Monte’s Resume Index


2009-11-12 04:56:56

Monte LeTourneau’s Resume Resources

Current Resume

(also found below, or download it as a .doc, .odt, .rtf, or .txt.)

Objectives
Work Experience
Education
Volunteerism
Interests
References

Website Portfolio

Business & E-Commerce Sites I have Designed
Social Web & Social Bookmarking Applications
Joomla, Templates, Drupal, & CMS
Hand Coded HTML

Art Portfolio

GIF Animations
Paintings
Renderings
Sculpture

Academic Portfolio / CV

(also found below, or download it as a .doc, .odt, .rtf, or .txt.)

List of My Courses
About My Courses Before Returning to UWM
Information Resources at SOIS UWM, and My Four Core Competencies
Future Directions

About Me

 

What is Meta?

About BSIR SOIS UWM

 

What is Technologia?

 

What is InfoGnosis?

Capstone Assignment to Create Portfolio

 

My MySpace Profile

My Facebook Profile

My LinkedIn Profile

My Twitter Profile

 

Cover Letters:

 

JoomlAssist Proposal

 

Green Party US Fund Raising Assistant

Indian Community School of Milwaukee

Peace Action Wisconsin

 

RESUME:

Monte Letourneau

N14466 n20th Avenue
Necedah, WI 54646

 

geanark@gmail.com
608-565-3516
http://montesite.net

 

OBJECTIVE – I am primarily interested in working for the common good, and towards a just and sustainable future. My ideal position would utilize my facility for, and enjoyment of, working with & serving others, researching & structuring information, design, teaching, a user’s perspective, creating tutorials & S.O.P. checklists, and the joy I take in talking to people about the things that really matter to them.

WORK EXPERIENCE:

Self Employed                  1990 – Present                 Allness Unlimited 
Web design and site maintenance, structural painting and restoration, woodworking, arts, crafts, jewelry, and other creative pursuits.

Webmaster                        04/2004 – 09/2006           UCSB                                  Milwaukee, WI
Maintaining and updating the web publication, Himalayan Linguistics Journal for the Linguistics Departments of UCSB and UWM.

Instructor’s Assistant     Spring Semester 2004    UWM                                    Milwaukee, WI
Research and paperwork for a School of Information Studies instructor.

Water Treatment
              6/00 – 1/01                         Institech / ITU                    New Berlin, WI
Waste water flotation treatment and recycling operation, forklift certification, maintenance, some welding.

Bartender                            12/01-2/02                        Clique Soul Club                Milwaukee, WI

01/01-9/01                        Shanahan’s Irish Pub       Milwaukee, WI

Injection Mold Setup          6/99 -12/99                       Interplas Ltd.                       Menomonee Falls, WI
Mold Set-up: Setting and pulling small quick-change molds, process troubleshooting, repair and maintenance of water thermal regulation systems.

9/98-9/99                          Generation 2 Plastics        Milwaukee, WI
Setting molds, some fabrication and maintenance, supervising second shift production, production reports, creating process S.O.P. checklists, W-2 client training in mold operation and inspection. Audits. Recycled polypropylene material extrusion. Melt flow tests. Densification. Forklift. Materials blending and sorting.

EDUCATION:

        2007                University Wisconsin Milwaukee                              Milwaukee, WI
Information and Library Science

2000                Wisconsin Bartending College                                  Milwaukee, WI
Bar Tending

1985-1988       University of Wisconsin                                             Madison, WI
History, Anthropology, Political Science

1984-1985       Academy Of Health Science/National Guard           San Antonio, TX
Basic Medical Laboratory 92B BML10

RECENT VOLUNTEERISM:

Milwaukee Area Green Party – 1998-2007, Co-ordinating Council member for 5 years

WI Green Party – 2003-Present, Co-ordinating Council Rep for the 4th, 5th, and 3rd Cong. Districts since 2003

US Green Party – 2004-Present, National Committee Rep for the 3rd Congressional District since 2007

Feed the Need Necedah and NecedahHarvest.org – 2008-Present, Steering committee, Webmaster, and Activist, for local food security and buy local efforts

INTERESTS:

Joomla & Drupal CMS, all sciences, reading, history, aquaria, art painting, computers, infognostics, interdisciplinary fields of study generally, especially Archeaology, and new paradigms of connectivity.
The reverence of Allness through seeking sustainability and grace in human affairs is essential in all I do.

References:

RECENT SUPERVISORS:

Michael Noonan, Professor of Linguistics, Dept. of English UWM

Wooseob Jeong, Assistant Professor, UWM SOIS

ACADEMIC:

Johannes Britz, D.D., D. Phil., Dean & Professor UWM SOIS

Jacques du Plessis, Professor UWM SOIS

Pa Moua (Paj Muas), ME-PD, Student Adviser

FRIENDS:

Mark E Sarvela, Program Evaluation Manager Bureau of Milwaukee Child Welfare, DHFS – DCFS

Gregory H. Bartz, NASA Flight Management Subcontractor

Anna R. Olson, Creative Director, Cream City Ribbon


Contact information on request at geanark@gmail.com

Download Resume as: .doc, .odt, .rtf, or .txt.

 

 

Academic Portfolio

Monte Letourneau

May 20, 2005

 

Table of contents:

 

List of My Courses

 

About My Courses Before Returning to UWM

 

Information Resources at SOIS UWM, and My Four Core Competencies

 

Future Directions

 

 

List of My Courses:

 

Course Grade Description Credits Transfered As

Area I

E ASIAN 101 D First Semester Chinese 6 LINGUIS 121
COMP LIT 288 AB Masterpieces of Literature For Honors II 3 COMPLIT 208
LINGUIS 200 A- Aspects of Language 3  :
ANTHRO 101 A- Introduction to Anthro-Human Prehistory 3  :
POL SCI 175 B+ Introduction to International Relations 3  :
WL ECOL 360 B Extinction Of Species 3 BIO SCI XN
ZOOLOGY 120 BC Biolocical Principles and their Impact On Society 3 BIO SCI 103

Area II

L&I SCI 632 A Microcomputer-Information Resources Management 3
L&I SCI 110 A Introduction to Information Science 3
L&I SCI 210 A- Foundations of University Library Research 3  :
L&I SCI 230 A Organization of Knowledge 3  :
L&I SCI 250 A Internet Planning & Implementation 3  :
L&I SCI 330 Electronic Information Retrieval 3  :
L&I SCI 410 Database Information Retrieval Systems 3  :
L&I SCI 430 Multimedia Application Developement 3  :
L&I SCI 490 Senior Capstone; DVD Site Project Management & this document 3  :

Area III

Business:
L&I SCI 640 A- Information Marketing 3  :

Area IV

L&I SCI 240 A Information Architecture I 3  :
L&I SCI 340 A Information Architecture II 3  :
L&I SCI 399 Independent Study; XML 3  :
L&I SCI 440 Information Architecture III 3  :
L&I SCI 510 Introduction to Reference Services & Resources 3  :
L&I SCI 681 Archives & Primary Sources in the information Age 3  :

Electives:

POLI SCI 209 B Issues In Political Thought 4 POL SCI XS  :
POLI SCI 260 BC Latin America: An Introduction 4 HIST 180
POL SCI 392 Survey Research: Design, Perform, & Analyize Unemployment Attitudes Poll 3  :
POLI SCI 551 BC Quantitative Analaysis Of Political Data 4 POL SCI 390
POLI SCI 570 C Literature And Politics 4 POL SCI U
POLI SCI 651 B Politics Of South Asia 4 POL SCI U
POLI SCI 654 AB Politics Of Revolution 4 POL SCI 321
ANTHRO 22 B+ Ancient Cities of the Americas 1  :
COMPLIT 232 B+ Literature and Politics: Religious & Moral Perspectives of the 19th & 20th Centuries 3  :
ILS 202 BC Integrated Liberal Studies; Western Culture: History of Science, Technology, & Philosophy II 3 TRAN-L&S XS  :
LIT TRAN 262 B Survey Of Chinese Literature 3 COMPLIT X 3.00
AFROAMER 277 B Africa: An Introductory Survey 4 AFRICOL 232
E ASIAN 240 A Introduction to the I-Ching: Book Of Change 2 TRAN-L&S
PHILOS 204 B+ Introduction to Asian Religions 3  :
SPANISH 101 F First Year Spanish 0 SPANISH 103
Course Topic(s): Chinese Calligraphy
PEACEST 201 Introduction to Peace Studies & Conflict Resolution 3
  2003-05-28 Deans Honor List
2004-01-06 Deans Honor List

 

My Learning Prior to SOIS at UWM:

My concentration has been on political science and studies of cultures.

There have been many opportunities for me to integrate my focus on the needs of citizens, whilst pursuing my SOIS studies.

Within SOIS I have focused a few graduate courses on library science, so one could easily say I have concentrated on the citizen need for information resources and how it can best be filled with our current capabilities. I have focused much study on the optimal future development of information resources for public use into the future.

There are several competencies that it has served me well to study; many of the most useful come from the second half of my academic career, when I’ve studied IR at UWM SOIS. The foundation upon which that course of study was laid was half a lifetime’s self directed study on the historical issues of the people in politics, and the possibilities that our technical development can and does open up for a more human future. The core of this study is the first half of my academic career; I particularly was left an impression on by a handful of these classes. Although the mists of time deprive me of much detail, I will start with the classes from my classic liberal arts / humanities phase.

First chapter highlights start with Ancient Cities of the Americas, Anthro 22. Although I can’t remember the professor’s name, he was a giant in his field and had been in charge of the digs at Teotehuacan and Cahokia, each for extended critical periods of time. He taught no more soon after that (1985), and was so old he was difficult to hear, but he put me on to a very important concept that is still having a hard time being accepted as the new paradigm. He told me, in trying to make sense of some details, or another, that there was much circumstantial evidence for many ancient American cities that tells a similar tale.

These city states all developed very complex hierarchies. These tended to grow over time, and eventually become too large and top heavy to be supported by those below. At this point they would eat up all their reserves, and hinterlands. Then when nothing could keep it working, the culture would collapse completely. As there would be no food anywhere nearby, the entire culture of that place would disappear, and the survivors would simply found a new, more egalitarian way of life somewhere else. He was quite convincing with this case using Cahokia, where he was the prominent expert in the field, and the evidence is quite strong now that this was the case. The Teotehuacan hierarchy may have survived somewhat transmuted as the Aztec, or some other aristocracy, its case is not so cut and dried. He hinted that the Maya may also prove to be a similar case, and since he has left us, the case has become pretty solid that the Maya just threw the culture away but are still using many of the same walled orchards, built long ago, today.

This gives me much hope, for I saw us as more like the Cahokian model, but without the ability to escape back to the hinterland and the wilderness. Our culture is so profoundly large, and impacts this planet so universally, that this class helped me see another way that we are meeting a grave new challenge never seen before. Next social collapse, there will be nowhere to leave to. This paradigm also pointed out the degree to which our culture has a built in addiction to frontiers, and that the frontier of human endeavor had transformed historically with the close the physical frontier of earth’s lands.

This lesson was bolstered by my simultaneously taking Anthro 101, and was thrown in sharp contrast by Intro to International Relations (the other IR), Poli Sci 175. A professor whose name I prefer to forget thought that the concept of hegemony was deep, and important, and the greatest thing since sliced bread. I may have been more inclined to agree with him were his intent to teaching hegemony less akin to Kissinger’s intent in practicing it. This semester is when I discovered my true enemy was hierarchal socio-political power, not the hierarchy itself, but the concept of its legitimacy.

So that was my first semester at UWM, formative. Then I went to Madison.

There were four courses that had a great impact on me individually, and one semester when three courses combined to cover the three sides of the golden triangle. These all were part of my focus on the political history of the peoples of our world.

The two most important of these seven were focused on biology and the history of science.

The first of the four was Poli Sci 209, Issues in Political Thought. The issue for the semester was the history of words used to identify political ideologies. In this class I came to understand that disparate modern ideologies had all started as something that I believed in strongly, but that over time the vagaries of political power had twisted the discourse until it was impossible to use these words to have meaningful discussion of the concepts that they represent. This is because they each have so many different meanings to different people. It helped me understand how skewed modern American political discourse is, and why it is so difficult to discuss politics meaningfully in the US. This formed the basis of my ability to define my very simple anarkic beliefs, regardless of my audiences’ understanding of ideological terms.

 The theme of Chinese, and Asian religious cultures, that also spanned these years, contributed much to my ability to discuss my spiritual beliefs, which were emerging from my atheism at the same time.

 The other Poli Sci course that had great impact was Poli Sci 654, Politics of Revolution. I’d always wanted to see myself as a revolutionary, this course helped me sort thru what is wrong and what is right with the revolutions that have occurred so far. One of the best parts of it was that we looked closely at what causes revolution; what factors were always present, and which, not being present, prevent effective change regardless of the need. The perception of the possibility of positive change appears to be the most important predisposition towards people changing their world. This concept has had a profound impact on me and it has grown stronger and more refined over time.

Two science courses had a profound impact on me in ways that go beyond science to political and spiritual understandings that have remained important to me. The prior semester had laid some foundations for this. Three classes covered different sides of the infamous golden triangle at the same time; this really helped me achieve a good overview of modern western history. Poli Sci 260, Intro to Latin America, and Afroamer 277 Intro to Africa really helped me understand how eurocentric culture has in fact created underdevelopment, and that it is sustained by the state department and other institutions that have inherited the mantle of the wealth and power of the eurocentric economic worldview. The other class I had that semester is hard to describe, for it was an interdisciplinary look at the evolution of western culture, science, technology, and philosophy. Integrated Liberal Studies 202 II was full of expansive ideas and charted the interrelation of what we see as different fields of study, and how they have become fragmented over time. All three of these classes spent the same two weeks on the period of the golden triangle. At the end of this time I realized that I had acquired a quite a broad and comprehensive view of western history, from within it’s philosophical core, and in it’s context of other cultures.

The take home lesson for this semester: when an ancient Greek used the word teknos, he was discussing not only how, and with what, but also why. We have divorced our reason from itself; we do not ask why we design science, technology, and philosophy. They have all become ancillaries to earning money, which motive is unquestioned. That this is the essential goal of our culture (earning more money for/by those who already have much of it), and our biggest barrier to good politics, science, and technology, was beginning to become apparent to me, but it was the history of science that straightened me out for good. I clearly remember History of Science 101, but my transfer transcripts contain no reference to it. It was near the end of this class, which was a broad overview of the rise of modern science over the last few centuries, that I realized that a good portion of the technical difficulties we are having with survival on earth has come from a changing of the priorities and motives for science, research, and technical development over the years.

What originally was a grand enterprise to improve the human condition and grow closer to God by understanding his world better has become mainly harnessed to the capitalist profit motive. There are many small reasons for this, and collectively they are quite substantial. This changed my core understanding, until then I saw all political problems as essentially being solvable by technical solutions.

Now I see that all technical problems require political solutions.

 

Information Resources at SOIS UWM, and My Four Core Competencies:

This brings me to the second half of my course work, a focus on the teknos of solutions to political problems. Entering the SOIS, I had the advantage of seeing technology not as object, but as process implying a purpose. I also had the advantage of knowing the power of information and knowledge to transform our world, as well as knowing the importance information access for everyone has to the world. Though I could only see at the time that I would rather study information use generally than any given field, I have found in IR studies the answers the first half of my studies had sent me looking for.

I felt simultaneously well updated and at home in my first semester back at UWM, in the IR program at SOIS. In L&I SCI 632 and L&I SCI 110 there was much discussion about the ethics of information use. We covered the need for intellectual property security, and the digital divide. These discussions helped bring my focus on socio-political issue back into focus. Class discussion in these classes did more to help me comprehend the current state of these issues more than any other materials could have. These two classes rounded out the competency I brought back to school with me. This is a basic, broad humanities background with a view of the context of our past, but a focus on current and future needs. I have rounded out this competency with the addition of PEACEST 201, Intro to Conflict Resolution, we studied conflict and it’s resolution. There was a real relevance here in that the digital divide and the information economy were important topics of the class. William Ury’s “Getting to Peace” was an excellent text that put a larger context to our cultural development. His essential argument was that we have returned to the expandable economic pie of our ancestors who were hunter-gatherers as a result of the knowledge economy. He places blame for violence amongst humans largely on the limited economic resources of the agricultural revolution. Like a hunter gather economy, but more so, the resources that matter in the knowledge revolution expand when shared, instead of shrinking like land and water do when shared. Ury is famous for his work as a corporate consultant and mediator. This socio-economic competence is formative and central to me. There are three other competencies that I value very much, it is easier to discuss them while discussing the second half of my course work, which is mostly in IR. In a word each: research, project management, and web implementation. My preexisting artistic bent has enjoyed flourishing particularly in web implementation and design.

The core competency that I value having expanded in SOIS, is the ability to do research. In L&I Sci. 210, Foundations of University Library Research, I learned how to research and document a good college paper. I had acquired a pretty good sense for how to write a paper, but this course covers material every student should know about how to use reference materials better to do research and to document it.

In L&I SCI 330, Electronic Info Retrieval, and L&I SCI 510, Intro to Reference Services and Resources, my ability to do research was expanded and solidified. The ability to find the information one needs is the most important skill today in my opinion. In all three of these course’s, databases, the Internet, and practice, were far more powerful than any books that could have been assigned. The familiarity I gained with the use of a reference library is invaluable to me, and was given uncommon depth, for a baccalaureate, by the addition of L&I SCI 681, Using Archives: The Value of Primary Sources in the Information Age. This course is about managing and organizing archives. One of its focuses was about basic marketing issues, this helped complete the course of thought began with L&I SCI 640, Information Marketing. This class was primarily about marketing information; the focus was on marketing free library resources to the public in an information economy. As this course was one of my first IR courses, it set a course of questioning that I followed throughout these following courses, comprising what I call the engineering, or development, competency.

One of the few courses that had books that I thought were instrumental to me was, L&I SCI 310, Human Factors of Info Seeking and Use. This course was essentially a study of usability. As someone who has an interest in universal info access, it was very instructive to study the methods of measuring and ameliorating usability problems. There were two books in this class that left an impression on me. The first was “Don’t Make Me Think”, almost a new type of book, being easy to skim and navigate; it was the best example I’ve ever seen for Steve Krug’s points about web design in book form. Donald Norman’s “Things that Make Us Smart” was all about how the focus of the information technology should be on conforming it to human needs, as opposed to the recent historical trend of adapting human behavior to the machines. To function, the knowledge economy technology needs to make us smarter. Tools that are not easily handled by the human mind don’t makes us smart as effectively.

To further bolster this engineering, or product development, focus, it was instructive to have three other courses in addition. L&I SCI 250, Internet Planning & Implementation, taught me how to build an enterprise scale intranet, and introduced the concept of project management, and working in groups. PM techniques were expanded upon and given depth and context in L&I SCI 340, Information Architecture II. Here we learned about basic PM tools and techniques. This was a good course for understanding information projects in the context of a modern corporate culture that is aware of the need for good project management. In L&I SCI 490, Senior Capstone, we put PM methods and tools into use in a group project of design and implementation of a scripted website.

The capstone class also capped off experience and formal study in the remaining competency, interactive web design and implementation. This is the competency that I most enjoy exercising and learning, because it satisfies my creative and artistic self. In L&S 110, we were introduced to HTML markup. I was delighted to design my first web page in this class, and this carried over into L&I SCI 240, Information Architecture I, where we learned a lot about HTML and learned some JavaScript as well. We also learned about CSS and other kinds of templates. L&I SCI 440, Information Architecture III, expanded this scripting background; we designed ASP and PHP interactive web applications that worked with databases. There were several good texts covered in these courses, but the best sources were web based, like Webmonkey.com, and W3C pages.

 

 

Future Directions:

Designing web implementations gave me ideas that may bring all these competencies back together. I am working out some ideas I have for how web applications can be used to automate some of the work of group self governance. On the surface the concept is no more than a survey, but it is hyper survey. A web application could make it much easier, and more democratic, to share opinions and decisions. Just for beginners, we could rank the questions to order them by value, and share each other’s answers. Most important, the web environment will enable more ease of rewording of proposed questions and the posting new questions by participants. All in all, there is much room to improve communication, expression, and decisions, on political matters in the online environment. There are security issues that I find hard to solve simply, without the use of nominal Paypal payments, or some other such conceptually inappropriate use, but they are not intractable to a fair solution, and new solutions will arise organically.

A similar idea is to use cooperative effort to compile useful link lists to serve the peoples’ expanding need for coherence in the flood of data. A multi-axis system of categories and rankings could be combined with user inputs and valuations. This could enable the finding, and listing, of links in a number of different criteria simultaneously, with a ranking along a spectrum of each criterion. In this way one could search for just the right level of knowledge at the intersection of several interests. Some of these axes (political radicalism, or left-right spectrum, as opposed to the freedom-safety spectrum, or scientific radical-conservative spectrum) would be more subjective and geared towards values, trust, and taste. XML, which was the topic of my independent study, L&I SCI 399, is a markup that would make a good platform core for these types of applications.

My focus on universal empowerment through knowledge access has been brought much empowerment itself, in the form of these three other competencies. Research, product development, and web implementation, are well bundled here to perform the job I have assigned myself. It is my job to help all I can to ensure that these possibilities are used to help us all, for our boat is now to small for us to survive historic levels of collective individual selfishness. The new frontier is knowledge automation, but good results there are right next door to everyone, truly this is a new kind of new frontier. Clearly this frontier is in many ways the most open ever in terms of possibilities. I have confidence in our ability to build a sustainable knowledge economy, for the possibilities are limited only by our imagination. Yet I am concerned, for Politics of Revolution has taught me that we will not change our ways unless we perceive that we are able, and there is much in our socio-economic system that argues that we are helpless before it. We are not, however, helpless before it, it is we. Whether we know, or care, or not, every one of us changes and defines our culture, every day.

Currently I see my future in self employment as a webmaster while also working in the non-profit sector and/or knowledge industry. It is my dream to work with the national Green Party web team while working for Google. In both cases I would seek to work on ideas like the two cited above. Ultimately I would like to work in consulting and as a webmaster, while creating a game site out of the Science Fiction Utopian novel I’ve been working on. I would like to find a way to express my artistic urges in the meantime, so I am thinking about studies in computer imagery. In the meantime I intend to spend my summer learning Macromedia.

Download Academic Portfolio 2005 as a .doc, .odt, .rtf, or .txt.