OLPC Rochester, NY/Show&Tell: Difference between revisions
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===About the Speaker=== |
===About the Speaker=== |
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Frederick Grose |
Frederick Grose volunteers for the OLPC project. He served for 27 years at Eastman Kodak Company in Rochester, NY as an industrial hygienist, asbestos hygiene manager, workplace epidemiology assistant, health, safety, & chemical information systems architect and programmer, and ergonomics associate. Over his career at Kodak he was responsible for industrial hygiene for significant tours of duty with the Synthetic Chemicals Division, Chemical Manufacturing Organization, Construction, Maintenance, & Facilities Organizations, Roll Coating Division, Photochemicals Division, Manufacturing Research & Engineering Organization, and Research and Development Divisions. He helped developed Kodak's asbestos control program, occupational exposure tracking system, exposure monitoring and analysis systems for historic and active cohorts of workers exposed to methylene chloride. He developed and delivered health education sessions for thousands of people working with asbestos and other hazardous physical, chemical, biologic, or mechanical agents. Frederick is a Certified Industrial Hygienist, a Master of Public Health (University of California, Berkeley), and a Bachelor of Science in chemistry (University of California, Riverside). He had been working most of his final 6 years at Kodak as an ergonomics associate, helping industrial clients to understand and implement ergonomic solutions that improve jobs and workplaces. |
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Revision as of 09:37, 28 February 2008
26 March 2008
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One Laptop per Child, an education project
the $100 laptop that is changing the world
Show & Tell, Look, Listen & Learn, Touch & Feel, Give & Take
An afternoon workshop with OLPC Rochester, NY leading to an evening meeting of the WNY HFES
Presented by: Frederick Grose, MPH, CIH and collaborators
Location:
RIT Building 70 Room 2400 (B. Thomas Golisano College of Computing and Information Sciences)
Park in Lot J. See campus map at http://inside.rit.edu/maps/
Timeline
1-5 pm - Drop In (at any time), Check Things Out, Get to Know Each Other, Try Things Out
- 1:00 - doors open: set up XOs, invite others to do likewise, casual introductions.
- ~2:00 - Identify possible interest or topic groups among attendees, suggest that they gather and self-organize.
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- ~3:00 (or as seems timely) - Break (popcorn popper) Report discoveries, suggestions, raise questions. Address questions, summarize and document on boards, redirect, regroup, or shuffle as desired.
- ~4:00 (or as seems timely) - Repeat previous step as appropriate.
- ~4:30 - finalize additional demonstrations & topics for 5:30 WNY HFES meeting; topic groups summarize learnings, questions, plans and report same on wiki and on board.
5-6:30 pm - WNY HFES Meeting time
- 5:00 - Refreshments (sandwiches for full-day attendees), greet HFES attendees.
- 5:30 - HFES Meeting Introductions, introductory comments (summarize OLPC project), explain theme, begin to answer new questions.
6-9:50 pm - Keith Karn's Usability Testing Class
- 6:00 - Identify any topic groups still present, get attendees up to mill around and exercise theme actions.
- 6:25 - Solicit all to visit OLPC wiki, contribute ideas to the project and OLPC Rochester, NY page, and spread the word about project to friends and collegues.
- Keith Karn's class agenda
- Stephen Jacobs' class or group agenda
About the Speaker
Frederick Grose volunteers for the OLPC project. He served for 27 years at Eastman Kodak Company in Rochester, NY as an industrial hygienist, asbestos hygiene manager, workplace epidemiology assistant, health, safety, & chemical information systems architect and programmer, and ergonomics associate. Over his career at Kodak he was responsible for industrial hygiene for significant tours of duty with the Synthetic Chemicals Division, Chemical Manufacturing Organization, Construction, Maintenance, & Facilities Organizations, Roll Coating Division, Photochemicals Division, Manufacturing Research & Engineering Organization, and Research and Development Divisions. He helped developed Kodak's asbestos control program, occupational exposure tracking system, exposure monitoring and analysis systems for historic and active cohorts of workers exposed to methylene chloride. He developed and delivered health education sessions for thousands of people working with asbestos and other hazardous physical, chemical, biologic, or mechanical agents. Frederick is a Certified Industrial Hygienist, a Master of Public Health (University of California, Berkeley), and a Bachelor of Science in chemistry (University of California, Riverside). He had been working most of his final 6 years at Kodak as an ergonomics associate, helping industrial clients to understand and implement ergonomic solutions that improve jobs and workplaces.
COST: Members & Students – no cost; Non-members - $5 payable at the door
RSVP: Contact Jennifer Dyck by 19 March, 716-673-3828, Jennifer.Dyck at fredonia.edu