Our paper written from the Soil Camp project received an Outstanding Paper Award at the meeting of International Society of the Learning Sciences 2024. The paper is available here as: Takeuchi, M., Thraya, S., & Mambo, T. (2024). Learning to see beyond anthropocentric views on bodies through transdisciplinary soil-centered pedagogy. In R. Lindgren, T. I. Asino, E. Kyza, C.Continue reading “Typos in an Outstanding Paper”
Category Archives: Uncategorized
A note of gratitude: Asian Changemakers 2024
Dear My/Our Beautiful Communities After so much contemplation, I have decided to take on your kind nomination for the CBC Asian Change Maker and we have done film screening today at the FascinAsian Film Festival 2024. Being able to have a moment like this evening felt like a miracle for many reasons – for connection,Continue reading “A note of gratitude: Asian Changemakers 2024”
Listen to the stories of the soil — What the soil compaction tells us about human relationships with the land
Together with Dr. Kori Czuy (Manager, Indigenous Science Connections) and Dr. Mathew Swallow (Associate Professor in Soil Sciences, Mount Royal University), we have collaboratively written an article published in The Conversation (later republished in the Globe and Mail, Phys.org, and Yahoo News). The original, preprint version of this article is here. We are the productContinue reading “Listen to the stories of the soil — What the soil compaction tells us about human relationships with the land”
Soil Camp 2021: Community partnership provides opportunities for refugee students to connect with the land
Reposted from UToday article published here (Thank you Clayton MacGillivray at the Werklund School of Education, University of Calgary, for his help for writing this story.) During the pandemic, community gardens and urban farms served as one of the few places people could safely gather and socialize, yet access to green space is not equallyContinue reading “Soil Camp 2021: Community partnership provides opportunities for refugee students to connect with the land”
Journal of the Learning Sciences Webinar: Learning in and for collective action
Recording of this event is available now! See the link and password included in this post. Thank you so much for joining the launch webinar of the new Journal of the Learning Sciences special issue around “Learning in and for Collective Action” (guest edited by Dr. Joe Curnow & Dr. Susan Jurow). When: May 28, 2021, 12 pm – 1:30Continue reading “Journal of the Learning Sciences Webinar: Learning in and for collective action”
In The Conversation
Scott White, Editor-in-Chief at The Conversation explains its mission as follows: “In the book The Elements of Journalism, authors Bill Kovach and Tom Rosenstiel state the ‘purpose of journalism is to give people the information they need to make better decisions about their lives and society.’ That lines up nicely with the mission statement of The Conversation:Continue reading “In The Conversation”
Mathematical Literacy in/for Transnational Activism: Critical Conceptualization of Embodiment and Emplacement
I wrote this article for the Journal of the Learning Sciences, with Virgie Aquino Ishihara, a long-term volunteer community activist who has long (for over 20 years) been working with Filipino migrant communities in Japan to redress violence rooted in human trafficking in transnational entertainment industry. Her activism centers love and care toward fellow migrantContinue reading “Mathematical Literacy in/for Transnational Activism: Critical Conceptualization of Embodiment and Emplacement”
Labeling and learning — How does the institutionalized label “English language learner” shape learner experiences in agentive mathematics pedagogy?
How does this Google search with a keyword of “Afghanistan” (e.g., “war” comes up first in the search) relate to in-school learning? The media provides symbolic resources of racism in our daily interactions. The media representation of Afghanistan in North America has been skewed towards wars, especially towards pro-war against Muslims who were portrayedContinue reading “Labeling and learning — How does the institutionalized label “English language learner” shape learner experiences in agentive mathematics pedagogy?”
ICLS 2020 Special Session: Learning and Identity
Unveiling Hidden Epistemologies In the current climate of uncertainty and difficulty that we live in, death is brought to the surface of our daily awareness. We live in the midst of collective grief of lives that were lost. In the year I lost my beloved younger brother, I wrote a piece in the Journal of the LearningContinue reading “ICLS 2020 Special Session: Learning and Identity”
Unveiling the Hidden Embodied Mathematical Knowledge
I start this blog with a story of May – she was a migrant student from the Philippines and lived in an urban city of Japan. Because of the immigration policy, May could not be granted permanent residency or citizenship. This political context placed many children of migrant families including May in stressful and uncertain circumstances.Continue reading “Unveiling the Hidden Embodied Mathematical Knowledge”