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September
16 , 2006
All the fun but with half the meaning!
The
past couple of days have been rather busy, and I haven't had time
to blog. But I have been writing. I got the deluxe full-length
edition of Barenaked Ladies Are Me, the new release from my favorite
band and track by track I'm writing my thoughts and opinions. Why?
Because you're dying to know what I think! I know you are.
You're sitting at home going "OH! What does she think about
Adrift! and how does she feel about Fun & Games!"
Soon
enough, my pretties. You'll know. You'll know.
I should
be done with that sometime this weekend. Getting to this computer
to sit longer than five minutes is a literal impossibility. I wanted
for us to always be a one-computer family. We may have to move to
two now that Geoff and Jess are both doing so much with it. Grrr.
Anyway.
Onward with a long awaited entry.
Speaking
of Jess, I went to her school open house on Thursday night.
I felt
like I was in high school. It was ... almost fun. I walked in the
door and immediately ran into her friend C's mom and dad. We stood
and chatted while figuring out where homeroom was. We ran into someone
else and chatted in the hall. The bell rang, we went to our seats.
I got Jess' schedule. They're on a seven day rotation (which confused
me, but now I see how it goes...) and we were living through day
one of the schedule.
First,
English. I like her English teacher a lot. His syllabus looks like
a college freshman intro to literature kind of class. He makes them
write a lot. No more "book reports" but actual writing.
Real, hard writing. Yes. Sweetness. Mwah ha ha. She shall excel
in this class.
Second
was geometry. Her only non-honors class. The teacher looks like
he's about 19 but he's not. He's more like 20.
He
was really nice and encouraging. I talked to him for a minute and
he said Jess will get an easy A in his class, and that she's showing
strengths at being a good peer leader with the other kids who are
struggling. How she ended up in a non-honors math class is she missed
by just a tiny bit. She was a B, B- math student last year. This
is her year to make that up. So far, she is doing great.
Next
was Theatre Arts. It is an elective, and she, of course, signed
up for it immediately. And was accepted into it. Jess has a really
good friend from middle school in this class with her. The two of
them are totally "Drama IS Life!" and I love the mom and
dad. We chatted for a bit, and I found out that out of 20 freshman
who auditioned for the play, four got parts. Their daughter and
my daughter among them. Cool!
At
this point I noticed that I'd been with the same mom and dad for
three classes. Casually I walked up to them and asked "what
do we have next period?" The mom laughed and consulted the
schedule.
Biology?
Yup. Biology.
Four
straight classes with the same girl... how funny is that? I hope
she's nice and my daughter likes her. It would suck to spend half
your day with someone who sucks. The parents seemed really nice.
I introduced myself.
They
wanted to know what Jess was into. Field hockey? Drama? Yes! Drama.
Their daughter is also in drama, but didn't get a role in the fall
play. Jess did, so they congratulated her through me... trying to
figure out who she was.
I
described her, and the mom said "oh! Grandma!"
Yes. She played Grandma in the play last fall. Indeed. It will be
her most remembered part, I'm afraid. They love her. They
were very excited to meet me and talk about drama and the high school.
And they can't wait to see what she does next for theatre. Talking
to people, total strangers, about my kid in this way was really
bizarre. I mean, they know her and like her acting, and they think
she's great and funny...
Living
vicariously through my daughter's skillset was interesting. Meeting
new people and finding they were friendly and nice and ... I was
having the time of my life. I can hope she only is doing the same.
Biology
was really cool. Her teacher is awesome and smart and they do this
huge portfolio of work almost like an art class. Which I think is
awesome.
The
lab is all filled with crazy science stuff and an emergency shower!
Dude! an emergency shower! I wanted to take a picture of it. It
has a huge pouring head thing, and a giant thing to pull on to make
the water turn on.
At
this point, my path diverged from the mom and dad I'd just met.
No more classes together. Sadly. We walked down the hall together,
chatting. The mom was talking about how it must be so weird to be
in ninth grade... all the people walking around with their attitudes,
fashion, boyfriends and girlfriends, shrieking cheerleaders, football
players gearing up for Saturday's game... and our kids. Mixed in.
The mom looked like she may have been a cheerleader, more so than
a theatre geek. I can only imagine her daughter. And I doubt that
if this mom and I were in the same grade in school in 1980 we'd
be clicking it off like this. She was petite, sexy, fancy shoes
and a beautiful sweater. I had on a golf shirt and jeans, and a
bandana in my hair... with my guster sweatshirt dragging behind
me because it was so damn hot in the building.
For
her to kind of look at what the hallways might be filled with at
7:30am most days kind of sounded like what I would say... or what
my daughter would think and feel.
I went
to History, and totally loved her teacher. He was a riot -- and
he talked about how they do a huge unit on Colonial Architecture.
Score. Jess can roll out of bed and write about her own house. Boo-yah!
So I chatted with him for a bit, and he was psyched to hear about
the house and style.
Ha.
Score.
I then
headed to German, and found her teacher is out because Mrs. German
Teacher is having a baby. He left documentation and a sign in sheet
for email so he can send us stuff... and there was information on
exchange programs that the school does. Jess wants to do it but
you need two full years of German under your belt. She has two semesters.
So between 10th and 11th grade she'll qualify. It is a six-week
exchange during the summer. I didn't see anything about a full academic
year exchange or a semester exchange, so I'll have to look into
that at some point if she's still interested.
Last
course of the day was Freshman Writing Lab. Yawn. I cannot believe
they make the kids take this. It is all "this is how a comma
works" and "watch out for subject verb agreement!"
She had all that crap down pat in fourth grade. And every single
stinking year they have to take a semester or full year worth of
this. What the heck!
I asked
the teacher why kids who don't NEED this class have to take this
class (meaning my kid) when her first period class is academically
designed to do what this class does, only better and more thoroughly.
She said it is district policy that they don't test out of this
class. They used to do that, and found kids tested well,
but weren't... that good really. With keeping all the kids in a
freshman writing lab, by 10th grade their MCAS tests are pretty
great compared to the rest of the state, and that they'd make the
kids take a semester every YEAR to reinforce these skills and keep
them in the game. She has sophomores in the class, because they
failed last year. She even had a junior last year who failed it
twice.
So
the district insists that everyone take and pass Freshman writing
lab. End of conversation.
She
also said that the class builds peer evaluation skills. She breaks
them up into groups of four and each group has a great writer, a
weak writer, and two in-the-middle writers. Experience shows that
by the end of the year this process works best in getting the weaker
ones stronger. The strong writers aren't going to get weaker --
but they build their skills as peer leaders, and learn a lot about
helping others. She said that in the first two weeks of school Jess
has already shown great skill in helping other students edit, revise,
refine and polish their writing. It will be an easy A for her, even
if it is academically unnecessary.
I got
to read her three writing samples, and they were all A work, graded
with comments and everything. The person in front of me was all
C work, I noticed over the dad's shoulder.
Her
next piece is a character study of someone who has "influenced
her life" as the assignment reads. She chose her friend K,
the one who had the brain bleed last summer. The one we go to concerts
with. It made me cry and it was just bullet points. I was sitting
there in her seat with her folder and her work reading the bullet
points of K's relationship with Jess. "Will you go to college
with me?" was one of her quotes.
I nearly
lost it. K is at a different school this year and I know that in
some ways Jess is missing her, and in other ways she's grown past
her. But that she chose her to write about at this time really surprised
me.
Heck,
I thought it would be ME. I am that self centered. Or at
least her theatre teacher from last year. Or Kinger. She could have
written about Kinger. But she chose K, and it should be an interesting
final product.
In
some ways I am glad for her to have the opportunity of taking this
class. In others, it bothers me that my child isn't getting another
academic subject but is participating in a big social engineering
experiment upon her back, her skills, and her time - the school
as a whole benefits. Instead of upon the teacher's back, skills
and time. I'd rather she have another subject, say... Archaeology,
Creative Writing, Public Speaking... no.
It
is important for her to build the skills of working on a team. But
I feel that there is way WAY too much emphasis on groups and teams
and not enough individual brain building. It bothers me. I remember
in High School each subject had ONE group project a year pretty
much. A presentation, poster board, that kind of thing. Now it seems
like every week, every day, is group dynamics, group learning...
Eating
up time she can be getting into another topic more deeply.
Anyway
-- all told, I like our school district and so far have really liked
what I've seen overall at the high school level. I hope it continues.
My neighbor has an 11th grader who was just like Jess in 9th grade.
At the end of last year she took an attitudinal dive, her As turned
to Ds, and she's hating school and life and everyone.
Please,
God. Don't let us go down that path.
Anyway.
Gonzo wants to go play flickit and he's been whining at me for forty
minutes now. Best go take him.
More
later.
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