The week before school started, my true love and I went to visit some friends and family in Ottawa. We visited the Museum of Civilization. Being a tech/media person, I was interested in seeing the Japan exhibition. Although the exhibition was relatively small, there were a couple cool artifacts that got me to thinking.
CRT televisions are now part of our history. The most common place I have seen these TVs in people's basements collecting dust or on the side of road on garbage collection day. I could be wrong, but I'm going to guess that no one is producing these anymore. They have been replaced with flat screen TVs and projectors.
Seeing a cassette player was awesome. I may have even had this same model when I was a kid. I can remember going through my dad's tape collection and playing them on my walkman. Each tape was like an adventure into an unknown galaxy. That was an education that I hope every kid gets to experience. When I think about it, having to listen to an album all the way through makes me think of slow cooking. Although I would never trade my iPhone for a walkman to listen to music on, there's something meaningful in not being able to switch to the next song with the tap of a button. Maybe the music was just better back then.
Seeing these old pieces of technology got me thinking about what I can expect to see in my school and classrooms as I start my new endeavour. I remember over-head projectors, binders and pencils. Computers were used in a computer lab. There were no video projectors.
Being in media arts, my wing of the school is naturally saturated with state-of-the-art gadgets, but even the lecture rooms are also dressed with relevant technology. Every classroom is equipped with a projector and wi-fi access. Every student has a laptop. I have one Hilroy ring notebook to write in and it's only because the professor of a class made it a course requirement. This concept was foreign to me when I first went to school, but now it just makes sense and feels natural. What would have been considered a distraction (apps, internet access, youtube) is key to our learning and development as writers and information seekers.
However, some things haven't changed. Time still ticks away at 60 seconds a minute and I still feel like I have to rush to get to class on time. This is going to be an exciting and engaging 2 years of my life. What happens after this, I can only suspect will be greater things!