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Learning and Teaching

Roundabout Sign

I’ve been lucky to have had some amazing teachers in my life. That’s definitely been an influence on me becoming a teacher as my love of learning came from my teachers and my family. Over the years I backed into teaching, not having earned a degree in teaching through a university, but gradually starting to teach through workshops and by figuring things out.

The first and more formal teaching that I did was at the New Brunswick Filmmakers’ Co-operative in their workshop program, passing on some of the filmmaking skills that I learned from others. Then I was hired by the New Brunswick Community College to help develop the curriculum for a video production program. It was a lot of challenging and rewarding work. It was a very valuable experience to spend a few months designing ways to teach video production. It provided a rare opportunity to think about how people learn and what the most effective ways of helping people to develop skills.

I was so lucky to be able to draw on the experience and resources of my life partner Carolyn, who actually was studying education. This provided me with a comprehensive teaching structure structure as she patiently taught me what teachers were supposed to do. Thanks to Carolyn, I understood Bloom’s Taxonomy and how there are different levels of learning. It was better for everyone as I reaped the benefits of her education degree and practical teaching experience.

There is nothing better than seeing someone understand something. The biggest challenge in teaching is to convince someone that they can learn. Having the confidence to take the risk of asking questions in the process of learning is daunting, but the rewards are great. Every person is different and they learn in unique ways, so teaching requires patience. At first you want to skip to the end, but by allowing someone to work their way through learning something will make it stick and make them able to teach it as well. Learning is preparing to teach and teaching is preparing to learn. It’s a cycle that repeats and grows. The more I teach the more I learn and vice versa.

Working at the Business and Technology Training Institute in Fredericton over a decade ago was a remarkable experience. I had a class of motivated and talented people who wanted to create things using new digital media tools. When I started there the curriculum needed to be developed and I was the sole instructor for a program that ran for just under a year. I loved it as the structure gave me a chance to spend a lot of time helping people figure things out. The assignments were practical and it gave me a chance to try things out in a supportive environment.

When I moved to Nova Scotia in June of 2000 to work at Production School House it was another amazing experience. With a team of talented producers and teachers we worked with learners who made some great projects. Working within the dot-com boom was great as we were all learning and trying out new things on the web with cutting-edge tools and techniques. Using a very practical workshop and production model kept every day different and interesting as we’d adjust things to help people make things. But the dot-com bubble inflated and burst, which left me searching for new employment, which I luckily found at the Nova Scotia Community College.

After almost a decade of workshop teaching and six years of classroom teaching I finally received some teacher training when I started at NSCC. Instructors at the College need to complete a two-year comprehensive program of learning about teaching called CCEDP (the Community College Education Diploma Program). The timing of my hiring was perfect as I was able to work with an existing curriculum for the first time instead of developing it from scratch. I also had the benefit of working my colleague Janet who had built up the Screen Arts program before I arrived, so I was able to focus more on teaching and what worked.

CCEDP began with New Faculty Orientation and it gave me a solid foundation before I started teaching in the Screen Arts program in the Fall of 2002. I met some amazing colleagues and teachers who I still admire and became a much better teacher because of that experience. Over the following two years through the other CCEDP courses I shared and learned with fellow colleagues and received my CCEDP diploma in 2004. Then I continued to teach, but as time went by the teaching becomes the primary focus and it can be difficult to get perspective on what you’re doing and the energy level can start to drop.

A welcome burst of energy came last month with the Great Teachers Seminar that I attended in Cornwallis. Organized by the Organizational Learning at the College and with a model developed and facilitated by David Gotshall, it’s a week-long chance to work with teachers in a positive and supportive environment. The focus is on teaching and while I was tired at the end of a long term, my enthusiasm grew as we worked within the “rigid minimal structure” to figure out what worked and shared ways to teach and learn in a relaxed environment. It’s the best week that I’ve spent and it felt like the culmination of my teaching career up to this point.

Great Teachers was exactly what I needed and it rekindled the fire and love that I have for learning and teaching. So now the cycle is restarted and as another school year wraps up I’m excited and chomping at the bit to focus on facilitating and creating places where learning can happen. It’s a privilege to be a teacher and I’m so grateful that I work in a place that supports learning and teaching.

May 30, 2010 , ,

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Back to School

windows.jpgThe first week of school is done at the Nova Scotia Community College where I teach in the Screen Arts program. It is always a busy and exciting week with the incoming learners getting up to speed and the returning filmmakers who are beginning their final year. Luckily I’ve been teaching for a while now and it gives me the opportunity to build upon what I’ve done and improve things every year.
Last year we started back in the new Waterfront Campus in Dartmouth along with all of the challenges of a new building that hadn’t been filled with people yet. This year everything is pretty much up and running smoothly, so the focus is on teaching and learning much more than figuring out how to connect things and which classrooms are on what floor.
I really need to have a structure with things organized, so I was very happy to have the whole term organized with Basecamp. Each course that I teach is project and all of the assignments, exercises and quizzes are milestones. In my Google Calendar I subscribe all of my Basecamp projects, so the deadlines all show up on my calendar. Each of the evaluative tools are stored as Writeboards, which lets me revise them before I lay them out in Pages in an assignment template that I’ve created. For support material I usually will have some presentations in Keynote (and I try to make things as visual and not text-heavy as possible) along with handouts or pointers to web resources.
For each class I have lesson plan that I create in OmniOutliner Pro that keeps me on track as I have tendency to drift. But I usually have a detailed course outline that breaks down all of the major topics as well as any readings. I’ll print out the outline that keeps me on track and I keep the paper that I use organized in file folders (green for year 1, red for year 2, and purple for the class that has both year 1 and 2). Every year a new Moleskine pocket notebook is used for notes and a pocket agenda (that is red) is a paper backup for my schedule (which I copy in to it from my Google Calendar).
With the systems that I have in place now it keeps me focussed on teaching and less on figuring out what I need to do. By having a solid support structure it opens the possibilities of improvisation as even if I get completely lost, there is an underlying structure and flow to the term that I can always fall back on. It’s fun to teach after you have everything in place.

September 7, 2008 , , , ,

Full Circle

Five years ago I started working at the Nova Scotia Community College and one of the requirements for full-time employees is that they have to take part in a program called CCEDP (Community College Education Diploma Program). It usually takes about 2 years to complete, which includes a couple of summers spent in residence taking courses. I completed the program and was lucky enough to be chosen as the valedictorian which gave me the opportunity to sum the experience up in my valedictory address. The best parts of the experience of learning how to teach adults were the connections made between the participants and instructors in the program. Now I know dozens and dozens (maybe hundreds) people from all over the province who work for the college.
A few months ago Carolyn asked me if I’d like to be part of a session that she was organizing called Engaging the Digital Learner that would be part of the New Faculty Orientation that happened in Yarmouth in October. I had a great time when I was in Yarmouth for it and I jumped at the chance to be able to give something back. It was a lot of fun and I contributed with some information about podcasting. I didn’t realize until afterwards that I’d been in CCEDP courses with most of the members of the team that facilitated the workshop, but now we were all at the front of the classroom with a few years of experience within the organization. It was very nice to have it all come full circle, and I’m so glad that I could be involved.

October 28, 2007 , , ,

Graduation

On my way in to graduateTwo years ago (less two weeks) I began a journey with the Nova Scotia Community College. I attended New Faculty Orientation which was the first of 10 courses as part of the Community College Education Diploma Program. Last summer I spent a month in Truro as part of the Summer Institute. It was an amazing experience that changed my life. At the end of this phase of the experience I was lucky enough to be chosen to speak for the graduating class which is quite an honour. I was able to spend a couple of days before the ceremony in Truro with some of my friends and had a great time. I felt like I belonged and was happy and solid and centered. On the morning of July 30 I wore a blue gown and lined up with my fellow graduates in Truro and we walked in to the gym and graduated. (Carolyn took the picture of me on the way in.) I’ve typed up a version of my speech to preserve the moment. Here’s what I said.

August 2, 2004 , , , ,

Conversations

Doc Searls points to a great bit of writing on Britt Blaser’s blog Escapable Logic. He writes about blogs as conversations (which is not new) and puts things in a great way. The theme he explores is: “Memorable conversation is the foundation of civilization.” That quote hit me and it’s one of those moments where the time and place and state of mind where I am all click.
Right now I’m in Truro taking a course with another amazing group of NSCC people. We talk a lot and share experiences of teaching and the rewards of working together to change the world through changing people’s lives. It’s important that we talk with each other and maybe the popularity of blogs and blogging is due to this inherent need to speak and be heard. Blaser hits the nail on the head in saying that blogs “contain a huge body of thoughtful conversations” and then he connects the conversations with actions to make the world a better place with the Spirit of America project. It’s amazing how quickly things can happen when people work together and engage in conversation which leads to action. People are working to make the world a better place. It reminds me of the amazing outpouring of support and random flowers to same-sex couples who were getting married in San Francisco in February that was made possible through conversations on the Web.

June 23, 2004 , , , , , ,

Summer Institute

The Summer Institute is about halfway through and I’m tired and happy
as I think about the experience here in Truro. Whether intentional or not, when a group of people live in the same building, eat and study together, socialization will take place. Shared values will emerge, and if the hiring procedure works as it should, they should be coherent with the values of the institution.

One can’t underestimate the importance of staying in the residence in the whole process. A great deal of learning and sharing takes place outside of the classroom, but it is almost always connected in some way to the events of the day. While the long days filled with stimulating discussion, group work, writing and eating should result in early nights filled with peaceful slumber, for many it is an energizing experience. We work until the time that we’d usually go to bed and then socialize.

A group of teachers is the most difficult group to teach. It would be similar to the task of a stand-up comedian who must face a group of stand-up comedians who sit and say, “O.k., make me laugh.” It’s a tough crowd and requires great courage to face people who can second-guess both the ideas and the way that they are presented. For these reasons it also can be difficult to learn as a teacher. I find that I must often take a breath and remember that I am here to learn and resist the temptation to teach.

The most positive part of the experience is the sense of collegiality that I feel. We are a community of learners and a community of teachers. With shared values and goals we can work together and challenge each other. We often complain about the workload, but we’re all putting much more effort in than is needed. It is a positive feedback loop with everyone wanting to be challenged and to grow. This is our chance to try out new things and to grow and we’re loving it.

July 16, 2003 , , , ,