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The educator covid diaries

By: mweller

I was at the EDEN conference this week in Dublin (excellent conference by the way, congrats to EDEN and the DCU team). Although Iโ€™ve done a couple of conferences, this was the first time seeing a lot of people I used to bump into regularly prior to the pandemic. It made me reflect that much of what happened during that time (2020-2022) is already fading from memory. This prompted me to look back over some journals I kept at the time, and I was right, I had forgotten most of the unusual work and roles we took on then, plus the stress of worrying about family, and the continual stream of lockdown variants.

Michael Ward at Swansea Uni started an interesting Corona Diaries project during this period, which capture much of this sense of anxiety, puzzlement, anger and uncertainty. My daughter even did some work inputting the entries. Looking through those and my own entries made me think we should share some of our experiences from the higher education perspective, before our human capacity to recover and move on means all those moments are lost in time, like tears in rain, or at least face masks in the bin.

So here are some edited highlights of my covid diaries, Iโ€™d love to hear yours:

18th May 20 I have 8.30 scrums most mornings now for the microcredential course. I wrote for this until 5.30

had a day that covered all my academic roles today โ€“ course author, senior manager, researcher, journal editor, administrator, speaker, fund raiser. Finished after 6

I finished at 6.30 and went outside for a neighbourโ€™s socially distanced 70th birthday. Everyone in the street came out and they poured champagne in glasses we left at the end of the drive.

Long working day again but then Iโ€™m on leave. I feel the problem of having too many roles at the moment โ€“ theyโ€™ve all increased by 20% because of the pandemic so Iโ€™m failing on multiple fronts. Went to bed by 9.30 and slept for 9 hours.

I did a webinar this evening for EDEN with Catherine Cronin on use of oer in the online pivot, then had a quick meeting with people from COL on doing another webinar. It is the year of webinars.

27th Sept [daughter] has had her first week at uni, she has settled in well with her flatmates. In Glasgow and Manchester Covid has spread wildly through student halls and itโ€™s surely only a matter of time before it hits them.

18th Oct We are likely to be entering a short โ€˜circuit-breakerโ€™ lockdown on Friday, for 17 days in Wales. Numbers have been rising and the hospitals are near to overload.

26th Oct [daughterโ€™s] flatmate has been diagnosed with Covid, and [daughter] thinks she has it too. She rang me at 1.30 last night and today was in tears. Itโ€™s difficult enough learning to live with 6 strangers, but having to negotiate how theyโ€™ll all deal with pandemic and self-isolation adds another layer of stress and tension to it.

21st Nov I did an interview for the BBC and Natwest this week, both for web articles on the shift to online learning.

Itโ€™s been a busy week, we needed to get a microcredential course in presentation by tomorrow, which meant writing a weekโ€™s worth of work and doing some odd tasks.

6th Dec The Welsh government announced last Monday that from Friday pubs would close at 6 and not be allowed to serve alcohol. Most have sensibly decided that pubs not serving alcohol are rather pointless and have shut. I went to the pub last Tuesday, and that was it, no pubs for christmas or new years. There is a rumour that we will be going into full lockdown again on 28th December.

It was announced today that weโ€™re going into full lockdown again on the 28th, and I rang my father today to say weโ€™re not coming up before Christmas.

20th Dec Wales went into lockdown last night, unexpectedly and without warning โ€“ we had been told it was coming on the 28th. Shops are to close, no meeting up, no travel. It means I might not even get to see [daughter] over the xmas holidays. It plunged me into depression last night โ€“ not just the lack of contact but the necessity to keep finding ways to be positive, to dig again and manufacture methods of staying active, being supportive and restructuring the day.

13th Jan Weโ€™re deep in lockdown now, with around 1500 deaths a day, and 50,000 infections

Iโ€™ve had a few insomniac nights, getting 3-4 hours sleep each night, but it shouldnโ€™t be a surprise really when ALL of this is going on.

17th Jan Weโ€™re still in lockdown now, I forget what it was like not to be in lockdown now. Weโ€™ve been in some variety of it since September and that was after a four month one.

I did a keynote for the H818 conference today. Iโ€™ve got another keynote on Monday for Belfast Met, and completed a review of e-learning rubrics for UNESCO this week.

Mar 14th (after getting a puppy) Yesterday I felt claustrophobic, trapped in one room mostly, still in lockdown, it felt like weโ€™d been taken hostage by two canine terrorists

4th Apr I went to see [daughter] last week, as weโ€™re now allowed to travel within Wales. We met up in Brecon and she walked Posey. I had my first vaccination jab on Friday. It was in a large leisure centre in Pentwyn. I found the experience strangely moving in its quiet efficiency.

I expect lots of you have more intense or interesting journals from the time, but I found it fascinating just how much of this I had forgotten.

Almost stopping


In last weekโ€™s newsletter, I wrote about almost stopping.

Notebook Storage Boxes

Anyone whoโ€™s followed this site for a while will have seen quite a few photos of notebooks stored in various ways: piles in cabinets, piles in drawers, wicker baskets, under-bed boxes, plastic sweater boxes, white cardboard bankerโ€™s boxes, moving boxes, and lots and lots of shoeboxes. Of these storage methods, a couple of favorites stick โ€ฆ Continue reading Notebook Storage Boxes โ†’

Diane Arbus Notebooks

I usually think of artists who draw and paint as having the most beautiful notebooks and sketchbooks, but photographers keep some intriguing notebooks too: my latest โ€œother peopleโ€™s notebooksโ€ fascination is with Diane Arbus. Iโ€™ve always found her quite interesting, since discovering her photographs when I was in high school, to more recently reading Patricia โ€ฆ Continue reading Diane Arbus Notebooks โ†’

3 notebooks

My three notebooks. On the left: my logbook. On the right: my diary. And in the middle, my commonplace diary. (You can take a peek at it in the latest newsletter.)

How I Use My Nolty Planner

Iโ€™ve written various reviews of Nolty planners and notebooks, but I donโ€™t think Iโ€™ve gone into too much detail about how I use my Nolty planner. These lovely Japanese diaries have some features that make planning, habit tracking, and list-keeping very convenient for me. The Nolty Efficiency Notebook has various page layouts. It starts with โ€ฆ Continue reading How I Use My Nolty Planner โ†’

The Forbidden Notebook

This book sounds fascinating! It was just reviewed in the New York Times: Rome, 1950: The diary begins innocently enough, with the name of its owner, Valeria Cossati, written in a neat script. Valeria is buying cigarettes for her husband when she is entranced by the stacks of gleaming black notebooks at the tobacco shop. โ€ฆ Continue reading The Forbidden Notebook โ†’

A Thames Mudlarkerโ€™s Notebook

If youโ€™re not familiar with the term โ€œmudlark,โ€ it means someone who digs around in a riverbed at low tide to see what sorts of treasures they might find. I felt like Iโ€™d found some treasure when I discovered Johnny Mudlarkโ€™s diary! I first saw some of these images on Pinterest, and was led to โ€ฆ Continue reading A Thames Mudlarkerโ€™s Notebook โ†’

Planner Review: Midori 2023 Pocket Diary B6- Clovers

By: Ana

With January almost over, it probably seems a little late to consider a planner. However, if you are ike me, you might have waited to make a decision or discovered that you needed something your current planner wasnโ€™t delivering. This is where the Midori B6 Pocket Diary in Clover Design (currently on sale for $21) comes in.

I had been trying to do all my planning freeform in a B6 Stalogy notebook but I realized I had not built in any โ€œfuture planningโ€ for myself.ย  I donโ€™t mean lofty 5-year goals or anything as grandiose as that. I mean I didnโ€™t have those month-at-a-glance pages in my Stalogy unless I drew them all out myself. Color me lazy but I realized a small pocket diary/planner could be added into my notebook cover that would provide me with a place for those planning pages. Things like birthdays, holidays, trips and other events that are not happening today. My Stalogy is for tracking the daily to-doโ€™s โ€” go to post office, print outs for meeting today, etc. But the sort of birdโ€™s eye view pages werenโ€™t there. The โ€œI have X weeks before this project is due and Iโ€™ll be out of town for these days soโ€ฆ.โ€ view that a monthly calendar or a week-on-a-page can provide.

So, I went searching for planner/diaries that were still available. Trust me when I say by the middle of January the pickinโ€™s get pretty slim. I lucked out (pun intended) when I found the Midori B6 Pocket Diary.

First, it fits into my leather cover and is the same size as my Stalogy so I can corral both books together and flip back and forth between my daily page in the Stalogy and the weekly or monthly view in the Midori.

Utilizing the notes pages in the back of the planner for pen tests. The last few pages of the diary are Japanese subway maps which are fun to see but wont be too handy here in KC.

Second, the paper quality is excellent. I know the expectation with Midori is that the paper will be fountain pen friendly but because of the size and cute graphics, I thought the paper quality might have been skimped on. Nope. Lovely paper. The paper is slightly ivory colored and the right hand page on the weekly pages is lined with light grey lines that donโ€™t bother me too much.

The paper works well with my finer nib fountain pens which are appropriate for the small spaces available to write notes. Iโ€™m not going to use a big fat nib to try to write holidays and birthdays in the boxes on the monthly calendar but the paper withstood the ink just the same, if I needed to.

Reverse side of the writing tests. Thereโ€™s a tiny bit of show through but itโ€™s minimal.

Third, the die cut tabs for the months is super convenient and makes flipping around to different months fast and efficient.

Finally, I am actually kind of charmed by the graphics. I bought the Clover designs because I like the color green but was worried that the graphics would be too busy of cutesy. After using the planner for a couple weeks, I actually like the designs. Each month has an animal featured. January is a pig, May is a deer. I am not sure what that means but I find the artwork cute and adds a bit more color to the largely green pages.

I would actually consider purchasing one of the other designs. The Birds design or the Vehicles design are particularly fun.

Should you decide to use the Midori Pocket Diary without a cover, it does ship with a plastic slipcover over the softcovers to provide durability. Overall, I think the Mirodi Pocket Diary is a good value with a lot of great features. If you miss out on ht remaining stock of 2023 editions, be sure to put a 2024 on your wish list.


DISCLAIMER: Some items included in this review were provided free of charge for the purpose of review. Some items were purchased with funds from our amazing Patrons. You can help support this blog by joining ourย Patreon. Please see theย About pageย for more details.

The post Planner Review: Midori 2023 Pocket Diary B6- Clovers appeared first on The Well-Appointed Desk.

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