Episode 6 (Season 2) of Marthaller Moments, the Glenlyon middle school production that explores the IB learner profile.
will byers stan first human second
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her
art blog(derogatory)
No title available
styofa doing anything
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me

titsay

Andulka
wallacepolsom

⁂
d e v o n
One Nice Bug Per Day

PR's Tumblrdome

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣
Misplaced Lens Cap

Janaina Medeiros
Sweet Seals For You, Always
Game of Thrones Daily
occasionally subtle

izzy's playlists!

seen from Malaysia
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seen from South Korea
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seen from United States
seen from Costa Rica
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seen from Netherlands
seen from Russia

seen from Türkiye
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@mrmarthaller
Episode 6 (Season 2) of Marthaller Moments, the Glenlyon middle school production that explores the IB learner profile.
Grade 6: Confessions, a light-hearted tribute to all the Grade 6 moms and dads on Parents Day. Students were asked 1) Who is the boss at home, 2) Who do you look like the most, and 3) What are two truths and a lie about your parents?
WCA Christmas Concert Memorable Moments Slideshow. Produced by Mr. Marthaller with photos taken by Grade 5 and 6 Yearbook Club Members.
Learning about the Golden Temple (Harmandir Sahib) from someone well-versed in its history, Amritsar, Punjab.
Leave it to Lucy to hit the nail on the head! The assignment was to synthesize the non-fiction articles in the textbook about Canada and come up with an artistic representation of its multiculturalism. For someone who has never been there, this really is great.
WCA Grade 6 Media Project - Christmas Lip Dub. Student conceived, directed, and starred-in! Filmed in a single, continuous shot, and produced by Mr. Marthaller using Corel VideoStudio Pro X6.
With UBC Chancellor and Macebearer after Faculty of Education graduate students convocation, May 2013.
Local school children, village visit, Tanzania.
UBC Faculty of Education Convocation Speech, May 2013.
With brave PE class in Giza, running in 40+ degrees!
At Shannon Falls Provincial Park with Whistler-bound international students from Douglas College.
Stratford Hall Graduation Speech, June 2013.
Digital Literacy as Social Justice and Environmental Pedagogy: How technology, humanity and the environment can coexist in English Language Arts.
Introduction and Scope
It would not be a great stretch of the imagination to envision how digital technology might be at odds with social justice and ecological pedagogy. In truth, advocates of sustainability and social equity could easily show how the majority of digital devices can have adverse effects on society and the environment. A computer in itself, for example, can represent a vast array of objectionable things: a mass of manufactured components often put together by underpaid employees in developing countries; a superficial status symbol that can cost hundreds—even thousands—of dollars; a perpetuator of a “haves” and “have nots” dichotomy in relation to information, knowledge and education; a consumer of vast amounts of electricity; a producer of electronic waste; and, perhaps worst of all, a drain on the time and energy of young people that could be put to better use elsewhere.
Read the full paper here...
Critical Review - Social Justice, Peace, and Environmental Education: Transformative Standards
Central assumptions
Social Justice, Peace, and Environmental Education: Transformative Standards is a carefully selected collection of articles, book chapters, and empirical studies, drawn from a range of disciplines. Its editors, Drs. Julie Andrzejewski, Marta P. Baltodano, and Linda Symcox, have compiled these works in an effort to show commonalities among and to address how these commonalities might inform our approach to education about social justice, peace, and environmental education.
The book is essentially predicated on two main assumptions: first, that social justice, peace, and environmental preservation are all interconnected and inextricable; and second, that there are a number of common themes that emerge when critically examining the work of those invested in the promotion of social justice, peace and environmental preservation.
Read the full paper here...
ReadWriteKids - A look at how adolescents are really using the web. Created for a graduate course in (Media) Literacy. Attribution non-commercial - Robert Marthaller (2011).
The more people I meet from around the world that speak different Englishes, the more I realize that Literacy is a property of relationships, not a universal, concrete and measurable skill set.
To te(a)ch or not to te(a)ch
One good argument against jumping on the tech bandwagon is that modern technology is very volatile, and there seem to be as many innovations that fail as there are that catch on and “succeed” (Facebook was way behind MySpace, Friendster, etc., etc., and now look at them). For some people (especially my father!) keeping up with technology seems to be futile because there is the risk that it either changes drastically or disappears by the time you’ve mastered it. You have to feel for those students who spent 4 years and $40,000 to get their undergraduate degrees in Esperanto! Who are they talking to now?
Another valid argument against embracing new technologies too quickly is that you inevitably take instructional time away from previous technologies (read: putting a pen to paper or sitting down with a real paper book from the library). I love that kids can write and create and express online, but, I also love to see them scribbling away in their Journals during a 7-minute write before class. A classmate from another course said that he sometimes feels his resistance to bringing new technologies into the classroom might be akin to telling Alexander Graham Bell, “No thanks, Mr. Bell. I don’t need your funny invention. I’ll write a letter instead.” The truth is that in hindsight giving Bell’s invention the cold shoulder would seem ridiculous, as would snubbing that funny-looking printing press in favour of a trusty swan feather quill and scroll of papyrus! But, are we wrong to cling to what we know? Do we really run the risk of becoming “obsolete” as educators by not keeping up with the speed of technology? Or, if we do jump in head-first, and then 10 years from now social networking and Web 2.0 collaboration disappear as yet more failed tech ventures, will we be left wishing that we had stuck with the proven tools and methods we knew best?
It almost feels that we could end up with egg on our face either way. Maybe it just comes down to how you like your eggs.