Welcome to another Blog Cabin on the Web River -- A place to explore what it means to be a Canadian citizen, to be connected to your environment, history, and culture, and what it means to be you!
Wednesday, May 10, 2006
Field Trip Feedback
(picture coming!) Well... I had fun. Geomorphology & city history at MacMillan Creek, soil & surface analysis at the base of the cutbanks, and local history at Cottonwood Island. What did you think, find, learn or discover? What questions do you still have? Suggestions for next time?
Monday, May 8, 2006
Current Events Activity
What news strikes you as interesting and/or relevant to our course? Find a reputable news source (like the ones listed below, and come up with a one-page (max!) news review which a) identifies the source and title of article, b) highlights the main pionts of the news artcile, c) discusses how or why this article could be used to explore concepts in SS10 (course tie-in), and d) gives your response, reaction, opinion to the article and connected issue. Keep a hard copy of your one-pager in your binder as part of a current events log. Good places to start a current events search include:
Mainstream media:
CBC news
Global Canada news
BBC news (UK)
Guardian news (UK)
New York Times (USA)
Alternate media sources
Z mag news
OneWorld.net
Alternet
Internet news
Google news
Wikipedia front page
Yahoo News
Mainstream media:
CBC news
Global Canada news
BBC news (UK)
Guardian news (UK)
New York Times (USA)
Alternate media sources
Z mag news
OneWorld.net
Alternet
Internet news
Google news
Wikipedia front page
Yahoo News
Example Current Events log
SUMMARY
This article explores the issues(s) of dam construction in India. New dam construction at Narmada will force thousands to leave their homes, meanwhile old dams aren't providing the benefits they were supposed to, as the needed irrigation canals were never built. A Supreme Court decision has ordered a stop to dam changes, but it ay be too late. The author explores corruption, politics, greed, ecology, and rights in the context of the dam issue. The interview style allows the author to explain how the problem relates with global issues from a number of angles.
COURSE CONNECTION
Government & Economy Units -- power of people, development Issues, globalization, ecology & environment
RESPONSE
I am amazed at how short-sighted the planners seem to be in this part of India to allow the dam projects to destroy villages and mess with ecological balance for the sake of power and irrigation (which never actually materialized). I would like to think that we have a more rational system in Canada but there are plenty of examples of mega-project blunders, mining operations, dams, and developments (many in BC) which have been a disaster for land-users, Aboriginal peoples, ecological stability, and long-term economic viability. The problem in Narmada makes me cynical about government in general, and distrustful of corporate initiatives. For example, will our provincial government accelerate the lifting of key pieces of land from the ALR to allow development? Relevant past experience says yes... we will lose Agricultural land base, wild places will face more pressure, urban-accessable green space will become user-paid and out of the reach of ordinary citizens. I hope the activits in India can prevent a disaster for the people in Narmada.
This article explores the issues(s) of dam construction in India. New dam construction at Narmada will force thousands to leave their homes, meanwhile old dams aren't providing the benefits they were supposed to, as the needed irrigation canals were never built. A Supreme Court decision has ordered a stop to dam changes, but it ay be too late. The author explores corruption, politics, greed, ecology, and rights in the context of the dam issue. The interview style allows the author to explain how the problem relates with global issues from a number of angles.
COURSE CONNECTION
Government & Economy Units -- power of people, development Issues, globalization, ecology & environment
RESPONSE
I am amazed at how short-sighted the planners seem to be in this part of India to allow the dam projects to destroy villages and mess with ecological balance for the sake of power and irrigation (which never actually materialized). I would like to think that we have a more rational system in Canada but there are plenty of examples of mega-project blunders, mining operations, dams, and developments (many in BC) which have been a disaster for land-users, Aboriginal peoples, ecological stability, and long-term economic viability. The problem in Narmada makes me cynical about government in general, and distrustful of corporate initiatives. For example, will our provincial government accelerate the lifting of key pieces of land from the ALR to allow development? Relevant past experience says yes... we will lose Agricultural land base, wild places will face more pressure, urban-accessable green space will become user-paid and out of the reach of ordinary citizens. I hope the activits in India can prevent a disaster for the people in Narmada.
Current Events activity
What news strikes you as interesting and/or relevant to our course? Find a reputable news source (like the ones listed below, and come up with a one-page (max!) news review which a) identifies the source and title of article, b) highlights the main pionts of the news artcile, c) discusses how or why this article could be used to explore concepts in SS11 (course tie-in), and d) gives your response, reaction, opinion to the article and connected issue. Keep a hard copy of your one-pager in your binder as part of a current events log. Good places to start a current events search include:
Mainstream media:
CBC news
Global Canada news
BBC news (UK)
Guardian news (UK)
New York Times (USA)
Alternate media sources
Z mag news
OneWorld.net
Alternet
Internet news
Google news
Wikipedia front page
Yahoo News
Mainstream media:
CBC news
Global Canada news
BBC news (UK)
Guardian news (UK)
New York Times (USA)
Alternate media sources
Z mag news
OneWorld.net
Alternet
Internet news
Google news
Wikipedia front page
Yahoo News
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