C 17-12b Joy in Mathematical Puzzles with Rob Eastaway

Choose Positive Living with Sara Troy and her guest Rob Eastaway, on air from March 21st.

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CHILDHOOD

I grew up in Cheshire in the North West of England in what – looking back – I realize was quite a carefree home environment where there were plenty of opportunities for imaginative play.  I loved playing most ball sports.  More unusually from a young age, I was also always intrigued by mathematical puzzles, an interest that was fed by my dad and later by one of my teachers who would often pose us riddles and quizzes. 

TEENS

images-1In my early teens, I had a few creative hobbies, including producing simple cartoon flick books and four-minute silent movies using an old 8mm cine camera.  But the innocent enthusiasm behind those and some of my other interests often set me apart from my peer group whose interests were increasingly turning towards heavy metal and parties.  I spent much of my mid-teens as an observer, watching how teenagers behaved with each other.  I was never bullied, but I became very sensitive to the injustice of people being laughed at just because they or their ideas were ‘different’. 

Around the age of 15 I immersed myself in the solitary activity of solving puzzles, and one day on a whim I had a go at setting a puzzle myself.  I submitted it to a national newspaper – The Sunday Times.  To my delight and amazement, they agreed to publish it.  That launched me into becoming a regular puzzle setter, first for The Sunday Times and then for New Scientist magazine.  Writing a monthly puzzle gave me early exposure to the world of journalism, and also took away some of the mystery of creativity.  I realized that ‘new’ ideas often come from immersing yourself in old ideas and then repackaging them.  There were other important lessons, too.  The second puzzle of mine that was published contained a serious error (it required April to have 31 days) and I was inundated by letters from angry readers who had been wasting time on an unsolvable challenge.  It was a harsh way to learn that while ideas are important, the end product has to work too.  


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CORPORATE CAREER

My interest in ‘real world’ puzzle solving led me to do study Engineering for my degree (at Cambridge University).  I then spent a few years working for Deloitte, one of the large management consultants.  I was lucky that their culture turned out to be one in which encouraged eccentricity.  Ideas and innovation were actively encouraged.  It gave me an excellent grounding in professional creative problem solving, and it was a confirmation that ‘fun’ could have serious benefits.  In 1991 I went freelance: I’d had my fill of working for big organizations and wanted the freedom to pursue my own passions in my own way.   I began running creative problem-solving workshops for senior managers in government (it was a huge, untapped market!) and also for graphic designers.  In my spare time, I also wrote a book about cricket.  I’ve always loved cricket, as a player and as a spectator, but was aware that the arcane laws of the sport are a mystery to most people. The book (‘What is a Googly?’) is an explanation of cricket to the general public. Getting that first book published in 1992 was probably the most satisfying creative project of my life – taking a project all the way from the seed of an idea to the finished product over the course of about 18 months, after many rejections by publishers.   The book did very well.  Its biggest claim to fame was that in 1993, Prime Minister John Major presented a copy of it to President George Bush (Snr) at Camp David.  (At the time it was an ongoing joke between the two leaders that Bush was a baseball fan, John Major a cricket fan).

BOOKS AND MATHS

In the late 1990s, an old friend Jeremy Wyndham asked me if I’d be interested in writing a book with him about the maths of everyday life.  That book became the bestselling Why Do Buses Come In Threes? and it was to push my career in a different direction.  I began to be invited into schools to give talks about maths for disaffected teenagers who couldn’t see the point of the subject.  I also started doing talks on maths and magic for primary school children.  Both of these proved to be a wonderful stimulus for generating ideas for new book material.  Jeremy and I wrote a second book, ‘How Long Is a Piece of String?’, and I have since gone on to write/co-write seven more books, some but not all of them about the maths of everyday life.  In 2004 I had the idea of putting on maths lecture shows for teenagers.  To get away from the notion that maths only happens in schools, we decided to hold the shows in regular theaters such as the Bristol Hippodrome and London’s Gielgud Theatre.  Our shows attract about 15,000 teenagers every year from across the UK.  We have to come up with new material each year, so nurturing ideas is an important part of my daily life.

CREATIVE THINKING BOOK – COMING FULL CIRCLE

In the last few years, maths education has become dominated by the words ‘creativity’ and ‘problem-solving’.  This has been a theme of workshops that I have run for maths teacher for several years, but until now I never formally made the link back to my previous life running workshops for civil servants.  My new book ‘Any Ideas?’ has brought those two worlds together.  The book is about the whole process of ideas – from having them, to implementing them.  What distinguishes it from the many other books on this topic is that I differentiate between having ideas on your own, and having ideas with one or more other people.  In most situations, there’s more than one person involved in the idea process, and that introduces all sorts of complications.  A lot of the book is about how to overcome the natural tendency to kill ideas (either our own or other people’s).  There’s also a chapter dedicated to the importance of SILLINESS: if we want to have new ideas, we have to tolerate a period of having ideas that may at first seem impractical, dangerous, crass or just silly.  The other feature of the book is that it has puzzles dotted throughout.  Puzzles are often a great way to illustrate the principles of creative and lateral thinking.

The book is aimed at the general public but it’s as relevant to maths teachers as it is to any other adults.

FAMILY

I’ve been married to Elaine, an American, for 18 years.  We have three children, who help to keep me young and (most of the time) enthusiastic.

WHY WE NEED MATH

http://www.robeastaway.com

http://www.robeastaway.com/books

rob@mathsinspiration.com

twitter.com/robeastaway

linkedin.com/in/rob-eastaway

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TSM 17-12 The Power of T.H.E. P.A.C.T. with Phyl Macomber

Their Story Matters with Sara Troy and her guest Phyl Macomber, on air from March 21st. 

unnamedSince completing a fellowship at Johns Hopkins Hospital’s Kennedy-Krieger Institute in 1988, Phyl Macomber has become an award-winning national speaker, author, inclusion specialist, and curriculum strategist. As President of Make A Difference, Inc., Phyl has consulted with and trained thousands of teaching staff and is a passionate catalyst for systems change in education.
Phyl was featured in the Common Threads Trilogy book series in 2015 as one of the top 100 empowering women from around the globe and has been a guest on several radio shows to discuss simplifying instruction for students of all abilities. In 2016, Phyl was appointed the first ambassador of the educational affairs organization, I AM L.E.E. (I AM Living Education Everyday), whose goal is to expand conversations on educational issues and challenges impacting families and communities. In 2017, Phyl was offered an Ambassadorship at Energime University to help support their mission in educating both children and adults around the world.

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Phyl has created a 4-step simple system for how to teach anything to anyone – in a way that students of any ability learn faster and deeper – and, teachers succeed in reaching and teaching ALL students while meeting the standards. Her research-based teaching strategies have been published in numerous articles featured in clinical publications in education since 2009 and are being successfully used across North America and in parts of Australia, South Africa, Saudi Arabia, and Italy. This systems-based instruction, called T.H.E. P.A.C.T., is outlined in Phyl’s first book, The Power of T.H.E. P.A.C.T., and is being referred to as “the simple, evidence-based solution for differentiated instruction and meaningful inclusion.”


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www.AboutTHEPACT.com 

Phyl@AboutTHEPACT.com 

Twitter: @AllAboutTHEPACT

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ECO 17-002 Daniel the Dolphin and the Ocean Guardians.

ECO Solutions with Sara Troy and her guests CARMEN FORSBERG & ADAM MARS, on air from January 10th. 

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Daniel Dolphin is a 3D-animated adventure film for the whole family inspired by the bestselling novels of Sergio Bambaren. Our goal is to push entertainment to a new level of audience participation and environmental awareness. Daniel Dolphin will share the larger message that we have to protect what we love: our oceans and each other.

Both Adam Mars and Carmen Forsberg (Silverlight Entertainment) are UBC Film Production Alumni and found the IP while travelling in South America.

“We met Peruvian novelist Sergio Bambaren five years ago and as he told us about Daniel Dolphin, the character from his best selling novels, we immediately knew we had found something extraordinary” says Carmen Forsberg, Producer.

The project has since garnered recognition from the National Screen Institute Feature’s First Program, Telefilm Canada, Harold Greenberg Fund and Creative BC.

“Our goal is for Daniel Dolphin to extend its impact well beyond an animated character, to create a new level of entertainment and driving force for social and environmental change” says Adam Mars, Writer-Director.

As ocean conservancy becomes a powerful topic of conversation, their goal is to position Daniel Dolphin as a key character who represents marine conservation, supporting global non-profits achieve their goals in education and sustainability through a give back model – a percentage of the funds from the film and all secondary revenues will be donated to conservation initiatives.

“We have come this far thanks to our supporters and the companies that have believed in us, and what Daniel Dolphin represents. Today we need a global audience to come together and push this timely vision through the finish line” says the Vancouver team.

The team has launched an Indiegogo campaign to help raise awareness and close the final development funds which will enable the Vancouver team to package the film and commence production.


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ADAM MARS – 

Adam is a multi award-winning Canadian writer/ director. His children’s short films have garnered multiple awards, aired on national television and played in more than thirty festivals worldwide. His first film “Chika’s Bird” (2005) was acclaimed nationally with numerous “best film” and “audience choice” awards. Adam has a degree in film production from the University of British Columbia where he won honours for his cinematography. Adam holds a second film degree from Capilano University. In 2008, through his love of CGI, he pitched and oversaw the build of a state-of-the-art 3D and VFX Animation facility and Faculty in Lima, Peru. The program was created in association with Studio Arts, Los Angeles. Adam currently works in the film industry as main camera operator (IATSE 669) for EPK units.

CARMEN FORSBERG – 

With a background in advertising as an assistant director for many high profile commercial productions, Carmen decided to commit her passion to filmmaking and large-scale production. She holds a film production diploma from the University of British Columbia, and Bachelor in Communication Science with honours in Marketing from the University of Lima. Her current interest resides in producing high-concept projects with strong commercial viability across all media platforms. She has worked closely with Dolby Canada’s Image and Research Technology Department in the development of HDR software, organised and managed events for the Vancouver film industry and along with Adam Mars built and currently consults for one of South America’s most complete 3D and VFX programs.

OUR TIME AT UBC

As UBC Film Production Alumni we cannot help but look back upon our time at UBC with some nostalgia. Brock Hall was the Film Production ‘hub’ back then, the old building saw endless hours of editing, countless film productions – some more organized than others – detailed conversations about story, characters, directors .. many late lunches and skipped dinners.. it was the fuel that drove us forward.

While at UBC Adam not only directed the short films mandatory for the production degree, he also managed to secure funds from CityTV (for the second time) and a NFB FAP program grant to direct a much larger short film. For “Blue” he recruited most of his classmates (as any resourceful filmmaker would) and worked closely with locations managers in the University to bring his vision to life – and with the use of CG even turned the ‘bus loop’ into a sky train station. Adam’s films have always been ambitious, but with unstoppable passion people follow his lead.

Carmen had come from a background in advertising (as an assistant director) and for her, film was the perfect medium to let creativity shine. Coming from South America, UBC was a city within a city and the Film Program was family. Carmen not only produced several of her peers’ short films but also UBC’s own POV (Persistence of Vision) Film Festival with fellow producer Cat Mills. For Carmen it was always about the challenge, being outside of a comfort zone, pushing boundaries in stories and finding ways to reach as many people as possible. During her last year at UBC she won Air Canada’s Student Film Festival ‘Destination Inspiration Award ‘ which allowed her short documentary film to play in Air Canada flights worldwide.

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http://silverlightfilm.com/danieldolphin

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CarmenForsbergg:

FB:  carmen.forsberg

LinkedIn:  carmenforsberg

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Daniel Dolphin:

FB: DanielDolphinMovie

Twitter:  danieldolphinOG

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TSM16/40 Get Into the Schools of Your Dreams

Their Story Matters with Sara Troy and her guest Elizabeth Dankoski, aired from October 4th on. 


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Get Into the Schools of Your Dreams


Forget about perfection, find out what you love and create a unique project so you get into the school—and LIFE—of your dreams

Students face huge hurdles when it comes to getting into the college of their dreams. Top universities accept a small fraction of students who apply each year. As a result, many highly qualified students have turned away, and those who are accepted often face uncertain job prospects upon graduation, despite the astronomical costs of obtaining a college degree.


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Elizabeth Dankoski created The Dream School Project to help young people stand out and overcome the high-stress stakes of college admissions so they can increase their chances of acceptance at their top choice schools — and to empower them to build the life of their dreams. Her program is based on her 15 years of experience as an “educational catalyst” helping hundreds of students get into their top-choice schools.

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Elizabeth discovered the reason some were accepted to the school were put on waiting lists and ended up settling for institutions that were not their first choice. The students who did get into their school of choice were those who had created unique projects, often reaching out to solve a problem or improve life in their communities. Elizabeth’s students include:

* A student working to go the Olympics as a referee for fencing

* A girl planning a 5K run to benefit epilepsy research in honour of her sister who is battling the disorder.

* An eighth-grader who loves hockey and conducting research, petitioning his town and raising money to build an ice-skating rink

* A boy whose family immigrated from India who is creating a website to raise awareness and funding for an orphanage there

* A student who wants to be a K-Pop star challenging herself to take her singing and dancing to the next level

“When our kids show what they care about most when they use their passion when they follow the path that lights them up — colleges will come running,” she says. “That’s what leadership really is: lighting other people up and illuminating the world with your unique gifts.”

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TSM 16/34 Invest in our Youth our Future Leaders

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Their Story Matters with Sara Troy and her guest Julie Connor airs from August 30th

As a keynote speaker, passionate youth and youth leadership advocate, a seasoned educator, and author of an award-winning goal-setting book, Dreams to Action Trailblazer’s Guide, I prepare youth to be leaders and adults to be mentors and role models. I have shown young people and adults in schools and churches, organizations and nonprofit organizations throughout the country how to welcome and actively involve youth and build collaborative leadership in the life of their communities as a consultant, trainer, program director, and youth minister for more than 30 years.

My youth leadership workshops and articles led to speaking and TEDx presentations.

I love teaching. I love building collaborative youth leadership teams. 

As a speaker, educator, and youth advocate, I prepare youth to be leaders and adults to be mentors and role models.

I pay it forward. I provide at-risk youth and families with goal-setting tools and training in Kansas City’s urban core.


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I empower teens, teachers, youth leaders, and adults who love young people how to break through labels and bullying to build caring communities. I specialize in vision, mission, and goal-setting strategies; collaboration and teamwork; consensus, communication, and conflict resolution. I also facilitate courageous conversations about diversity and inclusion.

In 2011, I graduated with a doctoral degree in educational leadership. My dissertation was a research model in two universities – and I lost my job. The school district where I work closed schools and my position was eliminated. I had to figure out how to transform the organizational strategies I shared with groups into a personal plan of action to reinvent myself and create a new career.

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