IT'S NOT WHERE YOU'RE GOING

IT'S HOW YOU GET THERE

by Charles W. Shirriff


Formats

Softcover
$17.95
Softcover
$17.95

Book Details

Language :
Publication Date : 1/9/2009

Format : Softcover
Dimensions : 6x9
Page Count : 216
ISBN : 9781440114915

About the Book

This book is a collection of personal stories ranging from humorous to inspirational. It begins with the author’s youth in Saskatchewan, Canada, moves through an assortment of universities in Canada and the United States, and ends with his eventual career in education in Manitoba.

In the Portage la Prairie School Division he held a variety of positions such as teacher, counselor, Special Education Coordinator, and Consultant for the Gifted & Talented for the Portage School Division.

He spent time in Moosonee, on the tip of James Bay, doing upper ozone atmospheric research for the International Geophysical Year in 1958.

The author’s interest in computers began when they were IBM vacuum-tube mainframe machines, and continued through the development of Commodore, Radio Shack, and Apple personal computers. He was actively involved with developing computer-assisted education including their use with the handicapped.

There are numerous photographs illustrating the author’s experiences, as well as several photos by Kev Millikin because they illustrate the book’s theme in an impressively artistic way.

Email: shirriff@gmail. com
Web site: shirriff.org


About the Author

About the Author Charles (Bill) Shirriff was born and raised in Saskatchewan during the Great Depression years of the 1930’s. After graduation from the University of Manitoba with a Bachelor of Science in Mathematics, Physics and Chemistry, his love of learning and a penchant for new experiences led him to obtain a Master of Science in counseling psychology from the University of North Dakota and a B. A. degree from the State of New York. Over the years, he took additional courses in a variety of subjects at the University of Toronto, University of British Columbia, University of Connecticut (Storrs) and Stanford University in California. His teaching career spanned 37 years. Thirty-five of them spent near Winnipeg, in the city of Portage la Prairie, where he held positions as teacher, counselor, Special Education Coordinator, and Consultant for the Gifted & Talented for the School Division. Travel related to his vocation of teaching has taken him north to Swan River, Cranberry Portage, Flin Flon and Norway House. A brief foray into the field of meteorology provided him with the opportunity to live in the tiny settlement of Moosonee, on the tip of James Bay, doing upper ozone atmosphere research for the International Geophysical Year in 1958. In the early years of personal computers, Charles worked on the development of pressure sensitive keyboards for use by physically handicapped people. Charles operated a part-time small company to manufacture and sell the keyboards across Canada and in the United States for several years. He has presented papers on computer-assisted learning provincially for Exceptional Children Conferences in Winnipeg; nationally at the National Research Council Symposium on Computer Technology in Vancouver; and internationally at the Association for the Development of Computer-Based Instructional Conference in Washington, D. C. He has written two novels. The first, Spirits of a Feather, is based on the life of a teenager from an abusive and dysfunctional family and his struggle to make his way in the world. The second novel, Souls of a Feather, is a sequel. It touches on Hutterian life, the Bahá’i faith, First Nations people, New Age philosophy, and other facets of our multicultural society. Charles resides with his wife, Wilma, in Portage la Prairie, Manitoba, in their home overlooking beautiful Crescent Lake. Their son, Ken, is a computer engineer with Google. He lives in California with his wife Kathryn and their daughter Sydney. Their daughter, Anita, lives in Winnipeg with her husband, Henry, and their two daughters, Emma and Lillian. Email: shirriff@gmail. com Web site: shirriff.org