⤟ Spring 2023 ⤠
WELCOME!
Please fill out this welcome survey before our first meeting. Thank you!
Class 1 – Jan 24
✲ RECLAIMING RESILIENCE ✲
IN CLASS
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- Welcome to our Learning Community
- Introductions
- What is this class about, the syllabus, class schedule, expectations, assignments & resources
- Why is self-care important?
- Activities: Redefining Resilience, together
- Reflections and assignments
ASSIGNMENTS FOR NEXT CLASS
- Set up a Process Site to document your process online and share the link with your instructor.
- What is your current definition of resilience and what are some tools/techniques you are interested in implementing to support your own resilience? This will be a work in progress that you can continue to edit and redefine as we research this topic together in the following weeks. Go on a quest to find examples, tools/techniques associated with it, or organizations that are doing interesting work in this space and that can inspire your own reclaiming of this term.
- Choose your own personal well-being & resilience tool and please document it with a short reflection:
- feel committed – Is there a practice/habit/self-care ritual that you have been meaning to try and take on? Maybe it’s nature journaling, daily writing, a weekly not-work-related practice, breathing exercises, or experimental art-making… Look no further! This could be an opportunity to try something new and try and commit to it for the rest of this semester.
- feel prepared – Make a go-bag list and spreadsheet and start collecting items to eventually assemble and keep handy!
- feel grounded – Experience nature. Find a park, a community garden, go on a nature walk, walking tour, go barefoot on a patch of grass or find your way to experience nature (for free) in the midst of a very busy time.
- feel restored – Physical exercise can be extremely helpful but if are like me and struggle to commit to an exercise routine, maybe you can try these restorative Yoga poses at home without the need for any special equipment.
- Readings
- Watch Start collecting found/recycled materials
- Optional reading: Hopeful Resilience.
- Optional activity: Make yourself a mindfulness tool to reclaim some time for you, for example, a mindfulness jar (easiest, more complex).
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Class 2 – Jan 31
⚯ THINKING IN SYSTEMS ⚯
IN CLASS
ASSIGNMENTS FOR NEXT CLASS
- What do you think makes a community resilient? How is community resilience different from personal resilience? How are they related? Are there communities/community-driven projects that you think are interesting examples of this? Please share your findings and your own definition of community resilience on your Process site.
- With your definition of community resilience in mind, embark on your own community discovery adventure and document it on your site through a short reflection:
- feel connected – Map your immediate community and its resources (with paper & pencil or mapping tools like Miro, Mural or anything in between!) This facilities tool from NYC might be an interesting example to look at. Through this process please identify local Community-based Organizations (aka CBOs) in your area that play an active role in the resilience of your community. Conduct some observations, reach out and get involved with them. Also incredibly important is to understand and actively participate in your local government by researching your neighborhood’s Community Board to try and get involved by attending the next Community Board meeting to better understand what your neighborhood’s needs and priorities are. If you live in the NYC area this might be a place to start.
- Readings
- Watch
- Additional Resources: the SDA website, RSD website & Systemic Design Toolkit (feel free to browse through these)
- Optional readings: The Earth Charter and UN Sustainable Development Goals.
- Optional activity: Embark on the 30 days of reconnection to nature challenge!
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Class 3 – Feb 7
⚘ GROWING YOUR OWN FOOD ⚘
IN CLASS
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- Sharing & discussion
- Distributed vs. local food production
- Food systems & intro to waste-free food growing strategies at home
- Guest: Samuel T. Pressman (Samuel’s Food Gardens, homegrow)
- Activities:
- Growing your own microgreens (& more)
- Regrowing techniques
- Making a self watering pot using recycled materials
- Seed library exchange
- Reflections & assignments
ASSIGNMENTS FOR NEXT CLASS
- Choose your own Grow Lab experiment, document the process and share your reflection on the experience on your blog:
- Grow – Grow your own: microgreens (seeds will be supplied!) or grow something else you want from reclaimed seeds and germinate it indoors. Are there seeds from your life or memory that hold a special place for you? Maybe specific flavors from dishes or traditional foods that have a particular meaning for you and you wish you could grow on your own? Check out seed exchanges in NYC to see if you can get your hands on some and bring some to share!
- Regrow – Re-grow from kitchen scrap and see what happens!
- Green Guerrilla – Take some growing outdoors, by activating an underutilized public patch through a guerrilla gardening intervention (like making & dropping seed bombs) or making moss graffiti! Alternatively, identify your local community garden and reach out to get involved (they might be in the planning stages for the season which is a great time to get involved).
- Readings
- Watch
- Optional activity: Adventure into growing your own oyster mushrooms.
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Class 4 – Feb 14
♺ FOOD PRESERVATION & REGROWTH ♺
IN CLASS
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- Sharing & discussion
- Dealing with food waste: redistribution before composting
- Funding urban food systems
- Guest: Gil Lopez (Big Reuse, Western Queens Community Land Trust, Smiling Hogshead Ranch)
- Activities:
- Bring an item from your pantry/refrigerator! Have you ever wondered where it comes from? We will go on a quest to map its journey in as many steps and details as we can.
- Fermentation or pickling in our kitchen.
- Reflections & assignments
ASSIGNMENTS FOR NEXT CLASS
- Keep up with your planting & growing (don’t let them die!)
- Choose your own fermentation or preservation journey, document it and reflect on it in your Process Site. If you need inspiration you can check out techniques for preserving foods like Canning, pickling, freezing:
- Sourdough – Begin your Sourdough starter journey!
- Yogurt – Prepare your own Yogurt culture (video+tips)
- Pickles – Make Nukazuke or Pickle something
- Compost – Begin Composting and seek out composting resources to support you! Your local community garden might be a good place to start. Alternatively, you can turn your fruit scrap into fruit leather or get creative with ways to reuse/upcycle your food waste (making natural dyes, stock, and more!).
- Readings
- Watch
- Optional readings: Entangled Life: How Fungi Make Our Worlds, Change Our Minds & Shape Our Futures
- Optional activity: Visit a community garden on your own, in person or remotely (look for the social media accounts of local gardens for virtual tours!). They might be closed for the season but many of them are open for composting so you can check out that process. Let me know if you need help finding one!
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Class 5 – Feb 21
☽ ENVIRONMENTAL SENSING ☾
IN CLASS
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- Sharing & reading discussion
- Introduction to citizen science & sensing:
- Microcontrollers & breadboards
- Inputs vs. Outputs / Digital vs. Analog
- Reading sensors & serial communication
- Activity (with yours truly):
- Arduino Hello World!
- Reading from the environment (soil moisture)
- Graphing data
- Reflections & assignments
ASSIGNMENTS FOR NEXT CLASS
- Repeat the steps we covered in class and supported by slides to get the Arduino reading and plotting the data from the capacitive soil moisture sensor. Pick a plant and take some readings to get a better understanding of the range of values specific to your plant and the level of moisture in the soil. Document it on your website and please post questions on Slack!
- When ready, think about your own environmental condition to monitor (to keep your experiments alive) and reach out if you want one of the below sensors to play with:
- Temperature – Through a TMP36 sensor
- Humidity – Through a or DHT11 sensor
- Light – Through a photoresistor
- Position – Movement (through the built-in IMU) or if your board doesn’t include an IMU, you could make your own switch to sense other kinds of actions/movements/triggers.
- Readings
- Watch How to read a datasheet. Please choose an electrical component, search for its datasheet and read through it, trying to familiarize yourself and grasp as much as you can.
- Optional activity: Make your own Soil moisture sensor from scratch
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Class 6 – Feb 28
✗ CITIZEN SCIENCE ✗
IN CLASS
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- Sharing & reading discussion
- Troubleshooting
- Storing & saving data
- Guest: Kendra Krueger (Advanced Science Research Center Community Sensor Lab)
- Activities:
- Troubleshooting
- More sensors!
- Sensors from ASRC Community Sensor Lab
- Reflections & assignments
ASSIGNMENTS FOR NEXT CLASS
- Start collecting & storing data from your environment and choose your own data exploration and document it on your site through a short reflection:
- Dashboard – Play with the Arduino IoT Cloud & App if you have access to an IoT board or play with the BLE communication between the Arduino Nano 33 BLE and your computer or phone. Start collecting & storing data from your environment!
- Add Sensors – Choose another data point to collect alongside the sensor data you are already collecting. How can that inform your understanding of the environment more?
- Close the Loop – Think through and sketch out a closed-loop system that responds to your sensor data by doing something in return.
- Enclose – Design and roughly prototype an enclosure/housing for your environmental sensing device that can withstand the elements.
- Readings
- I highly recommend the Netflix Series Connected, the episode on Clouds is especially relevant.
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Class 7 – Mar 7
✧ REMOTE MONITORING ✧
IN CLASS
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- Sharing & reading discussion
- Physical computing review & questions
- Data storage and data visualization options
- Guest: Green Light District at El Puente, BK (to be confirmed)
- Activities:
- Reflections & assignments
ASSIGNMENTS FOR NEXT CLASS
- Fill out Self Assessment #1
- Choose your own networking quest:
- Environmental Monitor – Finish building your environmental sensing system with at least one sensor and accessible data for you to use.
- Wireless Scavenger Hunt – Go on a wireless infrastructure walk in your area and document how many devices and other networking hardware you can find. Take pictures and post your findings and documentation of your local telecom infrastructure and sensors. Use Networks of New York by Ingrid Burrington as a guide! Tom made a super helpful map to locate some of these points!
- Guess Who? – Who owns your tech? Make a list of communication technology tools you rely on and think through the following questions/activities by Community Tech NY (who we will visit soon!). Investigate how these technologies impact you, your community, and where possible identify community-based or open-source alternatives.
- Network Ethos – Imagine a new community network for your area, what digital justice principles would you like to draft to discuss with your community members as a blueprint for this network? For inspiration, you can check out: the Detroit Digital Justice Principles, A Feminist Server Manifesto, DWeb Principles and more.
- Readings
- Watch Peering into Internet Infrastructure with Ingrid Burrington
- Optional activity: See if your area has a community-based network or open wifi network. For example, in NYC you can take a walk around Red Hook and test drive their free Red Hook Wifi. Or you might be an area server by NYC Mesh which is always welcoming volunteers. If you want to take a closer look at what is happening on that network (or on your own Wifi network) you can use this handy application Debookee. You can also listen to almost ANY radio frequency using a cheap SDR (Software Defined Radio) dongle: Video, tutorial and more resources on US spectrum here. (this requires a SDR which you can borrow from me!
- Optional readings: The Undersea Network by Nicole Starosielski
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Class 8 – Mar 21
☼ HARVESTING ENERGY ☼
IN CLASS
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- Sharing & reading discussion
- A brief introduction to energy infrastructure
- Transduction and harnessing different forms of energy
- Foundations of small-scale photovoltaics systems
- Activities (with yours truly):
- How to solar power a computer
- Solar-powered servers @ Low Pwr Lab
- DIY solar mobile charger
- Reflections & assignments
ASSIGNMENTS FOR NEXT CLASS
- Experiment with solar! Finish building your own solar charging system or build your own seasonally-affected bot and document it on your site through a short reflection. It could be a small device/service/server that reacts to environmental conditions and changes and responds by either making sound, lighting up, or doing something interesting!
- Begin thinking and brainstorming about what you are interested in exploring through your final research.
- Readings
- Watch Power Rockaways Resilience
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Class 9 – Mar 28
⨳ COMMUNITY NETWORKING @ EL PUENTE BK ⨳
IN CLASS
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- Sharing & reading discussion
- How does our Telecommunication infrastructure works
- Community Wireless Networks
- Visit to: El Puente Bushwick Leadership Center in Williamsburg
- Activity:
- Don’t Panic Organize!
- We are going to explore the Portable Network Kit Project (PNKs) for Community-owned networks from Community Tech NY, and El Puente’s Digital Stewards will explain how the system works and how to put one together!
- Reflections & assignments
ASSIGNMENTS FOR NEXT CLASS
- This would be a good time to go back to your original definitions of personal and community resilience and see if there are any changes you might want to make in light of the research and concepts you have explored so far.
- Is there an assignment/concept/lecture from the previous weeks that you want to revisit, add to or redo? This is your chance!
- Is there a scenario, event, challenge that you are interested in exploring or creating media around? Let’s start researching ideas for the Final Exploration. Begin immersing yourself in that space by reading up more about its context, application, challenge and collecting materials, references and information around it. We are going to spend next meeting discussing the themes you have highlighted and getting folks (ideally) into working groups. Document all of the above on your blogs.
- Readings Building resilience with community technology across the United States
- Watch
- Optional: Infrastructure: Building The World We Deserve & NYC Internet Infrastructure Plan (previous administration, it is very interesting to see how this plan has changed with the current administration)
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Class 10 – Apr 4
⧉ GRAPHIC FOR SOCIAL MOVEMENTS ⧉
IN CLASS
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- Sharing & reading discussion
- Resilience Review & introduction to Final Exploration
- Introduction to social movement iconography and graphic history
- Introduction to Riso Printing & IDM Print Lab
- Guest: Josh MacPhee (Booklyn)
- Activity:
- Hands-on activity: Poster printing using a Risograph machine and stamp-making using social movement iconographies
- Brainstorming ideas for the Final Experiment
- Reflections & assignments
ASSIGNMENTS FOR NEXT CLASS
- Choose your own Final Experimentation adventure and get started on the journey (all steps below):
- Solidify your project idea and create a concept/mess map of your topic
- Start researching and mapping out your topic
- Make a timeline for the next few weeks of development
- Start ideating and make a list of needs (materials, tools & skills required)
- Document this process on your blogs
- Readings Designs For The Pluriverse, Out of the studio and into the flow of Socionatural Life, Ch. 1
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Class 11 – Apr 11
✐ DESIGNING ✐
IN CLASS
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- Sharing & reading discussion
- Introduction to Interference Archive with IA volunteer
- Visit to: Interference Archive
- Activities:
- We are going to explore the archive and share a few discoveries with the group
- Cyanotypes on paper & fabric. (Outdoors if the weather allows or indoors).
- Reflections & assignments
ASSIGNMENTS FOR NEXT CLASS
- With your group:
- Design and sketch your ideas out
- Draft your story and content for your zine/poster
- Build a rough prototype & think about what elements you would like to get early feedback on next week
- Continue iterating and playing around with content and form
- Readings: Design for Transitions, Ch. 5 from Designs for the Pluriverse by Arturo Escobar
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Friday – Apr 14th @2pm-5pm
✷ SOLAR HANGOUT @ LOW PWR LAB ✷
Come on over to Low Pwr Lab, at 2 MetroTech 8th floor #821, to explore and play with different off-grid systems like the Portable Network Kit (PNKs) from Community Tech NY, a solar-powered blockchain node (GIGA Connect) and other small off-grid energy systems for charging devices through solar. Together we are going to finish building a solar-powered server that will be installed on the rooftop of 370 Jay Street!
Class 12 – Apr 18
✁ CRITICAL MAKING ✁
IN CLASS
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- Sharing & check-in on project
- Examples of contemporary artists’ books and zines
- The relationship between form and content
- Guest: Booklyn educator (Booklyn)
- Activities:
- Creating a zine using a binding technique of your choice: one-page zine, accordion fold, flag book, pamphlet stitch.
- Project work day
- Reflections & assignments
ASSIGNMENTS FOR NEXT CLASS
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Class 13 – Apr 25
❀ URBAN FARMING @ OKO FARM ❀
IN CLASS
ASSIGNMENTS FOR NEXT CLASS
- With your group:
- Make. Make. Make. Print. Print. Print.
- Iterate once more on your exploration
- Synthesize your process and lessons learned and prepare to share your exploration with the rest of the community!
- Fill out Self Assessment #2
- Course Evaluations are live now!
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Saturday – Apr 29th @10am-2pm
✿ DIRTY YOUR HANDS @ MOORE JACKSON COMMUNITY GARDEN ✿
Moore Jackson Community Garden Please join us on Saturday, April 29 from 10 AM to 2 PM to plant in our beds and on our sidewalk and beautify the garden for our new growing season. We’ll have creative arts and crafts and STEM activities for young people. Lots of information shares on things like beekeeping, curbside composting, and a local CSA share opportunity. Big Reuse will be giving away FREE 1-lb. bags of compost and kitchen food scrap containers. We’ll be selling treats to raise funds for the garden. And of course, a chance to be part of planting veggies, herbs, and flowers in our neighborhood space. Look forward to seeing our community come out to learn and grow together! 🌱 🌎 ♻️ 🌸 ☀️
I am planning a kid-friendly solar activity if anyone is interested in hosting workshops or helping me facilitate. The CERT team will also be there to hand out preparedness materials and answer any questions you might have about the Community Emergency Response Training program!
The address is 31-57 51st St, Queens, NY 11377, USA (map) close to the M/R trains and Q18 bus! I will be there!
Class 14 – May 2
✰ KNOWLEDGE SHARING ✰
IN CLASS
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- Zine printing & distribution
- Final sharing & feedback
- Publishing Pizza Party
- Hotwash & reflections
- Course evaluations
FINAL ASSIGNMENTS
- Find somewhere to place your zine in the wild!
- Final documentation
- Course evaluations
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⤟ The END ⤠