Entries from November 2009
November 26, 2009 · 1 Comment
Although there is none of the usual tule fog for Thanksgiving in the Central Valley, the reason is bad news for us–no rain. The drought continues. Our weather is so glorious, the light is so golden, the trees are beautifully dressed in reds, yellows, and oranges. The smell of autumn is intoxicating as we have so many bay trees and citrus trees. Someone should make a perfume with that recipe.
With a whole week away from school for the holiday, I have plenty of time to rake leaves and linger in the backyard to enjoy this beautiful time of the year. Today, after taking care of the newly fallen foliage, I sat on the greenhouse wall and read and wrote in my journal. Behind me, in the saddle of the pear tree, a squirrel was munching on the nuts I had left there. He did not appreciate my presence even though I am the source of his bounty.
Suddenly there are leaves, small pears, and other debris, raining down on my head. The squirrel had scurried up above me and was shaking the branches. Perhaps he was only trying to pry lose some of the pears for his own lunch, but after I got up and left, I could see him nibbling the nuts again. He too is enjoying the lovely fall weather in the backyard.
Categories: The world and my place in it
Tagged: autumn, autumn fragrance, drought, fog, leaves, relaxing, squirrels, trees
See that list over there? The one on the right with all those names? That’s my list of favorite blogs that I love to check in on with some regularity. I just updated it. Some people had to go. Their blogs no longer interested me or their links no longer worked. Some made me sad to delete (like the news photographer up the road apiece whose blog got rolled into a local paper’s site).
I am thrilled, though, to add some new blogs and hope you can check out some of them yourself, dear Reader. A couple, Jen in berkeley and A knitted frenzy, have been in my inbox for months and I go back to them on a regular basis. I just hadn’t taken the time to move them here. I started reading Jen while she was still teaching in LA, but she moved and still writes interesting, funny posts, now from Berkeley, another favorite town. Kim writes a knitted frenzy from just up the road and works for a school district I know. We have another connection in that she attended the same high school as my son-in-law. We share war stories from our classrooms.
I love to go to blogs that have blog rolls posted so that I can try out new reads. Some work, some don’t. We all have different tastes, which is what makes this blogland so interesting and compels me to keep coming back. I hope you too, dear Reader, can find something new when you check out some of my favorites.
Categories: The world and my place in it
Tagged: blog roll, blogs
Those dear Readers who have been with me for awhile know that I have a love affair with San Francisco, as is evident by the picture at the top of this blog. Terry and I have spent the last two years working on a way to get an apartment in SF, and on Saturday, it became reality.
We have signed a one-year lease on a very tiny studio apartment in downtown San Francisco with some amazing views. We are slowly moving items there and will try to figure out what we can and cannot live without. Going from a six room, two bath home, to a one room apartment will take creative powers. We know that God has something for us to do there and it is by His grace we have this place. I will keep you posted.
Categories: The world and my place in it
Tagged: answered prayers, blessings, San Francisco, studio apartment
Starting with this assortment of odds and ends, my four marketing seniors developed and built a product for a target market in 30 minutes which they then presented in the form of an infomercial to a panel of judges at the local college.
They were among 11 teams, all the others made up of college students. Pretty daunting for my inner city high schoolers, but they held their own and took third place. I was very proud of them. Just going out to the college and competing took lots of guts. I told them, “you never win anything if you don’t take the risk.”
My students made a comfort carrier with all sorts of goodies to carry on a plane and use in the hotel room. The infomercial they created was very clever and I think that is what won the prize for them.
Categories: School
Tagged: competition, entrepreneurship, inventions, marketing class
Yesterday was the wedding of a former student. Caroline was not only my student a few years ago, but this summer she was our housesitter while we were gone for three weeks. She married a nice young man and I wish them decades of happiness.
This morning, at church, another couple, married at this time of year, celebrated 65 years of wedded bliss. Pretty amazing.
As for those getting married now, I wish they would have indoor weddings. We have been to so many outdoor weddings, in so many venues–beaches, golf courses, rivers, camps, lakes, parks, and yesterday, a farm house, only it was outside the farmhouse and very chilly. Someone needs to tell these young people that there is this most wonderful invention–indoor heating and cooling. Sure would make these weddings more comfortable. Oh, and maybe I wouldn’t have to travel so far, either.
Categories: The world and my place in it
Tagged: celebrations, marriage, wedding locations, weddings
I wrote these words two years ago; I could have written them today:
Teachers get blamed for everything. If students don’t do well in school, it’s because the teacher isn’t interesting or caring or well prepared. The teacher didn’t try hard enough, didn’t call home enough, didn’t encourage enough. The lesson should be jazzed up, made better, worked more diligently.
Because I teach in an inner city school with all the inherent problems, I see so many students who come to school totally unprepared for and uninterested in school. Asking them to sit still, be quiet, work all period, organize their work, turn in their work, is daunting, but I do it everyday. The teacher is too demanding. The teacher doesn’t understand the situation from which the student comes. It’s ok if the student misses class to take care of smaller siblings, a sick parent, or to work a job to help with the bills. No one says no to a parent who wants to pull their child out of school for a week or a month to return to Mexico for a family visit. This is all part of the culture. Teachers need to be more compassionate.
Then the tests are given and the students are not prepared because they haven’t been in class. The scores are low, and again the teacher is blamed. If you had tried harder, worked harder, cared more, the students of color would have done better. The achievement gap would be diminishing.
I have worked harder, cared more, done more, and it’s not enough to please everyone. After 18 years in the inner city school, working with kids from severe poverty, I am discouraged and feel beaten down. When will it get better? I truly believe that we should be producing a better student, but it is not happening for every kid. Too many are being separated by the achievement gap. Poverty is only part of the equation; culture is also an issue. Someone needs to speak against parents taking their kids out of school for a myriad of familial reasons.
I only wish that in two years this would have turned around.
Categories: School
Tagged: failing
This is the view when I step into my front yard and look north. The trees have grown so tall over the years, and the colors are wonderful at this time of the year.
The house next door has a giant Chinese pistache tree in the front courtyard. A young family with two small children live there and will probably be around for a few more years.
Two doors down, where the old VW van sits, there are ginko trees that turn lovely shades of yellow around now. Makes me think of butter when I see all the yellow leaves on the ground. The couple who lives there are original owners, over 35 years in the same house. They are getting close to retirement age and are talking of leaving. We are both cat fanciers and share the same cat sitter. I will miss them if they move before us.
We have been in this neighborhood for 29 years. It was pretty bare and new when we moved in. In the meantime, while kids grew up and moved on, families came and went, we stayed. I am amazed when I stop and think about all the changes, especially when I look at how big the trees have grown. I will miss this neighborhood when we move.
Categories: The world and my place in it
Tagged: fall foliage, neighborhoods, trees
I took 3 hours away from school on Tuesday because I just needed to get away. With short notice, and only a half day job, I had to take “potluck” for a sub. The guy I got was one I nor the office knew. It was a bit of a disaster.
My afternoon classes do take some effort as these are not my Academy students; they have not had lots of training so they require due diligence. I don’t think this guy was quite up to that. Students did not turn back the handouts in word processing (I always make sure and yell at them to drop the handouts off as they exit the backdoor.) Some of the students didn’t even know about the assignment. My 6th period multimedia class goofed all the whole period and accomplished nothing. One student told me he slept! Most of them took zeros today when I did a project check.
And then the sub didn’t take roll and he lost the room key. He told the front office one of my students stole it. Yeah, right. I leave my keys lying around all over the room and no one takes them. My students know I don’t have anything of value and don’t even know why anything is even locked up.
This morning another student found the room key lying on a book by the rolling cart I use as a base for the classroom. That’s right, a student turned the key in. This after the school had pinned all the doors that the key opens, just knowing that dastardly students were waiting to break in and steal everything in sight.
Categories: School
Tagged: lack of attention to detail, students, substitute teachers
Yes, my blogoversary came and went yesterday. It has been two years and just over 400 posts. About 100 of you come by here and I appreciate your kind words when you stop long enough to write.
When I set up this blog, I had no idea of what I was doing or getting myself into. I had been told I should do this, and knowing I would be leaving teaching in a couple of years, I wanted to venture out beyond my four classroom walls. It has been a great experiment and now is a part of my life. I have made many new friends and learned a lot. And, I have fun doing it.
My writing is my voice. If you know me, then you would say you hear me when I write. If we’ve never met in person, trust me, I sound just like this when I talk. As I am transparent here on this page, I am in my 3D life also. I am often loud and passionate about my subject.
Thank you, dear Reader, for stopping by, for sticking with me. I appreciate all of you. You have made this successful for me, and I hope you are informed, entertained, and that you leave feeling like you’ve spent time with a friend. I know that is how I feel after reading many of your blogs.
Categories: The world and my place in it
Tagged: blogging, life changes, thanks
November 8, 2009 · 1 Comment
After all the hard work the marketing class has done this semester, we decided to celebrate. However, it was hard to find the time to do this as we are busy with our next project. On Friday we made time.
The kids all brought something yummy with a brunch theme (I made biscuits and gravy) and we invited a few guests. Although our Junior Achievement partners had other meetings, others accepted, came, ate, and enjoyed a good time.
We had two previous students who came. One now works for the California State Department and had a furlough Friday (3 Fridays a month, the state government shuts down). The other is the school’s activity director and she had to stop in to ask a question of one of my students and stayed for food and fellowship.
Dr. Godfrey, who took the kids’ videos to Norway, came by before heading off to Fresno State to teach her Friday class. Pamela Howell of the AfterSchool Foundation who worked so hard with us on the chalk art competition also joined us. It had been her idea to do this celebration. And a good one it was.
I’ve learned that there are some people I cannot invite to anything. They always have something else to do. Hey, I can take a hint. Those who come always have a good time and it helps my students practice their social graces. I was very proud of how well they did on Friday.
Categories: Uncategorized