Category Archives: Personal

The Best Teachers…

I like the TED talks.  A lot.  When I was working at the school board, I wasted many a lunch hour going through the TED video library.

This guy, Barry Schwartz, makes a plea for common sense over bureaucratic rigidity in modern society.  He also sums up the qualities of every single teacher that I’ve ever had, who I considered “amazing”.

Pretty inspiring stuff.

See Barry Schwartz’s talk here.

What’s Google’s slogan?  “Don’t be evil”? Whoever I end up working for, I hope I go home every day feeling like I’ve really done a good thing, as opposed to feeling like I just made a few bucks from somebody.

Some things I’ve learned from Movement and Voice class…

At the University College Drama Program, if you’re taking a Performance course, then you’re taking Voice and Movement.  They go hand in hand.  This is my third year taking Performance at the UCDP, and so this is also my third year with Voice and Movement.

I’ve learned a lot over the past 3 years in V/M.  Though they’re really two separate courses, there is plenty of overlap.  One of the most interesting things about these courses is their similarity to physiotherapy.  In these classes, we’re challenged to become more articulate with muscles that most people take for granted, or don’t even know they have.

So how do you get students to discover new muscles?  This is the challenge I didn’t understand two years ago – the challenge that the instructor has in guiding students to these areas of the body/brain.  Every student is different, and each could have their own way of understanding the mechanical workings of their own bodies – it’s really hard to tell.

So how did they do it?

Metaphors, believe it or not.  Images and metaphors.  I remember thinking that these classes were really…kind of strange, with all of the speaking in metaphors and images…

“Now, imagine that your soft pallate is like one of those automatic-pop-up tents….now POP it open!”

“Imagine more space in your hip flexor…breathe into that space…”

It might sound spacey, or floaty, or like nonsense, but believe it or not, this stuff works.

Probably the best example was in my voice class this year, when the instructor was getting us to find ways of getting our voice over obstructions in our mouths.  In this case, our obstruction was our own tongues – we had placed the tip of our tongue against the lower portion of our bottom teeth, and were pushing the middle of our tongue out of our mouths.

Now try to get sound out.  It might sound like you’re talking into a tin can.

The instructor then got us to try and “arc” our voices out of our mouths – and here’s where the really interesting part came in – he got us to arc our arms forward at the same time.  And it worked.

He said that there are many ways of communicating with the brain, and that one of them – that is often overlooked by academics – is through the body.  It’s called kinesthetic learning.  By arcing our arms away from our body, we were reinforcing the feeling of what he wanted us to do with our voices.

And in doing this, I actually discovered new muscles in my throat.  No joke.  They don’t move much, and they’re very subtle, but they’re there, and they affect sound, and those are what he was trying to get us to find.

Awesome.

Hey everybody!

I’ve finally hopped onto the blog bandwagon.

So here’s what I’m working on, or have been working on in the past few weeks:

  • I’m writing a paper for INI304 about how awful the Warren Commission report was at making a case against Lee Harvey Oswald after the JFK assassination.  Seriously – if Oswald had gone to court, his defence lawyer would have had a field day destroying all of the inadmissable evidence.  He would have gotten away, scot free.  How convenient he was killed before he could be tried…
  • The University College Drama Program production of Martin Crimp’s “Attempts On Her Life” wrapped up last Saturday, and for 7 hours yesterday, we destroyed/recycled the set.  It was a good show, ran for two weeks, and was selling out right up to the end.  I’m hoping to put up some photos soon.
  • I’m working on a project this year for Prof. Karen Reid called OLM…or Checkmark.  Actually, we don’t really have an official name for the project just yet.  It’s an online marking tool for CS undergrad classes, and it’s written in Ruby on Rails.  Check it out.
  • I’m playing Feste from Shakespeare’s Twelfth Night in my DRM400 Performance class.  If this thing goes public, I’ll post it.
  • I have to memorize JFK’s “We go to the moon” speech for presenting after Reading Week.  That’s for DRM401 Voice.

There’s plenty more where that came from, but that’s the major stuff.

Anyhow, here’s my blog.  I’m on the internet now.  Woop woop.