HMCS Calgary connected with students in namesake city with Ship to Shore program
[caption id="attachment_26741" align="alignnone" width="591"] Carol Stapleton’s Grade 5 class at Fish Creek School in Calgary pose for a photo after receiving hats from HMCS Calgary’s Petty Officer Second Class Joseph Chisling, who did regular video conferencing calls with the class while deployed in 2021. Image supplied.[/caption] Capt Jeff KlassenHMCS Calgary__In the middle of the night during their deployment, in the midst of a counter-terrorism mission in the Arabian Sea, sailors on board HMCS Calgary took a pause from their work, or got out of their racks mid sleep, to video conference grade school classrooms back in Canada.The video chats were part of the Ship to Shore program, established to connect the warship with school children in their namesake city. “Essentially, we got up in the middle of the night while deployed to do video conferencing calls with students in Grades four to six from four different public schools around the City of Calgary,” explained Sailor Second Class (S2) Audrina N’Guessan. “We also talked to them by email and they sent us questions and we answered them on the call. We sent them imagery and videos of the ship; it was just a way for the children to learn about what their navy does.” S2 N’Guessan, 26, a boatswain by trade, was one of 20 sailors that participated this year.The program started in the 2019-2020 school year as a collaboration between the Royal Canadian Navy, the Calgary Board of Education, and other stakeholders, with the intention of giving children a unique opportunity to learn about what their navy does. A success in its first year, the program continued into 2020-2021, and satellite internet on ship permitted them to continue while on deployment.“Trying to find the perfect time to do the phone calls was the biggest challenge,” said S2 Patrick Pilon, a Marine...