« Give me year 10 anytime | Main | Grandmother stories »

The ordinariness of hatred (and a request for help)

KKK outfit - Legacy gallery.jpg Our year 10 ethnographers did a great job today, gathering over 300 stories for the project and having a great time in the process. We took them to two "performances" one on knife crime and the other on the civil rights movement in the US in the 1960s. the reflections on both experiences were fascinating. At the end they spent time in the Slavery Museum, finding and telling stories about the exhibits which has the highest impact on them. Two of them wrote a poem about this exhibit and all provided intelligent comment. I must admit that this is the exhibit that scares me the most, its not a mock up its a real one. When you look close up you can see the crude hand stitching and your realise the sheer ordinariness of the creation of this symbol of hatred and fear. The experience of the middle passage moved several, although the multi-media exhibits with music and other images had some of the highest impact. I was impressed with the ability of the children to reflect on complex issues and situate them in their current communities. More on this project later as we complete the analysis and start a wider roll out.

In the mean time (and on a very prosaic level) we are trying to find a simple, cheap hand held device with a reasonable sized touch (or pen) screen with a good quality recording device built in. Anyone out there know of one?

Comments (4)

Although it may not be exactly cheap, an iTouch with the iProRecorder app ($1.99 U.S.) would me an awesome solution. Its easy integration to the Mac would make it an ideal solution.

Mike:

The death toll from a present-day, worldwide hatred is extensively documented at
http://www.thereligionofpeace.com/index.html#Attacks

Tim:

Dave, you might want to take a look at this
http://ookl.org.uk/web/index.php

Regards
Tim

Nicola:

Hi, I've heard good things about OOKL too. Don't know about the school's policy re phones but if they can use their own phones then various ones, Liz Kolb recommended Earfl http://earfl.com/ in a post last year:
http://www.cellphonesinlearning.com/2008/08/digital-storytelling-with-earfl.html

I remember at BETT this year, there are more devices being created for these kinds of purposes but the devices have a lot of functionality that you may not end up using, whereas in theory, phone created content easier to upload and distribute and they already have the devices. If your Year10s do have a range of different devices, would be happy to quickly scan through device atlas and check compatibility if that helps too.

Nicola


Post a comment




Remember Me?

(you may use HTML tags for style)