A Teacher at Sea: Rory Wilson![]() Cruising in the Indian Ocean trade winds aboard the R/V Roger Revelle makes Rory Wilson happy. Teaching, technology and time at sea are his passions and creating a web-based education program during an oceanographic research expedition brought them all together from June until August 2007. His unique opportunity—sponsored by JOI Learning in partnership with the expedition’s Chief Scientist, Will Sager—placed him on board the Ninteyeast Ridge site survey expedition (Sea90E). Serendipity With his background in information systems, Rory helped develop the interactive website (www.oceanleadership/sea90e) for the Sea90E expedition. Through this website, students interact with scientists almost daily—with Rory as the critical link. During the expedition, seven schools in different countries from India to New Zealand to several parts of the U.S. participated interactively via the website, which students helped design. Rory thrives on challenging projects and JOI Learning gave him the flexibility to be innovative. This component of Sea90E is what attracted him the most. While aboard the Revelle, he wrote, “I truly enjoy the very strange blend of high-technology education and core research, and being in the middle of the ocean.” Celestial Navigation Before the Sea90E adventure tempted him into the middle of the Indian Ocean, Rory had planned to spend some of the summer building his own self-designed fiberglass and Kevlar boat. At almost seven meters long, one meter wide and with a small forward cabin for sleeping, it is like a large ocean kayak. He launched the hull in 2006, tested its rowing prowess, and had planned to try out kite sails in summer 2007. Eventually, he wants to take it on an ocean passage. A Really Awesome Teacher Rory has been teaching mathematics to middle school students in Colorado since 2002. He says that he likes focusing on middle school because, “students get on track during this time…one way or another.” “I work extensively with Title I students, who actually need a bit more help with things, and I also work with the gifted and talented students who learn in different ways. This is very interesting, and I really care about students and hope they do well. This matters,” he adds. When Rory applied to the JOI Learning announcement soliciting a teacher to participate in Sea90E, his 6th, 7th, and 8th grade students at Barone Middle School sent along letters of support. They wrote how he engaged their interest and taught them to make real-world connections by using their math skills for projects such as building tree-houses and cool cars out of foam. His students and school administrators then took pleasure in organizing a school assembly to surprise him with the news that he had been selected as the teacher on the expedition. It may have been inevitable that Rory would eventually teach, but when asked, he notes a few experiences that affected his career path. An important one was his 1988 MS degree in organizational theory from the University of Arizona. “As a part of my masters program, I worked with development—learning theory and computers. I have always been interested in how people interact and learn, using computers to help or channel information. However, I have been more focused on the people side of computers and not with computers as a technology toy.” And it’s his interest in people that makes Rory, in the words of his students, “a really awesome teacher.” | |


