between the dinos, the lions, and the kinders, i didn’t stand a chance. and i had a ball.
—
You can discover more about a person in an hour of play than in a year of conversation. – Plato
between the dinos, the lions, and the kinders, i didn’t stand a chance. and i had a ball.
—
You can discover more about a person in an hour of play than in a year of conversation. – Plato
went to buy my teaching partners a little something with a mexican flair as part of their holiday gifts. ole, ole, ole!
—
when i got home, actually put my glasses on, and went to wrap their gifts, i discovered that i had bought this.
when i gave them their gifts, they were not surprised and very understanding and said it had been a rough week and maybe firewater was more what they needed anyway. this is why we work well as a team.
Every moment is a golden one for him who has the vision to recognize it as such. – Henry Miller
with my class, discovering a small bit of the world, so huge and all new to them, on a beautiful fall day
—
The process of scientific discovery is, in effect, a continual flight from wonder. – Albert Einstein
i followed two 4-year olds at the back of the line, as my class made their way down the school hallway. one was crying. the other reached over, took his hand, and walked with him silently for a minute. the crying continued. the hand-holder decided to take a different approach and share his own tale of woe to make his friend feel better. “hey, when i was a baby, my mom never even played with me. she just wanted to stay in her room with the door closed and watch t.v.,” he told him. (how does he know this? how sad, and it really explains a lot, i thought to myself.) the other little guy stopped crying and they continued on in silence once again, hands swinging.
|
If you think you have it tough, read history books. – Bill Maher |
not exactly sure what is going on, but all sorts of memos about animal mayhem on campus.
is it an uprising? are these incidents somehow connected?
in the endless sea of boring communications at school, these animal memos always brighten my day.
—
To: Community_Dist
Subject: Important Announcement
Wednesday evening, coyotes were spotted. While coyote attacks on humans are uncommon they can be aggressive towards small animals such as small dogs and cats. In addition, Coyotes can be carriers of rabies making it important not to approach or come in close contact with these animals. Coyotes are primarily nocturnal, but can be seen in daylight hours. If you reside on campus, please take the necessary steps to protect your small pets and yourself. As always, when walking your pet please use a leash to help keep your pet from encountering a potentially dangerous situation.
If you have questions or need further information, please contact the Human Resources department or Public Safety.
Thank you,
—
To: Community_Dist
Subject: guinea pig cage
Hello,
I’m wondering if anyone has seen my guinea pig cage with water bottles, feeding dishes, and other stuff. It was inadvertently “thrown out” and I need it for our new guinea pig, Buddy.
—
To: Community_Dist
Subject: Have you lost a parakeet?
Hello,
A parakeet has been recently seen.The concern is that it may have gotten loose from a resident or classroom on campus. If you lost your pet, please contact us asap.
Thank you,
—
Perhaps measuring animal intelligence by comparing it to human intelligence isn’t the best litmus test.
—
image credit: (erikearossi.com)
my team and i decided to be birds for school today, as we’ve been teaching our kinders about birds and trees and all things natural. j1’s flamingo was darling, j2’s robin was so cute, and my cardinal – well, very colorful, but good thing they told me just before the parade that i was wearing it backwards and was proudly strutting around showing off quite a bit of human tail.
—
I base most of my fashion taste on what doesn’t itch. – Gilda Radner
loved our leaf man project. read the book to the kindergarten, they then created their own leaf art. we found out 2nd grade also read the book and created their own version of leaf art. the kinders created all kinds of cute pieces: cows, butterflies, and leaf men. after, we took a trip across the school to see what the 2nd grade had done. all kinds of cute pieces once again: leaf babies, leaf fairies, and then there was one – done by a little boy who had his own idea of what art is.
cute kinder projects
cute 2nd grade projects
and then of course, you have the scarlet johanson leaf project
—–
If art is to nourish the roots of our culture, society must set the artist free to follow his vision wherever it takes him.
i am absolutely fascinated by one of the security people on my school campus. upon my first encounter with him, i immediately began referring to him as ‘dwight’, as he so reminded me of the character on the american sitcom, ‘the office’ who, when it came to the concept of security, was a bit overzealous to say the least. soon, other teachers began to believe this was his real name as i referred to him so often by that name, and over time, it just became a natural part of our school culture.
each day, my dwight stands at attention, across from my school, armed with his whistle and his stop sign, and a with tool belt full of ‘stuff’, like a benign batman, that really could not inflict any harm on any living thing, luckily.
he wears his neon vest, waiting to put his orange cones out, to deter drivers from turning left into the driveway once the clock has hit 7:30am on the dot, thus averting a potential ‘too many cars in the driveway circle at one time calamity.’ problem is, he is always a bit overexcited and tends to place his cones out a few minutes early on most days, inciting drivers to try to explain/outwit/go around him in this arena.
last year, he went after a teacher who violated his early cone placement, read her the riot act and tried give her a ‘citation’ of his own creation. (and what i wouldn’t give to have this in my possession). after this incident, he had a talk with his superiors and had his whistle taken away for a while.
and yet, the madness and mayhem continue. this week, ‘dwight’ abandoned his post, and literally chased down another teacher, while holding his stop sign, recently-returned whistle bouncing on his chest, tool belt accessories jingle-jangling, and vest flapping in the wind, for violating his wall of cones, and this was physically no easy task for him.
when he finally caught up with ‘the perp,’ they had a conversation about the exact time of his cone placement, and as he indignantly pulled his watch out of his pocket to prove his point, and as he was yelling about it having been 7:30, they both noticed it was actually only 7:31at this moment of confrontation. now, math is my weakest link, and i am no great detective by any means, but if i was to think backwards, and see how long it would have taken him to conduct his footchase, there is no conceivable way he could have reached his violator in 60 seconds. after some grumbling on both sides, they parted ways and once again, he returned to his post, ever vigilant, and watchful of any perceived wrongdoings.
after all this, i thought about him, and wondered what makes him so concerned with rules and order, and why he has such a strong need to enforce such things, when no actual harm or danger is involved. i’d like to find out his story, his given name, and while i can never move on from thinking of him as dwight, and while i admire him for caring and taking his job so seriously, i’m not all that certain he could save any of us in the case of some real danger, though i do feel he would always be watching, and perhaps run to find someone who could help, whistle bouncing, and in that way, he would at last be the hero he longs to be.
If I’d observed all the rules, I’d never have got anywhere. – Marilyn Monroe
The young man knows the rules, but the old man knows the exceptions. – Oliver Wendell Holmes
2 kinders cross paths at the doorway of our little classroom bathroom – one coming in, one exiting. the one exiting has pants down and is walking out like nothing is unusual and is on a sunday stroll in the park. one coming in yells out, ‘cover that up! no one needs to see your _____ (anatomically correct body part)!!’ – like a very bad day at the park. well said, little one.
I have as much privacy as a goldfish in a bowl.