Friday, September 26, 2025

Exit Slip: Ropes, Colour and Capturing Moments in Time?

After attempting the seven-strand braid, I initially felt discouraged from fiber work. However, I became fascinated with making rope out of grass. This process left me with some lingering questions: does twisting each strand to its maximum have a tipping point where it weakens the rope rather than strengthening it? And while twisting the strands, they naturally wanted to coil together, was the angle they tended toward ideal for overall strength?

Another activity we tried involved color-matching paint chips to objects in nature. I found this surprisingly difficult. Whenever I held a paint chip up to an object, I couldn’t always tell whether the colors didn’t match or if the difference was merely one of saturation. Perhaps the exercise was meant to spark critique of how artificial our modern world has become, or maybe I just lack an eye for distinguishing subtle color differences. I’m leaning toward the latter, since I’ve been told that before.

During a group discussion on how external factors shape our perception of reality, I brought up Huawei’s Moon Mode controversy. Some critics claimed the phone “photoshops” the moon into user photos. While I couldn’t verify the accuracy of this claim, a paper on the controversy raised interesting points: debates about Huawei’s Moon Mode aren’t just about image integrity, but about how societies negotiate new norms for what counts as a “photo” in the age of AI. Photography, traditionally seen as evidentiary, is increasingly a site where politics, technology, and meaning-making intersect. Regardless of the claims’ validity, Samsung has also been accused of reconstructing moon images with AI.

 

https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/01634437211064964 

 https://www.theverge.com/2023/3/13/23637401/samsung-fake-moon-photos-ai-galaxy-s21-s23-ultra

https://medium.com/adventures-in-consumer-technology/samsungs-moon-photos-are-kinda-fake-but-should-anyone-care-6fbad684ff41

 




Tuesday, September 23, 2025

Entrance Slip: Braiding is Hard

While reading the excerpt from Kallis’ book, I found myself stopping to marvel at the sheer difficulty of knitting an entire shirt by hand. It made me appreciate the patience, skill, and persistence required. I’ve always wanted to learn how to work with threads, whether crochet, knitting, or weaving, and I carry a huge amount of respect for those who can do these crafts so beautifully.

Alongside the reading, I watched the tutorial on the seven-strand double braid and even tried it myself. I’ve attached a photo below. The process was surprisingly difficult. I kept dropping the strands mid-crossing and lost track of my progress more than once. Still, the challenge gave me a deeper appreciation for the labor and artistry that goes into handwork. What seems simple or decorative on the surface often requires immense focus and practice.

For me, both the reading and the braid practice highlighted an important point:
making with our hands is a form of knowledge. Even small attempts at these skills show how much respect is owed to those who dedicate themselves to traditional crafts and ecological art practices.

I don't think I got very far

Sunday, September 21, 2025

Exit Slip: Sept 18 Soundscaping in the Garden

During our lecture in the garden, we revisited our sit spots, this time not to draw what we saw, but to listen. I chose to represent myself at the center of the page, almost like a radar, with icons drawn in the directions I heard sounds. Their sizes reflected the volume: larger for louder noises, smaller for softer ones.

Because my spot was near the road, the sound of cars dominated. At times I could barely distinguish between the whoosh of traffic and the wind moving through the trees. I also caught faint bursts of birdsong, though they felt almost hidden beneath the louder hum of the background.

What struck me most about this exercise was how easy it was to lose the very thing I was trying to focus on. I became so concentrated on how to notate the sounds, what symbol to use, how big to draw it, where to place it, that I realized I had started tuning out the world around me. In trying to capture the soundscape on paper, I unconsciously disengaged from the listening itself. The exercise reminded me that representation and perception can sometimes compete for attention, and that true listening requires letting go of the need to “get it right” on the page.

Wednesday, September 17, 2025

Learning With, Not From, the Garden

 After reading Susan's chapter on campus teaching and learning gardens, I found myself strongly agreeing with the idea that it is essential to teach students about respecting ecosystems. As the article points out, when we treat the living world as a co-teacher rather than just a resource, it opens the door to new ways of learning and relating. With enough respect, ecosystems can “reward” us, not only with food or materials, but with knowledge, beauty, and deeper understanding.

I connected this idea to my own experience learning in the Orchard Gardens. I still remember how wonderful the fruit tasted and how refreshing it felt to be outside working in the sun. It wasn’t just about the harvest, it was about building a relationship with place. I even learned about the empress tree, something I likely never would have encountered otherwise. That sense of discovery and connection is something I carry with me.

The garden is a space where all of these can come together. My time at the Orchard Gardens showed me that learning doesn’t need to be confined to a single mode. We can be serious while also being playful, we can engage our minds while also engaging our senses and emotions, and we can value both scientific and artistic ways of knowing.

For me, the biggest takeaway is that students need a wide breadth of experiences to see themselves in relation to the living world. Gardens, like classrooms, are not just about producing outcomes, they are about cultivating respect, curiosity, and imagination. That is the kind of teaching I hope to carry forward.

 

Thursday, September 11, 2025

Exit Slip: Learning in the Garden

 Finding my sit spot was a little bit easy. Since I had been acquainted with the garden beforehand, I was immediately drawn towards the empress tree. It was just so different compared to the other trees around it and in a bit of a secluded grove. It was also the first time I had ever used charcoal to draw so it was quite fun to explore using a new tool. 

After digesting our group discussion, I resonated with the sentiment that to be open-minded we need to be able to teach all kids, not just the ones that we like. We choose who to teach and with that comes the responsibility of not picking and choosing just because it may make our lives easier. As much as we may want to just forget about the day, we have a duty to all students such that they at least get a fair shake.

Wednesday, September 10, 2025

Being a Reflective Teacher

Despite being written in a different time and place, many of the ideas expressed in the article ring quite true. I did resonate with the notion that the amount of reflection one could make is so vast that it can be paralyzing. But realistically teachers do not have the luxury of paralysis and teaching must go on. 

The article mentioned unquestionable obedience to administrative directives, I do not believe that newer teachers accept these directives with their head down. I believe that teachers need to lead by example, and if we want our students to critically examine what they are being told, teachers must do the same and sometimes that requires speaking up to power.

For me, inquiry means reflecting privately, and also actively seeking evidence, experimenting with new approaches, and engaging with colleagues to refine my teaching. Critical thinking, then, is, in part, disagreeing with directives but about carefully weighing why I teach what I teach, how I teach it, and how my choices affect students. This framing helps me see reflection as a practical tool for growth rather than an abstract exercise.

Friday, September 5, 2025

Frank McCourt Exit Slip

 After watching a couple interviews about Frank McCourt, it really struck me how nonchalant his attitude was towards his life. It was really interesting to me how not having experienced secondary education shaped his outlook towards learning about the different perspectives of his students.

It inspires me to try to show a bit more humanity towards students and try to genuinely understand how they think. Often times I have made the mistake of being a little obstinate about getting students to complete practice questions just because it's required of them. I appreciate McCourt's often unconventional approach to try to understand his students and I am worried I will be too risk averse or lack the flexibility to properly adapt my future lessons to best meet the students needs. Frank's advice reminds me of the themes discussed in "How I Wish I'd Taught Maths: Lessons Learned from Research, Conversations with Experts, and 12 Years of Mistakes" by Craig Barton. In the book, Barton talks about previously teaching based on what he assumed works for children instead of a more pedagogical approach influenced by research. When I was a student, I never really paid attention to how different ways of learning were more or less suited to each individual. As a high school student, I was always aware of different "learning styles" but I did not really reflect on which of them worked for me as I usually could understand concepts without too much trouble and as such never appreciated when teachers changed their approaches.

 

Barton has a Medium article where he posted an excerpt from the book.

https://medium.com/eedi/how-i-wish-id-taught-maths-8ec9b0578228 

Thursday, September 4, 2025

Inquiry Presentation Slides

 Mine and Annabelle's slides: https://docs.google.com/presentation/d/1YT2NdzoXTvz89di05C6VNhGdLDYp5HTWdqCpSjICMpQ/edit?usp=sharing