All BCIT libraries will be closed on Thursday, July 1st for Canada Day and will re-open on Friday, July 2nd.
Stay safe and enjoy the holiday!
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All BCIT libraries will be closed on Thursday, July 1st for Canada Day and will re-open on Friday, July 2nd.
Stay safe and enjoy the holiday!
By Glenice Lilje
I have never been a green thumb. This has always been a sore spot for me as I come from a line of relatives that made their living as farmers, and yet, I cannot even keep a cactus to save my life. When BCIT first offered a seed library, I thought that I couldn’t possibly participate and that my home was a hostile environment when it came to plants. However, I was still determined and wanted to bask in some of the benefits from gardening and plant tending.
After talking to some plant enthusiasts, I learned that I was actually a little over zealous in my watering and different plants enjoy varying levels of sunlight. Cut to today where I am now enjoying my suburban oasis filled with many climbing plants and Monsteras, as well as an edible garden on my balcony.
Here are some resources that helped me overcome my trials and tribulations to become the crazy plant lady I am today:
Backyard Bounty – 2nd Edition: The Complete Guide to Year-Round Organic Gardening in the Pacific Northwest by Linda Gilkeson, 2018
Has the pandemic inspired you to start a garden? Do you aspire to grow your own food but feel that it may be too time consuming or challenging with your busy schedule? Master gardener Linda Gilkeson will curb any hesitancy by breaking down any challenges and provide helpful insights to turn anyone into a green thumb! Packed with a plethora of information, this guide highlights low-maintenance methods, what to do about common pests and how to make your garden more resilient to the changing climate. This book comes highly regarded from BC gardeners and perfect for novice and experienced gardeners alike!
The New Seed-Starters Handbook by Nancy Bubel, 2018
Why start from seeds when you can just buy the seedlings? Starting plants from seeds can make for earlier harvests, healthier seedlings, lower costs and can result in a greater variety. Not to mention the feeling of satisfaction one gets when watching their plants develop and blossom after starting off as just a tiny seed. This handbook will guide the reader through the latest in seed starting research, growing materials and media, as well as troubleshooting tips. It also comes with a plethora of information on over 200 plants-including vegetables, herbs, trees, fruits, garden flowers and much,much more.
Rodale’s Ultimate Encyclopedia of Organic Gardening by Deborah L. Martin, 2017
Rodale’s Ultimate Encyclopedia of Organic Gardening has been a gardener’s go-to resource for over 50 years. With over fifty gardening experts and writers contributing to the book, green thumbs of all levels can find information on how to start and/or maintain their community/urban gardens, find out more about edible landscaping, stonescaping and even horticultural therapy (say that 3x fast!). This updated version has added comprehensive coverage on earth-friendly techniques, what to do about invasive plants and insects, how to reduce energy use and recycling and also touches on wise water management.
Ready to take the plunge or would like a little more information? Check out BCIT’s Seed Library.
by Erica Huntley
Social Chemistry: Decoding the patterns of human connection by Marissa King, 2020
Marissa King, professor of organizational behavior at the Yale School of Management offers insight into the forms of networking common in our era. Social Chemistry: Decoding the elements of human connection classifies three styles of networking; Expansionist, Broker and Convener. Using examples of well-known and successful celebrities, the book offers more than just quick tips on social networking. Offered instead are broader sociological and psychological concepts of social networks and their impact on the job elsewhere.
Exercised: Why something we never evolved to do is healthy and rewarding by Daniel Lieberman, 2020
Evolutionary biologist, Daniel Lieberman shares some of his life’s work studying running and exercise while busting common myths about it. Both entertaining and informative, Exercised steers away from the blaming or shaming mentality, offering up helpful tips to get you fit. Read this book and be inspired to keep up your own exercise routine, or start one!
Making it personal: algorithmic personalization, identity and everyday life by Tanya Kant, 2020
A critical analysis of the personalization of the internet, Making it personal: algorithmic personalization, identity and everyday life explores the implications of personalized content on selfhood and identity construction. This book is for anyone studying or wondering about the impact of algorithmic personalization on knowledge production, autonomy, cultural capital, and formations of self.
By Jarrett Seto
Alchemy for the Soul
In the midst of a global pandemic, the monotony and horror of our day to day lives can be overwhelming, and understandably so. Sometimes it’s pleasant (ad infinitum) to escape from the endless cycle of Covid, conspiracy theories, and climate change (and let’s not forget the global resurgence of authoritarianism and fascism). It is exhausting. But what’s not exhausting, is diving into new worlds and realities where we can leave the unwanted mess of our own planet behind. Each of these fantasy novels brings something unique and different to the table, and hopefully you’ll want to read other books by these wonderful authors after you finish The Empire of Gold, The Rage of Dragons, and The Essex Serpent.
The Empire of Gold By S.A. Chakraborty (2020)
The dramatic final book of the SA. Chakraborty’s renowned Daevabad Trilogy. You’ll enjoy the intelligent characters who are able to talk things out without the average doses of miscommunication or comedy of errors. The characters have evolved from the first book, and the expansive world building does not take away from the plot. The Empire of Gold is a solid mixture of fantasy, romance, and politics, so readers will enjoy this amalgamation.
The Rage of Dragons By Evan Winter (2019)
Book One of the Burning series by Canadian author Evan Winter is unlike traditional fantasy narratives. Containing African revenge fantasy influences, this installment thrusts you into a society living in a state of perpetual warfare with a brutal caste system. Join our young protagonist Tau Solarin as he prepares for his warrior trials. The stakes are incredibly steep and his choices aren’t great, and things do not go according to plan. Be prepared to stay up late, reading page after page of this epic revenge fantasy.
The Essex Serpent: A Novel By Sarah Perry (2016)
In 1893, after the death of her abusive husband, Cora Seaborne retreats from bustling London for the coast to take up amateur paleontology. When a nearby earthquake occurs, it’s rumoured to have woken up the mythical Essex Serpent. Is it a myth? Is it a long lost dinosaur, somehow surviving undetected? Or is it a gigantic serpent? Perry uses the Gothic novel to frame concerns about morality, medicine, science, and religion. The Essex Serpent is an empowering novel, about a strong female character who plays by the beat of her own drum in an excessively patriarchal society.
For instructional videos, how long is too long? Research by Techsmith, the makers of Camtasia (which incidentally BCIT has a free staff subscription to) suggests that people prefer short videos, usually in the 3-6 minute range. But that figure really varies. If you reach the audience that is interested in your topic, and you have engaging content that meets their expectations, people will stick with you way longer than that. The same TechSmith blog has helpful tips for making sure you keep your audience until the credits role. They include prompting “viewers to actively follow along with your video, post thought-provoking questions and ask for comments, feedback, and other engagement.” And that’s where H5P comes in.
With H5P, you can add interactive elements into your video to encourage your audience to stay actively engaged in your content. What does that look like? Check out my first experiment with H5P; it’s a video I did for Annacis Island Campus to promote Library services there.
https://h5p.commons.bcit.ca/wp-admin/admin-ajax.php?action=h5p_embed&id=1104
If you got through the whole thing, you probably noticed my weird narrative enunciation, but also hopefully a number of elements, some interactive, embedded in the video. There are the drop-down quizzes, section headings, live hyperlinks, and a summary activity. In addition to links, images or text, you can embed the following question types:
By the way, if you want to see some more dynamic (=better) uses of H5P, check out the Vital Sign Measurement Across the Lifespan textbook on BC Campus. There’s really impressive integration of H5P videos in the text. I hope one day all textbooks look like this.
But does H5P (and other similar tools) make a difference in student learning? The technology is fairly new but some research is encouraging. For example a study at Utrecht University found that pop-up questions in videos did improve student performance on tests, and this was true whether or not the tested item had been addressed in a pop-up question. The researchers speculate that the mere presence of pop-up questions focuses students’ attention on the video generally. At least, it seems to foster the sort of active learning that is a tenet of BCIT’s e-Learning Strategy while supporting instructors’ “capacity to create and maintain their own e-learning environments.”
Are you sold? Here’s how to get started:
REGISTER: Contact your IDC liaison at the LTC or fill out the “Request Help” form at https://h5p.commons.bcit.ca/ and someone from the LTC will get back to you.
EXPLORE: Once you are in go to “H5P Content” and get some ideas of what you would like to do in your video. Marvel at some of the impressive work done by your colleagues. Click on “Add new” and “Details” to explore examples of the various content types.
CREATE: Drop your YouTube video into the Interactive Video tool and consider the type of license you want to use for your content. Then, start adding those interactions. When you are done creating, use the ‘embed’ tool at the bottom of the screen to load it into your course Hub.
That’s it! If you run into snags, check out the H5P site for more how-to’s of H5P video creation. https://h5p.org/tutorial-interactive-video Also Michelle Nakano mnuttall1@bcit.ca and the other IDC’s at the LTC is are great sources of help.
Have you used H5P already? Leave a comment of your experience and student reactions.
By Jarrett Seto
Leabhair iontacha
Ireland. The Emerald Isle. Erin Go Bragh, and Slainte. The Luck of the Irish and the gift of the Gab. Joyce, Yeats, Stoker, and Wilde. Pastures, rolling hills, two hundred year old pubs, and national tragedies. There are many reasons why Ireland lies in writers’ hearts. My favourite Irish whiskey is aptly named Writers Tears. Copper pot, single malt, and with notes of honey, vanilla, and oak.
The names of its counties are popular in song and verse “It’s a long way to Tipperary” and in Whiskey in the Jar “We’ll go rovin’ through Kilkenny.” Even when I recall the first line (in terms of when it’s presented on the page) of Finnegans Wake “riverrun, past Eve and Adams, from swerve of shore to bend of bay, brings us by a commodius vicus of recirculation back to Howth, Castle and Environs” my mind immediately goes to the Donegal coast and its lolling ocean waves, land overrun with heath, green hills dotted with sheep, and timeworn stone walls between the narrow road lined with a spackling of gorse shrubs and alder trees. In the mornings a thick pewter fog blankets the bay, though you can still hear the cries of gulls. Half nine the fog peels away, revealing the ocean, with white tips hurriedly birthing, before collapsing in the slushing grey kelp soup of the North Atlantic. I know it’s meant to be in the Dublin vicinity that the first line is describing, but my association persists regardless. The romantic thoughts I conjure overcome my rational analysis of the words.
Perhaps Ireland resonates so romantically with me because I grew up in the Maritimes, in a family with a salient Irish heritage. After all, parts of the Maritimes are more Irish than Ireland, one could argue. Anyone in Miramichi or the Shamrock City Pub or Mrs. Liddy’s in St. Johns or Glace Bay right in the heart of Cape Breton Island could tell you that. Maybe that’s why I tried to read all of the Irish authors that ever lived. That includes living authors too, and you’ll be at a loss if you don’t check out these newer, twenty first century novels. Pádraig Pearse, the poet, writer, and revolutionary wrote that “Tír gan teanga, tír gan anam.” That translates to “A country without a language is a country without a soul.” These books are full of soul.
Love By Roddy Doyle (2020)
Two older friends reconnect in the many pubs of Dublin. They’re from a time when people were more reserved, and it takes a few drinks for truths to be told and revelations to be made. They discuss love and the decisions that they’ve made in their lives because of it. With each pint, another part of their past is revealed.
Normal People By Sally Rooney (2018)
Connor and Marianne are polar opposites, so much so that they pretend to not know one another in school. He’s popular and well liked, and she has no friends and her classmates think she’s strange. Fast forward a year and they’re both attending Trinity College in London. Marianne is popular, well liked, and surrounded by friends. She comes from money. Connor has very few friends and is lucky to be there. He comes from a very humble background. Class, love, self-destruction, and an inseparable bond between two people melt together to give you Normal People.
This Is Happiness By Niall Williams (2019)
In the tiny parish of Faha nothing ever changes. The pace of life is very slow. Then the rain stops. It’s strange because rain has always fallen on Faha. Electricity is supposed to soon be connected. While local teenager Noel Crowe is basking in the new found sunlight, a mysterious stranger arrives, and with him, change. Tradition, community, and the Irish countryside are weaved together in this coming of age tale.
Conrad Ma is part of the TTED program at BCIT and has been using MediaWorks to print the custom parts required for his robotics project. We wanted to share the finished version as it is an exciting example of how students can use 3D printing and integrate it with other technology…Well done Conrad!
“This project is for a class called Teaching and Learning Support Materials in the TTED program.
It is where we get to build teaching materials that we could take to our school shops when we become teachers. Technology Education teachers are traditionally known as shop teachers. We are teachers who teach elective courses in a wide variety of shop classes including woodworking, metalworking, electronics and automotive technology.
With this project I wanted to make an eye catching project that can help teach different processes from several shops. For this project I welded the pipe to the steel base plate, I went to the wood shop to laminate the palm section of the hand, I 3D modelled the fingers in Fusion360, and of course, I programmed the Arduino microcontrollers in electronics. In addition, this project can also be a selling point to attract students into my shop class by showing the different types of things that they can learn to build and work with. In essence, this was a passion project of mine as I really wanted to learn the robotics behind a project like this and I hope I can use this to spark an interest in my students to build something that they want to build.
Inspiration for this project came from my own experience in electronics class in high school. I named this “Project Gebert” because my electronics teacher had a student that made one of these robotic arms. Unfortunately my teacher had an unfortunate accident where he was reaching for an old container of etchant on a high shelf and the container broke and etchant spilt into his eyes. That made him unable teach electronics after my grade 10 year. I always wondered what it would be like to learn Robotics from him in my senior years. Now that I have learned enough robotics to build a project like this, I dedicated this project to my late electronics teacher Ross Gebert.
Thank you very much MediaWorks for helping me build this project. It was a joy to build and see come together. Here are some photographs of the finished product and of the 3D prints that you helped me with:”
by Jarrett Seto
More must see titles from Kanopy, an on-demand streaming video platform available for all students and staff.
Beautifully shot, this cinematic odyssey follows mobile beekeepers as they haul their precious, albeit unusual, cargo from orchard to farm and onwards. The honeybees, whose numbers are in peril, are essential workers for helping to pollinate many of our staple crops. The Pollinators is surprisingly heartfelt and highlights issues with our current agricultural system with its reliance on chemicals and reduced crop diversity. By the end of its hour and thirty-two minute run time, you’ll have nothing but respect for the workers (both human and Apoidea). This is definitely a unique take on pollination and how some of our staple crops are grown and harvested.
Narrated by Neil deGrasse Tyson, Food Evolution shows the often heated debate over genetically modified organisms (GMOs) and how it affects our food,or at least our perception of it. Science has been used and misused in the issues surrounding GMO foods for decades now. This documentary shows how scientific analysis and literature have been utilized to try and offset campaigns of misinformation on the alleged health risks for using GMO products. It displays both arguments, and science, with respect. But who is correct when people on both sides of the aisle are saying that the science is on their side? Watch and find out.
Fifteen years after the groundbreaking original, Martin Spurlock returns to the world of fast food. Be prepared to be enthralled and horrified at many aspects of the lack of control chicken farmers have over their employers. That’s one of many hidden ingredients to your McChicken meal. It should come as no surprise that many fast food products that are labeled as “healthy” are, in fact, not. With predatory industrial giants, fried chicken versus grilled chicken, and the guise of market research, sit down, relax and have a very healthy salad as you watch this.
Available for streaming here.
Please note that the A-Z list of e-journals and e-books may be unavailable from Saturday, May 29 at 6pm to Sunday, May 30 at 6pm. During that time, links found in First Search and other environments may also be disrupted. We apologize for any inconvenience.
By Jarrett Seto
Nose, Heart, Eyes
On first glance, none of these books appear to have much in common. At all. However, I noticed a theme of sorts. They all deal with our senses and intuitions. Ok, so our heart and/or soul isn’t a sense per say, but there’s still a feeling you get from it. Each of these books varies in theme, but there’s smell, sight (through dry observation), and heart. Think of these three books as those See no evil, Hear no evil, Speak no Evil monkeys but altered. So monkey number one has their hands pointed towards their nose, number twos hands are away from their eyes, and three has their hands over their hearts. I name them the three monkeys of proverbial emotions. Or for a band name, the Olfactory Cortex Heart Club Band.
The Scent Keeper By Erica Bauermeister (2020)
Memory and family relationships are masterfully explored in The Scent Keeper. The novel follows Emmeline, a person who can read the history and journey of an item simply by its scent. Her father teaches her about the natural world using her senses as she grows up on a remote island off British Columbia. She discovers mysterious scents closed in little bottles that line the walls of her home. There comes a time where she must leave the island, and with it comes growing up, friendship, love, grief, and family. The Scent Keeper goes great with a reading nook and a cup of peppermint tea. Do you remember the first time you smelled peppermint tea?
My Year of Rest and Relaxation By Ottessa Moshfegh (2019)
A young, talented, and beautiful Columbia graduate has endless possibilities. She’s got an easy job and has lots of inheritance. She should be having the time of her life. But something doesn’t feel quite right. Could it be personal loss, an unhealthy relationship, or perhaps another issue? Ottessa Moshfegh’s second novel is, if anything, bold. It doesn’t shy away from any of life’s unpleasantries. You’ll find out that Moshfegh certainly has a way with words in this darkly humorous story of a woman who is trying to sleep for an entire year with prescription medications. The wry observational wit will cause you to chuckle, even when you know that you shouldn’t.
Notorious RBG: The Life and Times of Ruth Bader Ginsburg By Irin Carmon and Shana Knizhnik (2015)
Lawyer. Jurist. Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States. Feminist Icon. There are many roles one thinks of when RBG is mentioned. Her mark on history is undeniable, and her support for gender equality and human rights inspires people across generations. It’s well known that she was a role model for millions of people across the globe and that she possessed noble convictions. Notorious RBG gives you a look into her life’s work, her struggles, and victories.