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“When in April the sweet showers fall / And pierce the drought of March to the root, and all / The veins are bathed in liquor of such power / As brings about the engendering of the flower.” ― Nevil Coghill, The Canterbury Tales, General Prologue, modern translation
Welcome April! My second favorite month, after November. And what better way to start it off than with a Chaucer quote! The OG of British literature, and my personal favorite. (Sorry, Will, your tragedies have nothing on the pilgrimage to Canterbury!) Of course, the better known ditty goes “April showers bring May flowers,’ and being National Poetry month, April is chockablock full of more great rhymes than these classic, little gems. Students notoriously hate poetry, so when ELA teachers opt to really utilize April for the likes of Dickinson or Longfellow, there is often much groaning and use of hyperbole about how displeased they are. Yet poetry really needn’t be such an academic chore for students…
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“Work is hard. Distractions are plentiful. And time is short.” ― Adam Hochschild
It is Spring Break time already! For not being in the classroom, the days sure are flying by as if I were still there. The homeschool boys I work with are taking a Spring Break to match the District, and I was excited because I thought I wouldn’t have to leave the house, but wrong! Lots of plans this week, which are mostly gathers with still-in-the-classroom teacher friends who are savoring the rapidly fleeting week. And while the week quickly goes, the exciting thing about returning is that one *usually* returns to the last lap of the race. I always liked coming back from Spring Break and starting fourth quarter. It just made the remainder of…
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“Success is a journey, not a destination. The doing is often more important than the outcome.” ― Arthur Ashe
This past weekend our little family piled in the car for my first indie author fair. I did not want to participate in it because I thought it would be awkward and embarrassing and I didn’t tell anyone at all about it (okay except my friend who lives out of state because she’s too far to come!). I just have one self-published book from a few years back and I don’t know anything about author fairs, so I thought I was quite likely to be the bumpkin of the ball. Which, it turns out, I was. Hahaha, however, it was a surprisingly great time. I met some interesting, very nice and encouraging people, and overall…
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“It’s better to be prepared than to get ready.” ― Will Smith
There’s a bit of a semantical game with that quote. I don’t particularly like it, but it’s useful enough and applicable enough for recent days. Luis bought me a health tracker ring that came yesterday, well two days ago by the time the mailer picks this up, so after one night of sleep and heartrate and respiratory tracking, and the various other trackings, my “readiness score” was a 77, which I didn’t think was too bad considering I haven’t slept a full night in over nine months now. Sleep was my worst metric and probably will be for a while still (though in fairness our son only woke once or twice,…
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“Artificial intelligence is the science of making machines do things that would require intelligence if done by men.” ― Marvin Minsky
I’ve been meaning to do an AI/writing post and hadn’t gotten around it, but, since AI has been in the news a lot lately, now seems like a good time. Also, completely randomly, I saw this AI video on Instgram last night and was fascinated by how real it looks. If I didn’t know great white sharks can’t live in captivity or that they must be swimming to breathe, I’d have really struggled with this sight (and apparently sharks don’t blink so that was a giveaway, too, but I learned that in the comments X) I’ve never used AI bots like ChatGPT; I am just not a fan. I know it…
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“Little minds are tamed and subdued by misfortune; but great minds rise above them.” ― Washington Irving
I’ve been a baker for a long time. Nothing super fancy or particularly aesthetically pleasing, but cookies and cakes and tasty sweet things. Palate pleasing things. This probably stems from the greater enjoyment I get from eating the raw dough. Some of my earliest memories are eating raw cookie dough with my mom, hahaha. A little over a year ago I started down the sourdough path, and I have a handful of recipes I’ve become pretty good with. Today was supposed to be a loaf bread baking day. But I did something wrong and my starter did not rise …soooooo…it’s a discard biscuit day instead. Change of plans! In my early teaching years, I experienced classroom faux paus,…
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“And now we welcome the new year. Full of things that have never been.” ― Rainer Maria Rilke
Happy 2025! Crazy! December had so much going on, I decided to take it off from the blog and focus on the first Christmas season with our son–i.e. things that have never been and will never be again. But it’s time to get back into the saddle with structure and some New Year resolutions! Top resolutions: Make a lesson a month, increase activity level (I need some weight training besides carrying my son all over, haha) and continue decluttering/organizing. I started decluttering our house in September, and I am still in the process of going through little things, getting rid of duplicates or things forgotten about and found, organizing for better efficiency, etc. The decluttering kick…
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“God gave us memories so we may have roses in December.” — James M. Barrie
A couple of weeks ago I was in Publix after church, scoping out the bananas trying to find some that were ripe but not already a day away from liquid mush, when a woman sidled up next me. I thought I was in her way. “HI,” she said exuberantly for a stranger. I started to move and return a less exuberant greeting when I looked at her and saw she was a former student who graduated in 2015, though I had her her freshman year, 2011/2012. She was thrilled that I remembered her name right off the bat, and so was I for that matter. I told her that I had actually been talking about…
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“Regardless of who wins, an election should be a time of optimism and fresh approaches.” — Gary Johnson
It’s November! My favorite month! And it’s voting day! Or at least it is as I type this out. By the time the mailer picks it up it will be Thursday morning. This is definitely not my favorite time of my favorite month, haha, but I have some relevant ELA resources that jive with America so you can teach great literature while incorporating some history, (or some not history as is the case with “Paul Revere’s Ride”) and maintaining a good old USA motif! “O Captain! My Captain!” – Walt Whitman An allegory about the assassination of Abraham Lincoln, “O Captain! My Captain!” is a pretty short poem that packs a pretty rhetorical punch. This lesson includes some good…
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“Before anything else, preparation is the key to success.” — Alexander Graham Bell
Usually when I write a post here the topic is something that I have been thinking on recently. So, two weeks ago when this post was supposed to be made, I thought I’ll write about preparedness! This is great and relevant! Because we were preparing all the things for the hurricane that, at the time, may or may not have been making aim for our city (it decided to go South). However, it turns out that in the midst of preparing for Milton, and then preparing to take our son on his first plane trip, I was not at all prepared to create a blog post. Life. Go figure. So here I am, three weeks late, but, finally,…