Masters of Education Technology UBC

ETEC 540 Task 1: In the bag

My name is Olivia Marin and I am a French Immersion High School Science teacher. I have chosen to show you the contents of my school bag, it comes with me to and from school everyday!

I have a mixture of digital and analogue technology in my bag.  The heaviest and largest item is my school computer, a MacBook Air that I have with me almost 24/7. It is the computer I use for my school work and UBC course work as well as any personal computer needs. I have always used Macs and have had a Macbook since 2006, it is my favourite digital technology, I much prefer it over my iPhone or iPad.

I also have a calculator, the same one since my Grade 11 pre-calculus course and my lab goggles, which I purchased in first year university for Chemisty labs. I teach Math and Science and I use these items almost daily, they are practical but I also realize that I am a little nostalgic and attached to these particular items for their history.

I have my wallet and my school ID card which is also the FOB for the school and the photocopiers. The cards I carry are almost all digital, and I keep them in my wallet which has a RFID blocker. I also have my car keys and an extra mask for mobility.

On the analogue side there is a set of Science cards, a French Ressource I just found and have been meaning to discover further for potential use in my classroom. I have several pens, a stamp, some white out and a little notebook. This is my current notebook that I will use this semester for my two ETEC courses 540 and 565D. I like to write things out by hand as I find it helps me to remember things better than typing ever does. In these note books I will take notes from readings or write down ideas I might have throughout the day. I will also usually write short papers and responses by hand before typing them. I find my writing is clearer when I have to think about it long enough to write it out.

Finally there is a tumbler of coffee and some bubble gum, two of my staples. The coffee in the morning before classes start and bubble gum in the afternoon as a pick me up.

I think my bag while I was a student in university would have looked quite similar. The calculator, laptop and googles would have been in there, along with a note book and some pens. I probably would have had a tumbler and likely some bubble gum. I would likely not have had a mask but other than that I think all of these items would have been in my backpack 15 years ago. The laptop is of course a new version and it has a lot more information stored on it than I would have had in first or second year university. My colleagues who are a little older than me have cupboards full of binders of their course materials, I have all of that information locked in my laptop and saved to a digital drive through my school district.

I have evidence in my bag of both analogue and digital literacy and French literacy, in the cards and probably 80% of the information on my laptop. I also have numeracy evident, in the calculator, and maybe science literacy as symbolized by the goggles.

I think my bag is an accurate representation of who I am as a teacher. I am comfortable in a digital world but I still hold the nostalgia of the analogue.

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