domingo, 29 de mayo de 2011

Designing the Course of a Lifetime Part 2




It's been a busy week.

I have devoted a significant amount of time developing the Environment and Sustainability course. It seems like it may never end!

I am almost finished with the Sustainability section of the course which considers the main spectrum of the concept. The main guidelines related to the Final Project are almost finished as well.

Back on Thursday and Friday I attended an interesting training course. I received some hints and tips regarding how to provide a significant experience abroad. I also met the two tutors who will be helping me in Shanghai. Everything points towards an outstanding summer :)

I have gathered a myriad of interesting information which will definitely benefit the course. If you are interested on the state of the planet, I recommend you the Millenium Ecosystem Assessment which analyzes the state of the world under social, economical, and environmental perspectives. 1,300 scientists, the UN, and NGOs support it. It is worth a quick glance:

Millenium Ecosystem Assessment

Tomorrow I am having a last meeting with the colleagues who are also helping me. They will be teaching the course in Nice, France.

On the trip side, this week will be devoted to buying my personal belongings. Time is running faster than I expected.

More info later!

domingo, 22 de mayo de 2011

Designing the Course of a Lifetime




Next week I am visiting Shanghai to teach a course on Environment and Sustainability at a High School related to Tongji University.

Yes, I'm taking a plane with a group of High School students from Prepa Tec to fly halfway around the world. We will live for a month where I like to consider as the New York of the XXI century.

The most exciting part of planning the trip is not organizing my personal belongings, nor fantasizing about my second visit to Shanghai. The most exciting episode has been developing a course from scratch. It is not an everyday course. It is a course that has the potential to change the course of modern civilization. Why am I certain of such a statement?

The relationship between mankind and the biosphere is an extremely new discipline. Worries about our impact on the environment, and how it underpines social, economical, cultural and political dimensions were born during the 1970s. For a mere 30 years scientists, environmentalists, entrepreneurs, and economists have focused their efforts on tackling global issues under the label of "sustainability". That means, that out of 4 million years of human history, only 30 have been devoted to analyzing the conservation of the planet. Striking isn't it?

Flat fact: Sustainability is an EXTREMELY broad concept that has been vaguely defined. It is difficult to specifically define sustainability since the concept implies thousands of variables related to both human and natural existence. Moreover, this is the first time in the history of mankind where we are able to change our future and that of the planet.

As I'm doing my research, I have encountered a HUGE, TREMENDOUS amount of information regarding sustainability. I have learned that I need to cover topics related to astronomy and cosmology since they analyze how our plane came to be. Then, I need to talk about ecosystems, natural resources, Ecology, social issues, Ethnography, History, Anthropology, Biology, Botany, Zoology, Philosophy, Law, Religion, Economics and Finance to provide a large and significant spectrum to the students for all these disciplines are related to sustainability. After that, we will have to analyze societies that have collapsed due to an unsustainable scheme. Yes, societal collapses have happened throughout history. There are more than 20 cases that exemplify this outcome. Finally, I will need to share my knowledge regarding Design, Architecture, Mathematics, Production, Demographics, Computer Science, Statistics, Ergonomics, and Marketing. It may seem daunting and ambitious, but the fate of human existence strongly depends on sustainability. As Jared Diamond, Pulitzer-Price author of Guns, Germs and Steel (one of my favorite books) declares "There is no single cause for the collapse of a society. It is an intricate and complex process with at least a dozen causes".

My efforts on teaching the best course I could have my hands on will not only impact students to promote a change. It will need to trigger a revolution that will guarantee the future of mankind as a whole.

I recommend the following article in order to grasp the complexities of sustainability:

http://cmsdata.iucn.org/downloads/iucn_future_of_sustanability.pdf

Tomorrow, I'm having a meeting to build the course's Final Project.

More info coming soon ;)

miércoles, 18 de mayo de 2011

Another Semester Goes By...

I know it has been a while since my last update. For a month I became focused on finishing my first Master's Degree course, preparing my educational trip to Shanghai, and closing up this January/May semester. Sorry about the lack of updates, but here I am, back again with more time to reflect on Math, Education, and Life.

When a semester ends, a chapter is closed. It is always a bittersweet sensation; especially at Prepa Tec since teachers are rotated depending on the programmed subjects for the following semesters. Moreover, students reach their next level, and one is left expecting the next batch of people to work with. I guess nostalgia is a quientessential feature of every formative experience.

This semester's closure struck me for a particular reason. It has been the semester where I had the largest amount of failures in my 3-year career as a teacher. Every profession has its "horrific confession". Medics have to confess whenever cancer is detected, CEOs and Boards must declare a bankruptcy, a bank representative has to announce a foreclosure, and a boss has to directly fire someone due to budget restrictions. In education, this "confession" takes form in telling someone he or she has failed the course. It is especially striking with a person who struggled throughout the semester, but did not quite "make it".

To all those students who have experienced this situation I daresay--do not lose hope. If you tried hard, try harder now, and never get intimidated by the success of others. It is in YOUR hands, and SOLELY IN YOUR HANDS to achieve whatever you want to pursue. As teachers we commit endless hours to provide you with all the necessary tools you need, now it is time to act responsibly. Persist. Persist, and do not get desperate in dire times. Consider Math as an opportunity, and never as a threat. I will NEVER get tired of saying--NO ONE SUCKS AT MATH. Pardon the informality of the statement, but it is true. Keep on trying, do not settle. Eventually, you will master the topics that may not appear later as equations and integrals. The analytical process you developed will help you take better decisions in life. Even emotional ones ;)

Remember this quote whenever your hands get dirty when approaching a Math or Life problem:

“Whatever you do will be insignificant, but it is very important that you do it.”
--Gandhi

"Globa", the Global State

An extremely interesting and highly debatable article regarding the exponential growth of the Internet, communications, and its effects on society.

It considers English as the dominant language (instead of Mandarin Chinese), the conflict between multicultured vs. monocultured individuals, economic blocks, and
interesting concepts such as "the artilect", "terrans" and "cyborgists".

Comments are always welcome!

http://www.kurzweilai.net/globa-global-state-by-2050