Friday, September 6, 2013

2-COOL

I have been teaching ICT in Education this week, having been in a permanent state of professional development for the past several months in an effort to ensure I would be up to the task.  I now find that expressions like 'emerging technologies', 'cloud technologies' and my new favourite 'BYOD' [bring your own device - not 'drink' as was suggested today in a quick quiz!] just roll of my tongue, along with the tried and true 'wiki', 'blog' and ever-present 'ePortfolio', which seems to be standard vocabulary in every unit we teach.  I'm happy to say that Google Sites is meeting our needs in the ePortfolio department, and with each workshop we all become more proficient at uploading files and adding pages. As there can be anything from three weeks to a couple of months between workshops, the biggest problem is remembering one's password!

My professional reading has insisted time and again that, if you are going to write a blog, then consistency is the key, so with that in mind I am happily revisiting the past year in Alice through my collection of photographic memories.  Today's shots show the quirky relationship between a number plate and my windscreen one frosty July morning.

Thursday, September 5, 2013

Number Plate 2

    One of the many interesting Police number plates - this one was snapped at the Bangtail Muster.

The Corkwood



The corkwood outside my classroom is blossoming. I didn’t know it was a corkwood, or notice when the first signs of its blossoms appeared over a month ago.  The locals did – well, people who have been around the area longer than I have, which is almost everybody.  The flowers are beautiful in the way so many things here are beautiful, in a delightfully understated way – not because they demand to be noticed, but purely for their intrinsic beauty.  

The bees were buzzing around the flowers this morning and two of my students, who are mature ladies from the Arnhem area, were discussing the flowers, the bees and wondering where they could poke a stick to get some honey.  Strangely, I had not asked myself the same question.  My mind doesn’t automatically consider the food benefit of the local flora.  The ladies are not familiar with the corkwood, but they are finely tuned to the environment and all that is happening in it.



I just remembered last summer when some of the young men were here for their classes and a large lizard had attracted their attention.  Had I not come along when I did, the lizard may well have ended up the evening entrĂ©e.  They, too, see opportunities beyond my experience. 

When I go on walks with my friends, they notice the tiniest of flowers, and can name each variety we pass.  My landlady is a keen gardener and has designed and planted the delightful backyard where I live - an arid garden, full of plants of the region, some self-sown.  The rain several weeks ago, followed by the unseasonably warm weather, has encouraged the previously low growing plants to reach for the sky.  There’s something very Impressionistic about it – an arid Monet’s garden.  It’s an absolute picture every time I walk out my door.