Month: May 2022

Trends in Adult Education #2

Objective

One of the trends I notice in adult education, especially in the way that I teach is that there are so many passwords to remember.

Reflective

This is very interesting to me because I have struggled through two semesters of students who just weren’t sure of what their passwords ever were. Insert mind on fire and stressed. It felt as if each day I had a few students going to the IT department for help on how to reset passwords, day after day and week after week. The passwords could not be saved on the computers because after they log out for the night, all data was wiped off the console. It made lesson plans hard, because you’re teaching time got cut down, by the many minutes taken up to just trying to get the students all on their emails or Moodle site.

Interpretive

I think the only way around this fiasco is to have some open conversations with the students about passwords, and what passwords are considered private and should be held tightly (like your banking password) and what passwords aren’t as important (your safety course your doing online). If we can separate out the very private ones, with the less private ones, we would be off to a great start. Now with all of our less worrisome passwords, we could use an app to save them. There are many apps that save your passwords so that you can pull them up whenever you need them by only remembering one ultimate password.

Decisional

Although these password managers seem really cool, there is still so much to learn. It this actually going to be easier for my students? Is having them written and locked in my office just as secure? Will the students even use these programs when they are done school? Will it work on a computer without an app in a browser instead? I do think the only way to learn something new is to try different things, so perhaps next year will be the pilot program for trying this.

https://us.norton.com/internetsecurity-privacy-password-manager-security.html

Van Der Kleut , Jennifer. (n.d.). Are Password Managers Secure. Norton. Retrieved May 27, 2022, from https://us.norton.com/internetsecurity-privacy-password-manager-security.html#

 

Trends In Your Field #1

 

I work in the field of adult continuing education. Getting students prepared for the world, in a formal setting. My students are all amazing, inspiring, funny, interesting and kind. There are not too many courses in a college setting that they would be able to take, and excel at, except mine. They are have one thing in common. All of them have different learning abilities, or should I say diverse learning abilities. Or would it be better to say barriers to employment. Because of learning difficulties, writing difficulties and other learning barriers.

Having just started in this field, I feel I am playing catch up. Trying to catch up on the proper, politically correct and most formal way to talk about these varied abilities. But I am realizing I am not far behind. It seems to be something all educators are trying to constantly get a handle on, to speak about in the kindest most complimentary way.

To think that “diverse abilities” was the preferred term to use when I started a year ago, and now it’s students with barriers to employment (which is more central to what our course is). I have talked with students who did not like the term “diverse abilities”. I asked them what they preferred and they said adaptive better. I am not quite sure how it’s used in a sentence, perhaps I would say “I teach an adaptive group of students”. I would say that sounds really positive. The key here is that we honour the students for their abilities, not DIS-abilities. They are so very capable in many different ways as you and me reading this. They aren’t – The deaf. They are “People who are blind”. They are not “wheelchair bound” but “use a wheel chair”.

It makes me think about the many names we use for indigenous. We started with natives, it moved to aboriginal and now we are onto indigenous. Talking with friends I learned they didn’t like the aboriginal usage (what I grew up saying) because nobody wants to be Ab-normal, which is so similar. So we now use the correct term indigenous. 

It’s so important to give words and meaning some thought. Think, in England if you call somebody a C*unt. It’s an endearing, friendly, joking term. Here in Canada if you say that to somebody in the same way as the English, you’re in big big trouble. So yes context is extremely important to get right. Just to clarify that the video above is an example of how not to talk with students or anybody!

https://www.brown.edu/campus-life/support/accessibility-services/resources-teaching-students-disabilities/appropriate-terminology

Brown University. (n.d.). Appropriate Terminology, retrieved May 20, 2022, from https://www.brown.edu/campus-life/support/accessibility-services/resources-teaching-students-disabilities/appropriate-terminology

 

Assignment #1

Reflective Writing Assignment#1

My Brief Autobiography

Here’s a brief autobiography about me.

This blog can go all sorts of ways. I could talk about my journey of joy in life, talk about my childhood, talk about high school, talk about my adult life, talk about goals I have achieved in life.

I think for the case of the course, I will do what I believe is “on topic” and talk about what led me to the PIDP.

As a before hand, I will state, that as soon as I took English 12 in high school, I realized I never wanted to do a paper ever again in my life. I actually still feel this way however I find a blog less terrible. No topic statement, hook line etc… Just spewing out words…. No novelist here.

I was smart enough to know that I should go to college, and found myself debating either electrical or welding. I always took trades in high school so all I had to do was decide between the two. Electrical won because I didn’t want to get even worse skin so…. it was decided.

I took my Electrical ticket in Kamloops BC. It was wonderful. Trades school is super affordable, a nice balance between work and school, raises every year and you get to stay fit at work.

Throughout my electrical career (Im only 35) I worked at many places. Thats the way of the trades. I worked in Vancouver when I started, then moved back to Kamloops and worked at a mine. I spent time working up north, bopping around Kamloops doing solar, and doing side jobs in my own time. It’s been an amazing career that has opened many doors.

I ended up have two little girls and staying home with them. I was still always “working”, but by that it was side jobs I could do at night, or woodworking projects I could sell in my spare time. No actual on the books jobs or need to sign up for childcare.

Fast forward to a couple years ago, and I was given an amazing offer to work at TRU. I signed my youngest up for daycare, and began down the path to my new career.

It’s been rewarding. I teach a great group of students yearly. There’s only room for growth for them. I also love that I get to still use tools some days. I still do have a passion for the trades and will always be looking for ways to add them more into my course.

Thanks for reading

This work by Janessa Boomhour is marked with CC0 1.0. To view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0

 

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