Sunday, March 28, 2010

Mission Call!

My little brother, Bridger, received his mission call last week! However, due to my dad being out of town, he didn't open it until yesterday. In this photo, my parents are holding cell phones close so my Mamita (in L.A.) and sister (at BYU-I) could hear the news. This was a new experience for all of us, since Bridger is the first boy after 5 girls in our family! It was wonderful being there when he read his call.


Imagine our excitement when we heard that he was going to labor in the Mexico, Merida Mission! After that, everyone kept saying how well he was going to fit in (since we kids are half-Mexican), and wondered how much darker he was going to get from his mission! :)


He leaves July 21st for the MTC- almost a month after his birthday. Congratulations, Bridger! We love you!

Sunday, March 21, 2010

Ode To Being A Teacher

A couple years ago, I remember a BYU-Idaho professor asking those of us who were about to begin our semester student teaching, "Who here is becoming a teacher for the pay?" Of course, not a single hand went up. Teachers don't become a teachers for the pay (at least, not in Utah, anyway...). We do it for a better reward. The students are my reward. Just being around them every day has made my life so exciting, and "totally" fun! There's NEVER a dull moment, especially in a junior high! The students make me laugh so hard, there's so many times where I have to stop what I'm doing and write a funny quote down so I can take it home to share with Travis. (They always like it when a quote of theirs makes the "Things-to-share-with-my-husband" list.)

This is my third year teaching, and I can honestly say I have learned so incredibly much from my experiences over the past years. Earlier this month, one of my vice-principals came in to observe me and scored me from 0-5 in several different categories with 5 meaning, "you walk on water." I was very nervous because this vice-principal is pretty strict, very experienced, and detailed about everything. After her evaluation, we met to discuss how the lesson went. She had given me practically straight 5's in almost every category, including classroom management! I was so thrilled to hear this because it makes me realize how far I've come. My mind went back to when I was hired on at a Jr. High in West Jordan, the week after I finished student teaching at a nearby high school. These classes had no prior teacher, only substitutes the whole first semester. Obviously, there was no order and students were bouncing off the walls and swearing at the sight of me. I remember picking up crumpled notes off the floor, opening them up and seeing a student's artful depiction of me. It wasn't very flattering, to say the least. Things like this happened for weeks, but thanks to the support given by family and friends, and countless prayers to my Father in Heaven, by the end of the school year there was order and we finally saw eye-to-eye. They even wanted to help out with my upcoming wedding! :)

I'm so grateful for the opportunity to do what I love most- to be around jr. highers (and all their drama), and teach them something I love dearly. I love to help them realize their potential, and raise themselves to my high levels of expectation. I must admit, however, that even though I am their "teacher", they are really the ones teaching me.

(In the photo above, we're playing our "bow and arrow" review game, where someone calls out an English word, and we search for and shoot the Spanish translation on the board- I never play unless I'm challenged... And I haven't been beaten yet! :) All credit goes to Travis for coming up with the bow and arrow part of the game.)

My Housing Account

I feel there's some background information that I should share before talking about the presentation I made this last week at a conference in San Diego; but I'll try to make this as brief as I can.

I work for the BYU Campus Accommodations Office. We do all the contracting and billing for all of housing and dining services (about $40 million worth per year). Four years ago, we purchased a software system called RMS (Residential Management System) to help us manage our housing and dining contracts. RMS is one of the premier university housing management software packages available on the market today, and is used by over 150 colleges and universities, including Notre Dame, Geogria Tech, Northwestern, Duke, Purdue, and many others across the U.S., Canada, the United Kingdom, Saudi Arabia, and South Africa.

After we installed RMS, we quickly discovered we couldn't customize it the way we wanted, and the user interface left much to be desired. At the time, I was working as a student employee providing customer service and creating Crystal reports. I did, however, have a fair amount of programming skills I had learned in the past. Drawing from these skills and learning new ones, I began writing web applications to supplement the services RMS provided. Since then, my applications (named My Housing Account) have replaced the need for RMS's online student portal; I've been able to provide students and administrators with so much more than RMS can provide, and all at a much higher quality and lower cost, with much greater customer satisfaction.

My Housing Account gets on average over 1600 users login every single day, and receives over 3.5 million pages views per year. There are a lot of really cool things in My Housing Account that I am really proud about. One of the more "showy" features, though, is a graphical, visual Room Selection process. Rather than have someone in our office (it used to be me) have to manually assign each of our 4800 residents to a room with a roommate, students can now select their own room themselves. It has a pretty slick user interface and has a lot of bells and whistles. It's kind of a similar process to selecting your own seat on a plane when you book your flight, but a little more elaborate.

Every year, the company RMS sponsors a users conference for all its users. Two years ago, in Las Vegas, I showed our Room Selection process to a number of RMS employees at that conference. Their developers were particularly excited about it, and we were asked to present at the users conference the following year in Orlando. Last year, however, our presentation was blocked at the last minute. They didn't explicitly say why, but I figure it was because RMS didn't want us to show other schools what we could do without using their product. We did, however, get a chance to talk quite in depth with Phil Mosely, the new VP of Operations at RMS. Phil was intrigued and agreed to come to Provo a few weeks later to visit more with us.

During Phil's visit, the director I report through proposed a partnership between BYU and RMS, in which we would provide RMS with the source code for our Room Selection process, and in return, RMS would change their product to offer support for what we were doing. Phil was very, very excited about that idea. During the next several weeks, BYU's intellectual property attorneys and RMS's attorneys hashed out an amendment to our service agreement, and we were officially made partners. Over the course of the next several months, my student staff and I created an open source version of our Room Selection process which we provided to RMS's developers. Again I was asked to present at the next users conference, this time in San Diego, which happened last week.

In San Diego, I presented our Room Selection process (which is just one small part of what we have in My Housing Account!). The other schools were so blown away by it! In their eyes, this was the best thing since even before sliced bread! :) They asked a lot of really good questions, and were overwhelmingly excited about the entire concept. After my presentation ended, everyone ran up to talk to me and ask questions. They were all so impressed! They wanted a demo they could take back and show their bosses at their schools, so I provided them with a video demonstration we made for our students. My favorite part of all was seeing their jaws drop after telling them the entire Room Selection was developed in only about 8 months time by two students (myself and one other), in between answering phone calls and responding to emails. (I since was hired to work full time to manage the office's software development.)

While at San Diego, I met with Phil again, who basically said that our Room Selection has redefined the direction the company is heading in the future. RMS's development teams have been told to make the integration of our Room Selection process their top priority.

Anyway, it was a fun trip. It was great to meet with individuals from other universities across the world, and it made me feel good to know that I developed something that will literally change the students' contracting experience in the entire university housing industry.

Thursday, March 18, 2010

A Very "Green" Wedding

Our dear friends Colby and Kat Green got married yesterday (St. Patrick's Day- how appropriate!) in the Bountiful Temple. It's so fun when you're friends with both the bride and the groom! They make such a beautiful couple, and are the best of friends.


Because of this marriage, our family tree has now expanded a little bit. We were already some-what related to Colby through marriage. Travis's brother, Devin, married Colby's cousin, Natalie. And now Colby just married Kat, who is Rob's wife's little sister. So that makes Colby and Rob brothers-in-law, and makes us (distantly) related to Rob and Kim! Travis, Colby, and Rob have been best friends since grade school- who knew that one day they would all be related? Now we just have to figure out a way to get Brent into the family...maybe through the next generation. :)


The wedding was absolutely wonderful. How grateful I am for the plan of salvation, and that families can be together forever.

Sunday, March 7, 2010

Let the Race Begin!

Here we go again! We really want to start planting as many things as we can (or have room for), so we went to the store and bought some herb seeds. Last year we grew basil, and that was a hit. We also tried to grow oregano, but it didn't even sprout. Travis and I are having a race to see which herbs grow faster... his basil or my oregano. He's pretty sure he's going to win, but little does he know that I'm going to play Mozart for my seeds, and talk to them when he's not around. Winner gets full bragging rights. Let the race begin!