
It’s Thursday morning around 9am , I just had breakfast at the Arabesque downstairs, had my coffee and read the Khaleej Times. Must tell the blog about my day and night yesterday here in Al Ain—the oasis city...
Duncan Murphy picked me up around 7:30, and when he came a bit early I was still on the blog and hadn’t yet uploaded the photo album over my 28.8kb hotel connection, so Sandee, now you know why it wasn’t there until a couple hours later when I completed posting it. Now I know the life of a reporter—always working to a deadline, juggling the need to be present in the experience with the need to be the recorder of the experience. Well worth the effort though—no question whatsoever about that in my mind.
The workshop session I did yesterday was specifically for the participants in the training course I am facilitating for Al Ain Men’s and Women’s Colleges starting mid October. (see new photo album “Al Ain Workshop Day” Out of 100 faculty, Gary told me around 50 had requested to be in the class, but we had agreed to set a limit to 12 for the first session, so they were all highly motivated interested faculty from a variety of disciplines, including English, engineering, e-commerce, network administration, and more.
It takes a bit of getting to know each other when first getting underway, as there are so many different perceptions and assumptions about blended learning, with some faculty being relatively new to the elearning field and others having masters degrees in online education from top programs around the world. So bridging that gap and providing a comfortable starting place we can build on was my goal for the day.
I decided to do a “greatest hits” approach, meaning I would take some of the best elements of the different workshops like “50 Tips to Reduce Stress of Teaching Online” and “Multimedia for Online Courses” and blend them with an orientation to the OIT course. I really think it went well. In the morning we did a bit of talking about eLearning and showing what’s ahead in the course, then had the faculty show some of the work they’ve already done on WebCT and in other formats so we could explore how to optimize it for our purposes. This is a super group of folks—dedicated, smart, and funny as well, which as you might imagine, brought out the ham in me just a wee bit…
The first hour or so we were kind of feeling our way rather than taking a more orderly approach, and I took questions on everything and anything. At the break, a really nice gentleman came up and shook my hand and said, “Well you’ve taken the shotgun approach so far, and now there’s not a single squirrel left in the tree, but I wonder if you might lead us back down to earth a bit…” We both laughed and I just felt a connection with him that makes this profession what I love. I told him I was going to use that expression from now on…
After the break I sensed we were starting to really relax with each other and feel free to open up about things, worries, concerns, etc, and then that most wonderful of teaching experiences began to take hold—that experience where you can laugh and enjoy each other’s company while still getting really good work done and quality learning and sharing—all the great things we aspire to in our classrooms. Good stuff! This was my last training day in the UAE, and after work, Gary and Duncan had arranged a sand duning expedition by 4x4s with a desert BBQ and re-hydration session. The combination sounded a bit dodgy, but after 20+ days of round the clock work all over the region, I was up for just about anything…
OK, it’s 9:35 am, time for a swim, as I’ve got to check out of here by noon to return to Dubai for one last night and then I’m off by magic carpet to the online education capital of the world—Beavercreek, OREGON!!!
So swim first, then I’ll get back to “feeding the blog”… good time to grab a cup, eh?
…Just back now from a delightful swim (see photo album “Al Ain poolside”) in the pool here at the Intercontinental hotel.
So after work yesterday, Gary Evans organized a desert BBQ and sand duning extravaganza. We first went to Gary’s house and I got a quick tour of the stables and 4 horses from his adorable children and wife Sue, then loaded up the Land Rover, changed into shorts and no shoes, and we were off, LITERALLY roving over the land as Gary paid no mind at all to the paved road out of town and went over curbs, through open desert lots—more like “as the crow flies” than driving. It was brilliant! When we got to the edge of the desert (hardly 5 minutes from his home), he pulled over and had son James drive (see photo album “Al Ain Garys Great Adventure”), which had me initially saying my prayers over, but soon found with dad shouting instructions from the back seat, James was cool as a cucumber, and a skilled desert driver.
The trail ended at a camel camp, where we took some photos, then went on making out own path through increasingly high dunes and gullys of fine red sand, until we reached our BBQ site. James and Gary got the flames going while Elizabeth, Mary Claire, Duncan, and 3 year old Max took to climbing the dunes nearby.
Then we were off with Gary at the wheel. I’ve only seen the kind of 4 wheel driving Gary does on television, and luckily I had my video cam with me so I can show people what it’s like. At first when Gary would gun the engine and crest a dune with only the sky to see before landing on the other side, I was a bit “heart in my throat”, but after a few more, I was totally into it, and as Gary went faster and at more angles and dips, we both laughed like the twin maniacs I think we truly are…that is 100% good fun, especially in Gary’s expert hands. This is a guy that more than one person told me could start a desert driving school tomorrow and make a killing. World class.
Later we pulled back in to our BBQ spot, how he found it, I’ll never know, but it grew to be “magic hour” and as more friends arrived we munched on salad fixings, chicken, sausages, fish (for me), and plenty of hydrating fluids. Absolutely lovely! The kinds romped over the dunes, made marshmallows, and then Sue took them home and the adults just sat out talking under the desert sky, a warm breeze blowing softly, quiet all around us, digging our toes into the fine, clean sand at our feet.
When it was time to go, Gary asked very innocently if our other friends in another 4x4 might want to take a little more “interesting way home” and do a bit of “night duning.” It was on! THAT to me was the best of all—only the headlights to partially show the way blazing at speed up the front side, then straight down the back side, nearly vertical…whooping it up like two boys, we kept backtracking to dig the other 4x4 out of precarious positions—at each stop, more and more persistent inquiries about “Gary…perhaps there’s a more straightforward path home?”—oh…too much fun for any one to have, really.
Back at the hotel about 11 PM, I met up with Duncan at Shooters for a few quick games of pool and some more conversation. Turns out Duncan spent a year at Soon Mouk monastery in Thailand, which I also had been to, and we thus had a very rare connection to similar experiences…
Which brings me to the present, and time to upload this to the blog, pack , off again to Dubai…where, if my wife is reading this, I want to say I will do my best to find some nice “bling-bling”, modestly priced (hopefully) to bring back home…wish me luck! (and if I don’t get all the photos uploaded before I go this time, be patient and check them out tomorrow as well, when I may have more time…)