Thursday, May 30, 2013

Scavenger Hunt and Civilization Museum

We held our annual scavenger hunt today. The students did a great job of finding all of the points on this GPS hunt. There was a bit of a snafu at the Micky "D's". Apparently  McDonald's does not sell their ice cream cones at a uniform price in Canada.  Kara ordered 9 of the items on the menu that best matched the price I gave her. They turned out to be pie instead of ice cream. You can imagine how some of the students reacted when the pies came out instead of the cones. The clerks were sympathetic and gave all of the students ice cream for just $5 more. Thanks to Tiffany all the students had Pie à la Mode. I am very impressed how Kara, Caitlyn and Tiffany handled this. Kara choose to use her French skills to make the order resulting in the clerk making a mistake because she was expecting Kara to speak English. Caitlyn brought out the pies and distributed them in a way that made it seem that no mistake was made. Tiffany bailed out the two girls with the $5 necessary to correct the mistake. This was truly a leadership learning experience, and I proud of our team for pushing through it.

Here is a video that show the scavenger hunt, museum and some shopping we did in the evening.  We were not permitted to take pictures in the museum, but you will get to see an upside down video of some of us in an earth quake simulator.

Tomorrow we will ride bicycles and venture on the ferry to Levis.  Can't wait.
http://locker.palcs.org/~pparris/Quebec/2013%20Quebec/2013%20Quebec%20Day%203.mp4

Wednesday, May 29, 2013

Aquarium
Aquarium
Today we went to the Quebec Aquarium.  We were going to take our vans, but we found that we would lose our parking space if we moved the van. We decided to take a public bus. What an adventure. Luke actually got an owl to who at him. The polar bear seemed a little unhappy, but the luminescent jelly fish were amazing. Perhaps the most impressive specimen was the octopus with 20 foot arms.

Here is a video of our trip to the aquarium, and our opportunity to sample classic cuisine at two restaurants in the city. The Crepes were delicious. The poutine and cheese curds were amazing.

Tomorrow we will visit the civilization museum and have a digital picture scavenger hunt.  See you soon.
http://locker.palcs.org/~pparris/Quebec/2013%20Quebec/Day%202.wmv

Tuesday, May 28, 2013

Quebec 2013 Day 1 The Citadel, and Governor General's Residence

citadel
Citadel
We had a busy day today with much walking, and learning about The French military heritage in Quebec. We visited the Plains of Abraham where a battle was fought and won by the British. Madame Crisfafio explained the importance of the battle that occurred there.  All of Canada would be French if the British had not won that battle. Many  of the people who refused to accept British rule were forced to leave and moved to the Isle of Orleans which we plan to visit on Friday. We will visit a sugar shack there, and enjoy fresh maple syrup melted on snow into candy.  Delicious!

We went on a tour with an English speaking guide. It was obvious from the tour that the French speaking people are very passionate about their values, and are willing to fight to the death for them. We heard stories about the French Canadian Royal  22nd Regiment's heroic victory of Vimy Ridge in World War I.  I was inspired by their passion, to fight for those who they agree with like Gandhi, and the United Nations peace keeping forces all over the world. It is not surprising that the Queen of the Great Britain has chosen this award winning force to protect her.

We also visited the Governor General's residence. The Governor General serves as Secretary of State with significantly more power in the Canadian Government. His residence was similar to visiting the White House in the United States. We were not permitted to take pictures but there are a couple of slides at the end of the video with the best view from the bluff of the Saint Lawrence River.
I hope you have enjoyed our trip so far. We will be visiting Luke's favorite spot in Quebec tomorrow, a new aquarium that promises not to disappoint. :)

Enjoy this video of our day. http://locker.palcs.org/~pparris/Quebec/2013%20Quebec/Day%201.wmv

Monday, May 27, 2013

Arrival in Quebec

Arrival
Arrival in Quebec
The first time I came to Canada I forgot my passport. The border security guard was a bearded old man that did not want to hear my excuses. I had rode on my bicycle with two of my friends from high school, and I was not about to go back.  I told him quite seriously that if he did not let me in, then I would consider swimming the Niagra River. He gave me one of those long hard stares, shook his head and got up out of his chair. I did not know whether I was going to be arrested or thrown out. He looked at me sternly and said. “I will let you in, but I can’t guarantee that you will ever get back out.” I remember riding along the Niagara thinking, I could swim that. Then I saw the falls and changed my mind.

Fortunately, we did not have this experience at the border but if we did it would have been worth the risk. We had an excellent first day of our trip. We arrived by 7 PM. We had food before 8, and were back in our rooms by 9 PM. I love it when a plan comes together. No worries. We are doing great! Please enjoy this brief video.

We would love to have students interact with us on our BLOG.

http://locker.palcs.org/~pparris/Quebec/2013%20Quebec/arrival.wmv

The 2013 Quebec Team

Saturday, May 11, 2013

You have no buildings in cyber school!

Tuesday and Wednesday of this week, we visited Harrisburg to support cyber education. Each of our 13 student senators had their own story about why they choose to do cyber ed. They collected 100 letters from their classmates who had many different reasons for choosing cyber school. Our 13 student senators with very little training gave these letters to legislators by hand delivering the letters and dropping in on unsuspecting politicians. We also set up appoints with senators and representatives who I will mention in this post.

I like to call the reasons for choosing cyber school the three B's. Bullying, Bad grades, and Bad behavior. Bullying is a category that covers students being assaulted, attacked, or threatened physically or verbally, Many of our students have been bullied. Some of our students have been bullies themselves. Each has their own story that could fill several of my posts. Bad grades usually come when a student is unable to work at their own pace. They are defeated because they do not understand something, and do not have the time to get help or figure it out. The flexibility of cyber school allows students to work at their own pace or get tutoring help. Many of the 100 letters that we had gathered told that story. Bad behavior is not a very accurate description, but it does fit the rule of B. What I mean by bad behavior is really hyper activity, disorderliness, twitching, or even sickness. Included in this category is also disfigurement that would draw unwanted attention. I would like to add a fourth B to this mantra. The fourth B stands for buildings. School district personnel and legislators believe we have no buildings. This is wrong. Our cyber school has six buildings that we pay rent, mortgage or utilities on. Look at the top of the page to see examples of these buildings. Our mission was to communicate to the legislators that students had important reasons that they choose to by cyber schooled and that we have many of the same expenses as regular charter schools even though we receive 30% less funding for this reason. There is irony in our visit because our student government organization is an extra curricular activity that we also receive no funding for. This organization has sponsored two proms, two talents shows, numerous fundraisers, events, activities and  international and domestic trips annually for the past seven years.

We started our day be visiting Senator Mike Fulmer. He is the chairman of the senate education committee. Mike was informative and cordial to our students. He is new in this role and has an open mind. He is an advocate for parental choice in education which is also our desire. He asked us a great question. He asked if it would be fair if we could all be paid the same agreed upon amount for each student assigned to a cyber school. At the time I had not thought of that approach before. Now that I am home, I think it is a bad idea. If the PA Department of education were to add all of the individual allotments up from every school district for each student and divide by the number of school districts, minus special education, we would have an average amount for every student. The only problem with this strategy is that the districts who are richer would receive a bonus and the poorer districts would be forced to pay even more. While I am sympathetic to the idea of getting away from individual school boards establishing such unequal education allotments per student, I think this probably is the wrong way to go about it. A uniform payment for every student can not happen without reforming the entire funding of the state educational system.

The night before we had spoke with  Representative John Lawrence. He showed us some hand written letters from students. He said the he received as many as 500 a month. These letters were copied word for word from a teachers instruction. In the letters the students wrote about how money going to cyber schools was hurting their school. The ultimate betrayal of education is to indoctrinate young minds with opinion presented as fact. This is a mistake teachers can make when they are desperate for change. The ends justify the means in a process that opposes the values they embrace and teach. When we give into fear and in our confusion cheat with a quick fix to a problem we don't understand, then we must know that history will repeat itself in the future, and we may find ourselves on the other end of a future betrayal.

Representative Dan Truitt is a champion for cyber education and school choice. He has introduced two new bills to protect cyber schools. They are House Bill 970 and 971. These bills will allow cyber school funding to be reformed by having these schools report their expenses versus their revenues on an annual balance sheet. Unfortunately, cyber schools currently seem to be an easy target for funding cuts. When Dan attempts to defend cyber schools he has heard one consistent rebuttal. Cyber schools deserve a cut because they have no buildings.  When you ask a legislator if he has ever visited a cyber school they normally respond, no. Many legislators will never believe that we have buildings until they visit. We welcome them to come to 1332 Enterprise Drive, West Chester, PA 19380 or any of our other centers. I am sure that the other cyber schools will be happy to invite them as well. When legislators say we have no buildings, we should respond, look and see.