angela’s blog

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Weekly Reflections: Week Four with Kirsten Pierce

Today our class invited a guest speaker named Kirsten Pierce. We began by discussing how people learn about nature, touching upon the concept that individuals tend to show less concern for nature that they don’t have firsthand experience with. This highlights the importance of students venturing outdoors to observe the nature that surrounds them. We also discussed the idea of a “two-eyed lens.” This essentially means thinking about concepts in a broader way, such as thinking about what the concept means to ourselves but also thinking about what meaning it could hold for others in different contexts. Instead of looking at things from a single lens or single point of view, we broaden our perspective and consider other perceptions as well.

We also discussed the relationship between technology and the development of eco-literacy. Some technology that I’m familiar with would be stargazing apps. I’m familiar with this because my friends would often argue about which constellation is which or whether a bright dot is a star or a planet. I am also familiar with native-land.ca, which is a website that I used to help determine what Indigenous land I live on. Kirsten showed us many more resources, such as LeafSnap Plant Identification, Rock Identifier: Stone ID, Moon Phases and Lunar Calendar, Minecraft, and a few more.

Weekly Reflections: Week Three with Rich McCue

This week our class was taught by Rich McCue. For the first bit of the class, we were taught about educational videos and some of the science behind them. One point that arose was that people will remember less content from a digital presentation if the words spoken are also written on the presentation slides. This concept was taught to me in my early years of high school while I was enrolled in the project-based learning program, and I feel that it is an inherently obvious fact. If you look at a company like Apple giving a presentation on their new iPhone, you’ll note that they don’t display blocks of text on the screen because they know it won’t catch the audience’s interest. Similarly, TED talks use a giant presentation screen that often projects visuals that relate to what the presenter is saying. I am glad that future teachers are being taught about memorable presentations since it means that fewer students will have to sit through lessons where the instructor reads points off of a slideshow that the learners could just read themselves.

For the lab component of the class, we were introduced to a screen capture application which we could use to create an educational video. I thought this was a nice application since it is versatile and easily accessible from my web browser. It also allowed me to choose whether I wanted to capture just my browser tab or my whole desktop screen, which is versatility that I appreciate. I already use a screen capture application on my desktop at home, but this new application called Screencastify seems like a good option for my laptop.

Here is the video that I made:

It was just a quick experimentation type of thing, so the quality isn’t spectacular. I still put effort into the editing and video creation, but I could do much better if I were in a quiet setting with a proper microphone.

Free Inquiry Progress Update

These past two weeks I have been growing more familiar with sheet music. In our music class, we were introduced to the music note alphabet which consists of the letters A, B, C, D, E, F and G. We completed a few worksheets where we were tasked with writing the letter underneath the music note. I found it challenging to try and memorize all the letters, so I made a visual legend to look back on each time I needed help:

I find these notes very confusing, and I was struggling to find a method to remember them until my classmates mentioned a few acronyms, such as Every Good Boy Deserves Fudge. This refers to each line on sheet music, starting from the bottom and rising up. For the gaps, I can use the acronym FACE which starts from the bottom and rises up. As for the ones outside of the lines, I am confused and I need to ask around for some help. I know of one acronym, All Cows Eat Grass, but I am confused still.

I am beginning to think about how I can begin making sense of the sheet music that I have for my ending song. I asked a few of my classmates who have experience in piano playing and they told me that I could write down the music note letters on the sheet music to make the learning process a bit easier. I will still need to understand which notes on the piano are which, but this small step will make it a smoother process. I may end up also writing the beats down, although by now I feel very comfortable with the beat system and enjoy counting them. By the end of this, I hope to be able to play the song without the music note letters written down.

Reflection Week 3: Online Behavior

As a person who works in pedagogy, I have long since been informed by my mentors that I must be mindful of my online presence. I have always been weary of my actions in public and somewhat careful of my posts online. In 2022, I began posting gaming clips on TikTok which I enjoyed and continue to enjoy even now. I also began livestreaming on Twitch and TikTok where I’ve made a small community of friends. While I’m gaming, my language isn’t necessarily PG, and I was concerned that this would negatively affect my career in teaching, however, I can’t get in trouble if I never get caught 😈.

On the internet I am known by an array of names and most are not my real name. When I search my full name on google, I am met with nothing relevant to me. When I search my full name and ‘Vancouver,’ my blog from PLP is the first result, which is relevant to me but not harmful in any way. When I scrolled further, I found my BC Diving Provincial results PDF, which is also beneficial if anything. When I clicked images, I found a picture of myself that I uploaded to my blog:

This image does not concern me in any way and I think that it displays my photoshop expertise nicely.

When I searched ‘angela chirico vancouver bc,’ I am also met with nothing, apart from an ID finder website. When I scroll down far enough here, I am able to find my instagram account. This makes me wonder if changing my username may be a good idea, since if I remove my full name it would be more difficult for others to scout me out online.

If you believe that you could risk your teaching career, then why post? Is it really worth it?

In my opinion, it is. On my Tiktok, I edit content into something that I’m proud of (most of the time) and I enjoy looking back on this collection that I have of funny little videos. It makes me happy that other people on the internet have been able to enjoy my little videos as well, and I’m grateful to have a platform to display my creativity on. Streaming and editing is a hobby I’ve come to enjoy over the past few years and I hope that I can continue to enjoy it for however long that I wish to.

Free Inquiry: Learn Piano

For my free inquiry project, I’ve decided to learn how to play the piano. This will be a process in which I first learn how to read music, identify keys on the piano and then from there I can learn a song. To start myself off, I’ve studied basic music notes and am beginning to familiarize myself with timing. Here is an indicator of what I have been looking at:

I’ve wanted to learn how to read music since I was sixteen years old but I never took it upon myself to do so. Instead, I preferred memorizing how to play piano songs by muscle memory. That seemed like less work at the time, but was a very confusing and frustrating process. I have two playlists on Spotify that are full of piano songs that I enjoy listening to and that I want to learn. From these songs, I’ve decided that my end goal will be to play Sadness and Sorrow from the Naruto soundtrack. I feel quite anxious about learning how to read music, but I also look forward to the freedom it will give me when I am finally capable of learning in a way that makes sense.

My classmate Gina* told me to use my strengths to help me through this process. She said that I can use my knowledge of tech to design visual indicators that can help me to remember which key is which. I could also try video editing to reflect on the chords and suchlike. I don’t own a piano, but there are some in the music room at UVIC and a keyboard in the school’s library that I can practice on. I am very much a learn-while-doing type of learner, but I also can get emotional when I struggle to understand concepts. Throughout this process, I need to remember to keep calm and enjoy myself.

*Gina is a fake name that I am using in place of my classmate’s first name. As we learned from our internet safety talk last class, it is best to maintain others’ privacy as much as possible.

Reflection 2: Most Likely to Succeed

I love talking to my STEM friends about homework. While they’re assigned labs and are stressed about midterms, I get to watch a film related to teaching and reflect on it. My little brother is in his second year of engineering at UBC and he can’t even leave the house, poor thing. He comes home from lectures and does homework until midnight, every weekday. His weekends are spent doing homework from morning until night. I hope it pays off one day.

As I briefly mentioned above, our task this week was to watch the film called Most Likely to Succeed. In brief, this is a documentary style film that examines a high school that has implemented different styles of education that contradict the traditional secondary classroom. I was enrolled in a program that followed this same idea of education, where we learn how to use technology and our work is project-based. I did the program back in 2016/2017 so it may have changed over the years, you can read more about it here. In my experience, most of my projects involved me cramming things together at the last minute and pulling all-nighters before exhibition day. I would tie my hair up in a disgusting bun for the week and spend every spare hour working on my creation. I would aspire to do many things for my projects but was often incapable of following through with my big ideas. My perfectionism focus also made me struggle with time-management. For instance, I remember constructing a model of a diving board that had something like a sensor which would sense when someone was about to hit it, and it could retract (or something). Unfortunately, I procrastinated this project until the last minute and was unable to complete a poster board for the display, meaning that there was a 3D model placed on a table where I stood with no visual story and nothing to draw guests in.

Attending the POL meetings with the teachers afterwards was usually a nerve-wracking experience. The criticism was difficult, especially when I knew that I hadn’t done all that I could have done for my projects. Watching Brian go through the same process that I had gone through made me nervous for him because I feared that he would be harshly criticized. Brian’s meeting went differently from mine, however. While I remember being faced with disappointment, Brian’s teacher’s acknowledged his strengths, saying, “One of the things that is special about you is that you’re a visionary person, and we do not want to hammer that out of you.” This phrase made me tear up because I can relate to Brian as a visionary person and having a teacher acknowledge this is incredibly meaningful.

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