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Edited on Fri Dec-17-04 11:44 PM by Lisa
This was a regional geography class. Sure, they're supposed to have read the section on climate -- but I don't think they realize how cold it can get in Edmonchuk! I am assuming that the reason Calgary wasn't as popular as I'd expected is because a lot of them may have been there (next really big city over from Vancouver) and the exercise stipulated that they couldn't pick somewhere that was already familiar to them.
p.s. yes, the mall did feature prominently in about half the Edmonton assignments I read (mainly since they were hoping to get jobs there).
Most of the class are BCers (I think half are from the Island) and the level of curiosity about the rest of the country is incredibly low. The other instructors noticed this too -- many of the students just are not interested in going anywhere else in the country. I was desperate to get them to think about what it would be like to do a major move. Especially after someone offered the suggestion earlier in term that "if people up north or on the East Coast are unemployed, why don't they just go somewhere else, 'cause it's so easy to get work".
One single mom with two kids got up and did a presentation that showed how much it would cost to move her entire household to northern BC -- her much-younger classmates were sitting there with their mouths open, as she explained that she wouldn't be able to afford to just pull up stakes and hang around in a new city in the hope of maybe landing a job sometime.
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