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Idea for a book

31/8/2015

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In 2011, I left the University of Surrey and decided to establish an educational social enterprise formed around the idea of lifewide learning and education. Not surprisingly I went through a significant transition as I left the professional environment I knew and enjoyed, and moved into the uncertain space of creating my own environment for learning and achievement.  Even now (four years on) I  feel I am in a liminal space1, a state of being 'betwixt and between', 'a stripping away of old identities, an oscillation between states and personal transformation'2 p75

 No longer an academic in  practice in a university but still clinging on to my academic identity and investing time and effort into maintaining it,  but nevertheless uncertain of where my journey is taking me.

 Perhaps because of this uncertain and sometimes ambiguous mental, physical and virtual space I inhabit, I have become more conscious that it is essentially down to me to decide how I am going to spend my time and what I am going to do and try and achieve, at least in my professional domain. Of course my wife and children also have a big say in what I do in the family domain!  

 The absence of anyone telling me what to do or expecting me to fulfill a particular role, and the continuous challenge of motivating myself and constructing my own trajectory for learning, development and achievement, has made me more aware of the 'ecological' relationships I have with my world. By that I mean that what and how I learn and develop in all the different contexts and situations in my everyday life, feels more like a living, emergent, organic process involving me, my purposes and goals, and my relationships with the physical, virtual and social worlds I inhabit, rather than something that I plan, design and implement according to my plan. I feel I, and my learning, are part of an ecosystem which I help create and maintain but do not control and sometimes I'm pushed and pulled in all sorts of unforeseen directions. The idea that I am part of an ecology and I help create my own ecology intuitively feels right so over the last few years I have thought about it in the context of my own life and also tried to find out how others have thought about it.

Being an academic I realise that for these ideas and feelings to have any academic credibility and educational value they need to be explored, codified and opened to critical peer review, so a week ago I decided to commit to producing a book. 
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Omid-e-Mehr  Centre in Tehran

10/8/2015

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Once in a while, if we are fortunate, we come across an  educational project that inspires us.  On my recent visit to Iran I visited the Omid-e-Mehr  Centre  in Tehran at the invitation of the Director – Farhad Behrami (left). The Centre takes in some of the most vulnerable, abused and neglected girls including destitute Afghani refugees. With the help of private donors world wide, the Centre has built a community within which these young women are able to develop the tools, self-awareness, confidence and personal agency they need to lead independent, productive  and fulfilled lives.

In a society where being a victim of domestic, violent and/or sexual abuse can bring shame to the victim and their family there is nowhere for girls or young women to turn to. Starting in 2004 with one Center in Tehran with 15, the Omid Foundation is now supporting close to 200 girls in two centers. The educational social enterprise is driven by the vision, energy and passion of its Founder, Marjaneh Halati, a London-based social psychologist and psychotherapist.

Every 6 months the Centre offers places for 30 girls between 15-25.  Each girl is interviewed by a psychologist, social worker and psychiatrist and their level of educational attainment is assessed. Those who are offered places are welcomed into a warm, secure, and non-judgemental community in which the women immediately begin to experience what it feels like to have the value of their lives affirmed, and to be treated with respect, dignity, and kindness. Therapeutic intervention ranges from straightforward counseling to more innovative therapeutic approaches which help the girls ‘find their own voice’, discover the their creative talents and develop self-confidence through drama, painting and photography workshops, as well as music, singing and dancing. There is a strong emphasis on personal and creative self-expression and the walls are covered with the artistic expressions of the students.

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The Omid Centre provides educational programmes which address three key areas: self-empowerment, education and training.  ‘We provide them with a sense of self-worth and with the opportunities to experience a full range of life options, by effective work placement, counseling, and assistance. We pride ourselves on our holistic approach to helping these young women learn to be treated with respect, dignity, and kindness.’

Education focuses on developing literary and numeracy skills, with a special emphasis on IT, English language, and creative writing. During our visit we sat in on an English class with four Afghan refugees and were able to ask them questions about their experiences at the Centre. What came across was their appreciation for the opportunity they had and the recognition that it had enabled them to rebuild their lives and build confidence in their own abilities to lead an independent life.

Empowerment is achieved through a series of workshops that aim to change attitudes through awareness and knowledge. The workshops focus on fostering personal empowerment; the development of a conceptual understanding of individual/human rights; gender identity; a citizen’s role in society; as well as legal issues that pertain to women, the family and the work environment. They further aim to foster the ability to bring about a stable and equitable marital relationships. Assessments are made to either guide the young women towards a university education or advanced professional vocational training in fields such as IT, accounting, secretarial, architectural drafting, or tourism management. Students who opt for the vocational route are placed either in an appropriate job with an Iranian organization or given assistance and mentored to start her own business enterprise. The development of enterprise skills and attitudes is becoming an increasingly important aspect of the programme.

The Centre also seeks to develop cultural capitol, through visits to places and institutions of cultural merit and 'character' through physical challenges such as climbing significant mountains in the Alborz mountain range north of Tehran.

The Centre is keen to provide internships to high school or university students with an Iranian heritage, from America and Europe to contribute to the educational process. Those who participate are known as Omid Angels and they teach English or IT, or run yoga classes, drama workshops, fashion design or any other talent they can share. 

While giving to charities which support poor people is well established in Iran, supporting social educational enterprises like OMID is not part of the culture. It costs around $400 per month to support a student and all funding is raised through donations and private sponsors. I, and my family, feel privileged, humbled  and inspired after our visit to the Omid-e-Mehr Centre. To find out more about the work of the Centre or make a donation you can visit the website. You might also like to watch ‘The Glass House’, a documentary film which follows the lives of four Iranian women who were members of the first cohort of students.

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Reconnecting

4/8/2015

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In 1976 while studying for my doctorate in geology I met an Iranian student from Shiraz who had come to England to undertake a PhD. We shared the same supervisor – a distinguished Professor of Mineralogy who told me I had to look after him and find him a ‘project’. It wasn’t difficult and we made a field trip to Cornwall to collect some materials. We became good friends and he gave me some insights into Iran and its history, culture and humour, and his wife introduced me to  some of the many wonderful Iranian dishes. But a few months later I finished my PhD and went to live in Saudi Arabia and we lost touch.  From time to time Farid has popped into my mind but I thought I would probably never see him again.
 
Twelve years ago I met another Iranian who became my wife. Because of the difficulty of getting visas and other life events it’s taken twelve years for me to visit Iran to meet my wife’s family. As soon as it was decided that we would visit Iran I began to search for my Iranian friend and found articles he had written on medical geology on Research Gate. I saw he was a Professor at the University of Shiraz and so searched the University website to find him. But initial attempts to contact him by email were unsuccessful. However, through my niece who is studying at the University, we managed to make contact and arranged to meet.
 
37 years have passed and the world is very different so not surprisingly I was a little apprehensive about meeting my friend, although the email exchanges we had prior to the visit confirmed that he had the same sense of humour as the young man I once knew. Our meeting was very friendly and a little emotional but what emerged was quite interesting. As we talked we realised that although we had begun our academic careers in a very similar place, studying the geology of mineralisation of granites in Cornwall, as we trundled through life our interests and circumstances took us in very different directions. However, at this particular moment in time our interests again overlapped. He had recently been appointed Director of the Fars Science Technology and Innovation Park  and in this capacity he had become interested in the role of creativity in science education and research, recognising that while much good research was being done at the university, turning the results of such research into useful and commercially viable products and services was a significant challenge requiring creativity and enterprise skills and mind sets.
 
He saw that an important part of his role as Director of the Science Park was to encourage creativity to support innovation and enterprise and he recognised that this was a long term project beginning with undergraduate and continuing through post-graduate education and progressing into the people working in spin-off companies and projects. Consequently, he was very interested in my work on creativity in higher education and Creative Academic and the result of our conversation was the intention to stay in touch and develop a programme of workshops and Guides to begin the process of developing a better understanding of what creativity means with Faculty and postgraduate students.
 
The Social Age is all about connectivity, creativity and productivity facilitated by contemporary technologies linked to the internet. The ecology of life has its own logic when it comes to connecting and reconnecting. When you make a new connection you never know where it might ultimately lead and a broken connection still holds potential for interaction and productivity when circumstances encourage or permit. Loose connections such as we have through social networks like Linked-in can be reactivated at any points when interests, needs and ambitions collide.
 

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Freedom to Connect

4/8/2015

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This is the first of a series of posts I wrote while visiting my family in Iran. In England I have more or less unlimited freedom to roam the internet, make whatever connections I choose to make, and share my thoughts and experiences.  But in Iran I could not access Facebook, Twitter or even my own websites to post my blogs. People I spoke to told me that there were ways to overcome the filters that inhibit connectivity but that you  have to disable your antivirus software in order to install the necessary software which I didn’t want to do. So these posts are being made after the event. The experience has taught me not to take for granted the freedoms and opportunities I have and to appreciate the challenges people in some parts of the world face in accessing and utilising resources that are freely available to all who enjoy such freedoms.
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    Purpose

    To develop my understandings of how I learn and develop through all parts of my life by recording and reflecting on my own life as it happens.
    @lifewider1
    @lifewider
    @academiccreator

    I have a rough plan but most of what I do emerges from the circumstances of my life 
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