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Showing posts from January, 2019

2nd Draft of Pro-Pro Chart: Where Arguments Break Out!

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Second Draft of Pro-Pro Chart: Where Arguments Break Out After Asaf and Rosanne's comments; Before Mr. Essabhai's comments  2nd Draft of Pro-Pro Chart – Other Institutions 2nd Draft of Pro-Pro Chart – University of Toronto 1st draft Pro-pro Chart  After the meeting we had with Dr. Asaf and Dr. Rosanne, we were faced with the challenge to improve our Pro-pro Chart while taking into account all the information we grasp from them. However, before we had the chance to think about filling out the missing benefit bubble of the Pro-pro Chart and making the existing ones solid and strong, sudden confusion and insight arose. Christine, one of the groupmate rises a point that turned the group into much deeper thinking process. She suggested that the students, one of the stakeholders, that were originally divided as the raising hands and tapping shoulders should be merged as one. This is because she saw that dividing the students would create redundant and flexi

Aha Moments!: Baycrest's Asaf and Rosanne Visits JPCI

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On December 13, 2018, Dr. Asaf Gilboa and Dr. Rosanne Aleong went to visit us to hear our thoughts regarding the work that we were currently doing which is the Pro-pro Chart, as aforementioned in the past blog. The process would be: Dr. Asaf and Dr. Rosanne would have time to sit in each group separately to help them express their thoughts and insights freely and without restrictions from each other. This would help us screen the information in a direct communication given by each of them without them framing each other's thoughts, for as we later on discovered, the two of them also have conflicts going on and have their own parts/themes they want to highlight.  We talked to Dr. Asaf Gilboa later after we had talked to Dr. Rosanne. In a short period of time, we found out two things from Dr. Asaf. First, he exhibits that the majority of the students coming into the institution are under the category of raising their hands, estimation of 90% and 10% under tapping shoulder