Tuesday 20 March 2018

Institutional Memory

The staff of the Alberta Correspondence School, 1942
Distance education was an early vision of the Alberta government. In 1921 the government realized many students in the province did not have access to an education. In 1923 the Alberta Correspondence School Branch was formed to serve rural students, kids who were housebound, and adults looking to upgrade their education. That vision has been the cornerstone of distributed learning in its many forms for the past 95 years as teachers and support staff strive to provide equality of educational opportunity to all Albertan students, regardless of their location and environment. 

The first director of the Correspondence Branch was Elizabeth Sievwright who worked out of a tiny office in the back room in the legislature, making up her own lessons and mailing them out. In its first two months, 100 families requested lessons. Five years later, there were over 1000 students. In the 1940s, lessons were broadcast over CKUA radio. By the 1970s, some lessons were broadcast over ACCESS Television. For decades, teachers and support staff -working for the government- created the resources students used to learn at a distance and through which they were assessed. Assessment of student work largely fell to contracted teachers who worked from home.

In 1980, as part of a larger government plan to relocate government services to rural communities, Premier Peter Lougheed's government announced that the correspondence school would move to Barrhead where the province commissioned a new building that opened its doors in 1983. At the time, dozens of employees who had previously worked in Edmonton were forced to relocate. For a time, many of them commuted by van to Barrhead every day. Eventually, many sold their homes in Edmonton at a loss- due to the economic downturn at the time- to buy homes in the Barrhead area. This provided a boost to the Barrhead economy and over the next four years, the population of Barrhead increased from 3500 to 4000 people. Even the post office expanded to deal with the anticipated increase in lessons coming and going. Meanwhile the Edmonton office remained open, receiving a great deal of foot traffic. It moved to an office in Harley Court, then to the Devonian Building, and then back to Harley Court.

In 1991 this government funded programme, operated largely by trained teachers working under government contracts, was renamed Alberta Distance Learning Centre to reflect the modernization of delivery.

In 1996, Pembina Hills School Division, with its central office in Barrhead,  created Vista Virtual School to deliver online education. 

In 1997 ADLC was divested from the government and contracted to Pembina Hills School Division to manage. The creation of print resources was left to the Learning Technology branch (later renamed the Distributed Learning Branch) of Alberta Education, a government department that operated out of the ADLC building in Barrhead. 

In 1998, Vista Virtual had 6 online teachers who worked out of the ADLC office under their own principal. They created their own courses and taught students at a distance using internet technology. Numbers skyrocketed almost immediately. In the fall of 2001, the two programmes began working together to deliver instruction and create courses. The division between Vista Virtual (a school in Pembina Hills Public Schools with its body of students who are not assigned to any other jurisdiction) and ADLC (a provincially mandated school managed through PHPS that delivers instruction to students enrolled through other schools in the province) was blurry for some time until 2004 when a separate assistant principal was brought on. A full-time principal came in not long after and at that time, Vista Virtual students and ADLC students were separated with both schools having their own classlists, administration and teachers- all using the same course materials.
ADLC isn't a school, it's an opportunity. For kids wherever they may be, in location or education, to have a chance at something bigger. (Paul, one of the first students in Alberta to receive the bulk of his education online)
Contract markers continued to be used, both online and print, allowing both Vista Virtual and ADLC to offer students the flexibility of year round instruction and continuous enrollment. A new office was opened in Calgary. The Edmonton office relocated to a new location on Jasper Avenue. In July 1999, ADLC merged with Distance Learning Options South (DLOS) in Lethbridge and DLOS maintained the DLOS financial operations for course materials. By March 2006, DLOS completely dissolved all financial operations and was fully incorporated by ADLC.
ADLC students attending a climate change conference from St. Albert
In 2001, a common English 10-1 was written in both online and print formats by ADLC teachers to roll out in time for the implementation of new curricula-abandoning the tradition of using print courses developed by the government’s Learning Technology Branch which were always a year or more late in production. Soon more and more core and elective courses were developed in-house and shared province wide. In 2006, ADLC began to share online courses to schools across the province via a “team teaching” approach. This allowed partner schools to use ADLC infrastructure and courses to teach their own students- a model of instruction in use by hundreds of schools in Alberta today. In time, the Distributed Learning Branch of Alberta Education, slow to adopt online learning opportunities, ceased to exist and the development of online and print materials for all students in the province became part of the service ADLC’s was contracted to provide to the students of the province.

Today, ADLC has 73 teachers on continuous contract, 21 in Barrhead and 52 elsewhere in the province. Having such a diverse range of teachers ensures that teachers understand the nature of their students because they know the regions and schools where students come from-from First Nations communities, to isolated farms, to small towns to urban centres. Many teachers work from home, allowing them to understand the isolated environment in which many students work. This provincial presence allows ADLC to hire excellent mid-career teachers from across the province-teachers with strong backgrounds in not only classroom instruction, assessment and subject area expertise but also instructional design and distance education pedagogy. ADLC and VV teachers and support staff know that it is possible to teach and learn and work together for a common goal at a distance because they do it every day.

A couple of our excellent support staff at teachers' convention.

According to Socrates, “To know thyself is the beginning of wisdom.” Can you really know where you are unless you know where you have come from?

Institutional memory matters. From the very beginning our programme was designed to teach students who do not fit into traditional schools and to help schools offer options for their kids. As our school moves down an uncertain path, knowing who we are and how we got here can be helpful.

Thursday 8 March 2018

Why I won't tell you to go to Egypt

Streets of Cairo

Tour guides and taxi drivers throughout Egypt said "Tell your friends!  Egypt good!  Egypt safe!  Tell your friends - come to Egypt!"

We smiled and nodded. But we didn't mean it.

I will not tell you to go to Egypt.

Truthfully, Egypt is safe. Or at least it seems that way. The unrest following the 2011 revolution has died away. And I never felt as if I was going to be robbed or attacked in our 11 days of independent travel.



I will not tell you to go to Egypt. The sites are amazing, no doubt about it. The pyramids are  spectacular. Abu Simbel is incredible, as are dozens of temples, monuments, tombs and statues. The marvels of an ancient civilization are a wonder to behold.

But Egypt? I've been to more than 50 countries and this is the only one I don't recommend. I won't tell you not to go. But I will not recommend it. Which is very sad. I am not sorry we went and I loved what we saw, but Egypt is a challenge for tourists. 

Every minute of every day you are being harassed.  Not gentle requests or casual questions. Relentless oppressive attacks and "no" is not considered an option.

Tourist on a camel ride
Someone at first appears friendly and just wants to chat, but really, he wants to sell you something, usually something you don't want, at a ridiculous price. There is no humour in these conversations, like the jokiness of a Tijuana street vendor. There is no good-natured back and forth like you might see in Bali or Peru. There is no earnest innocence like I saw in the street children of Cambodia. No. 

Hello, my friend, what country are you from?  Canada? Canada Dry!...My friend, do you need a taxi? A horse carriage? Papyrus? Perfume? A hotel?  Sir? A guide? I will give you good price. Very good price. Best price for you my friend. Why do you walk away? Why are you so rude? I just want to help you!

Every encounter is a negotiation. Nothing has a set price. From the price of a cab, an item in a shop, a bottle of water, the cost of using a toilet. Everything.  Our first and almost last shopping experience is detailed by my husband in his blog. One guy charged me $7 for a small bottle of water and refused to give me change until my husband came into the shop. Another said it was 5 Egyptian pounds to use the toilet, and then suddenly it was 5 each and it wasn't until I demanded he return my money that he let both of us in. One guide told us 150 Egyptian pounds for him to tour us around the Tombs of the Nobles, and when we were done, it was 150 each. We booked a driver from one hotel to the next. The tour was to include visits to as many places as we wanted for the entire afternoon, ending at our next hotel. Just before we arrived at the final stop around 5 pm, another man jumped in the cab, claiming to be the boss of the driver, saying we had taken too long and we had to give him another 150 pounds before he would take us to our hotel.  We booked a cab at the airport from the limo service and suddenly it was another 20 pounds for the parking. You go into a tomb and the "guard" whispers that for a little baksheesh, you can take a photo. If it's not enough, he demands more. A random stranger in traditional dress points out some piece of detail on a hieroglyph and demands you pay him for pointing it out. A guy starts walking beside you, yammering about the site, and expects money.  Another suggests you take a photo of him and expects money for it. Just nonstop. 

Five pounds for this photo
On occasion we saw men almost coming to fisticuffs over a lost fare or a deal gone wrong. I mean, these guys were in each others faces. They were screaming at each other. At one point we were part of a shouting match over who would drive us in their caleche and we had to walk away only to be picked up later by the same caleche where the driver beat his horse and then demanded extra baksheesh for his trouble. The testosterone levels are raging and that seems to be considered normal.

Souk in Edfu
I know these people are poor and they depend on tourism. I appreciate that they may have few other options when it comes to making a living. I know I am a westerner with many advantages and options so I really try not to judge. But I also know my tourist dollar is vital to their economy and it's one reason I like independent travel. By staying in local hotels, eating at local restaurants, hiring local guides, buying local products and supporting local travel agencies we can help infuse money into the local economy. Dozens of countries are in the same situation as Egypt, many of which we have visited. Madagascar, Cambodia, Nepal, Nicaragua and Vietnam are all much poorer than Egypt. We did not witness this behaviour in any of these countries and it seems to me that this aggressive bullying is ineffective over the long term.  We ended up basically buying nothing (and believe me, there were many lovely products to buy and I LOVE shopping!) But the hassle was too much. Looking more big picture, I wonder how many travelers have heard about how tourists are treated in this country and stay away?

Men waiting to sell their goods to the next car of tourists.
Finally, almost all our dealings were with men. We had very few dealings with women. In fact, we did not even see a lot of women. In photo after photo taken along the Nile, in village after village, men and boys were all we saw. Street after street in Aswan, Luxor and Cairo- just men. Maybe if there were women involved, there would be a gentler and more polite approach with greater success. A woman owns the charming Al Moudira Hotel on the West Bank of Luxor and it is wonderful. Suzy was our excellent female guide in Cairo and I highly recommend her.  Women worked in the two excellent Fair Trade, fixed price shops we visited. Other than that, in 11 days, we talked to no women. None. Women rarely work outside the home. They do not work where tourists can see them. No female waitresses, shop clerks, chambermaids, guides, ticket booth operators, drivers or cooks. Are there female lawyers, doctors, soldiers, or engineers? I have no idea. From what we could see, women do not interact with outsiders or men outside the family. In fact, outside Cairo, they are rarely seen. And that is highly troubling.


99% of Egyptian women have been sexually harassed and almost half of all Egyptian men believe they like it. Cairo is considered the most dangerous megacity in the world for women. Not one report of sexual harassment was lodged during Mubarek's reign. Now, while women can report this abuse, those who do are treated like criminals and criticized by family and neighbours, frequently dropping charges. The treatment of women, mostly forms of physical abuse, has resulted in subway cars just for women on the Cairo subway.  One of the drivers we met said his wife was the boss of everything in his house. He found it easier that way, he said to my husband with a rueful chuckle.  Like "Women! Am I right?" Is it any wonder he "allows" his wife to run the household? She so little autonomy outside the home.

Women hoped for great gains after the revolution, at which they were front and centre. But that has not come to pass. Centuries of misogyny is hard to overturn. I try not to judge another nation's way of life, but I struggled in Egypt. I was with my husband. I tried to keep my head down, didn't look any man in the eye, and pretended to be invisible. My one attempt to act more like a western woman was to swim in the rooftop pool at the Fairmount Nile City where I was rudely stared at in my modest swimsuit. That is not the kind of country I want to spend time in, nor do I want to support it with my tourist dollar.  


So Egypt. I'm not recommending travel to your nation, despite the ancient wonders and the lovely people who do not work in tourism. It's not a pleasant place for a holiday. It is not a good place to be a woman.

Saturday 3 March 2018

Oh Egypt


Oh Egypt.

Land of antiquities.

Glorious Pharoahs, entombed in gold sarcophagi.

Tutankhamen, Khufu, Ramses.

Powerful female pharaohs

Cleopatra, Nefertiti, Hatshepsut.

Oh Egypt.

Where are your women now?

Harassed, abused, ignored. 

Almost invisible. 

Voiceless.

Oh Egypt.

Glorious empire, millennia in the making.

Your history written on the land. 

In your valleys and deserts.

In your tombs and temples.

In your pyramids and pillars.

Your stories told in hieroglyphs and statues.

Your treasures buried deep.

Your mysteries covered in sand and water.

Stolen.

Desecrated.

Oh Egypt. 

What is your history worth now?

"Shhh...take photo? Don't tell anyone! Just a little money!"

"I found this roman coin this morning. Just $300."


"Ride my camel to see all nine pyramids! Special price for you my friend."


Your economy based on history, desperation making history nothing but a commodity.

The sun set on your empire.

An empire we must narrow our eyes to see.