I was a volunteer from 1998-2000 and I served in the Solomon Islands with my husband Mark Barry. We were both teachers there and we loved our village of Gizo very much. One memory that I have of the experience is waking up to the sound of loud chattering in the banana tree outside our leaf and stick hut. As my eyes adjusted to the moonlight, I saw an eagle eating the sap from the "bulb" at the end of the bunch of bananas through my bedroom window. As I woke up my husband to share in the experience, I realized that I was not seeing an eagle, but a HUGE fruit bat (also called a flying fox because their heads look identical to that of a fox) sipping nectar from the banana tree. As I sat in awe of this enormous winged creature (not more than 3 feet away from me) another one came to stake claim to the tree. They began chattering and beating their leathery wings against each other to claim their territory. In the end, my eagle won and settled back in to a good nectar treat after scaring the other fruit bat away. This happened so often that I got use to the sound of squawking and chattering- a kind of lullaby as I drifted into dreamland. On my first night back I realized how cities and towns in the US are void of night-noise. Sure, we have loud cars that "boom boom" their music, or police sirens, or "outside-voiced" college students making their way home from the bars at 2 a.m., but not nature noise. I couldn't sleep for the first month upon return because it was entirely too quiet.
I am the campus representative at CSU. I get paid to talk about Peace Corps all day- it is a wonderful job.
Monday, September 24, 2007
Thoughts on Education
If you visit this blog, you will find out two things about me: 1. I was a Peace Corps volunteer and 2. I have been a teacher for some time, and part of that experience was teaching in a village in Alaska for two years- in a completely standards-based educational system. Please check it out - just click on the url to the right to get you to Chugach Schools. I believe that this is the way education may be heading- but it sure is going to take us a long time to get there. This "blogging" is all new to me- so comment if you like. I'd love to chat about Peace Corps or teaching in general.
Monday, September 3, 2007
My first entry
As I sit here enterning my information into cyberspace I think "wow, life IS NOT like this in the Solomons." Then I think- "who ever reads this may think- life will be like this soon enough in the Solomons." But it's just not true... There are so many places in the world and the U.S. that you cannot be connected to the internet. This does not mean that we shouldn't connect- but it is interesting to me that the assumption (especially in the first chapter of the book "A New Literacies Sampler") is made that All people can be connected and ARE connected all of the time. hmmm. My rambling will become clearer as I think and articulate myself better. As for now, I think that we need to remember that our technological life is "connected" to the developed western world... and even there, we still have big gaps in how far a cell phone signals will reach, not to mention wireless internet.
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