In which I work miracles

headdeskOkay, y’all.  Remember that to-do list I mentioned on Friday?  No?  Too bad, because this is it.  Some names changed to protect the innocent.

❏ Check (other teacher’s) data files
❏ Check pencil sharpeners
❏ Clean classroom
❏ Complete new Dropbox folders
❏ Create email roster for Parent Night
❏ Create/print textbook number rosters for each class
❏ Decouple 6th grade folder from dropbox
❏ Determine how math grades work– two classes, one grade?
❏ Determine which curriculum maps belong to Algebra class
❏ Email (yearbook lady) WRT yearbook
❏ Email staff about new Dropbox stuff
❏ Extra set of clothes for parent night
❏ Figure out DC fundraiser
❏ Figure out DC meeting
❏ Figure out the rest of the letters
❏ Figure out/arrange desks
❏ Find 7th grade workbooks
❏ Find some sort of bell-ringer book
❏ Find/count textbooks
❏ Finish student folders
❏ Get dates/schedule into lesson plan book
❏ Make sure we have a new yearbook advisor
❏ Mount whiteboard
❏ Move computer files over to my new account
❏ Nail bookshelf back together
❏ Organize file folders
❏ Print and bind algebra curriculum map
❏ Print out rosters– demerits, tardies, homeroom collectibles
❏ Print packets for Parent Night
❏ Pull one computer out from under table
❏ Put student birthdays on calendars
❏ Read through and mark up discipline plan
❏ Schedule union meeting for next week
❏ Seating charts???
❏ Talk to (four other teachers) about Success spreadsheet
❏ Track down potential new union members
❏ Track down union people
❏ Update data files for 2013-14
❏ Update materials/rules/discipline policy if necessary
❏ Update Teacher Assistant
❏ Write first day letter/email collection letter
❏ Write lesson plans for 1st three days of school
❏ Write sub/emergency plans
❏ Write syllabus for Algebra

Note that even though some things seem to be duplicates, they’re really not.  For example, “figure out desks” and “seating charts???” are two completely different activities– one is determining where to put the desks in the room, which is a pedagogical decision involving thinking about lines of sight, management, grouping, and other considerations (not to mention aesthetics) and another is purely a management decision– I’ve gone two years without a seating chart in any of my classes, but at least one of my groups I think is going to demand one.  Two of them, I think, can handle non-assigned seats.

I think only one item on the list is genuinely optional.  Maybe two.  Everything else needs to be done by 5 PM on Tuesday because that’s when Parent Night starts, and school starts on Wednesday.

You will forgive me if this is the only post today.  I have things to do.

On Jesus

9781400069224_custom-74c1fad03aa8c72c92cb923ce65325c75dd15ea0-s6-c30I’m actually writing this Sunday night for Tuesday morning; I don’t think I’ll have time to get to a post until late, what with it being the first official teacher work day (hah!) and Parent Night happening and all that, and I want to make sure some sort of post happens.  So  have a book review, combined with some fun nostalgia.

(EDIT:  Whoops!  Shit, posted it immediately.  Oh well.  I’ll come up with something else for Tuesday, I guess.)

As many of you already know, Alternate Universe Me has a Ph.D by now and is a Hebrew Bible scholar at some terribly prestigious university with an insanely high tuition rather than a math teacher at a high-poverty public school.  I managed three majors and two minors in college; two of the majors were Religious Studies and Jewish Studies and one of the minors was Near Eastern Languages and Cultures; one of my two Master’s degrees is from the University of Chicago’s Divinity School.  One of my tattoos is in Hebrew.  (And yes, I can read it; my cardinal rule of tattooing is that you never, ever, ever tattoo yourself in a language you can’t read– I’m looking at all of you idiots with Chinese characters that you think mean “Strength” and actually mean “Dim Sum” or “Stupid Cracker” tattooed on your arms or the small of your backs.)

I washed out when I realized that not only was a Ph.D in Religious Studies one of the longest doctoral programs known to the human race, but that I really wasn’t actually all that interested in trying to do independent research in a subject that people had been studying intensively for two and a half millennia.  Dissertations in Biblical studies tend to be… slightly more specific than I’m interested in.  And, I reasoned to myself, since what I was interested in was learning about this stuff, well, there wasn’t really much of a reason to keep paying beaucoup tuition for that.  I can read on my own, right?

Fast forward (checks date on diploma) thirteen years, and I’ve barely read a single thing on the topic of religion since then.  Maybe a half-dozen books.  Something like that.  So that’s how well that plan went.  If you’re one of my friends who actually has a Ph.D in some branch of religious studies, keep in mind that I’ve been out of the game for over a decade, so my recollection of the bleeding edge of scholarship isn’t exactly precise.  I’m reviewing this as a relatively well-informed amateur, for whatever that’s worth.


All that said: Reza Aslan is a goddamned genius.  I’m of the school of thought that he knew exactly what the hell he was doing when he went on Fox News and absolutely bewildered the interviewer with the unbelievable, does-not-compute mindfuck that an honest-to-God-Moozlim actually done wrote sumpin’ ’bout Jeebus. Note that I haven’t watched the interview; I lost enough IQ points just reading about it, but if you like stupid go ahead and click.  Aslan’s book may be the shortest “historical Jesus” work I’ve ever seen, actually, and doesn’t even actually spend all of its pagecount on Jesus himself– there are several chapters exploring the revolutionary/political environment he grew up in at the beginning and several chapters on Paul and James at the end, so really only about the middle 50% or so of the book is specifically about Jesus’ life.  That said, he manages to pack quite a lot of stuff into those pages, and does so without lapsing into the sort of impossible specificity and detail that these sorts of books are known for.  I can’t vouch for the rightness of his claims, necessarily, but I didn’t find much that I disagreed with– he certainly isn’t terribly interested in getting into details of translation very often (there is very little Greek, Aramaic, or Hebrew in the book, and everything is transliterated into Latin characters) and all of the footnotes and endnotes are in the back, not interrupting the text.  This is a book for the type of people who watch Fox News or react to stupid things that happen on Fox News, not people who are already in “the biz,” so to speak.

Best thing I can say about it?  It made me remember why I enjoyed being in a field that consumed most of my intellectual space for most of my twenties; it’s been a while since I regretted leaving grad school.  That’s the best thing I can say about it.  If you’re interested in the historical Jesus, this isn’t a bad place to start; I can move you onto other titles afterwards.  Thumbs up.

Terrible Decisions, Stage One

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Today, we start work (well, sorta) on our next home improvement project: destroying our larger bathroom and replacing it with something that doesn’t leak.  (After that?  Destroying our smaller bathroom and replacing it with something that doesn’t leak.)  The bathroom has forced us into a cascade situation, where each thing we want to replace has forced us to replace another thing, until finally we’re gutting everything but the walls.  And we may still need to pull those down, depending on how successful we are at getting the previous owners’ wallpaper down.  I’m guessing we’ll need to drywall.  We definitely need to kill an unnecessary bulkhead over the tub, so there’s gonna be some drywalling no matter what; we’ll see if we have to do everything.

The budget is $2500 and I’m betting we can come in at 70% of that– it’s a small bathroom, and we don’t exactly have extravagant tastes.  Today’s project is to locate flooring; we’re thinking hard about cork tile and are going to bring the grandparents over to babysit while we hit a bunch of kitchen and bath stores in the area and see what they have available.   If you happened to notice the Instagram picture of the tile floating in a bowl of water from the other day, I bought a bunch of samples home from Lowe’s and spent an afternoon trying to destroy them.  I’m sufficiently satisfied with cork’s resilience to be willing to use it in the bathroom, especially since we’re planning on glue-down and not snap-together tiling.  It should be manageable.

The bulk of the work, right now, is slated to be done over Labor Day weekend, which is– gulp– just a couple of weeks away.  We’ve got a bunch of basic decisions made (picked out the tub, the toilet, a new ceiling fan, etc, although we still need a vanity and we haven’t bought anything yet– we probably ought to spend some money today, though, since the stuff probably isn’t going to show up immediately) but there’s still a fair amount of work to be done before we can start actually doing any work.  And then all of you get to look forward to the blog post where I describe how I destroyed my entire house while trying to install a toilet.

Whee!

Pfah.

“Write every day, no matter what,” they tell me.

“Stay in practice,” they tell me.

“Have good ideas and something to talk about every day,” NO ONE EVER SAYS.

Stupid writing advice.

I made friends with a bug last night.  But the story ends in tears so I’m not going to tell it.  Instead, I’m going to go make soup.  I like soup.  It’s tasty.  Tomorrow, I will make risotto and invite Joe Bastianich over to eat my food.  He won’t come, but at least I’m trying.

The end.

In which I love you, really, I swear

20130816-163401.jpgEffective immediately, there is going to be a large and angry Viking armed with several sharp and spiky implements of bodily destruction guarding the door to my classroom. If you happen to need or want anything from me, that’s fine; you just have to get by Sven. His name will be Sven; I just decided that. I may feed him some LSD from time to time, too; don’t worry about that. Norsemen don’t get addicted to things.

This is honest truth: I don’t mind helping people in my building with things. It’s part of my damn job. But holy shit. I got nothing at all done yesterday, and with two work days left until the school year starts (after which point, as every teacher knows, nothing organizational will get done until December) I am seriously running up against the limits of how much any sensible human being can get done in the time I have left, and I have much much more to do this year than I ordinarily would at the beginning of the school year. I’ve said it before, many times: the week before school starts is my busiest week of the year, and this week has been substantially worse than usual in terms of how much I’ve had to do and how few hours I’ve had to do it in. The crowning moment of yesterday’s ridiculousness came when my former assistant principal called me from his new job to ask me something about a spreadsheet I’d created for him to keep track of disciplinary issues. While I was answering his questions for him (which quickly devolved into me saying “email it to me; I’ll fix it and send it back, because that will be quicker”) my current assistant principal came into my room… to ask me about the exact same spreadsheet.

And, again, because 1) it’s true and 2) I know my co-workers read this: I don’t mind. I really truly honestly and totally am happy to help people when they need help from me. But I also don’t want my kids skinning me and dancing on my corpse next week because I didn’t manage to get ready for the new school year properly, and I’m down to two days to get about four days of work done. Thus: my new friend Sven.

He’ll be answering the phone and handling my email, too, by the way.

(For real, though: I was in my classroom for about 2 1/2 hours today, because I was on Daddy Duty this morning and couldn’t get in before early afternoon, and then had to cut out before I wanted to because it’s Friday and the building was closing a bit earlier than usual. In that two and a half hours I got about six hours of work done, and still looked around before I left my room and could only see shit that I still had left to do. And, unfortunately, money that I had to spend, too. Christ, the last few weeks have been expensive.)

UPDATE: About fifteen minutes ago I took advantage of it being slow time at OtherJob, opened up Wunderlist on the iPad, and started putting together a to-do list for Monday and Tuesday. It is currently at 38 items, and that is not because I went crazy breaking things up into subtasks. Fifteen. Minutes. Ago. I’m sure it will increase in size by at least 50% by the end of the night.

SECOND UPDATE: Item #39? “Write lesson plans.” Oh, right, I have to do that too.

On self-improvement

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About exactly a year ago I started a project:  I had had a week or two where I’d kept running into Top 100 Books sorts of lists, and always when I read through them I’d read between a third and a half of the list.  There were always a few stalwarts that appeared on just about everything, but the differences around the edges between, say, TIME’s list and the one on Goodreads were sorta fascinating.

I decided, using three or four different lists that I felt looked reputable, that I’d put together my own personal Top 100 Books I Want to Read or Reread list, then read my way through the whole thing.  I wasn’t planning on doing it in order or anything like that, and obviously I’d be taking frequent breaks to read other stuff (frankly, I take breaks from reading Other Stuff to read books from the list) but over however long it took, I’d read all 100 of them.

I was pretty pleased with the list, which actually turned out to be 102 books long; I found a couple of others that I wanted to read after the list was “done” and decided that nobody but me cared if it was actually 100 books or not.  It was a good mix of stuff I’d never read (or, in some cases, never heard of) and some things that I wanted an excuse to reread.  I started book #26 today (THE CALL OF THE WILD, by Jack London, which I’ve never read) so if I stay at roughly the same pace it’ll take me four years to get through the entire list.  This is my 119th book of the year– I keep track over on Facebook, for those of you who aren’t following me from over there– so I’m not exactly focusing on sticking with List Stuff.

Anyway, here’s the books, assuming I can get WordPress to display them in something resembling a readable list.  Remember, everything on here was on somebody’s Top 100 list:

1 1984 George Orwell
2 A Clockwork Orange Anthony Burgess
3 A Doll’s House Henrik Ibsen
4 A Farewell to Arms Anthony Burgess
5 Aeneid Virgil
6 Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland Lewis Carroll
7 All the King’s Men Robert Penn Warren
8 Animal Farm George Orwell
9 Anna Karenina Leo Tolstoy
10 Beloved Toni Morrison
11 Blindness Jose Saramago
12 Brideshead Revisited Evelyn Waugh
13 Catcher in the Rye JD Salinger
14 David Copperfield Charles Dickens
15 Deliverance James Dickey
16 Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? Philip K. Dick
17 Don Quixote Miguel de Cervantes
18 Dr Jekyll and Mr. Hyde Robert Louis Stevenson
19 Dracula Bram Stoker
20 Emma Jane Austen
21 Fairy Tales Hans Christian Andersen
22 Finnegan’s Wake James Joyce
23 Frankenstein Mary Shelley
24 Go Tell it on the Mountain James Baldwin
25 Gone with the Wind Margaret Mitchell
26 Grendel John Gardner
27 Gulliver’s Travels Jonathan Swift
28 Hamlet Shakespeare
29 Howards End EM Forster
30 I, Claudius Robert Graves
31 Jane Eyre Charlotte Bronte
32 Kim Rudyard Kipling
33 LA Confidential James Ellroy
34 Leaves of Grass Walt Whitman
35 Little Women Louisa May Alcott
36 Lolita Vladimir Nabokov
37 Lord of the Flies William Golding
38 Love in the Time of Cholera Gabriel Garcia Marquez
39 Macbeth Shakespeare
40 Madame Bovary Gustave Flaubert
41 Mahabharata Vyasa
42 Metamorphoses Ovid
43 Middlemarch George Eliot
44 Midnight’s Children Salman Rushdie
45 Mrs. Dalloway Virginia Woolf
46 Native Son Richard Wright
47 Neuromancer William Gibson
48 Never Let Me Go Kazuo Ishiguro
49 Njal’s Saga Anonymous
50 Northern Lights Phillip Pullman
51 Nostromo Joseph Conrad
52 Odyssey Homer
53 On the Road Jack Kerouac
54 One Hundred Years of Solitude Gabriel Garcia Marquez
55 One Thousand and One Nights Anonymous
56 Pale Fire Vladimir Nabokov
57 Pilgrim’s Progress John Bunyan
58 Portnoy’s Complaint Philip Roth
59 Pride and Prejudice Jane Austen
60 Ramayana Valmiki
61 Robinson Crusoe Daniel Defoe
62 Snow Crash Neal Stephenson
63 Song of Solomon Toni Morrison
64 Sophie’s Choice William Styron
65 The Adventures of Augie March Saul Bellow
66 The Big Sleep Raymond Chandler
67 The Brothers Karamazov Fyodor Dostoyevsky
68 The Call of the Wild Jack London
69 The Executioner’s Song Norman Mailer
70 The Grapes of Wrath John Steinbeck
71 The Great Gatsby F Scott Fitzgerald
72 The Life of Gargantua and of Pantagruel Francois Rabelais
73 The Lord of the Rings JRR Tolkien
74 The Maltese Falcon Dashiell Hammett
75 The Naked Lunch William Burroughs
76 The Old Man and the Sea Ernest Hemingway
77 The Picture of Dorian Grey Oscar Wilde
78 The Plague Albert Camus
79 The Portrait of a Lady Henry James
80 The Satanic Verses Salman Rushdie
81 The Sound and the Fury William Faulkner
82 The Stranger Albert Camus
83 The Sun Also Rises Ernest Hemingway
84 The Thirty-Nine Steps John Buchan
85 The Tin Drum Gunter Grass
86 The Trial Franz Kafka
87 The Way of All Flesh Samuel Butler
88 The Wind in the Willows Kenneth Grahame
89 The Woman in White Wilkie Collins
90 Their Eyes were Watching God Zora Neale Hurston
91 Things Fall Apart Chinua Achebe
92 Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy John Le Carre
93 To Kill a Mockingbird Harper Lee
94 Tom Jones Henry Fielding
95 Twelfth Night Shakespeare
96 Ubik Philip K. Dick
97 Ulysses James Joyce
98 Vanity Fair William Makepeace Thackeray
99 Waiting for the Barbarians JM Coetzee
100 War and Peace Leo Tolstoy
101 Wise Blood Flannery O’Connor
102 Wuthering Heights Emily Bronte

Hmm.  That at least looked like it worked (EDIT: Mostly.  It’ll do.)  I started with ULYSSES, which I hated, and plan to finish with FINNEGAN’S WAKEwhich I also intend to hate, but other than that I’m more or less jumping around at random.  The biggest pleasant surprises so far have been Jose Saramago in general, FRANKENSTEIN, which somehow I’d never read, and THE PICTURE OF DORIAN GREY.  Meanwhile, PRIDE AND PREJUDICE is still my personal literary nemesis, even though I did manage to finish the sonofabitch this time, a feat I never managed when they tried to make me read it in high school.  It was one of the worst grades I ever got on an English paper– I’d not finished the book, and it was painfully obvious that that was the case; I managed to get the names of a few major characters confused, so the teacher completely saw through me.  A shame; I really liked him and his class, I just hate Jane Austen.  I was startled at how much I liked WUTHERING HEIGHTS, though, which I was expecting to be much the same thing.

Anyway.  Anything on there I should prioritize or fear?  Do you guys have any long-term reading projects I should know about?

Okay NOW I’m ready for summer

Seriously– how is it that I started getting my classroom ready in July and here we are a week before school starts and I’m so far behind I can’t believe it?

Long day today– union thing starts in an hour and I’m not showered yet, that’s supposed to last until 1:00, then over to school for as long as they’ll let me stay there and get stuff done, then back home.  I really want to go shopping for some stuff tonight but I’m also broke as hell and have to stretch my current money out for an extra week to account for the fact that I’m not getting paid again until September 6.

So, yeah, don’t expect anything terribly erudite or fascinating around here.  I may try and get a real post up later but don’t hold your breath.

On intimidation

20130812-192122.jpgAnd suddenly, now, with just barely over a week left until school starts, I’m stressed out.

The worst teacher I ever had– by such a margin that the title is not even in question– was my freshman honors Algebra teacher. I got a D in his class during the third quarter; I don’t remember the grades in the other three, because the D was so shocking– it was not only the only D I got in my entire academic career, I’m almost certain that there weren’t even any Cs to keep it company.

After every test, he would change the seats. He’d arrange everyone by grade, with no attention paid to any other aspect of seat arrangement– such as, say, whether you could see the board or not. The lower your grade got, the closer you were to the front of the room. The very worst grade in the class was reserved for the front row, right by his desk.

He let you retake tests for a better grade. The retake test would be from a different textbook, though, and if you were retaking Chapter Four’s test, you’d better hope that Chapter Four from that other textbook covered the same material or something you could handle, because if not, too bad– he averaged the two grades together, meaning it was entirely possible to pull your grade down for the retake. Weirdly, most of the kids in his class hadn’t figured out how he was coming up with these new tests; I think most of them just thought either he was really hard or they were stupid. No, he was stupid. And lazy, and destructive.

One of my finer moments in my freshman year– and, honestly, there weren’t many; most of my freshman year memories are painful in some way or another– was figuring his game out halfway through a test retake that I was utterly bombing and, instead of turning the thing in at the end of the hour he’d given us after school, ripping the thing to shreds and throwing it away instead. Minor rebellions, obviously, but it felt good: I figured out your game, John, and you can go fuck yourself.

I hated that fucker. Now, twenty-two or so years later, I’m teaching his class– my honors 8th graders are taking freshman-level Algebra. I have the textbook right in front of me. Now, mind you, I know this shit. I made it through the year and I have repeatedly demonstrated over the course of the intervening years (if nothing else, by passing the PRAXIS; I was in the ninth decile somewhere) that I can handle this material.

But man, am I suddenly sweating teaching it.

Flipping through the book has been intermittently terrifying in the way that flipping through math textbooks is always terrifying; looking over what I’ll be covering in the first six weeks revealed a couple of vocabulary words that I didn’t immediately remember the definitions of but produced an “Oh, that” type of reaction when I found the definitions. Most of it really isn’t so far from the math I’m teaching. But I don’t want to be adequate about this. I want to already be the best Math teacher these kids have ever had, and by the end of taking their second Math class with me I want to be even better.

Terror! Whee!

One other thing that’s hammering on me, here, is the teacher I had for sophomore year math– Geometry, in other words. At the time, he was the best Math teacher I’d ever had, and one of the best teachers, period. Then I had him again for Calculus senior year. And it wasn’t the same. I don’t know what changed, really; if I just had really bad senioritis and I wasn’t prepared to take his class as seriously as it deserved (I was also taking Physics, which was kicking my ass just as hard as Calculus was, but I was excelling in Physics despite the workload) or if he didn’t feel as confident about the material, or if he was trying to Hold Us to a Higher Standard and it just wasn’t working out, or what. But it wasn’t the same. If I’d only had him for Calculus, I’d have forgotten his name by now, and honestly my goodwill toward his class would have worn out a hell of a lot sooner. I only made it as far as I did because I’d liked him so much sophomore year.

These kids loved me when they had me in sixth grade. (Something like 30 of the 33 kids were in my class that year; this isn’t an exaggeration.) Now they’ve got me two years later, for what should be a much harder class. This isn’t exactly a shaky analogy I’m constructing here.

Not only do I have to do better than one of the worst teachers I ever had, at the material he was supposed to teach me, which is intimidating enough, I have to outdo one of the best teachers I ever had, by being better than he was the second time around.

I ain’t saying I’ve bitten off more than I can chew; I don’t think I have. But damn, does my mouth feel full right now.