Sunday, November 6, 2011

Life is Good.

Life is Good. I have been teaching now for about 2 1/2 months and I'm still alive! It has been so hard - it is a lot to do teaching 670 kids - but I absolutely love it. I'm still working on getting all of their names, but other than that it's just perfect. And by perfect, I don't mean perfect. I really do have the best job, but it's not easy by any means. I have some...troublesome students, and there are some days that go better than others. But life is so Good.

Halloween was fun, I helped to MC the Halloween Parade. This is where all the classes line up behind each other and walk around the school showing off their costumes to each other and the parents that come and watch. Man, those kids are too darn cute in their little costumes. I saw about 15 million Rapunzels and a surprising number of Yodas. One of my favorite costumes was a little 1st grade boy who was Harry Potter. There were quite a few of those, but he dyed his hair black and insisted on speaking in a British accent the whole day. CUTE!

This week I started talking with the Kindergarteners about Thanksgiving coming up and I told them a little bit about the Pilgrims. I mentioned their ship that they came over the ocean in. One boy raised his hand and shouted out, "Oh yeah, the cauliflower!" It was so hard to keep from laughing! I told him he was close, that it was the Mayflower, and that cauliflower was in fact a vegetable.

It seems that the holiday season is coming up quickly. I can't believe we're already there in the year. It seems like we just started. Is this where my life speeds up to an uncontrollable pace and before I know it I'll be 75?

Wednesday, July 20, 2011

Friday, July 15, 2011

Why I am kinda tired

In 7 days...

Washington DC:

  • Lincoln Memorial - I read every word
  • Washington Monument
  • Jefferson Memorial
  • FDR Memorial
  • Vietnam Memorial
  • Korean War Memorial
  • WWII Memorial
  • US Capitol
  • random secret alcove on Capitol grounds with ultra secret rainforest view
  • Ulysses S. Grant Memorial
  • Supreme Court
  • National Archives
  • White House
  • Folger Shakespeare Library
  • Smithsonians
    • The Castle
    • Museum of American HIstory
    • Museum of Natural History
    • National Gallery of Art
      • indoor waterfall
    • Air and Space Museum
    • Freer Gallery of Art
      • Peacock Room
    • Hirshorn Sculpture Garden
    • National Sculpture Garden
  • Old Post Office Tower
  • Smithsonian Folklife Festival
    • Colombian boat-making, net-weaving, drum, xylophone, guitar and harp-making, authentic music, dancing and singing, somewhat understandable Spanish
    • Rhythm and Blues Q&A with Fred Wesley, a top-notch trombonist
    • Peace Corps 50th birthday, displays of projects around the world, West African food
    • limeade
  • The Merchant of Venice set in 1920's New York
  • Library of Congress
  • rode the Metro
  • Japanese Cherry Trees

Alexandria:

  • Thai food - delicious curry
  • Alexandria's birthday celebration
    • fireworks
    • community orchestra - 1812 overture, Harry Potter theme, ET theme, and more
    • really cute kids - Moema, Mila, Luna, and George
  • Alexandria Torpedo Factory - converted into a huge mall of artist studios
  • really weird sculpture/waterfall/stone face thing
  • the tiniest lighthouse ever
  • swimming with really cute kids
  • watched Sherlock - if you haven't, do it!
  • survived a couple of really really crazy thunderstorms
  • went to the singles ward that PBS just happened to be filming (with permission from SLC) for "Religion and Ethics Newsweekly" that will air in August - I might be famous!

Roadtrip to Palmyra:

  • Smith Family Log Cabin
  • Smith Family plank house
  • Sacred Grove
  • Martin Harris Farm
  • Gradin Printing Press
  • Alvin Smith's grave
  • Hill Cumorah Visitor's Center - air conditioning and more
  • Hill Cumorah - the climb
  • Hill Cumorah Pagent - complete with waterfalls, earthquakes, lava, and explosions of fire


For next time:

  • Arlington National Cemetery
    • Tomb of the Unknown
    • Iwo Jima Memorial
  • Bureau of Engraving and Printing
  • National Museum of African Art
  • National Zoo
  • National Aquarium
  • Georgetown University
  • National Geographic Museum
  • Get a library of congress library card
  • Voice of America Studio - what is that? I just found it on the map.
This blog post made possible by Celia - the bestest aunt ever!

Saturday, July 2, 2011

Chains

I recently read a children's book that I really really loved and I thought I'd write about it. So here.
It is called "Chains" by Laurie Halse Anderson. It is the story of a young slave girl who is owned by a Tory family in New York right at the beginning of the Revolutionary War. It was quite an eye-opening story as most of my reading about slavery talked about cotton fields and such down South. It drew a different perspective especially surrounding the events of the beginning of the war including the Declaration of Independence. It touched on some of the apparent hypocrisy of the Patriots who declared their own independence from the oppressive British, but refused to extend the same independence to the blacks.

The writing is very good. I'm not very eloquent in expressing why I like someone's writing, but the book just drew me in and I couldn't stop reading it. Disclaimer: the book does not sugar-coat much of anything. There is violence in this book. However, it is not written in a gruesome or graphic manner. I still wholeheartedly recommend this book. That actually might be why.

I am a firm believer in accuracy in historical fiction. I also believe that there is a balance between raising children under a rock with no exposure to hard things and throwing them to the wolves. Of course we have to be careful and protect our children, but I don't think no allowing them to see or read anything that involves violence or hard topics is the answer. Of course I have no children now, but I think I would like my children to read this book if they would like to. There is my rant, and my own book review.

Tuesday, June 28, 2011

"Friends"

Last week my family watched a great movie called Mr. Magorium's Wonder Emporium. Dustin Hoffman was fantastic in this movie and it really got me thinking about friends. In the movie, several friendless characters are touched and changed when someone calls them their friend.


It got me thinking about facebook. We ask people to be our "friends" whom we have met for a few days and maybe will never see again, but there they remain on our list of "friends". Have we become too floosy with our words?

Who among your facebook friends would you call if you had a flat tire? Who would you call if your boyfriend just broke up with you and you needed to talk, or if you just got a great new job? Who would you hope would call if one of these happened to them?

I don't have an answer, just a thought to send out to the void. I guess, in a way, I should scold myself for opening myself up to the whole world - should I just reserve my thoughts for my real friends?

Blast.

Wednesday, June 1, 2011

The Mysterious Benedict Society

Apparently I'm on a posting blitz. That is all.

I just finished a book that I wanted to recommend. It is called The Mysterious Benedict Society by Trenton Lee Stewart. I actually listened to the audiobook, which in and of itself was a treat. The narrator, Del Roy, was very good, and I'm picky about my narrators.

The book is a children's book, and thus somewhat predictable, but what I really liked about it was that the children in the book were very smart, but not too smart. I've been reflecting on Harry Potter recently and I am frustrated with how...dumb Harry can be. I love the world J. K. Rowling created, but Harry himself is kind of dumb (Don't hate me, Potter club). But in this book, the children figure real riddles out. I'm not sure if this makes any sense, but if you know a middle schooler that is needing something to read this summer, check this book out from the library. I liked it.

I bought a piano

Yep. That's right. A real live piano. No, not an electric one, a real one with strings and hammers and wood.

How, you may ask? Well, let me tell you.

Once upon a time, a broke newly graduated teacher took a job as a mover to help teachers move their stuff out of a school that was going to be torn down. She saw a few pianos sitting in the surplus area and asked about them. She was told that they were going to be auctioned off online. She scurried home, found the website, and after much hemming and hawing, bid on the piano and ended up winning it.

That is the story. Today I made some cookies, bribed some manly friends of mine with muscles and a truck and moved it from the school to the house I'm going to be living in in the fall. (Did I mention I'm living in a HOUSE in the fall?)

So that's the story of my piano.