Tuesday, January 31, 2023

A Matter of Interpretation

Tuesday is current events day in our homeroom activity rotation, and that usually means CNN 10 and some kind of quiz game. For those who are unaware, CNN 10 is a 10 minute news show for secondary students produced every week day from September to May by, you guessed it, CNN. For the most part, it's not objectionable; the coverage ranges from politics, both national and international, to the domestic economy, with a large dose of science, heavy on climate change and astronomy. 

The quiz we usually do is a Kahoot. Again, for you non-schoolies, Kahoot is a web based platform where anyone can create quiz games. They also offer some public content that the company creates. Good News of the Week is one of those quiz games. As you might imagine the question can be a bit hit or miss in terms of their content. They definitely do not align with CNN 10, but the quizzes are usually entertaining.

Today was kind of a bust though. The kids (and I!) only got 34% overall accuracy. The questions were all over the place and more than a little esoteric ranging from the number of bike spots in a new underwater garage in Amsterdam (7000) to Louis Vuitton's partnership with Japanese artist Yayoi Kusama to the capture of a record-setting, nearly 7 pound cane toad in Australia.

We were all dismayed to learn in the follow-up info that the toad was later euthanized, as it is an invasive pest introduced to Australia from South America in 1935 in hopes of controlling the Cane Beetle which was harming crops. Since then, the toads have flourished, unchecked by natural predators, and have become a huge threat themselves to many native reptiles, birds, and mammals.

At the end of the game we all agreed that that particular news item was definitely not good, especially for the toad.

Monday, January 30, 2023

The Nerve

Around lunchtime today, we walked over with some sourdough bread and chicken salad to visit our friend Mary who is recovering from knee replacement surgery. Mary looks good; she may be giving Heidi a run for her money in the medical miracle category. Even though the surgery was just last Thursday, Mary met us at the door with only a cane. "Oh, I walked upstairs the same day," she shrugged modestly. "It's what they tell you to do." She went on to report that she had had a nerve block before the procedure which helped with the pain but was also pretty disconcerting. "I couldn't move my leg for a million dollars," she laughed.

Her story reminded me of the time in seventh grade when I broke my arm. Back then, they didn't call an ambulance for such injuries, instead my mom picked me up from school, where I had slipped on the basketball court during PE and fractured my ulna, and drove me to the hospital. It was a compound break, and they gave me a brachial block in the ER even before they x-rayed it. I remember lying on the gurney behind one of the curtains with my mother at my side, waiting for the orthopedist to come and set the bone. 

"Your hand is so warm!" I said to my mom.

She looked momentarily confused. "You're not holding my hand," she told me.

It turned out I was holding my own hand, but since I couldn't feel anything, I couldn't even tell!

Sunday, January 29, 2023

Well Isn't That Cool?

 Who knew our iPhone photo apps could do this???


Evidently this "lift a subject from the background" capability has been available since September, when iOS 16 arrived. Heidi found it by accident yesterday, while looking at wedding dress photos of course. We've been playing with it since, but are still not quite sure of its full application. It's cool, though!

*Cute puppy pic courtesy of Bill and Emily.

Saturday, January 28, 2023

Please Say Yes

Heidi has spent the last three weekends shopping for wedding dresses with our friend Lauren. Now, Heidi loves her some shopping and she also loves talking about clothes, about which she is super knowledgeable, but at this point, after dozens of dresses and discussions dissecting the lace and the beading and the bodice and the buttons and the train and the ruching and the neckline and the fit-and-flare vs the a-line and straps or sleeves or caps or sleeveless, I think even Heidi has had her fill.

Almost.

They have one more appointment Monday at 5. 

And Heidi? Is in!

Friday, January 27, 2023

Beautiful Mind

My reluctant writer finally made some progress on his essay planning today in class. Nevermind that the essay was actually due at the end of class, I was just happy to see him demonstrate his thinking and understanding of the process, which he has refused to do until now. The breakthrough seemed accidental: he was seated by the chalkboard, and as I probed his analysis of the story I wrote a few possible claims on the board. Excited, he jumped up and asked for the chalk. Ten minutes later? Here's what he produced:


It's a start.


Thursday, January 26, 2023

It's on My List

I walked up to the dentist with Heidi after school today, and while she was in her appointment I continued a couple of blocks to do some grocery shopping at Trader Joe's. As I strode toward the sliding glass doors, I made eye contact with a young woman who was canvassing for the Nature Conservancy. "Would you like to help save the world?" she asked.

"Nope," I answered, and then laughed. "Well, of course I would, just not right now."

She nodded without disappointment or surprise. I'm guessing she gets that a lot.

Wednesday, January 25, 2023

Good Old-fashioned

The bottom drawer on my teacher desk seemed a little sticky today when I opened it to retrieve a bag of Jolly Ranchers. I thought perhaps something had fallen behind it and was preventing a smooth glide when I pushed it closed, but the design of the drawer prevented me from seeing or even reaching into the space without removing the whole thing. So I pushed my desk forward to clear the bookshelf behind it and lifted the draw free of its rollers and out. 

I was disappointed to find nothing there, and I stooped to replace the drawer but I couldn't make it go in. I was banging it all around when my colleagues came in for lunch. One of my handier friends tried to assist me while the others poked fun at our ineptitude. "Maybe it's time for a new desk," quipped one.

"I've had this desk for 30 years," I replied. "I'm not getting a new one now!"

"That could be the problem," she laughed.

"I think you're going to have to call the custodian," suggested another, and the friend who was helping me agreed.

I don't call the custodian to fix anything! I have a drawer full of tools and pride myself on maintaining the vintage furniture and equipment I have spent so many years with. In fact, I'm sure I can count on one hand the number of times I've asked for help. Once when I barfed, once when a kid peed on the chair, once after at least 10 years of fixing a cabinet latch that finally fell apart, and that's pretty much it, so I really did not want to call for someone to help me put a drawer back in.

But that's what I did. Our friendly custodian appeared within five minutes, and after another round of jokes about the age of my desk, he pulled out the roller assembly and fit it on the drawer outside the desk then slid the whole thing back in. I watched him carefully in case I ever need to repeat his repair, but since I only pull the drawer all the way out every thirty years, I think I'm safe.

Plus? How can a desk look old? It has a laminate top, steel body, and three drawers which lock, AND it's inaccessible to any of the creatures I share my room with. What improvements could a new desk possibly have?

Tuesday, January 24, 2023

Fresh Eyes

Years ago, when I first started teaching I would often take advantage of our free access to the gym and workout equipment that is part of the rec center connected to our school. Back then, my friend Wes and I would do the stairmaster, lift weights, and then play a little pick up basketball with some of our students who might be hanging around after school. It was fun, and I was in great shape.

But times change: Wes moved away to teach overseas, first in Iceland and the in England, where he is today, married with three kids and still teaching in a DOD school. My afternoons got busier as I took on more responsibility as a team leader and a basketball coach. I joined a "real" gym where I had to drive to work out, and I did so, sporadically. COVID hit, and I didn't go to the gym for a couple of years, then every time I went back it was somehow unsatisfying. Then my gym was sold to another company, and that might be the last straw in our relationship.

Before I quit sending my money to that gym, though, I wanted another option. This year, my nephew started working at our school, and often after the last bell he goes down to work out in the rec center. Last week, I invited myself along, and today was the day when I brought my gym clothes and headed down for my first workout there in at least 20 years. 

What fun I had! The pickleball court was open so we volleyed for a while, then there was a home basketball game I could watch from the treadmill. We each did a couple of weight circuits and we met again by the bosu ball and pilates drum which we spotted each other on. I had a pretty good workout, and we are going to go again soon. 

Coincidentally, Treat is just a little younger than I and a little older Wes was all those years ago. I'm glad that he reminded me what a great perc we have right downstairs.

Monday, January 23, 2023

Kitty Bowl

I was exchanging messages with my cousin during the NFL playoff game yesterday. 

"Sorry about the Giants," I texted.

She is an inveterate football fan, and after a lifetime of rooting for Washington, their recent name change on top of their chronic poor management has driven her to the Giants. "My parents were from New York," she reminded us this summer, "and all my uncles were Giants fans when I was growing up." She even pronounced the name of the team Gintz (with a long i) just like they did.

"Go Bills!" she wrote back, knowing Heidi is from Buffalo.

I sent her this picture of our cat, Tibby "watching" the game.


After Buffalo's disastrous defeat, my cousin texted, "Tell Tib I'm sorry her team didn't win."

"I think she might have been for the Bengals 🐅" I replied.

"Good point," she wrote back. "She is a tough cookie cat."

Sunday, January 22, 2023

Our Daily

I was distracted as I mixed up the ingredients for my sourdough bread today. We had just gotten home from meeting an old friend for coffee, I was making a couple of different kinds of bread, another friend was here talking out a wedding dress crisis with Heidi. Even so, I feeling pretty accomplished as I finished the dishes and wet my hands to do the first stretch and fold. 

Something seemed a little off with the dough, and I paused a moment before putting the cover back on and allowing it to rest for another 15 minutes. What was it that jogged my memory? I can't say, but it occurred to me that I had never even gotten my starter out of the fridge. What was in the bowl in front of me was a pound of flour, some water, and salt-- basically a brick waiting to be baked. With nothing to lose, I kneaded the leavening in to the dough, covered it, and hoped for the best. 

Bread has earned its reputation as the staff of life over many millenium. In 2018, scientists found evidence of bread-making at a 15,000 year old dig site in Jordan. Fortunately, something so old must also be forgiving, and my bread was. Even as I write, my bread is rising in the kitchen, and so there will be loaves tomorrow.

Saturday, January 21, 2023

Time Passages

I was out and about running errands today, and so I took the opportunity to tune into AT40 on the 70s station. They were airing the show from this week in 1979, which was oddly coincidental since earlier in the day I had listened to an album by Dan Fogelberg which one of my roommates played over and over again when we were doing our winter term in St. Moritz in January of 1979. 

I confess that I think of that idyllic resort town more often than you might expect. Despite the fact that I never learned to ski, and avoiding that requirement was rather fraught each of the three Januaries I spent there, I have St. Moritz as one of the places on my weather app, and I check in every few months. 

I hadn't heard the Fogelberg album in at least 40 years, but I put it on when Apple music played "Run for the Roses" as part of a Linda Ronstadt station it was generating. When he sang, "It's the chance of a lifetime in a lifetime of chance," I was hooked by the antimetabole and was curious to revisit the Nether Land album that Amy played so faithfully those two weeks.

Not three days ago, another friend from high school texted me with a question about that January term, and last Sunday when I was getting a massage, all I could think about was St. Moritz: the snow packed streets, the hot chocolate, the ski bahn, the hotel, the classes, the gerstensuppe, the cross country ski instructor (Ooplah! she said when we fell, Come, ve go, she said at the beginning of every lesson; it was weird. 

After my massage, I checked the snowpack and the webcams to see how the season was unfolding there. The main mountain, Piz Nair, is some 5,000 feet above sea level, and so this year at least, Corviglia and Corvatsch have avoided the green pistes that other lower altitude alpine resorts have suffered.

And now, here I was this afternoon hearing the 40 most popular songs of the last week I ever spent there. And there was one last nutty coincidence. The last time I listened to the Top 40 was on the way home from the beach at Thanksgiving. My sister and Heidi and I rode together through the fields of the eastern shore nd sang along to the hits from that week in 1978. Well, some of those songs were still on the countdown today, because that was the same timeline, just eight weeks earlier.

And the number one song today? "Le Freak".

Fitting, I suppose.

Friday, January 20, 2023

Highly Irregular

A friend with a sick child asked Heidi to come by and stay with the baby while she went out to get some medicine and groceries, so I dropped Heidi over there on our way home from work. When I got home, Lucy was happy to see me, but stunned when Heidi did not come into the house right behind me. I leashed her up for a quick potty break, and she headed directly over to the car and gave it a sound sniffing, seemingly convinced that Heidi would emerge at any moment. 

We took a quick spin around the neighborhood and got the mail, but when we arrived back at the house, Lucy bolted up the stairs to see if Heidi had appeared, yet. Just then a neighbor came by and offered to take Lucy for a walk with her dog. We leashed her up again, and as she headed out the door with her friends both human and canine, she took a moment and looked back, head atilt, wondering what else in the world this day could possibly bring!

Thursday, January 19, 2023

Virtual Fail

As a follow up to my snow day prediction question the other day, the warm-up today was to make an argument for or against virtual learning on snow days. 

Oh my! I could have predicted that the students would be unanimously in favor of keeping snow days, but I wasn't really prepared for how violently they are opposed to virtual learning. 

Student after student told tales of shutting off the camera and walking away, and watching TV or playing games during class. They described kicking their teachers off the call and randomly muting their classmates. Worst of all, they are convinced that they didn't learn nearly enough in the time that they were away from the school building. "I'd rather go to school in July than learn virtually," one student announced passionately, and there were nods of agreement.

"It was just a boring waste of time," another added.

"You could always turn your camera on and do your best to participate and learn," I suggested.

"No way!" replied the first student. "We're kids!"

Wednesday, January 18, 2023

AI for the Win

Today was the day when I got to see what that recalcitrant student thought about the story I had ChatboxGPT write for him. The experience did not disappoint.

I handed it to him casually while the other students were busy gathering evidence to support their previously written claims about the characters they had chosen last week. When I checked in with him a little while later he told me he had not yet read it. "What have you been doing all this time?" I asked.

"I've been previewing it," he informed me.

"Oh," I nodded, "to make sure there's nothing you don't like in there. I don't think there is, is there?"

"No," he admitted. "I'm going to read it now."

"What did you think?" I asked when I saw him shift in his seat and lift his head.

He looked at his feet; I could tell he was a bit conflicted. 

"Did that kid do the right thing?"

As much as he dislikes me and my class, he couldn't resist talking about the ethics of the story. He had some questions, and he began to annotate the text. When he left at the end of class, he put the story in his binder.

"Good work today!" I told him on his way out of the room. "I think you made some progress on the essay."

He shrugged and walked wordlessly out the door.

But he did like that story. 

(Interested? You can read it here.)

Tuesday, January 17, 2023

Pro-Snow Days

The warm up question today went something like this: January shmanuary where are the snow days! and then it asked students to predict the first snow day we would have this year. Not surprisingly, there was a scatter of guesses for the days between now and the beginning of March as well as a number of pessimistic students who predicted no snow days at all this year. 

The conversation was as heated as the predictions were frosted-- everyone wished for that moment of waking up in the quiet hush of sweeping flakes and the news that school was closed. "But what does this have to do with argument?" someone asked in every class.

"I read recently that there is a bill in the state general assembly to get rid of them. Some lawmakers want schools to require virtual learning on the days when the buildings are closed," I told them

"Noooooooooooooo!!!!!!!!" the outcry was loud.

"Well," I shrugged, "you can always write a letter to your representative. Start gathering your evidence and reasoning now!"

Monday, January 16, 2023

Assistive Technology

I woke this morning to the alarming news, via push-notification, from the NY Times that A.I. chatbots are forcing educators to rethink how we teach. The article explained that ChatGPT, the popular chatbot released by OpenAI in early December 2022, is able to answer questions and compose text in such an effective way as to pose a threat to traditional homework assignments. This bot can do math problems, research questions, and write essays all in simple and disarmingly-human sounding sentences. 

Suddenly eager to find out more about this technology which has been only on the periphery of my attention until now, I clicked to another recent article from the Times, which had 10 writing samples and challenged readers to identify them as either the work of a real student or a chatbot. The authors had asked a fourth-grade teacher; a professional writing tutor; a Stanford education professor; and Judy Blume, to see if they could tell which was which. None of them was right every time. I got 9 out of 10.

My next stop was the bot itself, which, not surprisingly with all its recent media attention was over capacity. I had to try several times before I could set up an account and start playing with it. The wait was absolutely worth it, though. When I finally got on, I tested several questions and prompts related to our current essay unit, trying to see what my students might find, if they knew where to look. 

The bot and I had some interesting exchanges about the characters in "Thank You M'am" and "Raymond's Run", but it was flat out wrong about more than a couple of its assertions about Squeaky. That made me feel better, and it was just fabricating ideas about the main character in the story "Vanquishing the Hungry Chinese Zombie". It misgendered her and spat out a bunch of hooey about saving her village, which was very similar to the patently wrong information it included in a claim about the character of Spark in "Bouncing the Grinning Goat". I literally laughed out loud at how wrong the dumb bot was.

So there was that quantum of solace, but as I thought more about my students, I focused on the one kid who won't write about any of the assigned stories for a variety of reasons, and I wondered if I could get the bot to tailor a story to his penchants. Well. It was a learning curve, and I required the bot to give me at least 15 revisions, none of which were perfect. I was able, however to stitch together a tale of 1500 words or so that has a character he may find relatable, and who accomplishes something he might find admirable, but with methods that are unquestionably unethical. That's a claim waiting to happen-- do the ends justify the means?

The writing? Is not remarkable, despite my instructions to add dialogue and figurative language, which the bot did. What the composition lacks is concrete details and present actions; it tells instead of shows, and I did not have the desire to revise for artistry. 

On the other hand, I cannot wait to see what this conundrum of a kid thinks of the story, which, by the way, is called "The Ends and the Means" by A. I. Chabeaux. Clearly, there will be a part 2 to this blog post, if not that story.

Sunday, January 15, 2023

Cursed

The Bills were ahead by a hard-fought 10 points at the end of the third quarter when we stood up to go. We were at friends', celebrating their dog's birthday and the NFL playoffs, as well as getting in some baby time with their adorable 10-month-old.

"What?" asked our host. "You can't go now! There's still the whole fourth quarter to go!"

"I have some school work to do," Heidi apologized.

"Plus?" I added, "you don't really want Heidi anywhere around this football game. She's a jinx!"

His eyes widened and Heidi laughed. "It's true," she admitted, "the Bills never win when I watch."

"Well, thanks for coming," he said. "See you later!"

Saturday, January 14, 2023

Kaboomcha

I knew right what it was the moment the sound of glass exploding in the kitchen rang out like a gunshot. 

Back when we lived in Saudi Arabia in the 1970s all alcoholic beverages were illegal, as they still are today. But like any prohibition, this ban encouraged all sorts of bootlegging. Despite being punishable by deportation or public flogging, many folks made wine, brewed beer, and distilled moonshine from sugar water, which was called sadiki, or "my friend". 

My mother was among the brewers and vintners, mixing batches of malt syrup, hop pellets, and yeast, or grape juice, fruit, and yeast in large trash cans in the shower of an unused bathroom off the kitchen of our villa. Then she would bottle her concoctions, reusing the ceramic capped liter bottles that the grape juice came in and set them on their sides in racks to finish fermenting.

Sometimes the beer would get a little too fizzy, and unless the bottles were burped, they might explode. Then there would be a mess of beer and glass to clean up, but since they were in a shower already, the job was relatively easy. Even so, such mishaps could have been dangerous, and my mom took care to avoid them.

As for the product itself, I wasn't a drinker back then, and I don't really remember how it was. My dad was always very complimentary, but of course it was his only option, and so there was that. It seemed like guests at the parties my parents had enjoyed their drinks, too. My mother never sold her beer and wine, nor did my parents make it a practice to offer it to any of their Arab acquaintances, and so they stayed out of trouble.

This month I'm kicking off my year of holidays from twelve things I might enjoy a little too regularly by joining the loads of people practicing dry January. It has been an adjustment not to reach for a beer or a glass of wine at the end of each day, and the non-alcoholic versions of those drinks I've tried have been disappointing. 

When Heidi was going vegan we learned early on that it's often best not to substitute the things you can't have, but rather to enjoy those you can. In that spirit, I've been looking for alternative beverages to drink while I'm cooking or with dinner. So far, my favorite is switchel, that traditional refresher that New England farmers drank while working in the field. My version is a mixture of apple cider vinegar, ginger, maple syrup, and lime, and it is smashing when added to sparkling water.

I also decided to order some cultures and brew my own Kombucha and water kefir. I've never been a big fan of the "buch", but I figured if I make my own I can fix it the way I like it. As for water kefir, I'd actually never heard of this probiotic drink, but it seemed easy enough to ferment in a mason jar with just a little sugar and water. Where kombucha takes a month, water kefir is ready in a few days; you just strain out the culture and add juice or other flavorings to the liquid. Then you bottle that in a swing-top and let it develop a little fizz.

My first batch was sumo mandarine and vanilla, and when I checked it after a day on the counter, there was a little gas in the bottle, but the kefir itself wasn't effervescent at all. I resolved not to burp it for a day or two, to encourage the CO2 to carbonate the liquid.

And that's what exploded in the kitchen this morning. It's been nearly 50 years, but it's not a sound you ever forget. 

When we ran in to survey the damage, it became clear how lucky we were that neither of us or any of our pets had been in there when the bottle blew. There was glass as far away as the living room, and chards all over the kitchen counters, stove, and floor. The bottle had been standing right where I usually set my cutting board, and I had been cooking there not even an hour before. If it had burst then? I could have been blinded or worse.

And so I cleaned the mess up not in anger or frustration, but gratitude. We were all fine, and there's even another batch of water kefir in another bottle on the counter, where it will be burped at least twice a day, and then consumed or refrigerated promptly.

Friday, January 13, 2023

A Character with Character

As part of the essay project, today students had to analyze the character of their choice and come up with some character traits and write them on an anchor chart posted on the wall. Since my story was one of the options, the teenaged-me is one of the characters they could choose. 

Based on the evidence in the text, the young scholars found me (or the me in the story, which took place 45 years ago) to be responsible, trustworthy, clever, bossy, controlling, smart, funny, manipulative, dishonest, mean, forgiving, cooperative, evil, quick-witted, sensible, and, (my two personal favorites)

nimble

and

relentless!

Thursday, January 12, 2023

News to Him

A friend and colleague stopped by for a short chat this afternoon. "Do you all have any plans for the long weekend?" I asked him.

"Charlie wants to go the zoo," he told me about his 4-year-old son. 

"That should be fun," I said.

"He wanted to see the dinosaurs," he laughed, "so my wife had a little talk with him last week to explain that the dinosaurs are extinct."

"I'm sure he was disappointed," I laughed, too.

"And sad!" my friend said. "I came home from work and he was all upset. 'Daddy! A meteor hit the dinosaurs,' he told me. 'They're all gone, so they don't have any at the zoo.'"

Wednesday, January 11, 2023

Thank You Kids!

As a way to get my students to think about the short story selections they have been reading to prepare for their argument essay, the warm-up question today was to name their favorite so far. It is not false humility for me to report that I was shocked at how many students chose the story that I had written. 

For the second year in a row, I included the short memoir as an option, and I also read it out loud to each of my classes. But that was last week, and coming back today after two days out for Heidi's eye surgery, I had almost forgotten that it was one of the choices. The young writers in my class had not forgotten though, and when the final tally was complete, my story had garnered more votes than the other 9 combined! 

The competition wasn't shoddy either; it included the likes of Shannon Hale, Eve Bunting, Jack Gantos, Jacqueline Woodson, and even Langston Hughes. I spent the day shaking my head and blushing a little-- I know I have the advantage of proximity and familiarity, but it never hurts to get a little validation and appreciation.

Tuesday, January 10, 2023

HeidiVision

"Can you see the lines in the clouds?" Heidi asked me on the way to her follow-up appointment for her eye surgery. And when I nodded she continued, "The sky used to just look gray to me, but now I see each individual cloud!"

I was elated by her gratitude at her newly restored vision. Her cataracts had been getting progressively worse over the last decade, but neither of us really appreciated how bad they had become. 

At the doctor's office they did a routine vision check, which she passed handily. "Can you read the number at the bottom of the screen?" the PA asked. 

"20/20?" Heidi replied. 

"That's right!" he told her. "Wanna try the next one?"

And she got many of them right! So for the rest of the day, in addition to her amazement at the clarity of all she can see, she's been telling everyone, "And my vision is better than 20-20!"

Monday, January 9, 2023

Private Showing

Heidi was feeling restless after her eye surgery, so this afternoon we tried to find an activity within her restrictions and hit upon a good, old-fashioned movie at the movie theater. I can count the movies we have been to since the pandemic struck on one hand, but this was the first we ventured to unmasked. Oh, we had masks with us and we weren't overly concerned. As it turned out, we needn't have been: today we had the theater to ourselves as we finally caught Wakanda Forever.

It was a pretty engrossing 2 hours and 45 minutes, so many strong women, so few men, and it was a movie that was better served by seeing it on a big screen with no distractions. Are we back to the movies, then? That remains to be seen, but I'll take an empty theater any day.

Sunday, January 8, 2023

Shrooms

"Paul Stamets?" Heidi said as the name of the mycologist flashed across the screen. "That's the Star Trek Discovery character!"

We were watching the 2019 movie Fantastic Fungi, a documentary about fungi, communication, awareness of nature, and the mycelial network. The film came highly recommended by my sister-in-law, and having received a mushroom growing kit for Christmas, I was all in.

"I noticed that, too," I replied. "Do you think it's a coincidence?"

"No!" she answered. "Star Trek Stamets is all about the spore drive and traveling the mycelial network, too."

I realized how right she was. "It's all connected," they were saying on the movie. Everything is connected." 

At that trippy moment, it sure seemed like it.


Saturday, January 7, 2023

Left Over

We had chicken and white gravy, mashed potatoes, biscuits, and green beans for dinner last night. It would have been my dad's 88th birthday, and it was his favorite, so we ate it in honor of him. 

The recipe calls for a whole chicken, so although the two of us ate our fill, there were plenty of leftovers. Usually, I love eating the extras from any meal, especially such a comforting one, for lunch, and I'm happy to have the same thing for several days. But for some reason today I just didn't want the potatoes, even though Heidi thought I was nuts: "Those are the best part!" she reminded me.

Instead, I cooked some bucatini and tossed it some chicken and gravy, a healthy splash of pasta water, some blanched greens, a little shaved romano, and a spoonful of chili crunch. My lunch had the soul of the original dish, but it was completely different. I loved it! And I kind of believed my dad would have like it, too, if only we could have gotten him to try it.

Friday, January 6, 2023

Touché

The warm up activity in class today was to frame a quick claim about a character in a short story we had read. "Is Squeaky likeable?" I asked, and students were expected to post a debatable claim with three character traits to support it. There is a kid in the class who has lately been refusing to participate in the warm up. His recalcitrance poses a problem: the activity is formative and therefore not graded, but it is a requirement of the class, designed to either review, introduce, or extend important concepts, as well as to build community and engagement. 

Can it be a pain sometimes? No doubt. I'm sure there are mornings when several kids would rather sit there than participate, but in my estimation that's not what's best for them. Many students can be encouraged with rewards or consequences unrelated to grades, but this particular child doesn't fall into that category. And so I have developed an uneasy truce with him; if the question is more fun than academic and he can make a case about his ignorance of the topic, then I'll let it go. 

But today? That was not the case. We were taking a test as our next activity, and I insisted he finish this one before he start the test. Still he resisted, contending that he needed to re-read the story, and getting up several times to blow his nose. All around him, other students were sharing their ideas, several of whom put forth the claim that Squeaky was likeable because she cared about her brother. 

I pushed back a little. "Caring for your brother may be admirable, but does it necessarily make her likeable?" I asked. "I care about my brother. Do you like me?"

The unwilling student happened to pass by my desk for a tissue at that moment. "Hmm," he said to himself, but loudly enough that I could hear. "Definitely debatable."

At least he was paying attention.

Thursday, January 5, 2023

OLW '23

 Here's what I wrote last year at this time:

Another year, another One Little Word assignment-- regular readers might remember my new year tradition of asking my students to share one word that represents something they want more of in their lives in the coming year. This time, instead of asking the young writers to compose a paragraph about their choice, they simply posted the single word, and then each read it to the class and explained why they had chosen it. Seeing the words stand alone was powerful, but hearing the student's voices as they elucidated their ideas was quite poignant. I think I'll do it again this way next year.

Unfortunately, I did not check back with myself, and we didn't repeat the single word presentation. Perhaps I'll create a reminder for January of 2024.

And here's what I did do a bit differently:








I like this visual addition! I hope I can remember to do it again.

Wednesday, January 4, 2023

I'm Aware

 On the first morning back from winter break we did a mindfulness activity that involved drawing a circle, taking some deep breaths, and then recording any thoughts or feelings that came to the surface in the circle. The idea was to identify any distractions that might get in the way of learning and to consciously set those aside.

The kids in my homeroom were not quite sure what they were doing, so I stepped to the whiteboard to demonstrate. I drew a big circle, closed my eyes and took a few breaths. Then I began to write. "It's hot in here!" I started. "I hate the way that pipe they put in under the window looks."

The kids eyebrows went up. They did not expect negativity, but there it was. "Are you tired?" asked one helpfully.

"Yes!" I replied and added it to my list with a laugh. "And the room was a mess when I got here this morning, so I had to straighten everything up."

"Wow!" noted another student. "You really have a lot to get out of your way so you can do a good job teaching today!"

Tuesday, January 3, 2023

Undead

I spent the last few precious hours of winter break staring at my phone in the service waiting room at the car dealership. I had secured a 3 PM appointment and a portable battery charger, and the two of those got me twenty minutes away to where they could explain why a four month new battery had failed not once, but twice. 

They are very patient, solicitous really, there, which is one of the reasons I choose to take my business to them. And I have confidence in how much value they place in their brand name, and hence their service, which is another reason they are my auto shop. This time, they did not fail me, but they also did not find anything wrong with either the battery or the electrical system. They even gave me a free loaner and kept our car overnight to make sure it started again today.

Which it did. Four times.

And so? The mystery remains. But fortunately, so does that battery charger-- right in the back seat.

Monday, January 2, 2023

Tepid

Never one to relish transitions, I can't say I'm eager to get back to school, especially after such a lengthy break. The best I can do is to acknowledge it will all be fine and to remember that the best days of sixth grade are always after winter break.

Onward!

Sunday, January 1, 2023

Paris-Brest

Call me impressionable.

The Iconic French Pastry You Should Bake for a New Year’s Party read the headline on the NYTimes website. 

I was intrigued, and when I got to the third paragraph, Like many other French pastries, Paris-Brest requires several steps and components, but the entire process can be broken down into manageable parts that can — and should — be done ahead of time. The finished pastry is a showpiece, so make it when you really want to show off (and feed a group), I was all in! This would be our New Year's day dessert, the perfect conclusion to our traditional meal of fried chicken, ham, black eyed peas, greens, corn, and rice.

I was undaunted by the fourteen rather involved steps (5 printed pages!) that outlined the three main components: pastry cream, homemade hazelnut and almond praline, and choux pastry. None of the techniques were new to me, and the idea of making French-style praline seemed exciting and fun. I also knew I had most of the ingredients on hand, and that I would have the time to start cooking the day before. 

What threw me a little bit was the timing. The final product was meant to be assembled right before serving, and I wanted the pastry ring to be crisp and not soggy. I also wanted the mousseline to be airy and light, and so I wasn't sure when I should bake the shell and combine the pastry cream and praline. That uncertainty did cause me a bit of anxiety, because there could be no do-overs that close to dinner.

As I worked, I had my doubts about the pastry cream (not very sweet), and I totally brain farted on my first batch of praline, processing the roasted nuts and almond butter with the sugar before I caramelized it. Once I corrected my mistake, the resulting paste seemed a little bitter in that dark caramel way, and it was hard to tell if the components would magically combined into a perfectly balanced filling, but I put my faith in Claire Saffitz and persevered.

My pate choux did not puff as high as I wished, and it was dry and crisp long before the prescribed hour in the turned-off oven was up. The chopped nuts fell off the top when I sliced it off, but I saved them to sprinkle back on later. And the mousseline did come together into a dreamy filling, light and sweet, but not too sweet. I spooned it into my pastry bag before dinner and stuck it in the fridge, ready to fill the wheel of pastry right before serving.

The result was a little more rustic looking than the photograph in the Times, and of course I have no comparison for what it should have tasted like, but ours was delicious-- crisp and creamy and nutty and sweet and caramelly. It tasted like a French pastry.

"Would you ask for it again?" is always my question for Heidi when we discuss a new dish from our kitchen. 

Tonight, Heidi turned the inquiry around. "Would you make it again?" she asked.

That? I'm not sure of. But I am glad I made it today.