Honouring ceremony

I had the privilege to witness an honouring ceremony at Ray-Cam Community Centre in Strathcona today. Many people, young and old, were honoured. The audience was one of the most diverse I’ve seen in Vancouver, and it was wonderful to watch. My organization, Pathways Canada, is spearheading efforts to increase graduation rates in the area. Anybody interested in volunteering should contact me and research Pathways to see if it’s for them.

Jenny Kwan (MLA) was in the audience (second picture).

IMG_20160404_181340IMG_20160404_205652IMG_20160404_210028

Making passports with Life Skills

Life Skills students made their own countries last week and are now able to travel the world with their new passports!

We are ready to travel! Mr. Robson will be taking us somewhere… https://t.co/sX71S8mCYh

Posted by Windermere Secondary Life Skills on Wednesday, 10 February 2016

Creating passports for our countries with Mr. Robson and special guest, Ms. Katie.

Posted by Windermere Secondary Life Skills on Wednesday, 10 February 2016

Vancity Case Competition at Windermere

In an effort to promote values-based banking, Vancity has enlisted our students for advice. They did so well, putting into practice lots of concepts that my Business Education 9/10 students are going to be doing shortly for their Warriors’ Den 2016 business plans. For more photos, visit Jr BIA Collingwood’s Facebook page (they have hundreds!).

View from the judges’ room (Mr Kam’s classroom)

image

Angela Evans from Jr BIA Collingwood and me!

image

Inquiry: Enhancing social emotional learning (SEL) in senior high school classrooms


In elementary school, I had a favourite teacher, Mrs. Parker. I (and my parents) requested that Mrs. Parker be my teacher for as long as possible; she taught me for three years in a row. The experience was about as good as one can get in a school: I arrived early and engaged in activities with abandon. I believe these years were rich in social and emotional learning.

This changed in high school. In grade 8 (1997), I became withdrawn and experienced mild depression.  Much of this is attributable to unavoidable factors, but I also believe a lack of social and emotional supports extended and intensified my experience. Progressing upwards to Grade 12, SEL was increasingly substituted by content acquisition and competition. None of this is wrong, of course (high school is meant to prepare students for the outside world). That being said, I strongly believe the outside world needs more compassionate citizens who have a high degree of awareness of self and others. My inquiry project is intended to explore methods for creating socially and emotionally supportive senior-level classrooms, and examining links to student wellbeing, academic performance, and quality of life in adulthood.

Education in Finland

image image

I’ve been reading about the Finnish education system. It has many proponents and I think these are the reasons vis-a-vis the North American model:

-more outdoor playtime

-smaller schools and class sizes

-long-term educator – student partnerships (students and teachers are paired for more than five years)

-“whatever it takes” attitude towards struggling students (for instance, one-on-one instruction, more than adequate learning supports)

-Teachers have high status and autonomy (politicians and business people don’t influence policy)

-positive discrimination is used in high-need catchments (funding is provided for special resource teachers, counselors and special needs classes)

The Migrant Crisis

A doctor from Ontario recently took a leave of absence to assist some of the hundreds of thousands of migrants arriving into Europe. All are vulnerable and many are sick and injured. Today, a ship with almost 250 individuals sank off the island of Lesvos.

The doctor from Ontario, who has been posting about her experiences via Facebook, wrote this today:

image

 

In my ignorance, I hadn’t heard this news and looked on BBC for more info. It wasn’t even a headline. Instead, it was tacked on to an article about Austria putting up physical barriers to stem the flow of migrants.

This is a tragedy of global significance and universal resonance, and some news outlets can’t be bothered to put it front and centre.

History is repeating itself seventy years later right in front of our eyes.

 

 

Pro-D Day with my teaching family

October 23rd was a professional development day in BC schools. As such, my amazing group of teacher candidates went to the BC Business Educators Association annual conference at David Thompson Secondary.

Sessions included learning resources from Junior Achievement and Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives through to yoga in the classroom!

Thanks, Lily, for providing the photo below. I’m the guy on the ground. image

In the beginning…

Welcome to my first post! There’s more to learn about me than this blog can handle, so get in touch with questions at mattrobsonvancouver@gmail.com.

Quick facts about me (one of these isn’t true, guess which one!)

-I was born at Grace Hospital near Vancouver Children’s Hospital

-I’ve run into the Queen of England three times in London

-Tea always before coffee!

-I love the outdoors and go rooting around for wild orchids and mushrooms