Saturday, May 30, 2015

Saturday morning, the last Saturday morning of the school year.  Breakfast this morning...lemon sandwich cookies, the last of the Costco 4-Bean salad, and two pieces of Russell Stover candy from a box Scott for Valentine's Day from a student.

Monday, May 25, 2015

slacker

I have just been too busy reading to keep up with my book list.  Scott stumbled onto a one day good deal for Kindle, $2.99 each for Louise Penny's awesome Inspector Gamache quebecois mysteries, so I have been binge reading them.  Like when I was a kid and read Nancy Drew, Phyllis Whitney, Victoria Holt...

Saturday, March 14, 2015

Going to Ireland

I am going to Ireland.  With my two favorite women in the whole world, my mother and my sister.  I am so excited!
 May the road rise up to meet us!

Sunday, January 25, 2015

Now faith is the substance of things hoped for, the evidence of things not seen"(Heb.11:1)

I am searching for proof that the soul is real, personal and eternal.  But...if I have proof of that, I lose my faith.  What a connundrum, huh?  We think that being able to see, hear and explain the physical properties of something proves it to be so...but we accept as real many things we cannot see, hear or feel.


Ps- One of these days I will go back and finish the story of the long walk to LA! I published the beginning by accident.  And then lost my motivation...

Sunday, September 28, 2014

The long walk

I had a friend in high school named Heidi.  She was a friend with a strong personality; creative and smart and adventurous, so one day when she asked me if I wanted to walk with her to The Valley, I said, sure.  I was always ready to tag along on her adventures. Ushering at the Hollywood Bowl, going to folk dancing clubs, whatever she said, I went for it with her.  She lived on the very top of a hill between Thousand Oaks and Newbury Park.

Thursday, July 17, 2014

Yes, let's blame the schools!

This cute picture of Tela, Leah, Emma and Sam has nothing to do with my writing today, but it makes me happy to look at it, so I put it up here first...to make you happy before you read

So, I have a friend on facebook who is a writer and she was tagged in a photo with another writer who happens to be be the previous owner of our house.  There was a link to her book, so I had to check it out...right? And it turns out that she has written a book on secular homeschooling.  Of course, next I had to read the pages Amazon allows the curious customer to peruse for free.  Now, everyone knows that as a Public School Teacher, I can be a bit prejudiced against homeschooling (mostly because we have to try to pick up the slack after the parents let the children play video games all day instead of doing lessons, and then they bring them back to school for us to 'fix'...I give kudos to the parents who do a conscientious job of teaching their children).  So I steeled myself to read without being defensive and to truly see her criticisms of public education as being valid.  But as I was reading, something was needling me...I couldn't quite grasp what was bugging me.  Her thesis was well-written, but...and finally it came to me.  The author briefly discloses her background: a bright child who did well at school and got good grades, but was unprepared by the school system to live an independent adult life.  She also mentions in passing that she came from a dysfunctional family with a suicidal, agoraphobic mother.  Now this is important because what I realized was that her criticism of public education was that it didn't prepare her for life.  But MY thesis is that her FAMILY didn't prepare her for life.  She blames the schools, and I am so T-I-R-E-D of everyone blaming the schools.  It is too easy.  She says she learned facts at school, but not how to problem solve.  So she has come up with the idea of secular homeschooling to teach her daughters the way she wished she had been taught.  She uses her family as the proof text.  But lookit here...whether as a teacher or as a mother, she is actively involved in teaching her daughters, they do not have the dysfunctional family she was raised in.  I have a feeling they would have been successful whether they had attended public school or homeschool...because of the family, not the education system. Her daughters are headed to a university now (public BTW) and I applaud the author for successfully educating her family.  BUT I don't think it is necessary to denigrate the public school system in order to validate her method of secular homeschooling.   Obviously there is room for improvement, and we are always striving to make that improvement, but public schools must be doing something right for someone, as our colleges and universities ARE graduating students into the workforce who are bright, competent, creative workers. Thousands of them every year!  The media loves to zero in on the students who are not prepared, but the glass really is half full. Teachers do NOT raise your children, we teach them. Parents have been given the job and want to be able to slough it off onto the shoulders of the schools. And, as a final note, the conservative constituents coalition started lobbying for accountability in the schools, which led to a demand for measurable progress, which led to a crappy set of testing (NCLB) and a drill and kill method of teaching that we, as teachers, hated.  Now, the pendulum is swinging back to more authentic teaching which includes value given to creative problem solving, cooperative learning, communication, and some other 'c' word that I can't remember at the moment...oh, yeah, collaboration.

Saturday, June 7, 2014

It's June, it's June

Well, this is quite a month.  School was out on Wednesday, and now the days of summer will fly by faster than the speed of sound.  We are moving into the farmhouse next week, then preparing this house to be put on the market.  All exciting stuff.  Uncle Mike is in hospice in Santa Barbara and Aiden's anniversaries are coming up.