Category Archives: Self-Reflection

Personalized Learning Projects

Personalized Learning Projects

“Every man has two educations: that which is given to him, and the other that which he gives himself. Of the two kinds the latter is by far the more desirable. Indeed all that is most worthy in man he must work out and conquer for himself. It is that which constitutes our real and best nourishment. What we are merely taught seldom nourishes the mind like that which we teach ourselves.”
- Carter Godwin Woodson

That is by far one of the most influential quotes that I recant to myself almost daily.

One of the most vital elements of Urban Planning is the community organizing component. In essence, the organizing is contingent upon utilizing observations of a specific issue and critical mass to create avenues of informational outreach and then analyzing feedback to either continue on or rework the strategy for a really long-lasting solution. In other words, sustainable planning.

When I had first decided to become a student of this discipline, I read over the possible job descriptions and salaries. Community organizing was at the top of the list with a low salary than I would have liked to see.

“Me. Do community organizing?” I thought to myself. “That will never happen.”

Sure enough, as opportunities of employment and general internship experiences became limited for me, I came to the conclusion that I would have to seek out opportunities on my own. Or even just create them. So I did both.

Before I realized what was happening, I found myself not only using, but doing terms like ‘grassroot organizing’ and ‘community development’ in no time.

Additionally, relocating to Tampa, FL in the Fall of 2010 basically solidified the need for me to create avenues of learning for myself in any way I could. I visited the local library to read up on authors and theories and disciplines I could only brush over in my academic years. I wanted more depth and more time to study and understand thoroughly what it was I wanted to accomplish professionally.

But more than that, personally I wanted a dynamic experience that would inform my work in the near future. I wanted to surround myself with internal motivation and use outside influences like the city I lived in to encourage me to be more active. I wanted more than anything to learn firsthand from persons of influence and persons affected by those in positions of influence, to get my hands dirty with fieldwork, to collaborate with community members and leaders, to ask questions over again and rethink my way of learning, to analyze and research, and to find out the answers for myself by way of experience.

And so that is how Inspire Your Environment (IYE) came to be. It was a way for me to pinpoint a need in a particular community (the lack of eco-friendly outreach to communities that needed it most) and offering up what I had to contribute to that need (research, knowledge and planning).

The result? The result is that I have learned that it is a perpetual climb to new discoveries. It is an ongoing quest to find answers and solutions to old problems, new problems and strategize around what does not work and what could. It is has been a way for me to truly experience the type of education Carter G. Woodson spoke of: the education an individual gives himself/herself. It is experiential learning that will inform methodology for future projects and endeavors.

Of the myriad of lessons learned up until this point, one of the greatest is the most important: the human connection can never be replaced with an email. A smile can never be replaced with an emoticon through Facebook. A promise you give to one is your word and your bond. A face-to-face encounter is more influential than even a handwritten letter. It is asking questions and taking time to listen, listen, listen. Easier said than done. But problems can only be solved in real-time, in real world interaction and with real dedication.

Overall, the goal always remains to keep learning and give back the knowledge you have acquired along the way. That can always help even one person.

Lofty Aspirations & Gooooooooooools!

Lofty Aspirations & Gooooooooooools!

A few months ago, I had wanted to compile a shortlist of what my collective interests were, personally and professionally, to better equip me for pursuing a graduate degree I could completely identify with.

I pulled out my heavy black sketch book and started a written freestyle that ended up morphing into a miniature bulleted manifesto of sorts. Can you guess what my interests led me to decide a few weeks later what I would pursue? Keeping in mind my love of all things beauty and all things order plus the natural environment, the interests I kept close to my heart would become an obvious allusion to what my professional future would/will entail. 

As for the list, here’s how it read:

My Interests

My life’s goal is pursuing/creating the most absolute [and] perfect career for myself. Finding out what my interests are will help speed up the process.

  • Organizing, categorizing, labeling…to make things look pretty and finished.
  • Writing poetically (or at least attempting to).
  • Designing things…like room layouts, city layouts, even outfits.
  • The Earth; the natural environment, appreciation of biogeography.
  • Holistic health and diet.
  • Languages.
  • Eastern Europe…actually moreso Scandinavian countries (Sweden, Denmark).
  • Relaxed atmospheres and work environments.
  • Traveling (someday).
  • Foreign exchange.
  • Living abroad (Africa, Europe).
  • Meeting people from all over.
  • Music with little instrumentation. Organic music, bare, stark, crisp sounds. Natural.
  • Finding beauty in organization.
  • Neighborhood revitalization/gentrification.
  • Creative, short story writing.
  • Film editing (documentary style).
  • Web design and blogging.
  • Community gardens.
  • Youth involvement in education, arts, travel, languages, trade skills (i.e. carpentry, cooking).
  • Brainstorming, innovative thinking, problem solving, expanding single ideas into a myriad of new ones.
  • Architecture.

Architecture was the final bullet on the list. And what a way to end that list.

Based off this list, I made trips back and forth to the local library and checked out so many books, I could no longer carry them in my arms: Landscape Architecture, 3rd Edition by John Ormsbee Simonds (intriguing writing, wow! Would’ve loved to hear this man speak. I actually promise to write a review of this book, and I wholeheartedly recommend it as a recreational read), Green Metropolis by David Owen, The Green Workplace by Leigh Stringer, Gardening Through the Ages by Penelope Hobhouse, The Urban Design Handbook by Pittsburgh-based Urban Design Associates and Becoming an Urban Planner, published by the APA. And then that’s when I realized the amazing fields of urban design and [interior and exterior] space planning…

This captivated all of my interests into a meaningful collective whole: technicality, city layouts, neighborhoods, sustainability, problem solving, design, internationalism, health, art, aesthetic, polish and finish.

The biggest thing I’ve realized about myself is the desire for and practice of organization. Categories, sub-categories, everything in it’s right place…because everything has a place, right?

Speaking a little more technically, there is a part of me that believes in one right way and one wrong way. Like a mathematical equation can only yield one correct answer, the technical foundations of a project or blueprint must have absolute boundaries. Yet the artistic part of me believes that when these boundaries have been established and borders are delineated, therein lies the room in these spaces to release creativity and expression…and that is what I enjoy about architecture.

Urban Design takes the concept of the architectural structure of one building a little further, to produce a tapestry of spaces into one complete piece of [urban] art; much like a musical suite. Space planning, when executed sustainably, can create outlets for energy to flow in and flow out of one space, and reusing that created and borrowed energy to generate efficient productivity. Energy especially orbits around input and output strategies.

At the heart of it, the foundation of this lofty aspiration and goal, is one purpose: if I could give one gift back to God, it would be that my life’s goals and lofty aspirations revolved around preservation of the natural environment, His creation. This would be accomplished by designing  cities to be productive and sustainable environments that magnify the exquisite craftsmanship of the Original Artist. What I give back to Him is showing that I was responsible with the ‘talents’ He handed over to me for an opportunity to recreate a small, but beautiful offering back into His hands.

Urban Design- “Traditionally, the most popular definition is that urban design is the interface between urban planning and  architecture. In this sense it plays a mediative role between two major disciplines involved in the urban realm, but at different levels and scales. Moreover, the latter directly tackles the physical built form in unitary particles, while planning manages more ‘abstract’ notions such as zoning, functions, transport networks and economy. Hence urban design focuses on the urban space created through the effects of planning and realized through the physicality of architectural buildings.” -Ayssar Arida, Quantum City.

Ayssar Arida, Quantum City (2002)