We did something we hardly ever do this weekend. We went to the movies. I'd go often if it were totally up to me, but my husband isn't a big movie goer, and over 30 years of marriage, I'd say we average one movie theater trip a year. When our kids were little we went more often (after all this was before VCR's and DVD's and Netflix!) to watch the latest Disney flick, mostly. So it was a pleasant to surprise to get him to agree to go!
He was interested in seeing Bad Teacher, but good friends of ours had seen in it the night before and told us not to waste our money. I therefore got to see what I wanted to see - Super 8. We both really enjoyed it. It's a monster movie of sorts - think E.T. meets Jaws meets Close Encounters of the Third Kind meets Lost. It's 1979 and a group of middle school friends in Ohio are making a super 8 movie to enter into a film festival. As they are filming they witness a horrific train wreck caused when their science teacher purposely crashes his truck into the train. His dying words tell them not to speak of what they've seen. As the Air Force takes over the investigation into the wreck, mysterious things begin to happen in their town. Of course, the teens decide to investigate. I enjoyed the paean to all of Spielberg's movies and the movie was quite predictable, but what really stuck out for me was the innocence of the movie. The teen actors got the nuances of friendship right, and as a middle school teacher, I recognized my students in their portrayals. It was pure entertainment - not the best movie I've ever seen, but a very enjoyable rainy Saturday afternoon.
The second movie I watched was completely different. Using my Netflix subscription I watched The Black Swan. Nina Sayers (Natalie Portman) has just landed a career-making role as the Swan Queen in Swan Lake. She struggles to interpret the role of the Black Swan and as the pressure mounts, she falls victim to paranoia and delusion. It's a really creepy movie, and there were scenes that I watched through my fingers. (I don't take blood and mutilation well!). At the same time, it was very powerful. Barbara Hershey was compelling as the ultimate stage mother, and I liked the way the ballet storyline and Nina's descent into despair paralleled. I can't say I liked the movie, but it was a terrific movie, nonetheless. I can see why it won Academy Awards.
Monday, June 27, 2011
Sunday, June 26, 2011
Book #48 The Weird Sisters
The Weird Sisters by Eleanor BrownMy rating: 4 of 5 stars
At first glance the plot seems a bit cliched. Rose, the oldest sister, has stayed home to care for aging parents. When her mother is diagnosed with cancer, her two sisters Bianca and Cordelia return home. But their motive for homecoming goes beyond helping to care for their mother. Each has a secret she is hiding and home is a place to run away and hide in.
I'm not sure what made this book so compelling: the unusual narration (first person plural), the tension between the three sisters, the Shakespearean tapestry weaving the story together, or the oh,so accurate depiction of caring for a breast cancer fighter. When I first started reading, I had to get used to the narration style, but once I got past that, I loved how the shared perspective enriched my understanding of the characters. I connected with the sisters' shared rivalry as they each attempted to be "first" in their parents' hearts. I also remember quite clearly going home to help my own mother with her mastectomy and recovery, and many years later, to help care for her through her final battle with colon cancer. Most of all I connected with the love that each sister had for each other. Despite their rivalries and insecurities, the sisters understood the meaning of family. Eleanor Brown caught the nuances of family relationships perfectly.
View all my reviews
Friday, June 24, 2011
Ten Random Observations About Moving Classrooms
1. First day of summer vacation! At last!! Yesterday was hellacious as has most of the week. So how did I spend my first day? I went to school and spent 5 1/2 hours packing up my room and moving everything but the furniture to my new room.
2. I have a lot of stuff ---- I should have photographed it! Teachers save anything and everything we think might be useful . . . SOME DAY!
3. Why did I move a box of empty plastic jars for the third time? I used them for a science experiment two years ago, but I don't teach science anymore.
4. I have approximately 20 used one-inch binders. They fit into my wastebasket quite nicely. No, I didn't throw them out. That's how I packed them to move!
5. I've learned how to steer a loaded dolly around myriad corners, into the elevator, up 2 ramps and through 2 sets of double doors. I made 11 trips in all.
6. My bookshelves and table tops are dirty!!! Disgustingly so! Even though I clean them regularly.
7. I found a snack size bag of Fritos in my closet. No idea where it came from.
8. I have a TON of maps.
9. Old-style AVON boxes are still the best packing boxes I've ever had. They don't use them any more according to my BF who's also an Avon rep.
10. A lot of teachers were in the building moving too --- and none of us get compensated in any way for moving rooms.
2. I have a lot of stuff ---- I should have photographed it! Teachers save anything and everything we think might be useful . . . SOME DAY!
3. Why did I move a box of empty plastic jars for the third time? I used them for a science experiment two years ago, but I don't teach science anymore.
4. I have approximately 20 used one-inch binders. They fit into my wastebasket quite nicely. No, I didn't throw them out. That's how I packed them to move!
5. I've learned how to steer a loaded dolly around myriad corners, into the elevator, up 2 ramps and through 2 sets of double doors. I made 11 trips in all.
6. My bookshelves and table tops are dirty!!! Disgustingly so! Even though I clean them regularly.
7. I found a snack size bag of Fritos in my closet. No idea where it came from.
8. I have a TON of maps.
9. Old-style AVON boxes are still the best packing boxes I've ever had. They don't use them any more according to my BF who's also an Avon rep.
10. A lot of teachers were in the building moving too --- and none of us get compensated in any way for moving rooms.
Wednesday, June 22, 2011
Survival Mode
As the last day of school is finally almost a reality, we've been in full survival mode. Grades closed last Friday, and so we've basically been trying to keep a lid on the energy that's threatening to explode.
And so here's Survivor:7th Grade Edition
Monday: While half of our students finish science presentations Monday morning with my partner, I kept 25 students under control with tesselations, line designs, packin, and final prep for the afternoon activity: Ethnic Entrees. Students prepared a meal representing a country they'd researched, invited a guest, and served it up. We had spicy chicken and soup from Thailand, a tofu dish with pickled ginger from Japan, stuffed dates and hummus from Egypt, hoisin pork from China, and a lamb and potato dish from Greece in my room, while my partner had dishes from Russia, Australia, Poland, Cuba, and France. It was fun and delicious.
Tuesday: We put our kids in groups and challenged each group to create a video Survival Guide to 7th Grade or 7 Tips for Success in 7th! They had a lot of fun with that project. We gave them 2 hours for the project, and then spent the last 1/2 hr of the morning watching their videos. During the afternoon the whole grade walked to a park for kickball, capture the flag, and basketball.
Wednesday: Today's plan is a medieval themed movie: Robin Hood - since we've just finished a study of the middle ages. This afternoon one of our paraeducators asked to lead a cooperative game called Survival. So of course, we said yes! We'll also throw in some locker cleaning and packing.
Tomorrow is the last day- and it's a half day. We have awards and then a school-wide celebration involving a rotation of activities: karaoke, a dance, board games, and something else that I've forgotten at the moment. It was originally planned to be a big outdoor affair, but since the forecast is for stormy weather, it's been moved indoors. I actually think the indoor idea will be easier to control!
So, the end is truly in sight!
And so here's Survivor:7th Grade Edition
Monday: While half of our students finish science presentations Monday morning with my partner, I kept 25 students under control with tesselations, line designs, packin, and final prep for the afternoon activity: Ethnic Entrees. Students prepared a meal representing a country they'd researched, invited a guest, and served it up. We had spicy chicken and soup from Thailand, a tofu dish with pickled ginger from Japan, stuffed dates and hummus from Egypt, hoisin pork from China, and a lamb and potato dish from Greece in my room, while my partner had dishes from Russia, Australia, Poland, Cuba, and France. It was fun and delicious.
Tuesday: We put our kids in groups and challenged each group to create a video Survival Guide to 7th Grade or 7 Tips for Success in 7th! They had a lot of fun with that project. We gave them 2 hours for the project, and then spent the last 1/2 hr of the morning watching their videos. During the afternoon the whole grade walked to a park for kickball, capture the flag, and basketball.
Wednesday: Today's plan is a medieval themed movie: Robin Hood - since we've just finished a study of the middle ages. This afternoon one of our paraeducators asked to lead a cooperative game called Survival. So of course, we said yes! We'll also throw in some locker cleaning and packing.
Tomorrow is the last day- and it's a half day. We have awards and then a school-wide celebration involving a rotation of activities: karaoke, a dance, board games, and something else that I've forgotten at the moment. It was originally planned to be a big outdoor affair, but since the forecast is for stormy weather, it's been moved indoors. I actually think the indoor idea will be easier to control!
So, the end is truly in sight!
Sunday, June 19, 2011
How I Spent Today
5:05 am: Roll over, look at the clock, and realize I can sleep longer since it's Sunday.
5:29 am: Repeat
5:46 am : Repeat
6:07 am: Still don't have to get up, but the brain cells are starting to get too active. Decide to give sleep one more try.
7:15 am: Wow! I actually fell asleep again. This time though, I'm awake for the day and I get up.
7:30 am: A bowl of Cheerios and finishing up the shopping list for my husband. He's going through the Sunday paper for coupons and then heads out to the store.
7:50 am: Decide to boil some small red potatoes for potato salad later in the day. Head to the shower.
8:30 am: Dressed for church, read the paper, make out offering check.
8:45 am: Check email, play a game or 2 of solitaire.
9:10 am: Chat with Elder Son via googletalk. Invite him up for burgers on the grill this afternoon.
9:30 am: Leave for church.
10-11 am: Service with wonderful young pianist, and some good hymns.
11:20 am - 1:05 pm. Moderate a lively church council meeting with a lengthy agenda. Aside from usual business discussion topics include progress on establishing our food pantry as an independent nonprofit corporation, safety of shelter guests and employees when nobody else is around (i.e. locking the church), and improving handicap accessibility to our building.
1:30 pm. Arrive home and find Elder Son has arrived, groceries are mostly put away, and everybody is hungry.
2:15-3:30 Enjoy grilled burgers, green salad with fresh-picked greens, and potato salad. Admire Elder Son's new Android-type cell phone. Enjoy his visit, and help him "grocery shop" in our cupboards. Say goodbye as he heads back home.
3:30-4:15 Write the monthly moderator's column for our church newsletter. Email it to the newsletter editor.
4:15-6:00 Relax on the porch. Knit a few rows, doze in the sun, knit a few more rows.
Plans for the rest of the evening: Read further in "Game of Thrones." Knit a bit more. Plan tomorrow's lunch and pack up my school bag. Early bedtime.
5:29 am: Repeat
5:46 am : Repeat
6:07 am: Still don't have to get up, but the brain cells are starting to get too active. Decide to give sleep one more try.
7:15 am: Wow! I actually fell asleep again. This time though, I'm awake for the day and I get up.
7:30 am: A bowl of Cheerios and finishing up the shopping list for my husband. He's going through the Sunday paper for coupons and then heads out to the store.
7:50 am: Decide to boil some small red potatoes for potato salad later in the day. Head to the shower.
8:30 am: Dressed for church, read the paper, make out offering check.
8:45 am: Check email, play a game or 2 of solitaire.
9:10 am: Chat with Elder Son via googletalk. Invite him up for burgers on the grill this afternoon.
9:30 am: Leave for church.
10-11 am: Service with wonderful young pianist, and some good hymns.
11:20 am - 1:05 pm. Moderate a lively church council meeting with a lengthy agenda. Aside from usual business discussion topics include progress on establishing our food pantry as an independent nonprofit corporation, safety of shelter guests and employees when nobody else is around (i.e. locking the church), and improving handicap accessibility to our building.
1:30 pm. Arrive home and find Elder Son has arrived, groceries are mostly put away, and everybody is hungry.
2:15-3:30 Enjoy grilled burgers, green salad with fresh-picked greens, and potato salad. Admire Elder Son's new Android-type cell phone. Enjoy his visit, and help him "grocery shop" in our cupboards. Say goodbye as he heads back home.
3:30-4:15 Write the monthly moderator's column for our church newsletter. Email it to the newsletter editor.
4:15-6:00 Relax on the porch. Knit a few rows, doze in the sun, knit a few more rows.
Plans for the rest of the evening: Read further in "Game of Thrones." Knit a bit more. Plan tomorrow's lunch and pack up my school bag. Early bedtime.
Friday, June 17, 2011
Getting There . . . . .But Oh So Slowly. . . .
Three and half more days . . . that's what's left of the school year. Time is just crawling by. We are definitely just marking time since grades closed today. Now it's just trying to keep everybody under control which can be quite difficult. We have just a couple of major activities planned, all in the afternoon, so the mornings are going to be tricky. Monday afternoon is "Ethnic Entree". Our classes have divided themselves into groups. They've chosen a country, explored its cuisine, planned a meal, and on Monday, they get to serve the meal to themselves and an invited guest. The trick is that they all have to remember to prepare their dish at home, and bring it in on Monday! My colleagues say it will happen, but like Thomas, I will have to see it to believe it! Tuesday afternoon our classes will walk to a local park and play capture the flag and whiffle ball. Then Wednesday . . . .well, nothing is planned for Wed. At least not yet. And then on Thursday we finally have Awards and school-wide party down on the soccer field. And then. . . finally, the school year is over.
I cannot wait. Of course I'm still trying to pack up my room for another move . . . and I'm scrounging for boxes, as are about a dozen other teachers. . . I will have to spend a few days when school gets out to finish that, but at least there won't be any kids around. Don't get me wrong, I love my students, but right now I'm really tired of some of them!
I cannot wait. Of course I'm still trying to pack up my room for another move . . . and I'm scrounging for boxes, as are about a dozen other teachers. . . I will have to spend a few days when school gets out to finish that, but at least there won't be any kids around. Don't get me wrong, I love my students, but right now I'm really tired of some of them!
Monday, June 13, 2011
A Terrific Read: Half Broke Horses
Half Broke Horses: A True-Life Novel by Jeannette WallsMy rating: 5 of 5 stars
Jeannette Walls has written a fascinating "true life novel" about her iconoclastic grandmother, Lily Casey Smith. Born in 1901 Lily grew up in West Texas on a struggling horse ranch. She learned how to break horses as a youngster and by her "tween" years, she was running the ranch. Lily was sent to Catholic boarding school at 13, but was soon pulled out against her will, because her father used her tuition money to invest in Great Danes. The investment failed. In order to earn money for her family, Lily set out at 15 to teach school in a remote Arizona school 500 miles away. To get there, she traveled by herself, on her pony. She loved teaching and was successful, for a while. Eventually Lily struck out for the big city - Chicago, where she met and married her first husband. Later she and her second husband are hired to run a huge Arizona ranch. Lily never shied away from new technology: she learned to drive a car and fly a plane in an age where women rarely did anything but teach, nurse, or type. She sold illegal alcohol, played a mean game of poker, taught school, and lived life with gusto. Jeannette Walls made her grandmother come alive, and I couldn't put this book down. I need to find a previous novel, The Glass Castle that Walls wrote about her mother.
View all my reviews
Saturday, June 11, 2011
Tired, but It's a Good Tired
I woke up this morning at 5:30 am thinking "We forgot about the change!" Today was the church supper I was co-chairing with another woman, and I'd realized that one of had to go the bank to get change for the tickets. So my day started a little earlier than planned, which was probably just as well. By 9:30 am I'd done a load of laundry, gone to the grocery store to shop for the supper, (and our own personal shopping), and I'd stopped at the church to store some of the groceries. When I got home, I mixed up 5 lbs of meatloaf, and got it ready to bake. I did a few household chores, and by 1 pm I was back at the church hall to start preparations for the dinner. My church holds a supper on the 2nd Saturday for 9 months of the year. We serve between 75-100 people. Tonight the menu was meat loaf, baked potatoes, green beans, rolls, green salad, homemade pies, or brownie sundaes. We served 79 paying guests and about 15 workers. I got back home at 8:15, and I'm tired. But we raised over $500 and had a really good time working together. Our suppers are an institution and we've been doing them for about 25 years. We used to get a slightly larger crowd, but recently the local Catholic church changed the time of mass because of the consolidation of several small parishes. The Catholics used to go to 5 pm mass and then head over to our church for supper at 6. Now the mass is at 6, and they can't come at 5 and the supper is over at 7. We've been talking about changing our serving hours, but nobody wants to work any later than we have to! We vary the menu. During the summer months we do a chicken barbecue that always sells out, and in September we do steaks. We're going to try a pig roast in October. Other popular suppers are a turkey dinner, pot roast, and Swedish meatballs. It's work, but it IS fun. So, I'm tire, but as I said, it's a good tired.
Friday, June 10, 2011
Ah, the Joys of the Last Weeks of School in 7th Grade
The end of the school year is only 9 1/2 days away but it feels like months! The past couple of days have been really hot and humid. My classroom was 87° at 6:45 am yesterday with steam room-like humidity. My 7th graders have been mentally on vacation for almost a month, and nothing seems to catch their attention. I'm not alone with this struggle. My partner, who's been teaching 7th graders for a while, says he's never seen such lack of attention. It hasn't helped either that we haven't had a "normal" day of classes for the past week. One day band members were missing for a morning because they gave a concert at the local elementary school. The gifted and talented group presented a Renzulli fair one afternoon. We also had a grade-wide math placement test that interrupted our schedule, and yesterday we had "Transition Day." The incoming 5th graders came to visit the middle school, the 6th graders visited 7th grade, and the 8th graders went to the high school. Today, Friday, is the first normal day we've had schedule-wise all week. But even today we will have a group of our kids missing as they are on a field trip. They are a group of "at risk" kids. Most of us teachers aren't sure why they get to go on this really cool field trip -- the ones from my classes are all failing and they are disrespectful and disruptive in the classroom. We would feel better about the kids missing classes if they had EARNED the trip, but the teachers were not consulted.
I've been trying to plan some "fun" activities in a so-far vain attempt to capture interest. In social studies we've been studying the middle ages, so I've asked the kids to research a topic of their choice. They have to prepare a presentation (again, they have lots of choices as to how they present,) AND they got to choose who they worked with. Between my 2 classes I have 15 groups. I predict that 4 of the groups will actually have a decent presentation. The rest? Good question. I have one group of boys who are researching castles. One of them took great notes while one partner watched. The other wrote a skit that he wants to present, but his 2 partners don't want any part of it. He showed me his script yesterday. He has one knight challenging another and then they have duel with swords and pistols! I asked him, "Where is the information on castles?"
He looked at me blankly, and said, "Oh, I thought that was boring, so I wrote this."
I said, slowly, "OK, so can you tell me about the knights and their duel? What's with the pistols?"
"Oh, I saw this black and white movie with my dad. They had a duel, and the bad guy pulled a pistol out."
"Hmm. Did you look at any of the books on knights? Or on medieval weapons?"
"Nope."
"What do A. and J. think about this?"
"They think it's okay."
"What happened to the model of the castle you were going to build? After all that's what your presentation is supposed to be about."
Blank stare.
I won't continue, but you get the drift.
Also on my plate: Packing up my room completely in preparation for ANOTHER move. I just did this last year when I got moved to 7th grade. Now I get to go back to 6th grade (YIPPEE!!) but really . . ..
I think when I retire, I will write a book or two: Classroom Conversation: What Your Kids Really Say (and Do!) or Moving Classrooms: 100 Ways to Minimize the Use of Your Own Time Since That's When You Have to Do It.
I've been trying to plan some "fun" activities in a so-far vain attempt to capture interest. In social studies we've been studying the middle ages, so I've asked the kids to research a topic of their choice. They have to prepare a presentation (again, they have lots of choices as to how they present,) AND they got to choose who they worked with. Between my 2 classes I have 15 groups. I predict that 4 of the groups will actually have a decent presentation. The rest? Good question. I have one group of boys who are researching castles. One of them took great notes while one partner watched. The other wrote a skit that he wants to present, but his 2 partners don't want any part of it. He showed me his script yesterday. He has one knight challenging another and then they have duel with swords and pistols! I asked him, "Where is the information on castles?"
He looked at me blankly, and said, "Oh, I thought that was boring, so I wrote this."
I said, slowly, "OK, so can you tell me about the knights and their duel? What's with the pistols?"
"Oh, I saw this black and white movie with my dad. They had a duel, and the bad guy pulled a pistol out."
"Hmm. Did you look at any of the books on knights? Or on medieval weapons?"
"Nope."
"What do A. and J. think about this?"
"They think it's okay."
"What happened to the model of the castle you were going to build? After all that's what your presentation is supposed to be about."
Blank stare.
I won't continue, but you get the drift.
Also on my plate: Packing up my room completely in preparation for ANOTHER move. I just did this last year when I got moved to 7th grade. Now I get to go back to 6th grade (YIPPEE!!) but really . . ..
I think when I retire, I will write a book or two: Classroom Conversation: What Your Kids Really Say (and Do!) or Moving Classrooms: 100 Ways to Minimize the Use of Your Own Time Since That's When You Have to Do It.
Wednesday, June 8, 2011
A Book! A Book!
I sat out on my lovely porch yesterday evening and earlier this evening, with this terrific novel:
One Was a Soldier by Julia Spencer-Fleming
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
This 7th installment in the Clare Fergusson and Russ Van Alstyne series was well worth the wait. I do admit it took me a chapter or two to get myself re-oriented to the story (a drawback when it's a long wait between volumes!), but once I re-wired the connections, I couldn't put this one down. I think what I like so much about this series is that both Clare and Russ are so human. They are good people, trying to live good lives, but they are flawed, and make mistakes which can have a huge impact. For those not familiar with the series, Clare Fergusson is the Episcopal priest in the small New York village of Millers Kill. She's also a military helicopter pilot. She is in a relationship with town's widowed chief of police, Russ Van Alstyne.
Clare has just returned from an 18 month tour of duty in Iraq and she is not adjusting to civilian life as well as she thinks she should. She joins a veterans' counseling group, where all of them are struggling readjust. The "mystery" in the story, (is it suicide? is it murder? who stole the money?) takes a back seat to the deeper story of this group of veterans coming to understand that their experiences wounded them emotionally and mentally even more so than any physical injuries. At the same time, Clare's relationship with Russ deepens as they both struggle to "hold on, and not let go of each other." The realistic portrayal of their individual and shared emotional journeys just adds depth to the richness of the story.
View all my reviews
One Was a Soldier by Julia Spencer-FlemingMy rating: 4 of 5 stars
This 7th installment in the Clare Fergusson and Russ Van Alstyne series was well worth the wait. I do admit it took me a chapter or two to get myself re-oriented to the story (a drawback when it's a long wait between volumes!), but once I re-wired the connections, I couldn't put this one down. I think what I like so much about this series is that both Clare and Russ are so human. They are good people, trying to live good lives, but they are flawed, and make mistakes which can have a huge impact. For those not familiar with the series, Clare Fergusson is the Episcopal priest in the small New York village of Millers Kill. She's also a military helicopter pilot. She is in a relationship with town's widowed chief of police, Russ Van Alstyne.
Clare has just returned from an 18 month tour of duty in Iraq and she is not adjusting to civilian life as well as she thinks she should. She joins a veterans' counseling group, where all of them are struggling readjust. The "mystery" in the story, (is it suicide? is it murder? who stole the money?) takes a back seat to the deeper story of this group of veterans coming to understand that their experiences wounded them emotionally and mentally even more so than any physical injuries. At the same time, Clare's relationship with Russ deepens as they both struggle to "hold on, and not let go of each other." The realistic portrayal of their individual and shared emotional journeys just adds depth to the richness of the story.
View all my reviews
Monday, June 6, 2011
My Summer Retreat
The big project this past weekend was to get our porch ready for summer. For the last 2 years, I've been looking for new porch furniture. We have had a white plastic suite (table, 4 chairs, ), 2 white plastic chaises, and a couple semi-matching end tables. My husbands parents gave us the table and chairs as an anniversary gift about 25 years ago. We certainly got their money's worth from them, buying new cushions every few years. But we decided that it was time for a new look. The heavy plastic frames just wouldn't clean up very well, and the table just took up too much space. We rarely used it except as a plant stand and pollen catcher. It took us 2 years of looking to find a set that we liked, could afford, and was comfortable. Last year we found an almost ideal set, but the cushions only came in one very ugly color. Three weeks ago we found what we were looking for at Home Depot, on sale, and with free delivery. So we spent this past weekend prepping the porch. We dragged all the old furniture off and stored it for a yard sale later this month. Then we got out the power washer, and I blasted away at the accumulated pollen, dust, and spots of mildew. Once everything was clean and dry, the new furniture was installed. I kept one glider chair that came from my parents' porch -- I need to find a new cushion for its ottoman, but the rest of the furniture is new. I can't wait for school to end so I can live out on what we're calling our OutDoor Room.
Sunday, June 5, 2011
Busy-ness Abounds
As the school year winds down, the daily chores wind up. Transition sheets, awards, field trips, budgets, bid orders, IEP meetings, all needing to be accomplished yesterday. The weather is getting hot which makes it hard to keep 7th grade brains, already looking forward to June 23rd, focused on assignments. We went from 48° mornings to 90° afternoons in 24 hours. My classroom was in the 90°s 2 days last week with lots of humidity by 9 am. It felt like a sauna.
We've been busy at church too. We held a planning retreat, creating a master calendar for the next 12 months, but spending the bulk of our time starting to discuss some big questions about our future. We desperately need to change, but we need to figure out how. I"m the moderator, so I'm charged with guiding the conversation. We're also wrestling with other questions, most recently today: How do improve our handicapped access to the front door? We have a ramp, but it's poorly designed, too steep, and almost impossible to navigate without help. There is a proposal on the table that has many folks very concerned because it will alter the appearance of the front of the church. I wish we could all walk in the shoes of people who feel unwelcomed by our current entrance. Perhaps the appearance of the church would be less important. Perhaps more people would understand why our new access has to be ADA compliant rather than "it's better than nothing."
That's one of the lessons I've learned this year. I was moved (against my will) to a different grade level this past year. I struggled all year, not just learning a new curriculum, but learning to use totally different classroom management techniques. For years I'd been one of the many teachers who looked askance at this grade level's teachers, wondering why they didn't do a better job of making their kids mind. After 9 months, I've discovered that this grade level is different. What worked in my former grade level doesn't work with older kids, and you really have to pick your battles. I've apologized to my new team for my previous attitude, and in fact, I've gone back to my old team and told them how wrong we were to criticize. I've walked in their shoes, and things are definitely different. I've been humbled by this experience, too. I've had to ask for help in areas I've never needed help in before, and I have failed a few times too.
I am looking forward to returning to my "home" next year - not just to sixth grade, but also to the subjects that are near and dear to my heart. I will bring this year's experience back with me, and remember to be charitable!
Next on my immediate agenda: I'm one of 2 people in charge of our monthly community church supper next week. It's both a church fundraiser and a major community fellowship event. Lots of work and lots of fun, and I think my brain was on vacation the day I put my hand up to coordinate it. I am also packing my room at school for the move back to 6th grade in between normal teaching. No rest for the weary, at least until June 23!
We've been busy at church too. We held a planning retreat, creating a master calendar for the next 12 months, but spending the bulk of our time starting to discuss some big questions about our future. We desperately need to change, but we need to figure out how. I"m the moderator, so I'm charged with guiding the conversation. We're also wrestling with other questions, most recently today: How do improve our handicapped access to the front door? We have a ramp, but it's poorly designed, too steep, and almost impossible to navigate without help. There is a proposal on the table that has many folks very concerned because it will alter the appearance of the front of the church. I wish we could all walk in the shoes of people who feel unwelcomed by our current entrance. Perhaps the appearance of the church would be less important. Perhaps more people would understand why our new access has to be ADA compliant rather than "it's better than nothing."
That's one of the lessons I've learned this year. I was moved (against my will) to a different grade level this past year. I struggled all year, not just learning a new curriculum, but learning to use totally different classroom management techniques. For years I'd been one of the many teachers who looked askance at this grade level's teachers, wondering why they didn't do a better job of making their kids mind. After 9 months, I've discovered that this grade level is different. What worked in my former grade level doesn't work with older kids, and you really have to pick your battles. I've apologized to my new team for my previous attitude, and in fact, I've gone back to my old team and told them how wrong we were to criticize. I've walked in their shoes, and things are definitely different. I've been humbled by this experience, too. I've had to ask for help in areas I've never needed help in before, and I have failed a few times too.
I am looking forward to returning to my "home" next year - not just to sixth grade, but also to the subjects that are near and dear to my heart. I will bring this year's experience back with me, and remember to be charitable!
Next on my immediate agenda: I'm one of 2 people in charge of our monthly community church supper next week. It's both a church fundraiser and a major community fellowship event. Lots of work and lots of fun, and I think my brain was on vacation the day I put my hand up to coordinate it. I am also packing my room at school for the move back to 6th grade in between normal teaching. No rest for the weary, at least until June 23!
Monday, May 30, 2011
Book #41 Another Disappointing Read
I don't seem to be picking them very well lately. This looked very intriguing, and parts were, but I spent a good deal of time thinking about quitting!
Moby-Duck: The True Story of 28,800 Bath Toys Lost at Sea and of the Beachcombers, Oceanographers, Environmentalists, and Fools, Including the Author, Who Went in Search of Them by Donovan Hohn
My rating: 2 of 5 stars
I was sorely disappointed in this meandering book. I almost had to add it to my "Didn't Finish Reading" shelf, but every so often my interest was well-captured. The premise is great: Donovan Hohn heard about the container ship that spilled its contents, included 28,800 bath toys that started to wash up on shores in Alaska, and perhaps in Maine. He sets out to investigate and winds up on a journey of several years. He travels to Alaska, and joins in major beach cleanup projects, finding one of the legendary bath toys. Trying to trace the path of the toys, he goes to China to visit the toy factory from whence the toys came, and he travels on a container ship along the path of the ill-fated ship. But his quest doesn't stop there. He continues his quest on several scientific research vessels in the Atlantic, and ends his journey by traveling through the Northwest Passage on a Canadian icebreaker. He is never able to prove the legend of the "rubber ducks" (actually plastic), but along the way he shares a wealth of scientific research. He covers ocean currents, ocean pollution, the chemistry of plastic, meteorology, and the formation of Arctic ice. I got bored in many places in the book, having to go back to re-read or skimming over dense scientific explanation. It would have been very helpful to include some visual references - maps of the Alaska coastline for example, and a map of the Pacific Gyres. (I pulled out a science book from school for that). I think the book would have benefitted from some serious rewriting. I found the book most interesting during his description of his beachcombing days in Alaska and his trip on the container ship. I also enjoyed reading about some of the researchers he met, especially Amy Bower, the blind oceanographer.
View all my reviews
Moby-Duck: The True Story of 28,800 Bath Toys Lost at Sea and of the Beachcombers, Oceanographers, Environmentalists, and Fools, Including the Author, Who Went in Search of Them by Donovan HohnMy rating: 2 of 5 stars
I was sorely disappointed in this meandering book. I almost had to add it to my "Didn't Finish Reading" shelf, but every so often my interest was well-captured. The premise is great: Donovan Hohn heard about the container ship that spilled its contents, included 28,800 bath toys that started to wash up on shores in Alaska, and perhaps in Maine. He sets out to investigate and winds up on a journey of several years. He travels to Alaska, and joins in major beach cleanup projects, finding one of the legendary bath toys. Trying to trace the path of the toys, he goes to China to visit the toy factory from whence the toys came, and he travels on a container ship along the path of the ill-fated ship. But his quest doesn't stop there. He continues his quest on several scientific research vessels in the Atlantic, and ends his journey by traveling through the Northwest Passage on a Canadian icebreaker. He is never able to prove the legend of the "rubber ducks" (actually plastic), but along the way he shares a wealth of scientific research. He covers ocean currents, ocean pollution, the chemistry of plastic, meteorology, and the formation of Arctic ice. I got bored in many places in the book, having to go back to re-read or skimming over dense scientific explanation. It would have been very helpful to include some visual references - maps of the Alaska coastline for example, and a map of the Pacific Gyres. (I pulled out a science book from school for that). I think the book would have benefitted from some serious rewriting. I found the book most interesting during his description of his beachcombing days in Alaska and his trip on the container ship. I also enjoyed reading about some of the researchers he met, especially Amy Bower, the blind oceanographer.
View all my reviews
Book #41 Another Disappointing Read
I don't seem to be picking them very well lately. This looked very intriguing, and parts were, but I spent a good deal of time thinking about quitting!
Moby-Duck: The True Story of 28,800 Bath Toys Lost at Sea and of the Beachcombers, Oceanographers, Environmentalists, and Fools, Including the Author, Who Went in Search of Them by Donovan Hohn
My rating: 2 of 5 stars
I was sorely disappointed in this meandering book. I almost had to add it to my "Didn't Finish Reading" shelf, but every so often my interest was well-captured. The premise is great: Donovan Hohn heard about the container ship that spilled its contents, included 28,800 bath toys that started to wash up on shores in Alaska, and perhaps in Maine. He sets out to investigate and winds up on a journey of several years. He travels to Alaska, and joins in major beach cleanup projects, finding one of the legendary bath toys. Trying to trace the path of the toys, he goes to China to visit the toy factory from whence the toys came, and he travels on a container ship along the path of the ill-fated ship. But his quest doesn't stop there. He continues his quest on several scientific research vessels in the Atlantic, and ends his journey by traveling through the Northwest Passage on a Canadian icebreaker. He is never able to prove the legend of the "rubber ducks" (actually plastic), but along the way he shares a wealth of scientific research. He covers ocean currents, ocean pollution, the chemistry of plastic, meteorology, and the formation of Arctic ice. I got bored in many places in the book, having to go back to re-read or skimming over dense scientific explanation. It would have been very helpful to include some visual references - maps of the Alaska coastline for example, and a map of the Pacific Gyres. (I pulled out a science book from school for that). I think the book would have benefitted from some serious rewriting. I found the book most interesting during his description of his beachcombing days in Alaska and his trip on the container ship. I also enjoyed reading about some of the researchers he met, especially Amy Bower, the blind oceanographer.
View all my reviews
Moby-Duck: The True Story of 28,800 Bath Toys Lost at Sea and of the Beachcombers, Oceanographers, Environmentalists, and Fools, Including the Author, Who Went in Search of Them by Donovan HohnMy rating: 2 of 5 stars
I was sorely disappointed in this meandering book. I almost had to add it to my "Didn't Finish Reading" shelf, but every so often my interest was well-captured. The premise is great: Donovan Hohn heard about the container ship that spilled its contents, included 28,800 bath toys that started to wash up on shores in Alaska, and perhaps in Maine. He sets out to investigate and winds up on a journey of several years. He travels to Alaska, and joins in major beach cleanup projects, finding one of the legendary bath toys. Trying to trace the path of the toys, he goes to China to visit the toy factory from whence the toys came, and he travels on a container ship along the path of the ill-fated ship. But his quest doesn't stop there. He continues his quest on several scientific research vessels in the Atlantic, and ends his journey by traveling through the Northwest Passage on a Canadian icebreaker. He is never able to prove the legend of the "rubber ducks" (actually plastic), but along the way he shares a wealth of scientific research. He covers ocean currents, ocean pollution, the chemistry of plastic, meteorology, and the formation of Arctic ice. I got bored in many places in the book, having to go back to re-read or skimming over dense scientific explanation. It would have been very helpful to include some visual references - maps of the Alaska coastline for example, and a map of the Pacific Gyres. (I pulled out a science book from school for that). I think the book would have benefitted from some serious rewriting. I found the book most interesting during his description of his beachcombing days in Alaska and his trip on the container ship. I also enjoyed reading about some of the researchers he met, especially Amy Bower, the blind oceanographer.
View all my reviews
Monday, May 23, 2011
A Disappointing Read
Love Mercy by Earlene FowlerMy rating: 2 of 5 stars
This first book of a new Earlene Fowler series was disappointing. I really wanted to like it more. Love Mercy Johnson is still getting over the death of her husband. She is part owner of a local diner in fictitious Morro Bay, and she has a wide circle of friends, including Benni Harper. One of her granddaughters arrives on her doorstep with a stolen banjo and a tale of woe. There is no mystery involved, just a gentle and very cliched story of family and friends helping each other get by. I found the character development forced and I got tired of reading all the background. I also thought the book was way too preachy. I don't mind Christian-themed literature, but I felt that I was being beaten over the head with it. I'd much rather a more subtle approach. Will I read the next books in the series? Maybe, if my library buys them. I won't pay for them -- I didn't think it was worth the download price on my Kindle.
View all my reviews
Monday, May 16, 2011
Is it Thursday?
One of Our Thursdays Is Missing by Jasper FfordeMy rating: 4 of 5 stars
I really enjoy Jasper Fforde, and this book was no exception. My only difficulty with it was that I evidently missed book #5, so I it took me a bit to get up to speed. This book is set primarily in BookWorld where a Genre War is brewing. Thursday Next, the writtenversion is the heroine of the hour when she is asked by Jurisfiction to investigate a book disintegration, and to determine where the RealWorld Thursday Next has gone. Along the way she acquires Sprockett, a robot-butler, and runs afoul of the Men in Plaid. She's given the opportunity to travel to RealWorld where she meets the man of her dreams, Thursday's husband Landen, but just as her fondest wish is about to granted . . . Let's just say her visit with Landen leaves her confused. Is she the fictional Thursday? Or is she the real Thursday who only thinks she's fictional? Or is she the fictional Thursday set up to think she's the real Thursday thinking she's the fictional Thursday?
Jasper Fforde has an incredible imagination and wit. His love of literature and words is apparent, and a reader must pay attention else a juicy line will be missed! I will have to back and re-read the first 4 books, and find book #5. These are definitely a treat not to be missed.
View all my reviews
Sunday, May 15, 2011
A Dangerous Idea, Indeed
If you've ever wondered what effect ZERO has on our world, this book will explain! I finally finished it this week. Parts of it fascinated me, and I got lost in other parts. While theoretical math may be engrossing to some, I'm happy to be content with the idea that it exists, but I don't need to worry about it!
Zero: The Biography of a Dangerous Idea by Charles Seife
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
At a recent teacher-training, the presenter shared the opening of this book as an example of excellent nonfiction writing. He shared the first few pages and went on to describe the book as an interesting read. I have to concur. Charles Seife takes the idea of zero and illustrates how the concept has developed over time. From a computer snafu that endangered an aircraft carrier, to geometry, physics, and highly abstract mathematics, the idea of zero has had a worldview altering effect. This book took me a long time to read, several months in fact, because I was reading it during our weekly school-wide silent reading period, but also because the further I got into the book the more I had to re-read in order to understand the progression of ideas. The first half of the book is fairly straightforward and easy to follow, but once Seife starts discussing higher mathematics, I got lost. I think I got the general gist, but basically I got lost. It does make me want to try to understand more about higher math however!
View all my reviews
Zero: The Biography of a Dangerous Idea by Charles SeifeMy rating: 3 of 5 stars
At a recent teacher-training, the presenter shared the opening of this book as an example of excellent nonfiction writing. He shared the first few pages and went on to describe the book as an interesting read. I have to concur. Charles Seife takes the idea of zero and illustrates how the concept has developed over time. From a computer snafu that endangered an aircraft carrier, to geometry, physics, and highly abstract mathematics, the idea of zero has had a worldview altering effect. This book took me a long time to read, several months in fact, because I was reading it during our weekly school-wide silent reading period, but also because the further I got into the book the more I had to re-read in order to understand the progression of ideas. The first half of the book is fairly straightforward and easy to follow, but once Seife starts discussing higher mathematics, I got lost. I think I got the general gist, but basically I got lost. It does make me want to try to understand more about higher math however!
View all my reviews
Saturday, May 14, 2011
And Finally . . .
I went with a friend today to the NH Sheep and Wool Festival. It's about an hour away from where I live, and it's a lovely, small festival at the Hopkinton State Fairgrounds. The festival is usually held on Mother's Day weekend, but was moved this year so as not to conflict with the Maryland Sheep and Wool Show.
It usually rains when this festival is held, but although skies were gray, and rain eventually arrived this evening, our visit to the show was dry. I forgot to bring my camera which is too bad. One of my favorite parts of the day was visiting the sheep barn. One of the youth events was happening, and it was fun to watch 7 year olds lead their sheep into the ring. The sheep were judged but so were the kids as one of the requirements was that they wear woolen clothing. My friend and I got to giggling as we visited with the sheep and lambs. They were so chatty!! When you're in a barn filled with baa-ing sheep, you can't help but giggle. At times it sounded like my 7th graders trying to sound like sheep!!
There was a lot fleece for sale, and roving too. Since I'm not a spinner (yet! I think it's in my future, though), I was more interested in the finished yarns. Two skeins of lovely local yarn followed me home as did a pattern. Fortunately for my budget I managed to resist 1400 yards of the most beautiful merino I've seen in a long time. It wasn't that it was even all that expensive, as luxury yarn goes, but I had absolutely no project in mind. I think I just fall in love with color and texture. Maybe I should just festoon my home with hanging skeins of yarn???
Anyway, this is what I bought:
It usually rains when this festival is held, but although skies were gray, and rain eventually arrived this evening, our visit to the show was dry. I forgot to bring my camera which is too bad. One of my favorite parts of the day was visiting the sheep barn. One of the youth events was happening, and it was fun to watch 7 year olds lead their sheep into the ring. The sheep were judged but so were the kids as one of the requirements was that they wear woolen clothing. My friend and I got to giggling as we visited with the sheep and lambs. They were so chatty!! When you're in a barn filled with baa-ing sheep, you can't help but giggle. At times it sounded like my 7th graders trying to sound like sheep!!
There was a lot fleece for sale, and roving too. Since I'm not a spinner (yet! I think it's in my future, though), I was more interested in the finished yarns. Two skeins of lovely local yarn followed me home as did a pattern. Fortunately for my budget I managed to resist 1400 yards of the most beautiful merino I've seen in a long time. It wasn't that it was even all that expensive, as luxury yarn goes, but I had absolutely no project in mind. I think I just fall in love with color and texture. Maybe I should just festoon my home with hanging skeins of yarn???
Anyway, this is what I bought:
| 100% Super Wash Blue Faced Leicester - fingering weight from a hand-dyer |
| 100% Alpaca Cobweb Lace from Long Ridge Farm |
The cobweb lace was part of a kit called Two Rivers Wrap. The sample was exquisite and I fell in love with it immediately.
It was a very pleasant excursion, with a very wonderful friend, after an extremely stressful week. Just what the doctor ordered!!
And I Forgot to Include This Book Review
Mine Till Midnight by Lisa KleypasMy rating: 4 of 5 stars
I thoroughly enjoyed the first novel in Lisa Kleypas' The Hathaways series. Amelia Hathaway's brother Leo has suddenly inherited a title and a ramshackle estate. She is the "caretaker" sibling, trying to keep her older brother and younger sisters together. Leo is grieving for his dead fiance, running through the estate's money, and finding solace in alcohol, gambling, and opium. When Amelia goes to rescue her brother from a gambling den, she encounters Cam Rohan. Sparks fly between them, and continue to fly when several days later, she encounters him as she's exploring the new estate. This is a entertaining historical romance, reminiscent of Georgette Heyer. The difference is the inclusion of the frequent, obligatory sex scenes. I am sure that had I read this (and most present-day romances) about 30 years ago, I would be reading primarily for those scenes, but quite frankly, I skimmed over them. I was much more interested in the rest of the story! I am looking forward to reading the next books in the series. Pure, escapism!
View all my reviews
Medieval Forensics
Mistress of the Art of Death by Ariana FranklinMy rating: 3 of 5 stars
Adelia Aguilar is an anomaly. She has been educated in Salerno and trained as a doctor. Her specialty is forensics. It's 1171. In what is now Cambridge, England, several children have been brutally murdered and the local Jews have been blamed. Henry II who is dependent on the Jewish bankers, asks the King of Naples to send a medical expert from Salerno's famous university to investigate. Adelia is the chosen expert. She travels to England in the company of Simon, and a Saracen eunuch who masquerades as the doctor to protect her. As the investigation unfolds, Adelia finds support and cooperation from some- a prior returning from pilgrimage who finds great relief from her medical skills, several of the townsfolk whose trust she earns, and she meets hostility from others- Sir Joscelyn, a Crusader knight, rabble-rouser Roger of Acton. She is puzzled by others like the tax-collector sent by Henry to sort out debts owed the jailed Jews.
At first, I had a hard time getting into the book, and it took me a long time read (mostly because it was my bedtime reading and I've been so tired, I'd only manage about 15 minutes a night!) I think I'll read the next one during my daytime reading!
It was a good "process" book, comparable to the forensics shows on TV like Bones or CSI. The story wasn't the mystery, but the process of unraveling the clues, and the relationships between the various characters. The premise of a female doctor during medieval times was interesting, though not historically accurate, but I felt that the author captured the atmosphere of the time well.
View all my reviews
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)



