gameday 2002
Kill Switch
NASCAR 06: Total Team Contest
Nicktoons Movin’
Intellivision:
Swords and Serpents
Carnival
Atlantis
Venture
Demon Attack
Dragon Fire
Microsurgeon
Donkey Kong
Locomotion
Mission X
PGA Golf
Major League Baseball
Auto Racing
NBA Basketball
Skiing
NFL Football
Las Vegas Poker and Blackjack
Las Vegas Roulette
Horse Racing
Royal Dealer
Reversi
Utopia
Space Spartans
B-17 Bomber
Bomb Squad
Astrosmash x2
Space Battle x2
Bowling
Star Strike
Space Armada
Space Hawk
Night Stalker
Snafu
Space Battle (Red box)
Sub Hunt
Lock n Chase
Armor Battle
Tron: Maze A Tron
Advanced Dungeons and Dragons
Frog Bog
Triple Action
Safecracker
Stampede
Burger Time
Pitfall
PS4:
Until Dawn
Uncharted 4: A Thief’s End
Plants v. Zombies GW
Plants v. Zombies GW2
Fallout 4
Assassin’s Creed: Unity
Bioshock: The Collection
Batman: Arkham City
Galaga Legions DX
Alien Rage
Resident Evil 4
Friday the 13th: The Game
Prey
Borderlands: Ultimate Edition
Catherine
Ghostbusters: Sanctum of Slime
Pure chess
XboxOne:
Wolfenstein II
Star Wars: Battlefront 2
Fortnite
Rublox
Rainbow Six: Siege
iOS (Pad):
Dead Trigger 2
Zombie Shooter
Minecraft
Atari Greatest Hits
Lumosity
Elevate
PS App
PS4 Remote Play
PS Messages
Xbox
Harry Potter
Personality Match
Chess Time
Classic Slots Casino
Twitch
Fine Art
Not A Game
Amico Club
Missile Command
Asteroids
Star Trek Fleet Command
iOS (Phone):
Dead Trigger 2
Drop Wizard
NYT Crossword
Twitch
Plague, Inc.
Xbox
PS App
PS Messages
PS4 Remote
Dungeons of Chaos
GameVice Live
Minecraft
Personality Match
Scooby-Doo
Crimsonland
Zombie Shooter
Fallen London
Chess Time
Noovie Arcade
Not A Game
Fingers
Missile Command
Asteroids
Star Trek Fleet Command
Gaming devices:
Handheld:
Nintendo Donkey Kong dual screen
Nintendo DS Lite
Nintendo Game Boy
Nintendo Game Boy Advance
Old console:
Intellivision
PS2
Newer console:
PS4
XboxOne
Mini arcade cabinet:
Galaga
Karate Champ
Innovators
***Archiving. Originally published in the Fall 2014 issue of The Monitor magazine***
Original WORD document lost. Column name: “Standard Deviations”
A walk through history
***Archiving. Originally published in the Spring 2014 issue of The Monitor magazine***
Original WORD document lost. Column name: “Standard Deviations”
MOOCs
***Archiving. Originally published in the Winter 2013 issue of The Monitor magazine***
Original WORD document lost. Column name: “Standard Deviations”
Sanctuary
***Archiving. Originally published in the Fall 2013 issue of The Monitor magazine***
Original WORD document lost. Column name: “Standard Deviations”
Can Montrose have a university?
***Archiving. Originally published in the Spring 2013 issue of The Monitor magazine***
Original WORD document lost. Column name: “Standard Deviations”