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3.18.2012

Sunday Stolling in St. Pete

As long as I've been a Tampan, I've loved being a weekender in St. Pete.  
 

At the UU Church





3.08.2012

An Education


Smile class!


There’s a lot going down now with Florida public schools, cuts to higher learning, and tons of people with expensive degrees without decent job prospects to pay off that student debt. 

My friend and fellow Tampan Mary McKenzie, affectionately known as Mary Mac, told me recently, “It’s incredibly exploitative to the students who buy, literally, into it.”


It would seem that education in America is not very cost effective, with the only reward being, you know, getting to learn stuff and use it for the betterment of society. 


Mary, 28, is a smart & highly educated cookie. She earned a B.S. from UF in natural resource conservation. (Her idea of a fun internship was writing entries for 300 plant species in the Tampa Bay Watershed.) But she’s “not a fan of the system we have in place.”
Excited by Skool

So last summer when she heard about the St. Pete Free Skool, which offers free classes led by volunteer teachers, she decided Tampa needed one too. Tampa Free Skool and its busy class calendar was off and running.


“I place a lot of value on sharing knowledge. I’ll teach this ethnobotany class then maybe the 18 students will want to teach a class. And I’ll learn.” Anyone can take or teach a class


Another class Mary leads is the monthly hula hoop jam. Other upcoming offerings are Bread Making 101, Geocaching, a Sci-Fi literature class (From Frankenstein to The Hunger Games) and more. 
Art Skool
“In some classes three people will show up. Others, upwards of 30.” The Tampa Free Skool founders, about 18-ish people, are still trying to figure out what attracts a large turnout. The subject matter? The day of the week? But there's no doubt it's growing. 


Philip, 35, is a part of that original core group. He said he values the idea behind the free skool concept because it has a lot to do with building community. 


“Skill sharing is fun. I like acquiring new points of view and adding that binds me closer to the community.” 


“It’s really exciting to see friends so excited about their knowledge,” said Mary. “Cool to see your friends stepping up and being that source of knowledge you weren’t aware of.” 


Tampa Free Skool can also be found on Facebook and Twitter


Other free courses: 


The Tampa Bay Association of Black Journalists is offering a multimedia training session at the Tampa Bay Times building in St. Pete on Saturday, March 10th at 11 a.m. 


Stanford and MIT offer some their classes free online. 


And as always, your public library is an excellent source for introductory computer classes, book discussions, foreign language lessons, etc. (You could say it's the original Free Skool.)

3.02.2012

Hard Work, Fair Pay

It's easy to get overwhelmed by all the stuff there is to care about, in the world & locally. So why the heck should I give a hoot about something as small as a tomato?!


Because according to the Coalition of Immokalee Workers (CIW),  slavery in America didn't really end with the advent of Juneteenth and the 13th Amendment. They have been fighting a battle for fair wages with Publix, our fancy Florida supermarket chain, for years with no avail.


The CIW has had some other major successes though, with fast food chains and most recently Trader Joe's


While there has been some great reporting done locally and on the national level, there's nothing better than learning about an issue first hand. 


You can do that tomorrow when the Tampa Free Skool hosts a guest speaker from the CIW. From the Free Skool folks: 

This workshop shall cover the basics of the CIW's work with emphasis on the actions they have done and where the Campaign for Fair Food is now, specifically focusing on Publix. This workshop offers the opportunity for the community to get involved with a group making real concrete change for hard-working folks!

The workshop will be held at the Jimmie B Keel Regional Library on Saturday 3/3 from 1 p.m. - 2 p.m.