PEI

Student creates website to help find fun virtual activities during holidays

It started as a way to connect with her own family in Canada, now high school student Madelyn Iwankow has created a website filled with ways that friends and family can connect virtually over the holidays.

Student Madelyn Iwankow collected some fun and free ideas for the virtual holidays

Student-built website promotes fun things to do during holidays at home

4 years ago
Duration 2:00
A P.E.I. high school student has created a website to share fun family-friendly ideas to help make virtual connections during the holidays, so the CBC's John Robertson took a closer look.

High school student Madelyn Iwankow stands outside and with her frozen fingers scrolls through a website she created herself — warmed by the excitement she radiates as she shares what she has learned.

"Over the holidays, that can be really, really tough to not be able to see your family in person. And I'm in that situation as well," Iwankow said.

"My family's in that situation and I know a lot of Islanders are. So I created this to share some resources that I have."

The Grade 11 student created Holidays From Home, a website dedicated to sharing festive ideas so people can still connect while remaining apart.

"It can actually create the opportunity for more connection and I find that we value human connection a lot more in these times," Iwankow said. 

Grade 11 student Madelyn Iwankow says the idea came from her own family's search for a handy resource with fun and free ideas to still be able to share the holidays. (Jane Robertson/CBC)

"Like when it's suddenly being taken away from us and we have to find ways to adapt, we value it a lot more because we have to actively work towards it."

She had started the project a few weeks before the Atlantic bubble burst, and before the majority of Charlottetown area high school students were sent home for online learning.

Looking for ideas

Iwankow wanted to find free — or mostly free — options and ideas so that there were fewer barriers for people to participate from afar.

Iwankow scrolls through the website she created to help share ideas on how to connect virtually over the holidays. (Jane Robertson/CBC)

The website is broken down into different sections like activities, games and ways people can connect digitally. She even had a suggestion to encourage people to share traditions or try things like baking together from different places.

"You can cook together at the same time. You can maybe make the same recipe and like help each other out with it, like from far away," Iwankow said.

"Or you could like pass on family recipes that maybe you wouldn't in another year because you wouldn't even think to do that because you'd just be in person."

School project

The website was part of her school work in the International Baccalaureate (IB) program at Charlottetown Rural High School.

Philip Pierlot, program co-ordinator with the International Baccalaureate program at Charlottetown Rural High School, says he is proud of the way the students have been adapting quickly to get meaningful projects achieved during shifting public health guidelines. (Philip Pierlot/GoogleMeet)

The two-year diploma program offered to students for grade 11 and 12 has more than 40 students enrolled this year.

Through coursework and personalized projects the students are encouraged to think critically and independently.

Students have had to adapt some of their projects to make sure they were staying within shifting public health guidelines.

"It takes a little bit of reflection and just that awareness that there are things I can do. I'm not shut down," said Philip Pierlot, IB program co-ordinator at Charlottetown Rural.

"From my point of view, one of the values of this within the framework of COVID is that there are those outward reaching — I'll call it self-donation — things you can do within the community that do not have to end."

The website even contains a section for people to make suggestions of their own. (Jane Robertson/CBC)

He said it has been exciting and heartwarming to see the students shift their projects to fit the world during a time when there are so many uncertainties.

"Their proficiency with technology — they have grown up with digital technology — means they don't see borders that I might see," Pierlot said.

"And that's remarkable to see how they are using that. I think they are among the most effective people in using these various media for very positive things."

Open to other suggestions

The website has a spot for other people to make suggestions and Iwankow said she plans to update it as more submissions come in.

It's only been up for a short time and she has already had one idea for a scavenger hunt, which she added to the site.

"It's an honour. It makes me really happy that people are just, like, looking at this," Iwankow said.

"It makes me happy that maybe someone looked at this and thought, oh, these are cool ideas and I have an idea and I want to share it with other people. That means a lot to me."

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Jane Robertson

Journalist

Jane Robertson is a digital visual storyteller with CBC News on Prince Edward Island. She uses video and audio to weave stories, and previously worked out of Edmonton and Iqaluit. Her journalism career has spanned more than 15 years with CBC. You can reach her at jane.robertson@cbc.ca.