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APPRENTICES FORGE AHEAD
from Bodyworx 7#3
NAIT navigates hands-on learning in unprecedented times
BY JULIA LLOYD
Amid the pandemic, many students have been forced to take education into their own hands, pursuing courses from home via the internet—but students of skilled trades don’t have the luxury of remote learning.
The COVID-19 pandemic has caused a massive shift in the realms of education as university and college students across Canada study from the shelter of their own homes. But when the assignment rubric calls for a bumper replacement or structural repair—what’s an autobody repair student to do?
Fortunately, for students at the Northern Alberta Institute of Technology (NAIT), the trades college has been able to continue in-class teaching for 27 of its 28 apprenticeship programs.
Ryan Pomedli, an instructor for NAIT’s autobody apprenticeship program and a veteran in the autobody industry, said the college has added several protocols to prevent any COVID outbreaks.
The Northern Alberta Institute of Technology (NAIT) has been able to continue in-class teaching for 27 of its 28 apprenticeship programs, including its Auto Body Apprenticeship program.
explained Pomedli. “For example, in the shop we always required students to wear safety footwear and glasses and then, whenever they are standing there wearing an N-95 mask or if they are using a rotating tool, they use a face shield—but now students are wearing their masks all the time.”
Pomedli says students must always wear a face shield. During lunch time, the instructors are expected to disinfect the shop, and, at the end of the day, instructors complete a more thorough cleaning.
Due to COVID, the program has been restructured to meet the needs of social distancing guidelines by having the least number of students on campus at any given time. Normally, the program would be comprised of a half day of theory and half day in the shop. Now, with the COVID protocols, students complete three weeks straight of theory online and three weeks inside the bodyshop.
The first group of students will start theory and, once they move on to the shop portion of the semester, the second group of students start their three weeks of theory and so on, until the first semester of the program concludes.
The main challenge for the students is “trying to work in the shop with your mask on, wearing your safety glasses and everything. It’s always fogging up and all that, it’s kind of tough,” autobody student Hateem Ibrahim said.
Autobody Instructor Cecile Bukmeier believes the main challenge for both students and teachers is the transition to blended learning.
But for Pomedli, the biggest challenge is the lack of raw communication he has with his students.
“One of the biggest challenges, and it doesn’t matter if we are doing online theory or in the shop, is the inability to read facial expressions. For example, online some people have their cameras on but it’s so small you can’t read any facial expressions, and with the masks in the