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Our schools manager energizes Electrical Safety Week

Nicole talking about Electrical Safety Week to kids with Dave and Jaclyn. Nicole Vieira, our manager of schools and youth education, does an in-class test run of an Electrical Safety Week presentation along with BC Hydro spokespersons Jaclyn and Dave.

Our team members to volunteer as in-class presenters at schools

Like the kids who bounce about to mimic charged particles in her in-class workshops, Nicole Vieira brings energy to Electrical Safety Week, set for May 11-15 in B.C.

Our manager of schools and youth education, the former high school math teacher has enlisted an army of employee volunteers to take wildly interactive activities into classrooms across B.C.

Students of all ages will participate in refreshed hands-on activities. They could be singing their way to safety with a new song (complete with hand-actions!), searching for electrical hazards in different safety scenes, guessing passwords linked to safety behaviours, or diving into an Escape Room activity to solve a series of puzzles and clues to free them from an abandoned power plant.

"You can't just info-dump safety or electricity concepts on kids and expect it to stick," says Vieira. "You have to give them multiple different ways to process that information, and one way is to get them moving. We've had great feedback from teachers after school presentations and last year's Electrical Safety Week that adding movement has been a total game changer for keeping students engaged and excited to learn more.

"We also make sure to explain the 'why,' like where hydroelectricity actually comes from. So we build a dam with our bodies, and then we move to gather water in our 'reservoir,' push the water down the penstocks and then move like a spinning turbine. "

"And then we're all bouncing around like we're energized electrons. It helps drive home the point that electricity can be dangerous. One teacher told us ‘I think you finally broke through to the kids about why water and electricity don't mix'."

Electrical Safety Week is also about educating our customers and outdoor, seasonal workers

Each spring, many new workers take on outdoor, seasonal jobs, with little to no training. An astounding 61% of reported safety incidents that resulted in serious injuries or fatalities involved these seasonal workers, and 80% of incidents resulted from a knowledge gap.

Trades workers, including university students working as window washers, gutter cleaners, and painters, need to know the dangers of our electrical system. If you know someone who does this type of work, including more experienced workers who operate the likes of diggers and excavators, help us spread the word about the 3 keys of electrical safety. And encourage them to sign up for our in-person or online safety training.

Nicole with her hands clasped in a classroom. A former math teacher, Nicole Vieira is building school programs and content that adheres to the B.C. school curriculum and respects how busy teachers are.

Vieira makes helping teachers a priority

Part of Vieira's job was to help recruit our employees as volunteers for Electrical Safety Week. She was happy to get 222 employees to sign up, including about 30 who will be presenting at schools they have no connection to. That's a change from former years, where employees only presented at schools where their kids, nieces, nephews or friends' kids attended.

We'll be featuring a unit of nine classroom-ready activities that teachers can easily bring into their lessons on the Power Smart for Schools website. As someone who worked as a math teacher in Delta for five years and then spent a decade supporting educators through Science World programs, she understands the time and resource challenges teachers face in B.C.

Vieira also did plenty of R & D for the Electrical Safety Week activities. Her Power Smart for Schools team pre-tested the Safety Song, Hazard Search and Find, Password, and Escape Room activities in seven different classrooms. A lot of the activity creation is informed by what she learned delivering the likes of Science World coding training in classrooms across B.C.

"It was so fun and rewarding to get the chance to meet with teachers and give them a polished resource, a polished lesson," she says of her time as a facilitator at Science World. "One thing I remember struggling with as a teacher was having all these great ideas, but not having the time to implement them and iterate on them. You have so much curriculum to fit into a year, so you can only fit in one or two other things throughout the year."

Our Power Smart for Schools resources and activities touch on subjects ranging from energy conservation to the physics of electricity, electrical safety, and Indigenous perspectives on water conservation, salmon and energy generation. They are classroom-ready materials carefully aligned with the B.C. curriculum and often include worksheets or videos to engage the whole class.

Vieira says she has a 14-year relationship working with the B.C. curriculum and knows the documents and evolving competencies well enough to recite them to anyone who might ask. Asked why she quit teaching after five years, she says she believes her skills are best used elsewhere. She's using those skills now to grow Power Smart for Schools beyond online resources and exploring new ways or avenues of educating youth. There's been a lot of program growth over the past year, with even more ahead — including a home-friendly summer break Power Smart for Schools takeover launching in mid-June.

"I had always, always, always wanted to be a teacher – that was my one and only life goal," she says. "But I felt like there wasn't enough support in place for teachers. So I made the choice to leave teaching, to see what I could do to get more resources for teachers because there's such a big demand on their time. They're doing a million things at once and you have to be superhuman to be a teacher."