Angela Crocker

Write. Teach. Organize.

  • Home
  • Biography
  • speaking
    • School Visits
  • News
  • Books
  • Blog
  • contact

Remembrance Day at Home

11.05.2020 by Angela Crocker // Leave a Comment

Remembrance Day wreaths with a purple ribbon that reads lest we forgetAnnually, Remembrance Day is a time to honor those who have served our country in wartime and in peace. We recognize current and retired members of the armed forces, police services, and related civilian organizations to thank them for their service. We also mark this day to acknowledge the rights and freedoms we enjoy as a result of past efforts, and affirm our obligation to uphold and defend those rights and freedoms now and in the future.

In the middle of the COVID-19 pandemic, Remembrance Day 2020 will look quite different as all levels of government and Royal Canadian Legion branches across the country scale back ceremonies and ask the public not to attend in person. While we can’t gather in large groups right now, we can still observe the occasion within our household bubbles, and remember.

Remembrance Day in Your Home

As it happens, this isn’t my first time celebrating Remembrance Day* at home. Past illness and injury has afforded me some experience with what to do instead. To help you plan, consider the following options:

  • Observe two minutes of silence on November 11 at 11:00 a.m. local time.
  • Wear a poppy. While traditionally worn on the left lapel, over the heart, the Royal Canadian Legion endorses self-expression when choosing how to wear a poppy.
  • Make a donation to the Royal Canadian Legion Poppy Fund or another organization that supports veterans.
  • Stand and sing O Canada. If you’re shy about singing alone, add your voice to the Elektra Women’s Choir as they sing O Canada.
  • Watch a local or national service on broadcast television or a social media livestream.
  • Call a veteran or a person currently serving to thank them for their service. Thank their spouse, children, and other family members, too.
  • Send a card care of the recreation coordinator at a local care home or veterans’ hospital. If you have children, include poppy drawings or other artwork.
  • Tell stories about family members who have served so that younger generations can forge a personal connection to historical events including wars. If you like, use the comments feature on this blog post or your own social media channels to tell your family’s Remembrance Day stories and connect with others.
  • Peruse the Canadian War Museum’s online archive of photographs and other materials. Every object tells a story.
  • Raise a glass and make a toast in honor of Remembrance Day. Splice the mainbrace, if you will. (See the video below on signal flags to learn what that means.)

Worldwide Remembrance

*Of course, Canada is not the only country to honor the contributions of all who serve. Adapt these at-home plans to suit your family’s needs for Veterans Day (November 11) and Memorial Day (May 31, 2021) in the United States, Anzac Day (April 25) in Australia and New Zealand, Poppy Day (November 11 or nearest Sunday to that date) in South Africa, and so on.

What to Watch

My first choice of what to watch to commemorate the day is CBC Television’s broadcast from the National War Memorial in Ottawa. Historically, this service has been attended by the Governor General, Prime Minister, National Chief of the Assembly of First Nations, and other dignitaries. While I appreciate this show of respect from public officials, my favorite part of any broadcast service is the interviews with veterans, some of whom are now in their nineties.

I also make a point of watching the Facebook livestream from the Canadian War Museum. There is a poignant moment at 11:00 a.m. (EST) when the sunlight streams through a single window and falls on the headstone of the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier.

With this post, I would like to honor my grandfathers, both of whom served in the military. Writing about them is an act of remembrance.

Remembering Poppa

Black and white photograph circa 1945 Man in British Navy Fleet Air Arm uniform Remembrance DayMy Mum’s father, Peter Evans, served in the British Navy during WWII. He was a pilot in the Fleet Air Arm and trained in Canada to fly both Corsair and Spitfire planes. I don’t know much about his time in uniform but I do know he was sent to Canada under the British Commonwealth Air Training Plan. Somewhere in Ontario, he learned to fly.

I believe he also spent time in Gibraltar and that his scheduled deployment to the Japanese front was cancelled when the war ended. While his military service concluded when WWII came to a close, his service and sacrifice had a lasting impact on my family. Most materially for me, my grandparents fell in love during the war and moved to Canada in the 1950s, and I was born here two generations later.

Remembering Granpere

Black and white photograph circa 1944 Man in Canadian Navy uniform Remembrance DayMy Dad’s father, Barney Roberge, served in the Canadian Navy during WWII, the Korean War, and on numerous peacekeeping missions. He had a long and distinguished career spanning nearly 25 years. As a Signalman aboard ships including the HMCS Kelowna and HMCS Rivière du Loup, he was a communications expert. In fact, he wrote the first edition of the Royal Canadian Navy Trade Manual: Signalman. In this book, he covered everything from morse code and signal flags to NATO communications and radioteletype procedures. Veterans Affairs Canada captured some of his stories in video interviews giving us all an opportunity to hear him talk about signal flags among other things. While he was Chief petty officer, 1st class (CPO1) , he will always be Granpere to me.

Lest We Forget

From the Navy to the RCMP, many members of my family have served and sacrificed. While I mention my grandfathers here, my personal acts of remembrance honor all the men and women who have served.

A field of poppies shot from ground level backlit by the bright sun

Categories // Blog Tags // Barney Roberge, Canadian Navy, COVID-19, Home, pandemic, Peter Evans, Remembrance Day, Royal Navy

Peanut Butter Cookie Connections

04.23.2020 by Angela Crocker // Leave a Comment

Peanut butter cookies have been on my mind a lot lately. They are a source of comfort, nourishment, distraction, and connection — especially when we’re living a digital life during a pandemic. So, I’m sharing my recipe in case you are also looking for some of these things.

More Than Nourishment

Orders to stay at home unless necessary mean we have less to talk about online. We’re not going to in-person plays and concerts. We’re not browsing at the mall. (Although, we are picking up staple groceries, sometimes including peanut butter.) We’re not traveling to faraway places. We’re not volunteering in our communities. And, frankly, you can only have so many conversations about COVID-19.

To fill the conversational void, some of us turn to food. I think cooking and baking are about more than nourishment. Food is about community — even when we have to be physically distant. It’s about the connections and interactions that happen when we talk about food: something so universal.

Recipe Connections

Baking nurtures all sorts of connections online. My Facebook feed is filled with friends baking sourdough bread and tips to get the perfect crust. My Instagram feed offers a steady diet of cinnamon buns baked by my friends and connections. I’ve been baking lots of things, too, and sharing photos of bread, scones, and peanut butter cookies. I imagine you’ve had some online conversations about food, too.

One beautiful thing about the internet is we can find a recipe for almost anything instantly. Unfortunately, the internet is also unreliable. Too often, a newly-discovered recipe fails. The ingredient list might be incomplete or there could be a key instruction missing. This is why we rely on recipes from friends and family, even in the digital age.

While I have a robust cookbook collection, my baking recipes come from people I’ve known. My former colleague Tanya shared her banana bread recipe with me. My long-time friend Moira shared her recipe for scones. My grandmother’s molasses brown bread recipe was given to me by my aunt. And, with this blog post, I’m sharing my mom’s peanut butter cookie recipe with you.

These kinds of recipe connections give you confidence in the recipe, and you get to think fondly of the person who gave it to you every time you bake it.

Peanut Butter Cookies

So, here it is, from me, for you. My mom’s delicious peanut butter cookie recipe:

  • 1 ¼ cups brown sugar
  • ¾ cup creamy peanut butter
  • ½ cup butter or shortening
  • 3 tablespoons milk
  • 1 tablespoon vanilla extract
  • 1 egg
  • 1 ¾ cups all purpose flour
  • ¾ teaspoon salt
  • ¾ teaspoon baking soda

Yields 3 dozen

  1. Preheat oven to 375° F. Place racks (or foil) on the counter for cooling.
  2. Combine brown sugar, peanut butter, butter, milk, and vanilla in a large bowl. Beat at medium speed with an electric mixer until blended. Add egg. Beat again just until blended.
  3. Combine flour, salt, and baking soda. Add to the creamed mixture at low speed. Mix until blended. Do not overmix.
  4. Drop heaping teaspoonfuls of dough 2 inches apart on parchment lined baking sheets. Flatten slightly in crisscross pattern with tines of a fork.
  5. Bake (one baking sheet at a time) for 7 to 8 minutes, or until set and beginning to brown. Do not overbake.
  6. Cool for two minutes on the cookie sheet. Remove cookies to racks (or foil) to cool completely.
  7. Store in an airtight container for up two weeks. Cookies freeze well for up to a month.

Two peanut butter cookies sit on a blue and white paper napin. The cookies have a cross hatch pattern made with the tines of a fork.Please be sure to practice safe food handling. Perishable ingredients such as eggs, butter, and milk need to be stored properly. And raw cookie dough includes raw egg which can contain nasty things like salmonella. Please be safe, even if you are tempted to taste the peanut butter cookie dough. I know it’s delicious. (Do what I say, not what I do!)

Giving Credit

I got this recipe from my Mum and it’s been a joyful part of my life for more than 40 years. My slightly stained recipe card is well used but it doesn’t tell me if my mom invented this recipe. I doubt it as she wasn’t one to develop recipes from scratch. Maybe it was on a jar of peanut butter or in one of her favorite magazines: Canadian Living or Chatelaine? I don’t know. If you know, please get in touch. I’d like to give credit to the chef who developed the recipe.

What I do know is that I share it here with love. Peanut-butter-cookie-filled love. Enjoy!

Categories // Digital Living Tags // cookies, digital connections, food, foodie, mom, peanut butter, recipe

Education technology tests our patience

04.10.2020 by Angela Crocker // Leave a Comment

Education technology is everywhere, and it is especially noticeable right now.

In the midst of the COVID-19 pandemic, webcams are in short supply. Families are dusting off old computers. Everyone’s testing the limits of their home internet connections. Students are missing their school friends. Parents are struggling. Teachers are juggling.

While it’s wonderful that we live in a time where technology keeps us connected, education technology is the source of a lot of frustration right now. Let’s break it down.

Lessons from teachers and for teachers

If you’re a teacher, you’ve been asked to embrace digital tools with little prep time. Suddenly, your homeroom is on Google Classroom, MS Teams, Zoom, or Bongo. To turn in-class activities into online activities you’re scouring the internet, consulting with colleagues, and making things up on the fly.

You’ve had to pivot to use education technology. If you hadn’t already mastered how to make a PDF, you’ve figured it out now. Teachers with ed-tech training are ramping up lessons and, concurrently, mentoring colleagues on how to use the tools to best effect. Plus, teachers are providing tech support to students and parents by email and phone.

Students embrace education technology

If you’re a student, you’ve been asked to embrace digital tools. You think you know it all because you’ve got TikTok mojo and are working on becoming internet famous. For school, you have to convince your sibling to give you a turn on the family computer. You’re looking for your assignments on OneNote, Dropbox, or Google Drive. Finding your daily lessons is a scavenger hunt across multiple digital tools. Education technology requires assignments to be uploaded or emailed to your teacher.

And you’re wondering who’s going to know if you really do 25 minutes of daily exercise as requested by your physical education teacher.

Parents step up

If you’re a parent, you’ve picked up some extra job titles to facilitate education technology. Overnight, you’ve become the procurement manager finding computers, peripherals, tablets, and cables to get your kids online. You’re also IT support, managing internet access, log-in passwords, and antivirus software. Then, there’s your role as tutor helping your child grasp the tools and the “new-new-new” math that’s so different from what you learned years ago.

You’re also worried about how much screen time is too much screen time. Meanwhile, you’re doing your own job or looking for work to keep your family afloat. And of course you’re a parent, whose most important tasks are to love and protect your children.

Abundance and scarcity

Technology is abundant, but do you have the right education technology? Your tween might have their own mobile phone but no computer. Maybe your family shares one computer. Do you have enough technology for every student in your household? What about the adults working from home?

If you need to buy some technology, money might be an issue. Computers and tablets are expensive and many families simply can’t afford them right now. Even if budget allows a purchase, smaller, needed items such as webcams, microphones, and green screens are in short supply at brick-and-mortar stores and online retailers.

Internet access is another expense to consider. Are students relying on the data package on their mobile phone or do they have home internet? I’ve read that some students without the internet at home are being encouraged to visit their school parking lots to access the Wi-Fi. Even families with home internet are discovering the limits to their internet speeds. With a family of three or more concurrently streaming video, many households don’t have enough bandwidth. If budget allows and your neighborhood is wired for higher capacity, you can consider upgrading your service, but it might be difficult to get a service call.

With all family members working and learning at home, space could be an issue. If your family lives in a compact apartment, you might be sharing a dining table or home office. The sound of one educational video might spill over to someone else’s video chat. Finding a quiet spot or some alone time to think or write might be impossible.

What to do

We’re all living the challenges of education technology in these trying times. Here are some things to keep in mind:

Focus on what’s most important: safety, sleep, hydration, food, comfort, cuddles. Remember that Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs does not include Wi-Fi.

Be kind: Everyone’s emotions are running high. We’re all experiencing the stress and worry of a pandemic for the first time.

Practice patience: One task at a time. Acknowledge the learning curve. You’ve got this. Remember you can walk away and come back later.

Pick your battles: If completing a lesson is too much, let it go. A student won’t be held back a year for incomplete assignments during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Communication is key: Keep parents informed. Ask teachers questions. Find accomodations, as needed. Keep talking to solve problems.

Vent when you need to but be mindful of your audience: Try to do it in private so students and teachers don’t hear.

Avoid unnecessary arguments: Now is not the time to debate the merits of MS Teams versus Google Classroom. Ditto video chat platforms. Use Zoom, Skype, Hangouts, etc. as needed.

Acknowledge differences: Different children have different abilities. Adults have different technical skills. Some have a knowledge of Macs but not PCs or vice versa. Not all people are neurotypical. Remember that a person’s technical skill isn’t linked to age alone.

Keep money in mind: Technology is expensive. Be grateful for what you have and acknowledge that others might not have as much.

Teaching is still teaching

Education technology is the tool, not the lesson. Teachers’ knowledge and skills go far beyond the apps and interfaces they are using to teach today. Parents, too, have a depth of knowledge and skills to share.

Think of the technology as a delivery truck. Students want deliveries from their teachers, and teachers look forward to deliveries from their students.

Together, students, teachers, and parents are figuring out education technology. And we’re all learning; every day.

Let me know about any educational technology snags you may be facing, or innovative solutions you’ve come up with during these challenging times.

Categories // Digital Living Tags // COVID-19, ed tech, education technology, pandemic, Parents, students, teachers

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • …
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
  • 6
  • 7
  • …
  • 59
  • Next Page »

Digital Life Skills for Youth

Digital Legacy Plan

Digital Legacy Plan book cover

Declutter Your Data

book cover Declutter Your Data by Angela Crocker

The Content Planner

Podcast

Keep in touch!

Thanks for signing up!

Sign up for updates on Angela's latest books, projects and events.

By submitting this form, you are granting: Angela Crocker & Associates, 255 Newport Drive, Suite 225, Port Moody, British Columbia, V3H 5H1, Canada, http://AngelaCrocker.com permission to email you. You may unsubscribe via the link found at the bottom of every email. (See our Email Privacy Policy for details.) Emails are serviced by Constant Contact.

Buy the Book

Click to Buy Online

Contact Angela

Angela Crocker
Email
Voice: 604.727.6974
By Mail:
225 - 255 Newport Drive,
Port Moody, BC V3H 5H1

Contact Angela

Angela Crocker
Email
Voice: 604.727.6974
By Mail:
225 - 255 Newport Drive,
Port Moody, BC V3H 5H1

  • Email
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • LinkedIn
  • RSS
  • Twitter

About Angela

Angela Crocker helps businesses communicate. She’s a writer, a teacher and an information organizer. Trained as both a business writer and a technical writer, Angela draws on her twenty years of business experience in marketing, fundraising, entrepreneurship, leadership and teaching. A published author, Angela’s currently celebrating her latest book, The Content Planner. On a personal level, Angela collects Star Wars novels, adores choral music and doodles with fine art supplies. Learn more…

Recent comments…

Very informative! I particularly admired your ability to control the room.

Mia Internicola

Read more...

Recent comments…

Excellent book. Five stars. (From Amazon.)

J. H. Crabb

Read more...

Copyright © 2025 · Modern Studio Pro Theme on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in