Full cup and a warm glow after some time learning and creating with colleagues.
Back at work this week. Monday we had a couple of meetings about hiring for the new Teaching and Learning Specialist. There are quite a few applicants.
In and around the meetings I picked up ‘Small Teaching Online’ by Flower Darby. She used a really good analogy and I had a small epiphany that spurred me to go and write some content in the Blackboard sampler course. I have a good vision for it and I made some notes so on Monday next week I am going to dig in and work on content and start refining the design. What I think was missing in my planning was the importance of explaining why best practices are best practices. I’ve read that the term ‘best practice’ stifles innovation but practically, you have to start with what works and innovate from there if necessary.
As I’ve already mentioned, I volunteered to host a morning radio show for the BCcampus Studio 20 conference. For that I got a free pass to the conference. Hosting the show and interacting with the participants on the event site was even more fun than I expected. Tracy and I have a good rapport and Grant Potter made everything run seamlessly.
Sadly I missed the day one keynote because I had to see my surgeon (4 more weeks of immobility but I can practice bending my knee). Each day had a theme, Day 1: Vision, Day 2: Voice, and Day 3: Active Learning. I got something out of each day and was feeling quite rejuvenated by the end. The student panel on day three was fantastic. It was a diverse panel and they shared their experiences of being students in general, and through the pivot. I am even more determined to continue spreading the word of kindness and flexibility with assessments after listening to them. For example, one trans student in a wheelchair(Aaron – who is going to make a great teacher) was describing having to write a 500 word timed answer – he types slowly as his fingers sometimes dislocate – he knew the answers and could literally scream them at the screen (paraphrasing) but still failed the exam because he couldn’t type it out. We can do better for all students. One more big takeaway that relates to accessibility was our keynote presenter Arley who described each of the images used in her presentation. It took nothing away from the content and it was like having an audio alt tag – fantastic. I think doing this would also make one think very carefully when choosing images for a presentation.
It was a very active event with opportunities to draw, make recordings, and collaborate. I was shocked that I could learn how to draw a 3D eye in such a short period of time. Participants were invited to share their creations to a SPLOT and it was cool to see the contributions coming in.
From etug last week I have a few browser windows open:
The KPU Open resources catalogue that includes ‘How to Learn online’ and ‘Academic Integrity’.
Capilano U’s ‘Student Digital Ambassador‘ Built by students for students
UBC’s Open for Learning Challenge
Teaching Without Walls from TRU
I had some email exchanges with Mike and Albert around Ultra and I shared this upcoming event with faculty: Care in Crisis: A Crisis of Care presented by Brenna Clark Gray of TRU. I found out the registration link wasn’t working when several faculty who had tried to sign up emailed me about it. I think there is an appetite for this conversation.
“They” say that you can’t pour from an empty cup, and it’s true. I am re-filled and I have a lot of ideas to put into practice next week as I work on the Blackboard course for instructors.

I’ve been drafting this post in my head but didn’t get it down during the week. There isn’t much work to reflect on because I took the week off. Probably better that I waited to post, there were some painkillers involved in those mental drafts. This picture is what I had for dinner Saturday night. Not the rib-eye we had planned.
Everything happened very quickly.
I broke my leg last Saturday, had surgery on Sunday and was home Monday afternoon. There wasn’t a lot of time to think or to worry. I came to ‘acceptance’ pretty early in the process. There was really nothing I could do and there’s no point in being frustrated about it. I spent the week between the couch and bed moving with a walker so as not to put any weight on my left leg. I have another ten or so days like that until I see the surgeon. I am very fortunate to have someone to take care of me at home.
I did do a couple of work-adjacent things in between naps. As the days went by, I had more lucid periods and could concentrate a little. I checked in on email and managed to complete the last two challenges for the OER challenge. Next week I’ll follow up with the other NIC participants. I won a Massey Books gift certificate in a draw last week so that was nice. I’ll need some reading material for recovery.
Friday it was a nice treat to attend the etug conference. The day was planned with breaks between sessions and the sessions weren’t too long so it was manageable. So nice to see and hear old friends and some new faces. It was a good mix of content too.
I am going to try a little work next week and see – will probably take a few more sick days until I’m sure I can be up for it.
Playing with the H5P image slider again. I put the after picture first.
Since I talk about tools, and I really ‘drilled down’ on what ‘access’ means, I submit this close up of a toy drill.




Looking forward, looking up. Monday was about direction, re-defining/ re-branding my role and what I do – or as Liesel puts it ‘Terri 3.0’.