Kat Enters the 21st Century

A new educator's first foray into modern media

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Persona, Permissions, and Publicity – oh my!

In EdTech this week, we had a guest lecture from Jesse Miller regarding online security, digital consent, and teaching networked citizenship. I learned a lot about both the letter and the spirit of the laws that apply to online behaviour, both as a teacher and as a member of the general public. I’m pleased to hear that laws are catching up to the 21st century in terms of updating definitions and generalizing consent, slander, and privacy to apply to the reality that nowadays, everyone has a ‘digital’ persona. Yes, even you, Aunt Mildred (who doesn’t have social media but pays her MSP bill online). The online ‘version’ of a person should have the same rights as the physical version.

I have been reticent to join social media in earnest, but I have to confess that it has nothing to do with concern for my privacy. Instead, my aversion to social media stems from my communication preferences.  I am one of those people that would rather enjoy a moment for myself than to photograph and share it. I am one of those people that like to share my experiences with those who might be interested in person, instead of Tweeting about the things I do, see, and accomplish. This is not to say that I’m not strongly outspoken, opinionated, and proud of my experiences and accomplishments. I have simply never understood the urge to shout opinions, information, and ‘humble brags’ into a void, hoping the right people will find that digital message-bottle and resonate with it.  That sounds exhausting!

 

I have spent a lot of time in the past year thinking that in order to be an effective educator and successful professional, I need to have a ‘professional social media presence’. I was gearing up to go against my basic programming and get a Twitter/Instagram/Snapchat/TikTok/whatever else account and learn how to use them to further my career. For those who have the energy to do this (or grew up with it being a reality), I think social media can be an amazing tool. But the more I learn about the frankly archaic and seemingly absurd standards that teachers are held to, and the more I hear about permissions and digital consent, the more I confirm for myself that trying to build an online persona is just not worth my time at this stage of the game. For me, the term ‘professional social media’ is a bare step above an oxymoron. I’m going to have to spend some time this weekend curating my Facebook page, so that I can still use that platform to host events and connect with friends from my past.

But as for the rest? Actually, no thank you. I’m good.

Hoop Check-In – The Process

I have very little new developments to report this week, since I only had time to get to one hoop class and I’ve been held up with other schoolwork. So instead of a check-in video, this week I’m going to share with you a bit of my process. I’ll make up for it next week with (hopefully) some real live footage of me building my routine.

Choreographing a dance, or any kind of routine, is something I’ve never done before. I always thought it was some kind of alchemy that needed an expert to pull off. However, when the only person I’m choreographing for is me, I thought it might be easier since I know what my own limitations are. However, the disadvantage of choreographing for aerial apparatus is that I can’t just practice at home (I’ve been tempted to get out to a local playground and try the monkey bars, but it isn’t quite the same). Whatever advantage I have for knowing my own limits is erased by the fact that, until now, it’s all being done in my head. Trying to estimate the time it takes me to do certain tricks in order to time moves to music is hard when I’m not physically able to try it out.

So, where to start? I started looking online and found a few good resources for amateur choreographers (this one gets special mention), but this post on a blog called Steezy really stood out as something I could work with. They lay out choreography in 6 ‘easy’ steps, all of which apply to the process I’m hoping to undertake. There are helpful fun videos embedded (like the one below, based on Step 4), and some great examples. A good example of a multimodal blog!

The first step (pick a song and listen to it a lot) is completed. I’ve picked a few lyrics in the song that I want to link to my movements, and a few more dramatic points to fit with a fast or slow move.

The second step (get actively inspired) I’ve begun by putting together a list of moves that I can do, and starting to applying them to key points in the song that I think they go well with. Adding emotion is something I’ve been working on in my aerial hammock classes, and I’m still not very good at it. Adding pauses for effect will help to fill out the song and give me breaks, so I’m going to try that as a way to add emotion. For instance, just sitting in the hoop doesn’t look very cool, but if the hoop is slowly spinning and I can portray some drama with arm motions or positioning of my legs, it can work with the song while giving me a moment to catch my breath before the next difficult (and painful) drop or inversion.

The third step – freestyling – I have been doing at my weekly classes by practising skills and learning new ones. I’m hoping to try the routine in a real hoop for the first time at a special session with my instructor. In that space, I will be able to videotape some of my attempts so I can work on my video editing!

 

Hoop Check-In – Week 2

This week’s task was for me to finalize my pick for a song to choreograph my routine to. It came down to a tight race, but I’ve 90% decided on ‘Hold My Heart’ by Lindsey Stirling. I like the fast tempo, the vibe, and the number of fun drops in the song, and at about three and a half minutes long, it’s a manageable length of time. The music video for the song is below. Full credit to the artist, of course.

See below for my check-in video for this week. I’m starting to really get into aerial hammock, which (as I explain at length in the video) is a slightly softer, comfier version of the hoop that doesn’t produce any bruises, but does produce fabric burns. Combined with my hoop class, I have burns in all the places I don’t have bruises. Gosh, fitness is fun!

 

Environmental Apps for Place-Based Learning

Photo taken by Virginia State Parks on Flickr, under Creative Commons license CC BY 2.0.

The four of us (Kay, Kat, Caitie, Kate, and Brigitte) are looking into ways to incorporate place-based learning into our classes. We have diverse teachable areas, but we’re all interested in helping our students get more in-touch with nature and with the local species in their area. in my personal experience (Kat), knowing more about the natural world around me helps me feel more at home in a place, and better able to connect to it. As we get more and more involved in technology in the classroom, we all wanted to ‘take a step outside’, so to speak, and think of ways to use technology to get more in touch with sense of place.

The following is a list of nature apps that we know of, and might be exploring this term:

iNaturalist/Seek

Lifescanner

Merlin Bird ID

Picture Insect

eBird

Leafsnap

Seaweed Sorter

And more that we will find over the next week or so! Our current plan is to investigate each app and rate them on usability, quality of database, value-for-price, and number of applications to a class or unit. This will get tweaked in the coming weeks as we talk more about our plans, so stay tuned!

 

 

Video Editing with iMovie

This week in class we got a quick tutorial from Rich McCue on video editing using iMovie. I use Windows almost exclusively, so I was happy to hear that DaVinci Resolve is an option for us PC-lovers. I made the following monstrosity using the video that Rich gave us, presumably of his daughter playing with her goats:

 

Not too bad for a first attempt that took about half an hour of playing with the user interface, and I’m really excited to try this software for the first time on my own videos for my Free Inquiry project. I’ll also be using Audacity to produce a short podcast-style interview with my aerial hoop instructor (as soon as I get her permission to use her name, voice, and image). Now I just need to create some of my own content!

Kahoot! In Classrooms – Pros and Cons

A Quick Run-Down

Kahoot! is a game-based learning platform that can be used for formative assessment in classrooms. It is becoming popular in secondary schools and has potential to be useful for all teaching disciplines, and even out-of-class activities like coaching, field trips, and anywhere that students have their phones (which is, let’s be honest, all the time). So far, Kahoot! has gained a billion players in the six years it’s been around.

In Kahoot!, teachers create a quiz and students are able to access and answer the quiz questions on a mobile device or tablet. Each student’s score depends on both who answers first, and how long it took to answer (time elapsed).

 

A recent study showed that students given either a single Kahoot! game or several games in a few weeks had the SAME level of increased engagement and interest in the class (Wang 2015).

 

Pros

  • It doesn’t have to be a competition between individuals. Students can work in teams.

 

  • Adding some good-natured competition is a good way to keep students engaged and encourage them to have fun with classmates they might not talk to normally.

 

  • It lets the educator get a quick ‘pulse’ from your class in terms of comprehension, preconceived notions about a topic, or how students feel they are progressing.

 

 

Cons   

  • You need to set it up and make sure all your students have access to a phone or tablet. If some students don’t have access to a mobile device, you will have to provide tablets.

 

  • You need wifi (or data) to use it, and if you’re in a place where wifi is spotty, it might not work. James even mentioned that sometimes a team can lose the game just because they’re sitting in the corner of the room with the worst reception, which isn’t fair.

 

  • Students can create their own usernames, which leaves it open to inappropriate language. That said, you can turn them away if they try to sign up with a name you don’t approve of.

Let’s Give It a Try!

Hoop Check-In – Week 1

This week I had my first couple of aerial classes after 4 weeks. This is the reality of aerial arts: it hurts. Hanging from a solid piece of metal by a single body part does not feel good; bruises, scrapes, rub marks, and burns are going to happen. You can train yourself to ignore the pain, and you develop calluses on some areas, but part of the art is embracing and accepting the pain. Over the last four weeks, I’ve lost most of my calluses and conditioning, as well as my core and upper-body strength. A single-word description for my life right now would be: ‘ouch’.  My check-in video is below:

The Apparatus

I work with a number of different apparatuses in aerial arts, some of which more (or with more skill) than others. Here is a brief intro to each of them, in case you’re curious.

Lyra Hoop

Photo by Leonard Low on Flickr

A metal hoop that hang from the ceiling, usually able to spin. It can have a single hanging point, which is what I work with, or two hanging points, where it’s suspended on the end of two ropes or silks, like in the video I showed in my last post. The difference is in the way you can work ‘over the hoop’. A double suspension allows you to use the hoop more like a trapeze (below). Pros of hoop: looks cool even if you’re not good at it (especially if you spin it). Cons: It’s a hard, curved metal object digging into every part of your body that rests on it.

Static Trapeze

Photo by Joe Mabel on Wikimedia Commons

As opposed to the flying trapeze, which is what most people think of when they hear the word. The static trapeze doesn’t swing and is usually not done with a partner. You don’t switch between them. It just hangs there, much like the hoop. The trapeze is just a single horizontal bar suspended from two ropes, either connected at the top to form a triangle shape, or connected separately, like a swing set. The one I work with is a triangle. Pros: more versatility and ways to show flexibility and technique. Cons: two words. Rope. Burn.

Aerial Silks

Photo by AerialShowgirls on Wikimedia Commons

Two long strips of stretchy fabric that are both suspended from the ceiling. They are incredibly versatile and can do basically anything you can imagine. Pros: No bruises! And they look absolutely stunning if you can get good at them. Cons: working with them requires a baseline of strength and flexibility. Getting good at them is very tough. And just because they aren’t a hard piece of metal doesn’t mean it doesn’t hurt, since you end up trussed up in them and supporting your weight in your ankles or armpits.

Silk Hammock

Photo by jenniferdukedodd on Flickr

The same stretchy fabric, but hanging in a loop. It’s like a combination of all the other apparatuses, in that it’s soft like silks, in a loop like the hoop, but hangs in a triangle, like the trapeze. Pros: versatile, comfortable, and can double as an actual hammock to lie in! Cons: In order to do cool-looking moves, there’s a lot of strength and flexibility required. In other words, everything I can do so far looks unimpressive.

I’ll have another video update – and perhaps an interview with my Flight Instructor – next week!

 

Learning to Fly with Stiff Wings

Over the last year, I’ve been training in Aerial Arts (hoop, trapeze, silk hammock). After almost twelve months practicing once a week, I won’t say I’m good at it, but I’m better than when I began. In the last little while, I’ve been distracting myself watching videos of amateur aerial artists performing (see below for a stunning example), and I’ve decided I want to give it a try.

About six months ago. The first time I felt comfortable with somebody taking photos of me posing in the hoop.

 

I danced from the age of 4 to the age of 14. Again, I was never very good, which is why I quit once I got into high school: at that point, you either danced at a competitive level, or you got forced out. One of my problems is flexibility: I have, despite the best efforts of yoga instructors, dance directors, and my own independent practice, never been able to lean over and touch my toes, let alone do the kind of splits and leg lifts that make the difference between mediocre steps and a real dancer. My body just doesn’t seem designed for it. This is also (surprise, surprise) a barrier for me in aerial arts. I’ve been doing yoga classes for the same twelve months consecutively with my hoop classes, to no avail. I’m simply not going to do the kind of stunts that make performers look really good. See, for example, the video above. I can do about a third of those moves, but they don’t look nearly as impressive or smooth when I do them.

The look I get when my aerial classmates see me stretching before class.

That said, not everything you can do in the hoop/trapeze/silks is predicated on being able to do the splits or lift your leg over your head. Most of it, but not all. So this is my challenge to myself over the next three months: choreograph a hoop routine that showcases my strengths, not my weaknesses, in a way that still looks really, really cool. In all my years of dance, I’ve never choreographed (except in my head, in my own fantasies). I’d love the chance to showcase my technical knowledge of the moves I know I can do, my musicality in putting those moves to music, and the challenge to my own fitness in making my own very limited human body do those things in time to the music. Will it look really, really cool?

 

Time will tell.

In an effort to increase my comfort level with seeing my ungainly human form in photo or video medium (I have some pretty serious self-confidence issues surrounding my captured image), I will be video-documenting my journey. It will not be pretty at first, but I’m determined to stick to it.

I’ve also had a hiatus from my hoop routine, since the studio I’ve been practicing at (pictured above) for nearly a year experienced a catastrophic flood last month and is closed for remediation until February 2020. I start at a new studio on Wednesday this week, so stay tuned for my first (probably very sore and bruised) video check-in on Thursday September 19th!

 

A Short Essay Response to ‘Most Likely to Succeed’

For the past two weeks, I have been immersed in the heady broth of the liberal, forward-thinking UVic Education program. I am learning to teach in the infancy of the new BC curriculum, which was put into place following decades of academic study, piloting, and cognition research. I am proud to be at the leading edge of pedagogy in policy, but I also recognize that I am at the epicentre of a liberal, academic bubble here on southern Vancouver Island. My impression from speaking to teachers in other parts of Canada and the world is that the newfangled ideas that I am being taught about individualized education, cross-curricular study, active learning, flipped classrooms, etc. have been slow to trickle out of the university bubble in other places.

My initial impression upon watching the film Most Likely to Succeed, directed and narrated by Greg Whiteley, was to smile knowingly and say to myself, ‘of course this is in San Diego’. The booming west coast Mecca of wealthy fad dieters, New Agers, organic juicers, abstract artists, communes, and cults. Of course I’m being ironic, but the average Midwesterner might believe it in earnest. Certainly I’ve heard a similar sneering indictment of Victoria from former colleagues of mine in Alberta. So what was the real value of this film? Who was it meant to convince, and did it do what it intended?

Who was the intended audience?

My big question is: who is the intended audience of this film? Teachers? Parents? Teens? Those who are already willing to suspend their disbelief, or those who staunchly believe in the current system?

From my impressions, the film was definitely preaching to the choir. It was a professionally-made, masterfully edited piece that tugged at my emotions. I even felt tears welling in my eyes during the last few minutes of the film. The intention of the film was to immerse the viewer in the case studies that they focused on, and they did a brilliant job. However, in order to evoke such an emotional response, the scope of the film had to be narrowed to those two case studies almost exclusively. The film hints teasingly at teachers in more conventional schools across America trying to use the same model, but I imagine that wouldn’t have been as impactful a story. As a teacher, I found this frustrating. Not all of us have the benefit of a corporate-funded, purpose-built charter school in which to experiment with project-based education. So my conclusion is that the movie wasn’t really for teachers.

The film-makers took care to include a few dissenting opinions, in the form of interviews with parents and with students at other ‘not so enlightened’ high schools. The interviews with students were interesting, and I felt a kinship to the high-achieving teens that just wanted to get a good score on their SAT so that they could get into the best universities. I was that teen, and the idea of not having to compete, not having to cram and perform and learn by rote, would have been similarly alien to me. The film shows little sympathy for these students, instead seeming to roll their eyes and say ‘See? Look what The System has done to these poor unenlightened kids’. The reality of The System, and the hold it still has on teachers, parents, and students across North America, is not really the focus of the film and is mainly ignored. Thus lack of sympathy and reconcilement with what students are told they need to succeed makes me think that this film is not for students, either.

The concerns raised by parents of the focal students at High-Tech High were of course soothed by the end of the film, which added to the drama and emotional punchline. ‘See? The system really is good for my child, and therefore good for me.’ I could argue that this film was directed at parents – specifically, parents who are already willing to be convinced (as the parents of the teens in the film clearly were, since they consented to not only have their children attend this experimental school but also to be filmed for an entire year). It is no surprise that the response to this film was so mixed, as it does read more as an advertisement than it does a documentary.

The bottom line

It was a good movie. It got the emotional response it wanted to out of me. But it was frustrating to me as well, because the intended message is, for the most part, backed up by evidence. There is little question that the current educational model is inadequate, and High-Tech High’s model is a solid offer of a new way to proceed in the modern age. Instead of presenting a feel-good, largely one-dimensional triumph story, I wish Whiteley had taken a more nuanced approach and battled with the larger issues at play: the systemic barriers to educational reform, some ways in which we can change attitudes of and about institutes of higher education, and the real everyday lives of the students at High-Tech High. We never saw these students outside of school, interacting with peers from other schools, or indeed even interacting in the ‘hallways’ of their own school. We instead saw a very deliberately sanitized version of the new system which, frankly, wouldn’t convince anybody unless they were already willing to be convinced.

The film presents some valuable information, and I believe wholeheartedly that change needs to start somewhere. I just wish that the film-makers hadn’t gone the opposite direction with the film, creating a Hollywood-ized documentary à la Michael Moore instead of a nuanced, well-balanced argument for their case.

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