Author Archives: Michael K. Barbour

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About Michael K. Barbour

Michael K. Barbour is the Director of Faculty Development and a Professor of Instructional Design for the College of Education and Health Sciences at Touro University California. He has been involved with K-12 online learning in a variety of countries for well over a decade as a researcher, teacher, course designer and administrator. Michael's research focuses on the effective design, delivery and support of K-12 online learning, particularly for students located in rural jurisdictions.

Canada Remembers CAF Around the World / Le Canada se souvient des FAC autour du monde

This webinar on Monday may be of interest to many of our members.


On February 22, please join Veterans Affairs Canada online to learn about a vision on the future of remembrance and recognition in Canada.

The virtual event will feature the Minister of Veterans Affairs, Dr Lee Windsor and Captain (ret’d) Hélène Le Scelleur who will outline how this new approach will better serve the Veteran community.

In the coming months, Veterans and members of the public will be consulted on this new strategy to give valuable input on how we can all best recognize and commemorate Canada’s military, peacekeeping and humanitarian missions.

Sign up to ensure you don’t miss out:

https://us02web.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_ZEIsXSrDR_e0au1oFdiY3A

Don’t have zoom? The event will also be hosted on Facebook Live – Veterans Affairs Canada.

“WWI Education Webinar: Strategies and Tools for Teaching WWI in 2021”

This webinar may be of interest to some of our members.


Doughboy Foundation 2021 webinar logo

Fri. Feb 26, 2021 1pm ET

REGISTER

Teaching and learning WWI in 2021 animated gif square

Calling All EDUCATORS… and LEARNERS: Friday, February 26, 2021, 1pm EST


You are invited to register to join us live or access the webinar on-demand

Please Join our roundtable discussion with WWI educators as we explore their experiences and challenges in bringing World War I History into “classrooms, online, and hybrid environments” all of which is a part of 2021 education.

We assembled a group of educators from different parts of the US to explore issues about teaching WWI from a real-world practical perspective:

  • How teachers are adapting in teaching especially social studies, during the Pandemic
  • How do differing State standards affect teaching WWI
  • Practical practices, clever ideas and limitations when teaching WWI
  • How local WWI memorials can provide community engagement learning

We also explored and discussed the education tools created by the Doughboy Foundation during and after the Centennial of WWI. This includes the USB thumb drive Website “How WWI Changed America;” specific WWI handouts for the classroom to prompt learning and conversation; using the WWI Genealogy Research Guide to tie WWI into local community learning and the innovative “WWI Memorial Virtual Explorer App” that provides an interactive augmented reality field trip to the new WWI Memorial in Washington, D.C.

Even if you cannot attend live we invite you to register for this FREE 2021 Doughboy Foundation webinar for educators and learners about the challenges, opportunities and importance of teaching and learning about “The War That Changed the World”.

We will post the webinar as video-on-demand and send the link to all registrants whether you were able to join us live or later.

Many thanks to the supporters of The Doughboy Foundation for making this webinar possible. To learn more about the Doughboy Foundation, please visit https://doughboyfoundation.org .


REGISTER For the Webinar


The Battle of Britain (15 September 2002)

One of the services that was regularly organized by the Golden Bear RCAF Wing of the Air Force Association of Canada was the annual Battle of Britain service.  In 2002 it was held on 15 September at the Main Post Chapel at the Presido in San Francisco.  The program from that service is below.

To download a PDF of the complete program, click here.

 

Boarding parties in the Persian Gulf

An item from the Legion Magazine.


Legion Magazine
Front Lines
Boarding parties in the Persian Gulf

Boarding parties in the Persian Gulf
Story by Stephen J. Thorne

Canadian sailors had limited to no experience in boarding potentially hostile ships at sea when they embarked on their mission to the Persian Gulf in August 1990. Yet this was to be one of their primary roles.

Their British and American allies had marines and others specially armed for and trained in hailing foreign vessels and boarding them.

READ MORE

The O Canada Trilogy
Military Milestones
Operation Moshtarak

Operation Moshtarak

Story by Sharon Adams

In mid-February 2010, Canadian troops and helicopters were involved in launching the largest NATO attack to that date on the Taliban. It was called Operation Moshtarak, which means ‘together’ in the Dari language.

More than 15,000 coalition soldiers and 50 helicopters converged on the small city of Marjah and surrounding farmland, a hub for the Taliban and the opium poppy production that supports them.

READ MORE

Medipac Travel Insurance
Canvet Publication Ltd.

The Barnes family’s legacy in Canadian Studies, Nova Scotia heritage & travel updates

An item from one of our fellow Canadian organizations in the Bay Area.


Canadian Studies Announcements
In this issue:
  • Françoise Barnes Bonnell talks about her family’s support for Canadian Studies
  • Happy Nova Scotia Heritage Day!
  • … and Happy Lunar New Year!
  • Travel update: Negative COVID test now required to enter Canada by land
  • Upcoming event: Free documentary & film talk on The Blinding Sea
  • Affiliate event: “The Black Experience in Canada & the US”
Board Member Françoise Barnes Bonnell Reflects on Her Family’s 40-Year History with Canadian Studies
On the Canadian Studies Advisory Board, few have as deep ties to the program as Dr. Françoise Barnes Bonnell. The daughter of its late co-founder, Professor Thomas Garden Barnes, and his wife Jeanne-Marie Barnes, Françoise was born in England during one of her father’s sabbaticals and grew up in Berkeley but spent many summers at her family’s ancestral home in Nova Scotia. Together with her mother and family, Françoise continues to support Professor Barnes’ legacy while expanding the program’s scope and relevance. We asked her about what drives her engagement with the program, and how her experiences have convinced her of the importance of not just sustaining, but advancing her late father’s work.
Excerpts from the interview are below: read the full piece on our website.
What is your family’s connection to Canada?
Our connection is through my father, Thomas Garden Barnes, who was a professor of law and history at Berkeley. His ancestors emigrated to Nova Scotia from Massachusetts in the 18th century. They built a house in Plympton, which was passed down through the generations to my father. We’d drive across country from California every year to spend the summer in Nova Scotia. I was amazed by how many family members we had up there – my father was an only child, but we had so many second and third cousins!
What inspired your father to create the Canadian Studies Program?
Because of his family connections my father always had an interest in Canada. But the real motivation came in 1979, during the Iranian Hostage Crisis. A handful of US diplomats were taken in by the Canadian embassy in Tehran. My father wrote a letter to the Canadian consul in San Francisco thanking Canada for its assistance, which started a relationship between the two of them. He had a desire to make people aware of just how close Canada has always been as an ally of the United States, not just then but going back years and years.
It was a little difficult to convince people that this program was worth it, but he was always very determined; he wouldn’t give up. And I can’t dismiss my mother’s part either. She was a huge supporter of everything my father did and continues to maintain his legacy today.
Why do you think it’s important for Americans to learn about Canada?
Personally, I feel that if we as Americans understood how much we have in common, especially from a historical perspective, we could learn so much from Canada: in our understanding of politics, how Canadians have interacted with Native people, and how they’ve learned to live in a society that’s strongly impacted by two very distinct cultures.
Many Americans don’t ever think about Canada, or consider how much it’s influenced us as a nation. A few years ago I visited the Historic Acadian Village in West Pubnico with my family. An American visitor told the cashier that he thought the music they were playing was really great, and she told him it was traditional Acadian music. He said, “Nah, that’s from the Bayou, that’s Cajun music from Louisiana.” He didn’t realize that the music he grew up with was directly influenced by the Acadians who had been expelled from Canada. In recent years I’ve come to realize we can’t take the US relationship with Canada for granted; we’ve got to work hard to forge better bonds across the border.
What do you think the program does well, and what are your goals as a board member?
The program is very strong with the comparative cultural and political aspects, and of course immigration, which is very topical. I think overall Irene has been very successful in expanding interest into so many different fields. I’m very interested in expanding the academic research aspects of the program, and encouraging a historical perspective. I think a lot about how we can attract more students to the program, and I’d like to see if we can encourage more historical research. But in the end, I think everyone on the board really wants Irene to continue doing what she’s been doing, because she’s been so successful at it. My father would be very proud of her hard work and dedication to the program’s success.
What was your favorite experience as an American in Canada?
It struck me that at the end of every summer, when we were preparing to go back to California, our friends in Plympton would say, “hopefully the year will go by quickly and you’ll be home soon.” It was surprising because as a teenager, I thought of Nova Scotia as a place where we spent the summer. And what I realized was that people there looked at our roots in Nova Scotia and thought of us as people that had to go away for the winter, but then always came back. That sense of community is incredible, and I hope to be able to go back soon.
Happy Nova Scotia Heritage Day!
For program founder and historian Tom Barnes, the rural villages and rocky shores of Nova Scotia always held a special place in his heart. Home to the Mi’kmaq people for thousands of years, Nova Scotia was also the site of the first French settlement in North America, a haven for Loyalist refugees fleeing the American Revolution, and one of the original three colonies that united in 1867 to form the modern nation of Canada.
Today, the province celebrates Nova Scotia Heritage Day, commemorating the remarkable people and diverse cultures that have shaped Canada’s second-smallest province. This year’s celebration honors the Lebanese-Canadian soldier Edward Arab, who perished in the Canadian-led Battle of the Scheldt in WWII. Canadian Studies invites you to discover more of these stories by visiting Historic Nova Scotia.
… and a Happy Lunar New Year! 🐮
Canadian Studies wishes a safe, happy, and prosperous Year of the Ox to our friends around the world. With many traditional festivities called off this year due to COVID, people are thinking creatively to find new ways to celebrate at a distance. Read about how Canadians are adapting to the challenge of celebrating in a pandemic via GlobalNews.
Image: New Year vector created by pikisuperstar on www.freepik.com.
Travel Update: Negative COVID Test Now Required to Enter Canada by Land; Further Requirements Ahead
The Government of Canada has announced that beginning today, February 15, mandatory COVID testing requirements are being extended to persons entering Canada by land. All travellers must provide proof of a negative PCR test taken within 72 hours of arrival, and will be required to submit to a 14-day quarantine, in line with previous airline travel requirements. Furthermore, beginning February 22 travellers entering by either land or air will be required to take a COVID test upon arrival, as well as after completing quarantine. Learn more and read the full order here.
Image: Cars approaching Canada Customs from the United States by dherrera_96 on Flickr, posted to Wikimedia Commons.
Upcoming Event
Free Documentary and Talk: The BIinding Sea
March 9 | 12:30 p.m. | RSVP here
Join filmmaker George Tombs for a discussion of his 2020 documentary The Blinding Sea. The film chronicles the life of Norwegian polar explorer Roald Amundsen (1872-1928), the first person to lead a successful expedition through the Northwest Passage. It evokes the joys, sorrows, relationships, and missed opportunities in the life of Amundsen, who disappeared mysteriously during a polar flight in 1928. The film places a special focus on Amundsen’s relations with the Indigenous people he encountered on his voyages, particularly the Inuit.
A free link to the documentary will be sent in advance of the event. We request all participants watch the documentary before joining the discussion.
George Tombs is an award-winning author and filmmaker based in Montreal, who works in both English and French. He is currently writing a biography of Roald Amundsen. His past works include Robber Baron, a biography of controversial media tycoon Conrad Black, and his recent humorous novel Mind the Gap.
Affiliate/External Events
The Black Experience in Canada & the U.S.: A Discussion with Debra Thompson
February 24 | 12:00 p.m. | RSVP here
The Black Lives Matter movement has given rise to global conversations on how systems with built in racial inequality continue to affect the lives of people of African descent worldwide. While there is growing awareness of the ongoing legacy of racial inequality in the U.S., the Canadian experience is less well known.
Rana Sarkar, Canadian Consul General in San Francisco/Silicon Valley, will lead a discussion on the Black experience in Canada and the U.S. with Dr. Debra Thompson, associate professor and Canada Research Chair in Racial Inequality in Democratic Societies at McGill University and a leading scholar of the comparative politics of race. Dr. Thompson previously spoke at a Canadian Studies colloquium in September 2020.
Canadian Studies Program
213 Moses Hall #2308
Canadian Studies Program | Univ. of California, Berkeley, 213 Moses Hall #2308, Berkeley, CA 94720