Monday, October 6, 2014

Factors for effective learning

So I give up! I made it halfway! The 100 days of learning still continue but the documentation through daily blogging has fizzled out. I have my notes, scribbled all around, with the hope that I will some day document my learning experiences but realistically speaking that is a long long way off! So I have decided to go with the flow and update whenever I can. Blogging...like religion and social media, is created by us humans to better our lives and should not be dictating our lives in exchange. Quite certain about that! 

In the last few weeks, some of the mini lessons that I have enjoyed are to do with Maths and the Arts. The more I re-discover Maths, I am convinced about Maths being a part of the Arts. I have watched a number of videos, tried to find patterns in things around me and listened to Mathsartists. I loved this TED talk on the Magic of Fibonacci numbers . I would love to return back to the classroom to share my new-found love with children. Will definitely try it if I can with the senior grades if I get a chance/time. 

One of the things that I am happy about was the way we followed up with the Maths workshop at school. Some staff were kind enough to share their experiences in the staff meeting and we managed to pull together lessons from different year levels. It was good to see how teachers were using their experiences and learning to run inquiry lessons in Year 1, 3 and 4. The good part about the sharing was that it inspired more staff to share their work. I am happy receiving emails now where staff members are keen to share their work with the rest. This bodes well for a positive school culture.

I often examine and re-examine my role at work. I enjoy leadership but I am still growing and finding my balance. I am conscious that I am moving from a managerial view of leadership to that of leading and capacity building. Read an intensely thought provoking blog post re curriculum design by Grant Wiggins, who never fails to amaze me with his astute observations. His blog post on Curriculum leaders not managers raises a number of questions and throws the reader into an uncomfortable position. 

I have now looked at a number of models PBL, Inquiry-based curriculum, Genius Hour (http://www.geniushour.com/), iTime, etc. and I have done a number of class visits as well as self-reflections. For any of these models to be successful, the teachers HAVE to learn to read and understand the curriculum and be comfortable in letting it go! A well- written curriculum is vital for the new staff but it needs much more than classroom management and curriculum delivery to develop successful learning engagements for children. 

Empathetic relationships with children and their families, hunger for learning and 'listening' to/reading the current contexts, in my view are three very important factors for successful teaching and learning. 

I have not heard of and cannot imagine a successful classroom where the teacher leaves the children as soon as she/he comes out of the classroom. Most often than not a teacher's students are 'my children'. Every year teachers talk of how good this batch is and how we'll never have a batch this good again! And yet, every year we get connected to the new bunch and take pride in their success and feel hurt at their failures. Empathetic relations are important to understand children's contexts and the hurdles as well as possibilities in their learning journeys. The weekend recounts, the little stories during class conversations, the show and tell sessions, the text to self connections during guided reading, the characters they build in narrative writing, the way they talk to their friends, adults, the way they respond on stage, to questions, to open-floor opportunities, all help in building the stories of the children in class. Parent-teacher meetings, emails, communication and meeting parents in a social context helps complete the picture. The important role of the educator then, is not to judge the context but build on and through it. 

Hunger for learning... I cannot repeat this enough. The hungry teacher is effective! Teachers are greedy beings, usually! A new resource probably generates equal excitement in the teacher as a pay rise! Ok, now I am exaggerating but just a little. All teachers love collecting teaching resources. But then there are those that are on a constant lookout for research, for new developments and new strategies as well. They regularly read, upgrade, up-skill and are on a constant lookout for what works well in other classes. They modify, better and apply their learning in their own classrooms as they sift through myriads of information they find on the net, in their colleagues' rooms, in staffroom conversations, in journals and magazines and believe it or not even through staff meetings! They can be viewed as over competitive, energy-driven and in Indian lingo called 'enthu-cutlets'! What I find fascinating about these teachers is that their enthusiasm for learning gets modelled in their teaching. It transfers into their students subliminally. When a student shares a new information the sense of wonderment and curiosity is as evident in the teacher as the other students. This helps build a culture of learning. Students are bound to thrive in such classroom cultures.

Last but not the least important is the listening to or reading the context. The knowledge component of the written curriculum has a lag, simply because the world is changing too rapidly! It is important to read/listen to the context. While the basic understanding of the skills in language and maths including reading, writing and maths operations remain important, the once considered essential components of the disciplines are rapidly changing. Being aware of those changes is equally important as being aware of the written curriculum. And how does one do that?

For one.... develop the hunger for learning! More to come..thoughts galore in my head!















Monday, September 15, 2014

Days 42 - 50 - Additional Language Learners

It's been a good eight days or perhaps more, not having documented my learning journey through this blog. Having said that, I have not really abandoned the project but was unable to use the time effectively due to some extra commitments.

One of my biggest learning during these eight days has been about Additional Language (AL) learners. I have met teachers, additional language learners and concerned parents who want their children to pick up the language but don't know how to support them. 

Last week I attended a meeting of the AL teachers and one of the most interesting things that I learnt there was that every single Language quote in Mandarin is not attributed to Confucius! OK, I am exaggerating, I do know that! Just that I could not resist laughing when the presenter shared a quote which was assumed to be that of Confucius and she said "Not all Chinese quotes belong to Confucius!" It is typical to have Chinese associated with Confucius. It is an easy reference, easy assumption.....perhaps because we don't know better. In my view we don't have much understanding of the Chinese culture and the embedded, inherent values that go with it. 

I have been preparing for an interview about International Mindedness by a professor in the University of Melbourne. I have been trying to work on some of the questions that he is going to ask me. One of the questions is "What is the best indicator of international mindedness?" I have been reflecting on it since the last few days and my best response is that the best evidence of international mindedness would be when an Asian teacher would be able to bring his/her pedagogy with pride at the same table as a Western teacher and both would be able to draw upon the best practices from each others' cultures. For now, the balance is extremely skewed and the Asian staff (more so the mandarin staff) is particularly restricted to taking pride only in its culture and supporting lessons which do not encompass the vast pedagogical practices which are an inherent part of that culture. 

This might sound strange because I am a strong believer in the inquiry-based pedagogy. However, it bothers me that we might be losing a strong culture of learning because those cultures are losing pride in their practices. If we are truly international-minded we should be examining their beliefs, values and cultural norms before applying a standard fit of inquiry to their pedagogies. It is a challenge to all leaders in the authentic international contexts.

I have taken the role of helping facilitate the AL teachers interest group. As always, I realise that the more I work to train/facilitate teachers, the deeper my understanding becomes. The new research paper from the IB gives an interesting insight into the AL learning. More than anything it is simply gratifying to read that the challenges are felt across the community, particularly with languages that are considered to be 'not very useful'. 

This brings me to the stress families undergo in regards to AL learning. Whether the parents are getting a child to learn a language due to its usability in real-life contexts (eg talking to grandparents, using the language for business, etc.) or usability to pass the exam requirement, the challenges remain similar. (I am now planning a workshop on this for parents.)  

One of the key things is for schools to rethink their AL philosophy. Mother tongue versus AL is great; however for a number of nationalities English has now become a naturally acquired language. It can have a tinge of the local lingo and accents to become Aussie English, English English, American English, Hinglish, Singlish etc but it does come naturally to many because they are immersed in it. In addition, Mother tongue in many cases does become literal.... it is what the parents use amongst themselves but their children have no context as they are speaking English. 

How does a child in such a case learn the language? 

More reading needs to be done, however one thing that is clear is for teachers and parents to develop an interest in the AL and make the context for use, relevant for the learner to get motivated. 

More to come.......

Monday, September 8, 2014

Day 41 - Balance in teaching and learning

The weekend's given me some time to reflect on my Maths PD. I particularly liked the fact that the workshop leader talked about a balance in the curriculum, citing research acknowledging the place for procedural fluency, adaptive reasoning, conceptual understanding, strategic competence and productive disposition in maths teaching and learning. The ACER research gives this in detail.

Today I read the article on John Hattie's visit to Alberta - Key to better education. His statements provide an interesting alternate view on constructivist approach. I quote
"The personalized, discovery style of teachers can work, but only after students have accumulated the right amount of knowledge so they’re ready to dig in deeper, Hattie says. “I have no trouble with all the constructivism notions at the right time, but if they dominate, I think they miss the point completely.”

In his book Five Minds for the future Howard Gardener talks about the necessity for students to master the information within the major disciplines like maths. He talks about the disciplined mind that needs to retain information that may not necessarily be intuitive. He also talks of synthesizing and creative minds that need to be cultivated along with respectful and ethical minds.

All above resonate with what experienced teachers have been doing all this while - providing the right balance in the curriculum. The PYP talks about the concepts, knowledge, skills (in the new model skills is replaced by approaches to teaching and learning), attitudes and action and it is again vital to ensure that there is a balance in these components.

Pleased with the learning that validates my own approach towards teaching and learning.


Sunday, September 7, 2014

Day 37 to day 40 - A myriad of experiences and learning!

So I haven't been able to update my learning days for a while now. Last week was super hectic at work but some beautiful gems came my way as a result. 

An intense school certification visit ended on a great deal of learning. Not only did I learn more about my work, I learnt more about myself, how I behave under pressure, how it affects my physical being and how it affects me mentally. It was funny how this 100 days of learning made me look at myself with a lens, from a separate plain as I was going through the daily motions. I realised that I need to eat extra healthy, keep extra reminders to keep breathing normally as my breathing becomes shallow when I am under stress. It was good to have my work friends and colleagues drop into my office to keep checking on me........ relationships matter.... a lot, more so in times of absolute busy-ness! 

Some of the major learning during this visit was the technical vocabulary used by other departments. I had heard the terms scheduled, preventive and predictive maintenance before; however, this was the first time they made some sort of sense to me. (Esp, after having googled them!) I quote from wikipedia!
  • An individual bought an incandescent light bulb. The manufacturing company mentioned that the life span of the bulb is 3 years. Just before the 3 years, the individual decided to replace the bulb with a new one. This is called preventive maintenance.
  • On the other hand, the individual has the opportunity to observe the bulb operation daily. After two years, the bulb starts flickering. The individual predicts at that time that the bulb is going to fail very soon and decides to change it for a new one. This is called predictive maintenance.
  • The individual ignores the flickering bulb and only goes out to buy another replacement light bulb when the current one fails. This is called corrective maintenance.

Wow!

This week I met an interesting guy. He reminded me of myself because he was bursting with ideas, had loads of energy (which his continuous cans of coke added to!) and was ready to take on the world..... then and there! I also realised the effect he was having on people around him. It reminded me again of the need to keep a reign on ideas and read the group which is to implement the change and the ideas. The pace of change needs to be in sync with the understanding as well as the energy levels of the group the change is going to be applied on. It will be interesting to see how we lead the change. 

The mooncake festival at school was another reminder of the cultural diversity I have the privilege of experiencing at very close quarters. While the Hofstede's cultural dimensions have opened my eyes to the possibilities, the habit of constant reflection and analysis now helps me to see beyond these dimensions. I am particularly intrigued at the changing facets of these dimensions with the changing demographics, education, English proficiency and the third culture seeping in. This needs a deeper reflection, observation, more reading and perhaps a PhD! If only it wasn't this expensive!

The most enjoyable learning I had this week was through my professional development course on mathematics. I have always been interested in maths but this session was absolutely brilliant. The workshop leader provided us with some amazing maths challenges and I particularly fell in love with Pascal's triangle! I also loved the website http://nrich.maths.org/frontpage which provides excellent open-ended maths inquiries for learners. My colleague and I started a particular activity and we just couldn't let go. This is going to be Micky and my favourite site for a while now, knowing his love for maths!

Happy with the very productive week in terms of work and learning. :)

















Wednesday, September 3, 2014

Day 36 - Sustainable Ganesh Chaturthi

I have always enjoyed Ganesh Chaturthi, particularly the singing and the food! I have not had many occasions to go to houses that set up the Ganesh idols for the festivities but whatever few I have had, have been wonderful.

Having said that, I get very concerned when the festival cycle comes to an end and devotees happily immerse the colourful idols of Ganesh in lakes or rivers. I feel very concerned at the environmentally un-friendly way of bidding goodbye to the god and immersing plaster of paris idols with the accompanying fabric/plastic/metal etc in our  water bodies. 

I decided to research on the impact of the festival in our water bodies. The only data I could get  was some references to a study done by the Central Pollution Control Board. I haven't been able to corroborate it and do not know the validity of this source. (http://www.dnaindia.com/mumbai/report-ganesh-visarjan-how-it-impacts-our-environment-1887519), however this seems to be the only one readily available on a google search. Anyway... 

A related study on lakes by CPCB in 2010 found that:
The acid content in the waters increased
The TDS (Total Dissolved Solids) increased by a 100%
The Dissolved Oxygen content increased during the day due to the agitation of waters during immersion and reduced at night when organic discharge increased
The heavy metal content sampling showed a ten fold increase in metals such as iron, while copper content in the sediments increased by 200 to 300%. 

The point is that immersing an idol made of non-biodegradable material, with paints which may have harmful chemicals, does not make the human society better, which in my opinion is the intention or the rationale of all religions and religious festivities. 

I celebrate Ganesh Chaturthi but do not set up an idol separately for the occasion. If I would I would definitely make it with flour or clay, the old-fashioned way, which is certainly more sustainable. (We need to stick to the old traditions our previous generations had... they were in harmony with the environment.) 

I received this interesting new take on Ganesh Chaturthi from a friend on whatsapp which has been my learning for the day.

So this idol has been made using 28 kilos of chocolate. The person who made this kept it for the celebrations and then in the end, immersed it in milk (instead of the water bodies) and distributed the milk in the local orphanage. How sweeeet is that? :)

I love the creativity and comparative sustainability of this project. More power to such creative genes and may the celebrations continue! Happy happy everyone!






Monday, September 1, 2014

Day 35 - Of Darwin and Maslow!

So a dear friend tagged me on his post today and we somehow managed to reach the topic of survival. He mentioned how we were brought up with the concept of survival related to the basic food, clothes and shelter and how he disagreed with the concept. 

So I googled the definition of survival 'the state or fact of continuing to live or exist, typically in spite of an accident, ordeal, or difficult circumstances.'

This brought me to think that survival at each state of Maslow's hierarchy changes its lens. 


Retrieved from: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maslow's_hierarchy_of_needs on 1/9/2014

At a very basic level, you need the food, water, air, etc. for survival. As you go higher your survival becomes kind of 'high-profile'. The need for love, belonging, self-esteem becomes so high that the world seems worthless if that doesn't happen. The need at that time becomes so high that it can impact the survival of a being. Depression may result due to the absence of these needs, and affect the physiological strata ultimately.

Of course, there are variations across age groups, times, cultural influences and even other models. I guess survival and the definition of 'difficult circumstances' both are relative. 

Not bad a reflection based on a FB chatter! 






Saturday, August 30, 2014

Day 34 - Understanding by Design and Socratic Seminar

I am a recent Twitter convert and one of the educators I follow is Grant Wiggins. His Understanding by Design model has influenced the IB inquiry model. Yesterday I read one of his recent posts comparing the PBL, Inquiry etc with Ubd.

I enjoy the Grant Wiggins Blog and I particularly liked this statement yesterday. Quote. 
'understanding is dependent upon drawing inferences by oneself – as well as testing and justifying those inferences – if only to question or verify claims made by the teacher, other students, or authors. Otherwise, it is rote learning with no thinking behind it.'
Unquote
I also picked up the phrase that I have often read, Socratic seminar. After a few minutes of Google I got an interesting read on how a Socratic Seminar can be run for teaching and learning. 

Now just waiting for an opportunity to try it! :)


Friday, August 29, 2014

Day 33 - TGIF! CMP

TGIF!

Lazy evening with yummy take away dinner from Jaggi's. Tummy and head sated, I watched the Food Network where I learnt a new recipe - the CMP Dessert! The dessert is a decadent treat guaranteed to give you a sensational sugar rush!

So CMP stands for Chocolate, Marshmallow, Peanuts recipe! But the recipe I watched was as follows..........


Take a dessert glass.
Add a scoop of vanilla icecream or butterscotch. (My take on it.)
Add a generous spoonful of chocolate ganache.
Top with sweet crushed peanuts.
Add a spoonful of melted marshmallows.
Top it up with shattered sugar glass thin.

Now take a  long dessert spoon and dig through the layers. Mess it up as you pull out the spoon with the gooey, crunchy, sweet, salty, cold and hot CMP Dessert!

Hmmmmm............. now to try a GF, Vegan version!

Happy Friday!

Thursday, August 28, 2014

Day 32- Star Trek and Student Leaders

I love Star Trek! Was watching it this evening in a sort of a zombie mode after a tiring day at work.. I always enjoy watching Captain Picard at his leadership best. He inspires. He runs his ship with intensity and passion and his crew is equally passionate and committed. All characters are great but the two of my absolute favourites are the graceful Counsellor Troi and the real cute Data. 


I love the concepts of Data and Troi. A ship/ an organisation needs both to run -  data and intuition. And this somehow relates to my post yesterday. One needs intuition to get a feel of the culture, the people, the change, the happenings. However one needs data to corroborate the intuition.

On that note, I received a photo of three of our ex-students this morning. Two of the mums sent it to me, separately. All three children, who have been my students in the past were chosen Student Leaders by their respective home room classes today. It was a beautiful, proud moment! I wasn't the only one. We had other teachers who had supported their learning journeys and each one of us took  pride and pleasure in the news when I shared it at the staff meeting today.  Their parents have been incredible, trusting the children and the teachers, and today they even bothered to share this news and celebrate with us in spite of having left school. 

So where does it link in?

I intuitively believe that my small little school with its big heart does a great job of teaching and learning. We hone the children, we give them the opportunities and we invest in them much more than some of the big schools with big resources. We invest ourselves and that makes the difference. The feeling is more intuitive than data based at the moment. However, when three of a class of 20 make it to leadership positions at the same time, in different class contexts, there is something more than coincidence.


Happy chappy! :)



Wednesday, August 27, 2014

Day 31 - Perception, Attention, Perspectives, Data and Reality

I watched an interesting TED talk by Apollo Robbins on the Art of Misdirection. TED Talk - Apollo Robbins
This man is hailed as the world's best pickpocket and what more he actually demonstrates this art on the TED stage! As I watched his video, I realised that he was creating perceptions which were very real to my mind. I (along with the audience) was convinced that I 'knew' what he was doing.... till it turned out wrong when he shared how he was mis-directing us intentionally.

This reminded me of a conversation I had with a friend who was convinced about something whereas I wasn't. But she was firm in her perceptions, as was I. Obviously both of us had contexts that we had experienced without the other so we were quite firm with our perceptions and thus our perspectives!

The misdirection video brought back to light how perceptions can become reality for us. Till the master guy/performer doesn't open his or her cards, these perceptions are there to stay. What more, our actions are based on them. These perceptions and realities can make us unhappy or happy. After having done my 100 days of happiness I have come to the conclusion that I would prefer to keep my perceptions if they give me happiness. This doesn't mean that I'd like to stay in oblivion, however it does mean that I will not dig too deep for the truth if my sense of reality is a happy state. For example, if I have the perception that my daughter's friends find me cool, I am not going to dig too hard and ask them how they find me cool, why they find me cool, etc.! On a more serious note, if I perceive that the staff does not share ideas with me, I would be unhappy and definitely dig deeper into the reasons as well as my perceptions.

So how do we know? I guess one of the best ways is to remain open-minded to the fact that your perceptions (and thus the actions/perspectives) can be wrong. Listen to the other people (you trust). Find for yourself. Talk to the related stakeholders. Communicate your sense of reality. Watch, listen (around and to yourself), think  and communicate.

 Secondly, learn to be attentive and seek data. I am getting more and more convinced about mapping the data.........accurately! An interesting thing happened with my new found love for data.

So in the last few weeks, I felt that my helper was getting in what we euphemistically term "Contract coming to an end mode". She wasn't waking up in the mornings on time. My tea was always late and then I was late and then we both had a grumpy morning. We tried putting an alarm bell for her, which didn't work due to the acoustics. One week was particularly bad when she just didn't wake up to the 3 alarms she set up in the mornings almost daily! Micky complained the same and he is generally the quiet kinds so I felt that it was action time. After a grave discussion without any conclusion, I decided to map and actually note the days she couldn't wake up. The results were interesting. Mondays were particularly bad (The Sunday off is tiring with her Volleyball commitments). For the rest of the week, she managed to wake up on three days on an average for three weeks. I shared this with her which did wonders! It also helped me come back to senses that she doesn't always do it! (which was my firm perception for a while). It helped me realise why the Mondays were as they were.

Data is useful. However, to seek  that data you need to ensure that you are attentive. The Art of Misdirection video certainly brought home the importance of attentiveness. The Project Zero Making Thinking Visible routine Looking 10 x 2 is a useful tool to hone attentiveness and the power of observation in learners. Art of Thinking -Project Zero

The more you hone the power of observation, the more you are attuned to the power of data, the closer your perceptions are to reality!

(Wow!This is a deep reflection today! Either this is completely relevant or the fever is playing games with my thoughts and words! If you read this and reach the end, please let me know your comments! :) Thanks.)










Tuesday, August 26, 2014

Day 30 - Motivated by bigger purpose

I read an article heading about how a bigger purpose can motivate students to learn. Well, I was about to mentally shrug it off as something I already know.............Yes, we do look at the purpose of learning. Yes, we do understand that children need big ideas to get motivated for meaningful and purposeful inquiries.

However, I didn't shrug it off because it was tweeted by Kath Murdoch - the guru of inquiry learning. So off I went to read the blog which I found interesting. How a Bigger Purpose can motivate students Blog

I found the research interesting and it made me think of one of the debates/discussions my husband and I often have on homework and what constitutes meaningful homework for children.

I will not post my learning for the day but my questions for the day.
  • How  much homework is enough?
  • What should it look like?
  • Who is responsible to give, to complete, to monitor homework? Why?
  • What makes skill and drill homework bad if there is a place for skills in the curriculum?
  • What makes the 'thinking' homework good if the thinking does not get scaffolded, challenged or even monitored?
  • The research says homework does not help. What context was the research done in?What is the current status of that society- economically and socially? Can the context be transferred? Should the context be transferred? 
  • How should the definition of homework change with the needs of the cohort of the children and the strata they come from?  (My Aunt taught in a rural area school and the 'homework' the children had to do was to cure leather to make shoes as that was their sole source of income. Should that not have been a valued component of practical skills development?)
  • What is the measurement of success? 
The article about bigger purpose motivating children to learn resonates with me and yet it poses many questions. I am particularly provoked by this paragraph..quote
"Yet, he added, it isn’t practical or possible to render every lesson or assignment in K-12 “super fun and game-y” for kids — and even if it were, doing so could be a disservice to them later. What would they do when they get to law school and are faced with having to memorize long lists of laws? Or when they land a job that calls for mastering information that no one has “gamefied” to make it exciting to learn." Unquote.

I guess at a Primary school level we are still looking for the right balance for the right context and the right needs..... and when we find our feet the context changes again in the rapidly changing world. Having said that if a purposeful mindset motivates children, service learning should be an essential part of the curriculum. 

The learning continues as Kath Murdoch continues to provoke directly and indirectly! 




Monday, August 25, 2014

Day 29 - Maths class with loose materials

Day 29 - I went into a class this afternoon to talk to a teacher, who was rather excited with a number carpet on the floor. Teachers must be the most amazing, simple human beings who can get happy on seemingly mundane things like a carpet with the hopscotch boxes with numbers 1 to 10 on it. Anyway, the teacher was excited to tell me how she had made big sponge dices for children to roll and then jump on the number that rolled up with the dice.  And then she pulled a face saying that that did not happen. 

I waited for the story to continue... because this teacher is an amazing educator who constantly improves, looks out and facilitates open-ended inquiries. 

Her face suddenly broke into a smile as she described what her students did instead. Her classroom has many 'loose parts', open-ended materials and one of the mini baskets (Daiso 2$ cane baskets) had an assortment of paper cut-outs, foil pieces, feathers etc. Children used them to create a pattern on the number carpet! 1 feather for box with the number 1; 2 scrap papers for the box with number 2..... and so on! What a beautiful way for children to show their understanding of numbers!

Student-initiated, student-centric, student-led activity that the students enjoyed! Of course, she took no time in quickly documenting this learning through her iPad. Small yet big thrills of a teacher's daily life!

How did this happen? A combination of all factors come in  mind.
Her classroom facilitated collaborative learning. Children felt comfortable to explore and reach out.
She was "listening" to the children and was able to identify quickly when the children did not get interested in the dice.
The image of the child in her pedagogical belief was that of the children being competent, capable learners who have independent access to the learning material around them. They are able to use the materials competently to build as well as demonstrate their understanding.
She was open-minded with her own set of beliefs and though she introduced the dice activity, she did not impose it upon the children as the only right way.
She was respectful towards the children and most importantly believed in them.

Her enthusiasm was contagious. I came up to my office and reflected upon the learning in her class.  I remembered the time I had asked my Year 3 students to show me the times tables for 3. How did they know 3X6 was 18? They came up with an array of exciting ways, from using stickers, to leaves arranged in a flower shapes, to using straws in bundles, to using popsicle sticks in piles. What I still remember distinctly was a fascinating way in which a student deviced a musical instrument with straws of different lengths in groups of three. As he blew into the straws, the sounds differed (which became another inquiry!). It happened by chance as he was trying to tape the straws up and his friend remarked that it looked like a peruvian instrument he had at home. 

I got reminded of this incident this  morning. The more I thought about it, the more I got fascinated. I looked up 'loose parts' and the possibilities they offer in a classroom.

My learning for the day was that the theory of Loose parts was first proposed by the architect Simon Nicholson who believed that the 'loose parts' empowered creativity. Loose parts are materials that can be moved, carried, combined, taken apart and put back together in a number of ways to build a design or redesign an idea. They don't have a set direction or use and can be used in a combination.Loose parts website

Stones, wooden stumps and sticks, glass pebbles, clay, twigs, leaves, shells, gravel, paper pieces, yarn, wire, pencil shavings, fabric, pebbles, caps, dried beans, seedpods etc can be kept in the classroom as loose materials. Children use these competently to create, extend and demonstrate their understandings. 

I want to try it with adults in the next learning environment. What can we come up with? Will we be able to let go the impositions of our educated minds on ourselves and allow creativity to take course?

That might be a learning for another day!



















Sunday, August 24, 2014

Day 28 - The ALS Ice Bucket Challenge

Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis is a motor neuron disorder, where the neurons controlling the voluntary muscles gradually get affected thus impacting all muscular activity of the patient, gradually and ultimately resulting in death.

I first heard of the dreaded disorder from a friend whose spouse was diagnosed with it. I could not then and I cannot now, imagine the daily dread this lovely couple is going through - physically and emotionally. As the muscles atrophy and start to affect the body slowly but steadily, it ain't just the one person who is affected. The deep-seated feeling of dread of the times to come in my friends' lives, is so hurtful that I can't even bring myself to think of it any further let aside describe it. The first time I heard about it, I decided to shut myself to it. I felt that the less I knew, the more I would be able to stay positive with our conversations and make their times spent with me happier. 

The ALS Ice Bucket challenge has been making the facebook rounds. Came even closer to me as Neetima took on the challenge last evening. My friends, Mihir and Sangeeta made the challenge even more special with this beautifully and meaningfully made video. 

So I decided to read more about the ALS this evening on wikipedia. I still cannot bear to go through the entire wikipedia article as I keep thinking of my friends. However, it sort of helps to know more about the disorder. I think I can now at least support the conversations by understanding the condition a little better, when my friends talk about it with amazing courage. I promise to myself, to be more supportive and help them talk about it whenever they want to. That is the least I can do to support them as a result of this day's learning.

May we learn so much about it that one day we can take the struggle out of it. Till then........ let's spread the awareness. 


Saturday, August 23, 2014

Day 27 - Selfies and selflessness - Mariners' night 2014

A lazy Saturday after the first school week!

Micky and I went to an annual event for mariners. It is an amazing event, which I have always admired in retrospect! Truthfully, when I am there, I fail to appreciate it as much as I do after the event is done and dusted. 

It has to do something with the intense assault on senses - the taste of spicy Indian food - from kebabs to cold cuts that strain to glimpse at their consumer from the deluge of daal makhni and curries piled on copious amounts of rice, with a naan soaking yoghurt somewhere on the plate; the sight of  glitzy Indian women dressed in their fineries; the smells of perfumes mixed with alcoholic pheromones; the sounds of people shouting out conversations over the peppy Indian beats provided by the enthusiastic group of folks who dance, sing and take on the roles of the DJ; and the happy hugs of friends and acquaintances that grow in intensity and frequency with the free-flow of spirits! I don't enjoy huge crowds in general and this event grows bigger each year. The yearly increase in membership for this event and association is evident from the change of venue to a bigger hall and the ads of bigger sponsors.

I come here to support hubby's networking as well as to meet my friends and love the idea of dancing to the music at the end of the event. However, any meaningful conversations drown in loud music and the conversation threads break often as networking happens. Hubby and I stand talking with a group of his ex-colleagues when he suddenly catches a glimpse of his batchmate from uni days ten people away and rushes to find him in a crowd of about 2000 people! Good luck, sensible shoes and an incredible amount of physical and social dexterity is needed to navigate in this crowd to find what you are looking for. (I am sure there is also an incentive to lose your spouse conveniently for a while on this pretext!)

I am glad that I have friends to hang around with, in this event. A friend and I stand together for a chat. Since we can't have much of a conversation with  the loud music, I decide to whip out my phone camera and take pictures and selfies. Soon we have more people around us and a group comes together to be a part of the pictures. We catch hold of the nearest cooperative fella to take pics. He conveniently takes a selfie while we are all posing with our smiles. He returns the camera with a cheeky grin! We all groan and ask him to take another pic. The place suddenly appears friendlier and we all introduce ourselves to each other. Phone numbers and pleasantries are exchanged, connections are made, and loads of food and drinks are consumed.  

I have often read about how the Smart phones have impacted the social skills and graces of the younger generation. However, today I realise the possibilities of the Smartphones and Selfies in creating social bonds. It is an instrument of cohesion. An instrument that helps people connect. I like it and that is my learning for the day.

Micky is in the editorial team of the club's magazine (I do have a sense of familiarity with some of the write-ups! :) )and often raves about the phenomenal energy of the club's committee members who invest their heart and souls in running this club on a voluntary basis. I meet these guys every year and each time I marvel at the absolutely passionate and almost philanthropic zeal with which they work for this event. What energises them? Why do they do this? What drives them? Why are these guys so selfless with their time and dedication? The more I think about it, the more it confuses me and the more it impresses me. 

Remembering my favourite researcher Hofstede again....establishing rituals, symbols and heroes help support the core of the values and impact the practices, the culture of a community. The annual event is a beautiful ritual that brings people together, economically, socially and emotionally. The club magazine pages that laud partners' and children's achievements send a loud and clear message of the importance of families in the lives of the community. The core committee members that proudly and enthusiastically go up on stage are the heroes, the people who are committed, dedicated, passionate and zealous about the club. The quiet ones who support from the wings to organise the free flow of food, drinks, fun and edit the event's thick glossy magazine are the unsung heroes (and heroines) who add layers to the culture. The volume of the event and the enthusiasm of the group to open the doors for even more members gives a lovely sense of an inclusive culture. From an all Indian expat crowd in the first event to a crowd with local and expats from other countries in this event, the diversity is expanding. It bodes well for social as well as economic interests. 

We stayed on past midnight and came home tired. As I kicked off my heels I thought of the club members who would be busy wrapping up the event, now and in the days to come; again on a pure voluntary basis. It was humbling. I am glad I went, glad that Micky invested his time and support to this team and I am glad to have met new people. I look forward to the event next year! May the energies, the commitment and the enthusiasm live on! 










Friday, August 22, 2014

Day 26 - Pub and Hofstede - spirited learning indeed

Yesterday was Day 26 of my 100 days of learning - a hectic day which ended at a happy note with my colleagues and friends.
 
Many years ago I went to a workshop on Collaborative Planning and the workshop leader talked about how effective collaborative planning is and what all we need to do at work to promote, instil and sustain a culture of collaboration at school. I was a young leader - starry-eyed and willing to implement all strategies immediately - and learnt the hard way that a team willingness when different to a team leader's willingness, makes any change impossible. Over the years, I have slowed down (some of my work friends might disagree!) and have hopefully become better at implementing change. The work culture needs to be developed and readied for change implementation.
 
I continue to reflect on developing the work culture and yesterday, I couldn't help remembering the workshop, the philosophy, the events of the day and connecting it to my favourite researcher - Hofstede.
 
So it has become a tradition in my workplace to have a staff party at the end of the first or the second week once all the initial year settling down, parent evening and start of year professional development workshops are over. We go in a large group to a particular pub and the newbies to the staff are initiated! It has so happened that in the past five years, we have gone to the same pub and it has gradually turned into an annual tradition. The drinks facilitate the conversations, the bonding, the tears (with the hectic settling down first few weeks there are some), the fun, and an evening of looking at each other as human beings with life!
 
A few of us have been a part of this tradition since the last few years. As I write, I can't help reflecting back on how this annual tradition provides me a rich data of what the year might be like. Reflecting right back, the tradition started with a lovely group of staff - a close and cohesive group of some young expatriate staff members; next year some more joined in; the following year a note was put out in the staffroom... As the years went by, other nationalities and department groups joined in. Two years ago a bubbly colleague decided to hire a mini-van for the occasion each year. It doesn't allow enough seating so groups also go in cabs in masses. It is now an annual tradition of the workplace.  
 
This time spent together in the pub is a valuable 'culture building' occasion. People chat, share personal stories, giggle, laugh, cry, bond and view each other in a different light. We learn about each other, see commonalities, see differences, share the world views and solve all world problems in one go - as drinking buddies often do! We all get spirited (which doesn't necessarily mean drunk!) and after a while the perceived boundaries of being a newbie, being from a different culture or nationality, or language, or department, or age, or even heirarchy ......dissolve! (Alcohol generally is a good solvent!) More importantly, when everyone gets spirited together, it is difficult to remain judgmental, at least for that one occasion, which in turn helps get closer to team building. There are stories to share from the occasion at a later point and times to reminisce about the fun-time together.
 
Traditions at workplaces help build cultures. The symbolism, the rituals of something as simple as going to a particular place after a particular event for all staff becomes an outer core to help strengthen the values and the practices of a workplace. Hofstede's Onion model comes to my mind yet again.
 
Reference: http://laofutze.wordpress.com/2009/08/28/303/ retrieved on 17.08.2014

I enjoy being a part of this particularly because as one ascends professional ladders, one somehow tends to descend the social ones.... not because one wants to but because of lack of time or being locked away in office or simply because of being absent when the plans are being made. I often depend on the mercy of my kind colleagues and friends who remember me and invite me to come along for the outside work events! :)
 
As I write this, I realise that yesterday was wonderful. The diverse group in this annual tradition was much bigger and richer than ever before. Stories were shared, tears were shared, fun was made, fun was had, the connections were strengthened and we all learnt something about each other. 
 
I learned how workplace rituals and traditions reflect and can strengthen work cultures. An important lesson indeed!
 
 
 
 
 
 

Thursday, August 21, 2014

Day 25 - Separation anxiety

I spent the morning talking to a 3 year old about why mums cannot stay at school! With her separation anxiety mounting every second when her mum went out of her sight, she found comfort in the fact that her mum and I were wearing the same colour top, a rich royal blue top. We took a walk around the school as we went on a 'mum hunt'. What a bundle of joy! She chatted about her interests, her favourite food, what her  mum likes to do, different types of birds that she sees around her house and even where she lives........all amongst deep sobs every now and then, with a semi-muted mantra .............."mumma". All went well till she saw her mum again in a corner of the school.
 
Separation anxiety can be huge and from a child's perspective it can almost feel like abandonment! In my teaching career over the years I have read, seen, experienced both as a parent and an educator, learnt and heard about separation anxiety, time and again. This evening, I went on to Google (as most of the times) to see if I could find more strategies to help ease this anxiety in the new children and parents. Helpguide for separation anxiety
 
Hopefully this reading/experiencing and learning will help me convince the little one tomorrow as to why mums cannot stay at school for long.
 
Perhaps it will also depend on how quickly that rich, royal blue top dries up!
 
 
 
 

Wednesday, August 20, 2014

Day 24 - Kath Murdoch Split Screen- lessons from the classroom and life!

Some days are conducive to learning, today being one of them.
 
As the school admin and PYP Coordinator, I seldom get the time to teach students directly. This year I have decided to get back into the classrooms more often. I went to the year 6 classroom this morning to run a mini inquiry on leadership. The Student Representative Council elections are due soon and often the popular kids get the votes, regardless of how the popularity is earned, while some others don't even try because they don't see themselves as leaders. My intention was for children to see that each one had the capacity and the capability for leadership regardless whether they chose to apply for and win the School Captain's positions or not.
 
I tried for the first time the Split Screen strategy that I first heard about in the recent Kath Murdoch workshop I attended.
 
I introduced the split screen concept to the students with 'what we are inquiring into' (content) and 'how are we learning' (process). I had the two areas (content and process) written on a big chart divided into two. It was amazing to see how quickly the students got the concept of the split screen. As I started talking about the 'how we learn' some of the quick thinkers predicted what it would/could be. The more they shared, the more the understanding expanded through the group. I loved it!
 
The provocation provided to the students was the open-ended questions - Why do we need leaders? What qualities should a leader have? What are the responsibilities of a leader? Students were asked to divide themselves into three groups. No parameters were given and students were told that none would be given. The first division they did made a huge group of 12, a group of 10 and a third group of 4 students. As they got ready for their instructions, I asked them if they thought that the groups were balanced and fair. It was good to see most of them being so flexible that the groups came undone completely for a while before they all got adjusted into balanced groups. A good deal of negotiation, decision-making took place which was again a valuable tool for reflection later on. That was a moment for me to refer back to the process- learning behaviours in the split screen.
 
The concepts/questions (reasons/qualities/responsibilities of leaders) were written on three chart papers and the students did a mixed Placemat/ Bus Stop activity. The groups took one area each. They first thought about the concept and wrote their individual views, then they read their peers' ideas and finally discussed it. They rotated to the next area of inquiry and then the third one, where they repeated this. My role at this time was to provide the scaffolding. I read one of the ideas in a group quietly and asked the very quiet student standing next to me, if she understood what her peer had written. She said "Not really. " So I asked her if she should ask that peer to explain. I also talked to a group about asking questions to clarify understanding. My role included behaviour management and to get students to reflect on their learning behaviour with a one on one quick counselling if needed.
 
At the end of this, the three groups needed to choose two members who would present their final ideas to the rest. Again, no parameters were given and the groups negotiated in different ways about who would present it. One group decided on two students because they were the two who volunteered first; another group decided to play scissors, paper, stone and the third group had a discussion and debate on who would present. This was yet another point of reflection for the split screen.
 
I did have another layer of scaffolding for this session. Before the Year 6 students embarked on their leadership inquiry this morning, I had asked the Year 4 and 5 classes to share their ideas of what they would like to see in their Year 6 leaders. I shared this information with the Year 6 students after their presentations. The Year 6 students looked a little surprised when I shared this because though most of them were comfortable with the idea of them taking leadership roles, they did not have the idea that  their junior peers' could have a perspective as well as a voice on their roles. It was interesting to see their looks!
 
We reflected as a class using the Split screen again. We looked at the content learned through the inquiry and we looked at the process used. I was impressed by the children's ability to readily discern between the two and use the Split screen really effectively.
 
The sheets are now displayed in the room. The inquiry is not yet over. Tomorrow, class teachers will run a mini-lesson on Persuasive writing skills and children will then write about why they will be good School Captains and/Vice Captains. This Literacy activity will then be used to develop their communication skills and further presented on stage in front of the Primary school students for elections and voting.
 
I am really pleased with the outcome today. For me the learning was in terms of applying the Split Screen in the Year 6 context. In retrospect, I left gaps and I should have stopped more often as a class to reflect on the process. My mistake was also the assumption that the children would take time to comprehend the Split Screen. Their readiness threw me off, which was also a matter of pride since they could not have developed this had it not been for their teachers who over years of primary/pre-school helped students develop their skills, attitudes and thus their overall profile as learners.
 
So with an inflated sense of pride in my school and an improved sense of how to use the Split Screen, I returned back to some mundane paperwork, when a teacher came to show me her well-earned certificate with her very first free-online workshop on Maths after I had sent her the information about the workshop and encouraged her to go for it. Ego got a tad more inflated!
 
And then I walked out of school to meet an old man who spoke to me for a full five minutes in rapid Malay. I often see this man around and smile and he smiles at me. I had never had a conversation with him before this evening, simply because he didn't speak much English and I spoke no Malay. Today he seemed sad and agitated and kept a rapid-fire conversation up. My first instinct was to smile and go away because I couldn't understand him and felt helpless as well as worried. What if he was asking me for help? What if he was in legal trouble? What if he was angry? What if he felt sad that I couldn't understand or wouldn't help him?  After a fleeting thought with these million questions, I decided to stand there and give him a listening ear. So what if I can't understand much. He probably needs to talk. So I did. After a long five minutes, where he sniffled, he talked, I listened and tried to look sympathetic, he seemed calmer. Either he figured out that I couldn't understand him or he managed to off-load his initial sentiments in regards to something sad that had happened. I suspect it was the latter. As I walked away after a final wave to him, I felt satisfied to an extent. The situation, whatever it was, wasn't sorted but at least I could help listen. That is my new lesson for the day. I will not run away because of my own assumptions (unless instincts warn otherwise!).
 
Finally I got to read about Vandana Shiva of Navdanya. I have always supported Navdanya. With Micky and my passion for the environment, it attracted us with its noble cause of fighting against seed patents. However, I had no idea of this lady being such an eco-warrior! Vandana Shiva in Newyorker
 
Loads to learn and loads to give. I guess, time needs to be organised more efficiently....
 
... and that probably is the most provocative thought for the day!
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Tuesday, August 19, 2014

Day 23 - A new website

Today I came across an interesting website www.curiosity,com
The site shares interesting videos which are excellent provocations for the units of inquiry. My favourite one was on the 25 strangest and unusual buildings in the world. I enjoyed seeing the piano-guitar museum in China and look forward to the completion of rotating tower in Dubai where each floor of the buildings can be rotated! I promptly sent the website to the teachers who would be able to make good use of it during their unit.

Talking of teams, I had a marvellous experience this evening as five of the staff members were planning the staff dance. Our music teacher came up with an idea, which we all built upon collaboratively and we built up what we think is an amazing performance idea. Hopefully we'll be able to pull it together as successfully on stage! Clearly, I still haven't got off the cooperative versus collaborative teamwork thoughts and the more I think of it the more readily I am able to connect it to real situations.

In fact, the more I write each day, the more I am starting to wonder about what learning is for me and how best do I learn? Sometimes, I don't read or experience something new but simply reflect on something that I have previously read, or simply on the day and it seems like a fresh 'aha moment!'

For instance, I woke up early this morning and simply made a list of the things I needed to do today at work. Took a good twenty minutes but the day seemed so well organised after that! Now I 'knew' this fact all through and it's not that I haven't done this before. Every now and then I do wake up early and list my jobs for the day. Yet, now as I reflect and write about it, it seems to take a concrete plan in my head and I hope to be able to do this regularly.

So in effect, I learn by reflecting and writing, not only the seemingly big ideas but also the seemingly small ones!

As a teacher, we always make our students reflect on the day's or the unit's learning but as learners we seldom write our own reflections. However, it is an amazing tool and the more I use it, the more it makes sense to me in terms of observation as well as metacognition. Since I know that I will need to write out a blog at night, I try and observe things better and keep a mental note of them for a longer time. Ideas, hence, stick!











Monday, August 18, 2014

Day 22- Learning hands-on

First day of school is a hectic, happy day.
 
The biggest learning for me today was formatting Excel sheets with long-winded words! I needed to format some documents and was feeling hopeless after a while, when I suddenly remembered the lesson from my daughter. 
 
Like every other child, Neetima seems to be born with the inherent talent of being able to figure out new remotes, cell phones and other gadgets with ease that would surprise and at the same time annoy most normal adults! Micky and I remember how after shifting to our new apartment we looked around for the chimney switch for the stove top till Neetima figured out a way to run it. Like many parents we conveniently started handing her all remotes and new electronic items we bought, to figure out and teach to our helper. Micky and my infinite wisdom of "Let her figure it out, so that she can learn...." gradually morphed into "Let her figure it out because it will take us too long to learn...."!!!
 
Neetima says that all modern software/gadgets are intuitive or at least the creators try to make them intuitive. So the best way to learn is to use the 'hunter-gatherer' exploration style. She says, "Think about how a hunter-gatherer would explore something new. He/she would touch, feel, see, hear, taste things, shake them, move them around and perhaps even throw them and try to figure it out. Similarly when we wish to explore a new gadget, we should touch, slide, move, press different keys which appear 'natural' to us. Don't over-analyse and just do it!' I often use this advice and it definitely works provided I am not working under pressure. (Else I get my expert office colleagues or Neetima of course to help! :))
 
Neetima's advice worked today and after some initial exploration I stumbled on to a quick way of doing what I needed. The trick now would be to remember it for the next time. I am sure I can....
....else I can always go back to the 'hunter-gatherer' exploration style.

Love you Neetima!

Sunday, August 17, 2014

Day 21 - Janmashtami, Hofstede and TCK

Hindus celebrate the birth of God Krishna with the festival of Janmashtami which we celebrated today; a festival which brings back a lot of fond memories for me. We used to fast, my grandmother, mother and I, on every Janmashtami. The one big reason for me to start fasting at the age of 12 was that I'd get to eat sago pooris and potatoes unlimited for dinner if I'd fasted the whole day. That was incentive enough!
 
We moved house when I was 16. The big Birla temple was on the same street as our house and every Janmashtami brought with it a huge fair. The street would be closed for traffic and hundreds of people flocked to celebrate the birthday party of Krishna. The street was full of exciting wares, fun stalls, games and food, food and more food. The tikka-wallah who made delicious fried potato cutlet-like tikkis, set up his stall every Janmashtami at 5:00 am. He would wash his huge iron skillet in front of our house (The Public tap was right outside our house!). Then peel and prepare huge mounds of potatoes to get ready for the masses that queued up for his absolutely delicious, fried tikki. That was my biggest test! I would have loved to eat one of those had I not been fasting. Grandmum's unspoken rule was clear, if you have the will to fast, you had to have the will to stick to home-made dinner that night. I never got to eat that tikki but I still remember it!
 
The festival was a huge celebration. The idol would be dressed up in mini-frocks and crown. Sago pooris, Ugal fritters, Potatoes cooked in ghee, Talmakhana kheer in our traditional food plate was the tastiest birthday party meal one could have. And like all grannies, mine cooked the best meal! We would pray in the evening, which was the most awesome way to teach delayed gratification to the kids at least, as the prayers would go on and on for long. Finally we would sit for dinner and I could eat those yummy pooris for ever!
 
I continued the tradition in Singapore, especially for Neetima. Barring Ugal flour, which I couldn't get in Singapore, I made everything else. We prayed together every year and ended the pooja with the ceremonial aarti.
 
This Janmashtami, for a change I decided to focus less on celebrating and more on learning. So Micky and I discussed Krishna's teachings and compared it to the teachings of the other Gods. Every discussion somehow manages to reach Google and Micky ended up listening to an interesting conversation about similarities between Hinduism and Islam. A learned Islamic scholar made the comparison and talked about how Kalki avatar in the Hindu mythology has similarities with Prophet. I found it fascinating.
 
The evening Pooja was as always but we missed Neetima, so we decided that she could connected on face time. When we finally connected, I realised that she was wearing a kurta and had her head covered as we did when she was here.

 
I couldn't help remembering the Hofstede's Onion model. The core values are surrounded by rituals, heroes and symbols.
Reference: http://laofutze.wordpress.com/2009/08/28/303/ retrieved on 17.08.2014

It is our ritual to celebrate Janmashtami together. The covered head is the symbol and Krishna and other Hindu deities are a hero. Across the core, our practices help us connect, and I am certain that these practices will help Neetima get some sense of her roots and her sense of identity, in her Third Culture way of life.

Love Hofstede! Love Janmashtami! Love Neetima!


 

Saturday, August 16, 2014

Day 19 - Meditation and Jogging

15th August - Indian Independence day. Micky and I were invited by friends to listen to the independence day speech by Narendra Modi, which we did, over drinks and amazing mutton with Nachos! We discussed India and its past Prime Ministers and their styles. Then we discussed our responsibilities as citizens and very soon the discussion moved from India to Vipassana and meditation. These friends of mine have done the Vipassana course.  Another friend of mine did it this summer in Nepal. This is one area that fascinates me.
 
We compared Vipassana practices to the Art of Living Sudarshan kriya and jogging. Micky is an avid jogger and always talks about running giving him a high where he gets into a phase where his lungs open up to the next level and he gets into a rhythmic pace which allows him to go on and on. His description fits the state of mind I get in after kriya and meditation. Our friend talked about his experience in Vipassana and the focus one gets as a result of continued focus on breathing. The more we discussed the three, the more similarities we unearthed between them.
 
Some years ago, I had gone to visit a book shop in India and on the insistence and recommendation of the very old shopkeeper, I bought a book on yoga and meditation. I have tried reading that book umpteenth number of times but I have never been able to complete it, partly because of the microscopic font and partly because it is a heavy read. The book written by a Yogi, has some amazing lessons and one of the many that stand out is about breathing and the connection of it to Prana. (Ever since, I have kept myself a reminder in my office, to breathe.. properly!) It is so easy to fall into the shallow breathing mode when working. In Vipassana, one of the basic breathing and meditation techniques is called Aana-Pana, something I learned from my friends during the discussion. In Sudarshan Kriya, the breathing is regulated consciously to help get into the meditative state. Micky says that jogging helps him get into that state where all his senses are fully open yet he is able to get into a focussed mode and rhythmic breathing which he finds very calming.
 
I guess, my learning for the day is that as long as one breathes properly, is able to focus and channel all energies to a positively productive task, the head and heart get in sync and peace prevails. All roads, in this case, do lead to ... home!

Thursday, August 14, 2014

Day 18 - Attitude, Aptitude, Women and Maths

Maryam Mirzakhani has won the Fields award for Maths and she is the first woman to win so.
Frankly, I had no idea about Fields medal, or Maryam Mirzakhani, but today this news caught my eye on Twitter and I read more about her on the Newsweek and on other websites. Maryam Mirzakhani
 
Maryam is an Iranian born mathematician who was told by one of her Maths teachers in her middle school that she wasn't particularly talented in Maths. Yet, many years later she wins the first Fields medal restricted to mathematicians below 40 years old and is involved in the most complex sounding mathematical investigations (symmetry of curved surfaces such as surfaces of doughnut... how many doughnuts did she research on??!!!)
 
My interest was not as much in her Maths... but the fact that she was able to sustain her interest in the subject in spite of having been told that she didn't have the talent. One of the write-ups about Maryam talks about her being optimistic and a pleasure to work with. Maryam is into doodling and jogging. She is humble, persistent, optimistic, hard-working and doesn't mind jumping straight into big, abstract problems that make her curious. She makes Maths seem rather artistic and poetic - something that needs imagination in order to "cross boundaries people set up between different fields". Her work goes into abstract areas and her husband feels that she needs sometimes to take bigger jumps rather than smaller logical steps.
 
Fantastic lessons for the day for me...
1. Your attitude has the ability to push the boundaries of your aptitude.
2. Every problem cannot be solved in simple logical sequential steps. Sometimes it is fine to jump straight on to the big picture to find the pixels!
3. Imagination and logic can breathe the same air!
 
Thank you Maryam. May you continue to explore vistas and cross all boundaries.

Wednesday, August 13, 2014

Day 17 - Rice porridge, google and mum!

As a child I was often subjected to the traditional kumaoni rice porridge called 'Jaula', as I often had tummy aches or the runnies. It was much later, as an adult that I was diagnosed with Gluten allergy. However, as a child anytime I had a stomach ache or a runny tummy, I was given jaula. I hated it with passion, so much so that I never bothered to learn the recipe....
 
.... till today when Micky had a tummy ache. Google came to the rescue as many a times! I made the jaula and it didn't taste bad at all. In fact I quite liked the taste with my modified recipe. Here it is.
 
1 cup rice, washed and soaked in four cups water.
1 tsp cumin seeds
1 pinch asafoetida
1 tbsp. grated ginger
1 tsp ghee
1 pinch turmeric
salt to taste
1/2 cup plain homemade Yoghurt (if not lactose intolerant)
 
Heat 1 tsp ghee. When hot, crackle the cumin seeds, add a pinch of asafoetida, add the rice, the ginger, salt and turmeric. Let it cook till porridge consistency. Then add yoghurt and cook for a while. Serve hot.
 
Was quite proud of my recipe so called up mum and checked my recipe. She suggested boiling the rice first with turmeric, salt and ginger. Then add yoghurt and cook. Finally temper with cumin, asafoetida in ghee. The ghee taste becomes more prominent this way, so lesser amount is needed. Easy on the stomach, filling and yum!
 
So what did I learn? The recipe of course, but then also consolidated the idea of authenticating or verifying information from a Primary source, an expert. Google helps but a primary source of info is always better.
 
And when it is mum.... better still. :)

Tuesday, August 12, 2014

Day 16 - Husband-wife Argument 'n Inquiry!

Our house and condominium have the worst acoustics possible. The voices around the swimming pool can be heard clearly on our 12th floor but my voice within my house does not carry effectively to Develyn's room! (Teacher's voice at that!)
 
So Micky and I decided to try a wireless bell that we could use to signal to her. The range seemed good according to the simple looking plastic pack with instructions in Japanese. We had initially intended it to replace our wired doorbell but decided against it. Anyway, the bell was working fine from the main door to the kitchen. It took the transmitter's frequency and chimed beautifully.
 
The problem started when we decided to install the bell switch (the transmitter) in the bedroom and the chime receiver in the kitchen. The bell chimed once, then stopped working. Then suddenly it chimed again, and as soon as we rejoiced........ it stopped! Micky and my faces lit up when it chimed again. However, each time we thought that the bell had finally started working, it stopped. As a typical husband and wife 'experiment- with- a- new- gadget' conversation goes, the dialogues cycle ensued as follows....
 
Here, let me try.....
That's not the right way to do it... 
I haven't tried it yet.
Yes, but you are holding it incorrectly. The frequency signal needs a straight line of sight.
Hmm.. but the pack said it would work over a range of .....not all homes would have a clear line of sight.
I'm telling you. There is no other explanation.
So how did it work the last time?
That was a fluke!
Yes but that means that the frequency doesn't need a straight line...
Try...
I am..it's not working.
I told you so.... Here, let me try...
 
So the poor doorbell chimed and unchimed and chimed again and so on and we continued the argument.
 
I eventually gave up and decided to toss this bell out and look for a new one. (For some reason, for me, a bell from a 2$ store does not ring a "bell"!) Micky, who by the way, is fond of books like 'Physics for entertainment', obviously could not give in so easily. So as I went to plan the dinner, he kept changing positions of the switch and the chime. Then he ensured that the chime had a battery that worked. Then he ensured that the plug point was working. Next he opened the wardrobe doors to try and reflect the radio frequency. His enthusiasm was infectious, so I joined him again. We tried the bell at different heights. Then we tried it on different surfaces and angles.
 
After loads of trial and error, we realised that the switch does not work when we place it on a metal surface. It also doesn't work if we try and press the switch continuously. (Micky feels that it is a courteous bell and has something to do with the lovely culture of patience in Japan and consequently the Japanese products are purposefully designed with that in mind.)  And the bell doesn't work below a particular height! So we have finally mounted it on the bed frame amidst the ongoing arguments about the effect of gravity on the signal and also the efficacy of the double-sided tape on a bedframe. That part of our inquiry has still not come to a conclusion. Anyway, the bell is working and hopefully it will serve the purpose well.
 
So what did I learn today?
a) Where to operate the bell from!
b) How to experiment on a gadget and keep constants, changing just one factor at a time.
c) To give time to inquiries and not give up.
d) To trust hubby but keep arguing-fosters his creativity and challenges him enough to not give up!
 
Great lessons moi thinks! :)