June 2008


 

160_aboriginalIn an event that will for be known for centuries as “The Apology ”, yesterday marked one of the most important events in Canadian history. Prime Minister Steven Harper made an official apology on behalf on the government of Canada, finally, to Aboriginal Canadians for the assimilating, genocidal policies of the Residential Schools. Yes, genocidal: according to the United Nations, one group’s attempt to alter another group, via familial and cultural transmission of values, is a form of genocide. Prime Minister Harper admits that the absence of an apology has been an impediment on the healing process for these acts of genocide.

“About 150,000 First Nations, Inuit and Métis children were removed from their communities . . . and forced to attend one of the country’s 130-odd residential schools. Overseen by the Department of Indian Affairs, the schools aimed to force aboriginal children to learn English and adopt Christianity and Western customs as part of a government policy called “aggressive assimilation.”” –CBC

Many of these students endured every manner of abuse: physical abuse, sexual abuse, emotional abuse and neglect. There are 86,000 former students of Residential Schools living in Canada today. These genocidal acts have creates a network of abuse, miseducation, and psychological trauma that has, in many ways, poisoned communities of Aboriginal Canadians. This does not mean that Aboriginal Canadians have not moved past these horrific past actions, in fact they have displayed incredible strength and vitality in the face of cultural genocide. fallenfeather

The greatest book I have read focusing on Residential Schools is the quasi-autobiographical novel by Tomson Highway, “Kiss of the Fur Queen”. As a former residential school student turned piano protege, turned playwright,  Highway’s story blends traditional Native spirituality with poetic prose and a roller coaster of a plot that follows the lives of two Cree brothers from northern Manitoba as they are forced into residential schools and then move to Winnipeg. It’s a dense and surreal text, but it weaves humour and wit into a story of profound tragedy.

I commend the Government of Canada for The Apology and, if you aren’t up to date on the facts of Residential Schools in Canada, I highly recommend that you look into it. It is one of our country’s darkest and most concealed secrets. Hopefully it won’t be a secret any longer.

Allan

 

Perhaps one reason that I feel qualified to have a professional blog is that I am quite confident in how I engage with people at a professional level. The proof is in the punch: I have 5 jobs. Seriously. My primary job, as I’ve mentioned, is as robo-writera copywriter at a marketing company that specializes in helping employers communicate with their employees—specifically focusing on loss prevention. For the past 8 weeks I have been working with another copywriter and the two of us work under the company’s studio manager / copyeditor / copywriter. But I was hired to replace the second copywriter for her maternity leave. The official replacement occurred today; her last day was Friday. So now my work load is assuredly going to at least double, but I am up to the challenge. I find copywriting fun and engaging—but I think that’s best left for another post.

 

My second job is a part of my funding package that was offered to me by the University of Waterloo: I am a teaching assistant for a distance education course. The course is English 210F: Business Communications and I am responsible for marking the work of 35 students. I also deal with all student correspondences because it is an online course. Again, I find this job engaging and fun. Although, I’ll admit, the first assignment was a professional portfolio—resume, cover letter, and job description—and after marking about 25 of these assignments, I was getting a bit bored. But thus is life. Work can’t always be exciting! But if you take on your assignments with enthusiasm and positivity, you’ll inevitably enjoy it.

My third job is a research assistantship for a psychiatrist in Toronto, Ontario—about an hour from where I live. I was referred to this psychiatrist by a professor in my department at school. This psychiatrist is currently working on his thesis for a masters degree in Education focusing on the education of medical residents. patient-doctor-392His research project is fascinating: he argues that end-of-life interviews (dignity interventions) between medical residents and patients can be a profoundly educational experience for these residents and hopes to prove it through analyzing transcripts of a number of these interviews. That’s where I come in. Due to my background in literary and linguistic studies, I am going to do a middle-level narrative analysis of these interviews and search for narrative or linguistic patterns that emerge. I am quite looking forward to it and I will share my findings here.

I was just hired at my fourth job this weekend—quite randomly I have to add. On Friday night, I was out for drinks at a local pub that typically hosts a lot of Waterloo’s graduate student population. The bartender, Christina, recognized me and asked, “Are you drunk?”

“No,” I replied.

“Do you know how to be a bouncer?” She asked.

“I used to do it in Edmonton when I was younger. Is everything alright?”

It turned out that the owner of this particular pub, who also owns a club across the street, had his entire door staff walk out on him that very evening. She asked if I’d like to make some extra money and help this gentleman out. My friends were leaving soon anyway so I went over to lend a hand. Later on, I asked if he was hiring doormen and he enthusiastically offered me the job. Normally, I wouldn’t work as a doorman at a bar, but I’ve been to this particular club once or twice and the crowd is always very positive and laid back. That night I kicked out a very drunk young man who I noticed smack a girl on the rear, but that was the only incident. I worked the next night too and there were zero incidents. lawnmower1

My fifth job is mowing the lawns of the properties that my landlord owns. He approached me to help him out with this a few weeks ago. I’ve always been on good terms with my landlord, I’ve helped him out a lot and he’s done the same for me. The best example of the latter was a massive flood we had in the basement of our house. I cleaned up the terrible, sewage-ridden mess that was left over and he compensated me for my time but also thanked me profusely for not forcing him to hire professionals. Anyway, I only mow the lawns every second Saturday and rather than receive a payment, I just asked for him to put it towards the monthly bills.

Needless to say, it’s bound to be a busy summer. Anyway, here’s the main point of my post: professionalism pays off. Sure, being nice to everyone doesn’t always work out in your favor immediately. There have been many times where I feel like I’m being taken advantage of or being overly ethical or fair. But when you present that type of persona to people, they remember it and when they need a go-to guy or gal, it’s going to be you. Aside from the first two jobs, the latter three were all offered to me by people I had dealt with in the past who knew they could rely on me—alright the bar job wasn’t offered to me by the owner, but the bartender knew me and she knew I was reliable enough to ask for help.

That’s all for now! Wish me luck.

Okay, University of Alberta department of English, I’ve got a bone to pick with you. I have a honours degree in English from this fine institution and yet it wasn’t until my first week of working as a co-op student copywriter that I realized how little applicable skills I had actually learned during those many years achieving my degree. Professional writing is completely different than academic writing and this university simply does not have a system in place to teach students how their skills can be transferable into the real world (versus the airy, vagrant, academic world).

Second, Third and Fourth year English courses at the University of Alberta are exclusively focused on literary and cultural theory or various literary periods. Now that I am a student at the University of Waterloo, I’ve the opportunity to peruse their course catalogue and check out the titles of some of these (I think) more practical courses. I had better mention here that at the University of Waterloo you can do an undergraduate degree in English specializing in either literary studies or rhetoric and professional writing (RPW); similarly, in my graduate program, I can specialize in either rhetoric and communication design (RCD) or literary studies. Anyway, check out some of these undergraduate course titles that students at the University of Waterloo have the option of taking: Writing Strategies, Genres of Technical Communication, Genres of Business Communication, Arts Writing, Legal Writing, Approaches to Style, Rhetoric: Principles and Practice 1 and 2, Speech Writing, History and Theory of Media 1 and 2, Information Design, The Rhetoric of Text and Image, Writing for the Media, The Discourse of Advertising, and Rhetoric of Argumentation.

The main point I am trying to make here is that the University of Waterloo actually teaches classes on how to make an argument, how to write in the professional world, and how to be critical in the professional world as well. The University of Alberta has many excellent courses on criticism, but none actually teach students how to write, especially not in a professional context. Tania Smith shares my frustration in an article that I came across here in Waterloo (Thanks to Prof Cathy Schryer for this one:  http://www.stthomasu.ca/inkshed/cdncomp.htm):

As one example, I offer the University of Alberta in Edmonton, the university where I obtained my honors B.A. and M.A. in English literature. “Literature and Composition” courses at the University of Alberta have traditionally been 8-month long surveys of post-1800 British, American, and Canadian literature in which students write academic, analytical essays about literature . . . In 1994 Roger Graves explained that Canadian English departments market their courses to students and other departments as if they were “universal guides to clear writing,” but in reality they are “introductions to reading and writing within the discipline of English studies”. [Graves, Roger. Writing Instruction in Canadian Universities. Winnipeg: Inkshed, 56]  

Interestingly, Tania Smith was training as an English instructor at the University of Alberta at the same time that I was beginning my undergraduate degree. It is quite possible that she instructed some of my peers. Her description of how she was trained to be an English instructor at the UofA startled and angered me:

When I was trained as a first-year English instructor in 1994 and 1997 at the University of Alberta, I and my peers were given only 8-10 hours of training, and a very small portion of that time was training in “writing instruction,” which seemed to be interpreted as grammar instruction, grading, and written response to student writing. The bulk of the seminar was about syllabus design and leading discussions about literature. As a result, I and my peers were led to believe writing instruction was just that simple, and since there was no way to enforce it, far less than 1/3 of class time in English 110 was spent “going over” the common errors in class. More intensive writing instruction techniques (such as the use of multiple drafts and peer response) were briefly mentioned as possible methods, but were discounted as too time consuming for the instructor. Therefore, although the course was to include a writing instruction element, this element was often treated superficially as a matter of form and grammar, and teachers could easily get away with spending far less than the required percentage of the course discussing such matters which could easily become boring and tedious. Without more intensive training for writing instructors, and some sort of institutional controls on syllabi and methods, such courses are handicapped in their mandate to teach writing.

I recall enjoying my first year English course—likely moreso because I took it with my best friend than because we had a particularly good instructor. However, I took English 100, which was a version of first year English specifically focused on English literary studies. Many of my friends took English 101, which was to have a writing component in it, but which, I recall, ended up focusing mostly on grammar instruction rather than writing. In retrospect, I would have enjoyed learning grammar, composition, and literary studies, yet this option was not, and still is not, available to first year students at the University of Alberta.

                Anyway, it appears that this diversity is available to students at the University of Waterloo and I applaud the English department here for their forward thinking practicality.

The purpose of this blog is a professional one. I’ve been procrastinating on beginning a personal, diary-like blog filled with my dark musings and secret predilections for a long time . . . For some reason I just can’t do it. I’m not sure why this is. Perhaps I don’t have enough secret musings or dark predilections (or vice versa), or perhaps I have so many that it’s just impossible to jot them down. Perhaps have trouble adopting a secret persona because I am, typically, honest to a fault.  Either way I found the prospect of beginning a professional blog rather attractive. So here we are. I guess I’d better start of with some ground rules then.

1.       This blog is going to specifically be about my experiences in the professional world as a copywriter for a marketing company.

2.       I will constantly be referring to the differences in the education I’ve received in university and how I use these skills on a day to day basis.

3.       I find the prospect of one day writing my autobiography, or the biography of several other individuals I’ve know throughout my life, as rather intriguing. Thus, I will occasionally lapse into memoir-like posts which I will clearly label so as not to trick readers into reading about my life—hey, if you want to read about my life, do it, but I’m not going to suppose that you want to. I doubt I want to read about yours.

4.       Okay, okay, I probably want to read about your life too. Feel free to share your blog’s link with me and I’ll do my best to check it out. If I like I what I read, we can dialogue. Isn’t that what joining the blog-o-sphere is all about.

5.       I’m not sure if blog-o-sphere is a word but I will be using it anyway. I, like Erin McKean, think of myself as an anti-prescriptivist dictionary evangelist

6.       I will try to reference as many cool, academic or professional resources and references as I possibly can: links I find in my academic studies or just from boingboing (or my friend Dave . . . he’s good).

7.       I can’t think of anymore and, guess what? It’s 5!

More later,

Al