What’s sitting on my desk now…

Some of my former teaching assistants would laugh because my desk is relatively clean right now. In addition to the things you would expect (file drawers, tissues), there are a couple of other things I keep on my desk to remind me about various things:

Yes, I’ve been known to like the Peanuts cartoon strip (I’m second generation when it comes to that). I did see the statues during all 7 years they were out in St. Paul, Minnesota and Santa Rosa, California. I have … a few of these statues as well. But why I have this one on my work desk: to remind me of the various parts of the department I serve. It’s not just rhetoric, or strategic communication… we’re also about journalism and production in its various forms.

You’d also see a bunch of 5×8 sheets and index cards on my desk too. They’re the cards and sheets that my students filled out at the beginning of the semester, with various questions I asked them about their learning styles and what they hope to get from my classes. I leave those on my desk to remind me of who I’m teaching, and to remind me that it’s not just about content — it’s also about the people in the room.

And I also have a few journals on my desk. Since I’m a patron member of Southern Communication Association, I get all the regional journals. In the case of some of the regional associations, I don’t get access to the electronic copies; rather, they decide to send an entire year’s worth of their journal at once.

Three journals: Communication Studies, Communication Research Reports, and Communication Reports, along with a statue of Charlie Brown carrying a bag of newspapers, a reporter’s notebook, and a camera with Woodstock on the camera.
The journals and the Charlie Brown statue.

The journals remind me that as the chair of a comprehensive department, part of my job is to learn more about the communication discipline in all its forms – media, strategic communication, relational communication, communication education, and so forth. Have I read all the articles yet? No. Do I intend to? Yes. Because that’s what polymaths do.