Montreal Gazette

Dryden connects students to future

Former MP, Hab teaches course at five universiti­es via video conference

- LIAM CASEY

Ken Dryden sits in a classroom at McGill University ready to talk to students about the future. His face beams into four other classrooms across the country.

“Ryerson, can you hear me?” he asks. Students at the Torontobas­ed university give the largescree­n television with Dryden’s face the thumbs- up.

The former politician and hockey player checks in on three other schools: the University of Calgary, the University of Saskatchew­an and Memorial University in St. John’s.

About a dozen students in each location are all on the video conference, as they are every Thursday this semester.

The idea is simple: connect a bunch of remote classes simultaneo­usly, but make it feel like one big classroom. At Ryerson, voiceactiv­ated cameras hang from the back and front of the room. Dryden and video of the four other universiti­es show up on two big television­s. His voice booms in from the ceiling speakers.

The whole thing is very metaphysic­al — the topic of the course in the futuristic classroom is “Making the Future,” which discusses events that haven’t happened yet.

“The idea was for students to not only think about their own futures, but how they would live in Canada and how they would live in the world around them,” Dryden said in an interview before the class last Thursday.

But it is also a way for students to understand the regional differ- ences that exist in Canada on some of the country’s most important issues, such as health care, fossil fuels and aboriginal affairs.

In one class, for example, they discussed the oil industry. Should the country go all- in on oil or abandon it altogether? The answers differed markedly depending on the university. Dryden says the students in Calgary are much bigger supporters of the oil industry compared with those at Ryerson or McGill.

Then they conducted an online poll to figure out how many students had relatives who worked

The idea was for students to not only think about their own futures, but how they would live ... in the world around them.

in the oil industry. The results, tabulated instantly, showed nearly 75 per cent of the students in Calgary had a relative working in the oil industry.

Not surprising­ly, the results were significan­tly different at the other universiti­es. Sometimes those difference­s galvanized students.

“We also became a tight- knit group here, especially if one of the other schools had such a wildly different experience with something. It would force us as a group at Ryerson to talk even more about why those difference­s exist,” said Anisa Hassan, 23.

Dryden drives home these difference­s by having students from different universiti­es work on assignment­s together — a crosspolli­nation of sorts. They have to co- ordinate schedules, taking into account time difference­s.

Hassan’s new friend, Emily Gagné at McGill, said the class “gets us out of our bubble.”

“A lot of time, conversati­ons in classes come from the same perspectiv­e and this challenges our convention­al thinking.”

The classroom of the future isn’t perfect. Dryden knows it. The students know it.

Sometimes the connection isn’t great. Sometimes the audio and video do not line up. And the natural flow of a classroom discussion is stilted because of the technology.

“We would have to unmute our feed to say something to Ken, who would then line us up to respond,” said Lucas Duffield, 27, from the University of Calgary.

“It can be difficult at times to get your point across right away when there are five universiti­es.”

And the classroom of the future is filled with students from the present. Some pay attention, while others check Facebook. One Ryerson student struggles to stay awake — Dryden has been speaking for more than an hour, seemingly without taking a breath.

Dryden has long thought about teaching a course like this. He began preparing in earnest after losing his federal seat in Parliament in the 2011 election. A few months later, he started teaching the course at McGill. For two years, it was only offered there.

He has a vision to connect students in universiti­es from all provinces by 2017 — the year Canada turns 150. The University of Calgary joined last year and this year Ryerson, Saskatchew­an and Memorial universiti­es came on board.

“This is what I had in mind,” he said, “which doesn’t happen very often.”

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