June 6, 2003
Let the music flow
Kangiqsualujjuaq students
learn via satellite
ODILE NELSON
Nunatsiaq News
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PHOTO TO ENLARGE
Violin students at
Ulluriaq School in Kangisualujjuaq take instruction from Adèle Dufour,
who uses video-conferencing to teach the class from her base in Buckingham,
Quebec, hundreds of kilometres to the south near Hull. (PHOTOS BY ODILE NELSON)
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It is two days before Ulluriaq
School's first-ever violin concert and Adèle Dufour's immense face is looking
down at her class from a computer screen projected on a bare, white wall.
"Were you playing at the same time as I was?" she asks, smiling and
resting her violin near her side. Dufour's image freezes from time to time,
chopping her movements and interrupting the flow of her words.
There is a pause, then her nine students laugh. Some yell "yes" while
others yell "no" into the microphone that rests on a stool at the
front of the class.
When everyone is sure no one else is talking, Chris MacPherson, the class's
violin teacher in Kangiqsualujjuaq, steps in front of a video camera.
"I think we've always played the song a little bit slower than you Adèle,"
he says. When he speaks, every word is deliberate. He wants the microphone to
pick up every word.
The somewhat stilted and slow exchange is typical for this violin class. But,
given the significance of what they are doing, and a little fidgeting aside,
no one seems to mind.
Violin
students at Ulluriaq School in Kangisualujjuaq
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The children here are participating in a novel project the first of
its kind in Nunavik. They are using a broadband satellite connection to take
violin lessons with Dufour and her small group of students, who live thousands
of kilometres to the south in Buckingham, Quebec.
The project is opening many eyes to what videoconferencing could mean for schooling
in remote regions across Canada.
History of innovation
Ulluriaq School, under the guidance of Alain Rochefort who serves as both a
pedagogical counselor and computer technician at the school, has developed a
reputation for innovative projects.
In 1996, the school was the first in Nunavik to have a dial-up Internet connection.
Two years later, it had the first Ethernet connection.
Today, with a helping financial hand from the Quebec government and Ottawa's
Communication Research Centre and the support of the Kativik School Board, it
is the only school in Nunavik to have its own satellite dish with enough bandwidth
to hold videoconferences.
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PHOTO TO ENLARGE
Proud Ulluriaq School students
perform a concert to display their new skills.
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Last fall the school joined a dozen or so other remote schools across Canada
in a test project with Telesat an Ottawa-based commercial satellite operator.
The company gave Ulluriaq School free monthly bandwidth to start a variety of
one-off projects. The continuous violin classes began in November.
Rochefort says the decision to use videoconferencing in the classroom is two-fold.
"In the North, you have difficulty keeping interest in school. This keeps
students interested," he says. "But on top of that, it can help them
learn some things they otherwise would not have the opportunity to."
The hows and whys of videoconferencing
How it works is fairly simple. The two schools use videocameras and microphones
to capture images and sounds. They then use their broadband satellite connection
to videoconference in this case simultaneously see and hear each other
with enough quality to allow for music teaching.
The images on this computer monitor show a video-conference in progress.
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As Rochefort explains, it is the type of connection that is essential.
The satellite connection at Ulluriaq School uses protected bandwidth and, because
this connection is separate from the Internet, it allows for high-quality videoconferencing.
Videoconferencing can work with other kinds of connections but they won't work
as well, Rochefort says.
Dial-up connections with modems can't carry information fast enough. Direct
satellite connections that rely on the Internet are also not ideal because too
many users fight for the same connection, causing delays.
Every week, Rochefort and a southern counterpart begin the violin class by
linking the two schools' computers using their broadband satellite connections.
Sometimes they would connect directly with each other. At other times, when
a researcher wanted to sit in on the class for example, they would connect through
Telesat's videoconference bridge in Ottawa. This bridge allows up to four sites
to videoconference at the same time.
Learning is bottom line
Of course, for the students, who graduated last week, all the technological
details of why and how were peripheral to having a chance to learn the violin.
When asked, the students shyly answer that learning violin from Dufour was
"fun" and "neat" but sometimes hard.
MacPherson, who had never picked up a violin before the project, says pretty
much the same thing albeit with a little more detail.
"I'd learn one or two weeks before, what the students would need to know
It's been one of the most difficult things to teach. If you think , let's say
it's a lecture course, reading or science, there's nobody moving. There's no
expert telling you to move your fingers two inches but it came with trial and
error," he says. "On all aspects, it seems to be a success."
The classes did not go off without the occasional glitch. Sometimes connections
were painfully slow. Other times, there would be no connection at all.
But Rochefort is convinced that the technology could be a valuable tool in
bridging the gap that exists between education in the North and South.
For example, upper grades classes like biology or calculus need teachers with
specialized training something most remote schools don't have, Rochefort
says.
But videoconferencing could allow an isolated school to hold weekly, interactive
classes with a biology or calculus teacher in the South.
More importantly, Rochefort says, Nunavik schools could use the technology
to strengthen Inuit culture.
"We'd like to see it not so much North to South but North to North,"
he says. "Students could learn throat singing, drum dancing or even how
to carve from artists in other communities."
This goal remains a way off. Similar equipment must be built in Nunavik's other
communities, and schools will need to find long-term funding to maintain the
expensive broadband connection.
But as Rochefort says, this technology was meant for a region like Nunavik
and, last week, Kangisualujjuaq graduated nine young violin players to prove
it.
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