
| "We need to prepare students to be global citizens, to know how to communicate with others, learn from each other, understand ourselves and each other. Only then will we have a truly peaceful world." |
So when you ask her what was the best thing to ever happen to her, it's a little surprising when she answers, "Walking out." It was about five years ago that Mali left her class, vowing to never return. She didn't see the reason to teach anymore, frustrated by what she saw as outdated teaching methods and public policies that placed undue importance on test results, sometimes to the detriment of the children themselves. "So I left. Just walked out one day."
It's nice to know you're wanted and Mali certainly was. Encouragement from her administrator prompted her to rethink her situation. But the spark that re-ignited her passion for teaching came from a completely new source: fellow teacher and mentor, Jim Carleton. Using his award-winning experience as the Information Communications and Technology consultant for the Simcoe County District School Board, Jim taught Mali how to use technology to enrich her students' experience. "That brought the spark back to my teaching." And it brought teachers and students from around the world into her classroom. "For the first time in history, we as teachers can allow our students the chance to collaborate with others instantly and in real time." A project Mali has been intimately associated with is "Elluminate," a camera-and-computer internet exchange that enables Mali's class in Canada to collaborate with a classroom in, say, Iraq. "The ability to actually talk to and connect with other students is so powerful. No longer are some of these kids just kids in news stories; they are friends!" Mali has found that this type of interchange doesn't just enrich the education, it builds empathy and tolerance. "By having them connect with others in meaningful dialogue, we can help them develop as citizens of the world."
It was Jim who introduced Mali to the International Education and Resources Network, a global network of teachers and students committed to collaborative learning. "I could see the creativity and meaningfulness of the projects and they spoke to my soul, something that was missing in my life and career." It wouldn't be long before Mali would join her mentor as co-coordinator of iEARN Canada. The two have been actively cultivating the network in Canada and abroad ever since. It was at an iEARN conference in the Netherlands where Mali was first introduced to The MY HERO Project. "I instantly knew that I had to get my class involved." For Mali, the topic of heroism in the classroom is a natural. Her own heroes, her mother and father, have earned a place in her life, not so much because of their fame, fortune or impact on history, but for the lessons they continue teaching her to this day. "My dad is a veteran and fought in WWII. He was 18 when he went to fight in Europe, which now rings so deep within me, as I have an 18-year-old son! He was proud of his involvement in the Royal Canadian Air Force but didn't talk about the war much. He is a quiet, understated man who always taught us to do what is right for all people. There were times in his life that he did what he felt was right, not what was popular and we learned from that. We were blessed to have such a big, diverse family and my mom was, and is, the person who always keeps us all together. My mother taught us to accept everyone and to appreciate each person and that everyone has special gifts."
Courage, acceptance, integrity and the importance in fighting for something in which you believe. For Mali, these are more than teachings to cling to; they're lessons to share. When asked what she would say if she had the teaching world's ear for five minutes, Mali replied, "I would tell them to lay down their curriculum binders, that what is "on page 5" isn't important. What is important is that we teach the whole child." This holistic approach to education is no better illustrated than when Mali introduced her class to a child soldier in Sierra Leone named Sidibay. Mali witnessed firsthand the eye-and-heart-opening experience it was for her Canadian students to reach out across the planet to a young man struggling to rebuild a life that had been shattered by war. Communicating with him by email, supporting him financially and cultivating a personal relationship with this young man has given them a better understanding of their own good fortune as well as their own challenges. "It's incredible when the students actually reach out to the heroes about whom they write and make that connection. To me, that has been the most rewarding part of The MY HERO Project. My dream is that one day, those kids who were in my class (and now I work with them in a Global Education club) will have the opportunity to meet Sidibay."
"I love when they have that "Ah-ha!" moment and change their concept of a hero. So many of our students see the modern day celebrities as heroes. I wanted to have them discover that ordinary people can be heroes, ordinary people who have made an impact on their lives; a family member who has overcome adversity; a local community member who has worked to make a difference in the lives of others." Even as Mali says the words, you get the feeling that she's talking about someone else, some other family member, somebody else in the community who is making a difference, that it hasn't really occurred to her that what she's describing to her students; the selflessness, the determination and the courage that define a hero, can also be seen in the daily commitment of a teacher from Southern Ontario who once walked away but who couldn't stay away. For the lives she's enriched with the gifts of tolerance, caring and fully engaged education and for the immeasurable good she has yet to bring to the world, Mali Bickley is my hero. UPDATE The MY HERO Project last spoke with Mali at the beginning of the 08-09 school year. Since then, Mali and her 5th grade class have faced a unique mix of challenges and rewards. In a recent conversation, Mali shared with us a few of their more memorable moments. Inspired by a visit from MY HERO youth reporter and filmmaker, Slater, Mali’s 5th graders ventured into uncharted movie-making territory by embarking on their own environmental short film. With the help of a software grant from Adobe’s Youth Voices program (an iEARN/Adobe collaboration), the class utilized “green screen” technology to put themselves into their own movie. Though they experienced technical difficulties at first, they remembered Slater’s advice that “Sometimes it doesn’t work out the first time.” The class hung in there and the results are stunning: Commit to Our Earth by The Dream Team. Mali reports that her students at W.H. Day Elementary really embraced the MY HERO Project this year. Some of them had experience with My Hero and the LEARNING CIRCLES (iEARN) and much to Mali’s delight, she found that they were eager to help their fellow classmates. It’s an evolution she encourages, “Our role has changed as teachers. We’re no longer Saints on a stage. We show them how to use (technology) responsibly, step back and let them take leadership.” But perhaps Mali’s most treasured memory from this past year was when her class collaborated with Machinto, a Japan iEARN project and the Canadian International Development Agency. Their goal was to send books to a girls’ school in Kandahar, Afghanistan; girls whose education has been deliberately and sometimes violently thwarted by extremist groups in the embattled region. In a gesture Mali describes as “an incredibly moving experience,” the girls each created a hand-made book for the students at W.H. Day, books that were hand-delivered by a teacher from Afghanistan. For students and faculty alike, the experience, though not exactly “text-book,” was unforgettable, but then, that’s precisely the lesson Mali seems most motivated to bring her students. As Mali puts it, “It has everything to do with what kind of people are going to be turned out of this classroom.” If the accomplishments of this past year are any indicator, the kind of people coming out of W.H. Day Elementary will be locally and globally engaged and compassionate, the kind of people who make a positive, lasting difference in this world; people like my hero, Mali Bickley. - dk
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Written by
David Kemker
Photos courtesy of Mali Bickley |
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iEARN Canada iEARN-Canada is the Canadian chapter of iEARN, the International Education and Resource Network. iEARN is the world largest and longest-running k-12 global learning network. iEARN is a non-profit global telecommunications community of over one million students and teachers in over 20,000 primary and secondary schools and youth organizations in over 120 countries. iEARN enables students and teachers worldwide to undertake projects designed to make a meaningful contribution to the health and welfare of the planet and its people. Through their educational projects, young people develop the skills needed for the 21st century. iEARN has helped to facilitate and support projects to this end since 1988. Art Miles Mural Project The Art Miles Mural Project is a passionate and colorful ten-year movement combining the efforts of children and adults worldwide to promote global peace and harmony through mural art. Each hand and every mural aims to create and express a global voice to develop and advocate art rather than violence, cooperation instead of war and the continuation of life rather than death. Mile by mile across countries, borders and oceans, the Art Miles Mural Project has become the resonating artistic symbol for peace. Machinto The Machinto Project brings children together to share their responses to war and to facilitate the delivery of picture books they make to bring comfort to those in conflict zones. Machinto gives children around the world a voice and an understanding of non-violence. Mali Bickley's Class page of Heroes Mali and her class at W.H. Day participated in the My Hero Learning Circles... check out their heroes! The My Hero Project Film Festival Mali's students won the National Multimedia Award from the Calgary Board of Education for their My Hero movie about Mohamed Sidibay, a former child soldier from Sierra Leone. |
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To explore some of the ways Mali brings the world into her classroom, browse through some of the projects listed in "links." As coordinators of iEARN Canada, Jim Carleton, Mali Bickley and Anita Townsend will be welcoming the world as they host the iEARN Conference 2010 in Ontario, Canada. |
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| Ana Eugenia Posada is a dedicated teacher who provides help and support to children with learning difficulties. | Andrew Greene Jr. of Sierra Leone teaches the world about peace. | Annie Mansfield Sullivan Macy developed new methods for teaching blind and deaf students. | Atsuko Shiwaku set up the International Intercultural Mural Exchange Project to promote peaceful coexistence. |
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| Baba Coleman is a drumming teacher who instills self-determination in his students. | Barry Guillot is a middle school teacher who makes science come to life through service-learning. | Barry Kramer empowers students to ask questions and find answers through Learning Circles, a telecollaborative learning experience. | Bill Belsey is a teacher with a mission to stop bullying. |
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| Cheikh Darou Seck is an English teacher in Senegal who inspires his students to become MY HERO reporters. | Christa McAuliffe was the first teacher to fly in space. | Domingo F. Sarmiento was a distinguished educator and president of Argentina. | Dr. Ed Gragert works towards peace and global education. |
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| Dr. H. Arief Rahman is admired by his students for the way he speaks his mind and encourages them in their studies. | Dr. Norman Isaacs is an inspiration to the staff and students at Millikan Middle School. | Dr. Robert Ballard and the JASON project bring scientific exploration to children around the world. | Eeva Reeder is passionate about teamwork and hands-on, real-life applications of abstract mathematical concepts. |
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| Emi Yuliaty encourages her students to believe that where there is a will there is a way. | Erin Gruwell is the founder of Freedom Writers and an inspiration to teachers and students around the world. | Eva La Mar uses visual learning and communication tools to deepen understanding of geography, geology and local history. | Film Festival 2005 Teacher Award Get a Clue Carol Anne McGuire teaches visually impaired children and founded Rock Our World. |
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| Gary Birch is a compassionate educator and role model to his students. | Geeta Malik is a media arts educator for The MY HERO Project. | George N. Parks inspires his band students to do their best and have fun with music. | Georgiana Munteanu, My English Teacher inspires her students to believe in themselves and to love and respect nature. |
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| Giuseppe Fortunati is a computer teacher from Italy who uses the Internet to promote cultural exchanges. | Hero Teachers of a Dyslexic is a personal story that seeks to guide and encourage students who learn differently. | Herschel Vaughn conducts an after-school program that teaches music, discipline, and friendship. | Jacqueline Melnick is a music teacher. |
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| James Burke developed a model of discovery called the Knowledge Web to connect information across space and time. | Jason Wilcox was a teacher at Glenmore Christian Academy. | Jason XV: Teacher Argonauts Eight talented teachers from the US and Bermuda took part in Jason XV: Rainforests at the Crossroads in Panama. | Jesse Thyne was a generous soul with a passion for teaching. |
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| Judy Warner worked to create a public high school for technology. | Laurel Schmidt encourages her fifth graders to get involved. | Louis Braille invented a system of writing and reading used by blind people all over the world. | Luisa Orellana is an English as a second language teacher who inspires her students to reach for their dreams. |
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| Mali Bickley uses technology to help her students connect with their peers around the world to build empathy and tolerance. | Marco Torres helps students empower themselves through the mastery of multimedia. | Maria Montessori developed a new approach to education. | Marsha Goren is much beloved by her students for her genuine commitment to them. |
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| Martha Mecartney is a scientist, engineer and professor committed to helping young women interested in the field of science. | Mary Lyon established the U.S.'s first college for women. | Mary McLeod Bethune used education to help in the fight for racial and gender equality. | Mel Levine believes that students who understand their learning styles are better equipped for success. |
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| Mia Siscawati teaches people to protect their environment. | Mirian Acosta-Sing piloted a project to provide every student and teacher at Mott Hall School with a laptop. | Mrs. Linda Klepper has changed the lives of many young children as a second grade teacher. | Mrs. Magdalena Domniteanu is a hero for her patience and ability to inspire her students with a love for learning. |
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| Mrs. Mignosa is a hero to Caitlin because she helps her with her studies after school. | Mustapha Louznadji is an Algerian educator who leads by example and who brings out the best in his students and colleagues. | Pat Bolanos founded Key Learning Community to cultivate multiple intelligences. | Peggy Bryan emphasizes teacher support, parental and community involvement in the classroom. |
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| Phil Layne gives encouragement, hope, and a helping hand to his students. | Raden Ajeng Kartini championed education and civil rights for women in Indonesia. | Ranald MacDonald was a Native American/Scot wayfarer who helped open up Japan to the West. | Randy Randall exhibits strength, courage, and integrity to his students. |
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| Robert Moses founded The Algebra Project, which is committed to teaching math literacy. | Roberta Guaspari-Tzavaras uses music to inspire children to learn. | Rowena Gerber and her students raise money to send Solar Ovens around the world. | Ruth Simmons is breaking down barriers in the world of higher education. |
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| Ruty Hotzen inspires students from around the world through Talking Kites, iEARN. | Sadie Dunn is an inspiring role model as a teacher and great-grandmother. | September McGee is an artist and a teacher. | Sequoyah invented the Cherokee alphabet, which enabled Cherokees to record their history. |
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| Shannon Arnett impacts her students with her love and excitement for learning. | Stephanie Joukoff coaches synchronized swimming and is a hero to Emily. | Susan Elizabeth Blow founded the first public kindergarten school in America. | Tommie Hamaluba is a teacher in Botswana, Africa working to eradicate malaria. |
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| Tony Bencivenga stresses the importance of social and emotional learning experiences. | Valentina Mindoljevic is a science teacher who helped to provide aid to women and child refugees in Croatia. | Viola Vaughn founded an organization that supports girls working to achieve academic success in Africa. | Wendy Jewell is a passionate MY HERO educator, writer and Learning Circle facilitator. |
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| Wendy Milette is a visionary filmmaker and educator. |
Last changed on:10/27/2009 9:01:47 AM
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