In which god I’m tired of this (part 3 of 3, sorta)

22913I took yesterday off because I spent all day asleep and then had to go to work; it’s 1:43 as I’m starting to type this and I’ve only been out of bed for about three hours.  This annoying goddamn just-wanna-sleep-all-the-time illness is getting old, folks, and the inexplicable sore throat it decided to throw at me yesterday out of nowhere isn’t fair.  Also, there’s a chance I might have pinkeye again for like the fourth fucking time this year.

I will be the first in line to transfer my consciousness into a machine.  There’s gotta be a mad scientist out there working on that.  Get moving, dammit.

So, that in mind– let’s get this Tony Bennett post out of the way.  Not spending time on my Facebook feed lately?  Okay.  He’s Indiana’s former superintendent of education.  “Former” because he got tossed out on his ass last year, after all of Indiana’s teachers rioted against his lying, crooked ass.  Turns out we have enough friends and relatives that the new Superintendent got three hundred thousand more votes than the new governor did.  He then went to Florida, the worst place on Earth, which is where all of the world’s shit and evil goes to die.  And less than a year later he’s had to resign that job because his evil lying corporatist ass got caught cheating, too.

You didn’t click on the link, I know; I’ll nutshell:  one of the schools that Tony just knew should have been an A school ended up with a C under his new, bullshit school grading system.  That school just happened to be run by an influential Republican donor, who just happened to have donated several hundred thousand dollars to the reelection fund that wasn’t enough to keep Tony from getting tossed out on his ass.  The entire grade system therefore got revised until Tony’s buddy’s school got the A that he’d already predetermined it deserved.  Meanwhile, several Indianapolis public schools in basically the exact same situation got taken over by the state for their poor grades.  Coincidentally, I’m sure, the new system managed to lift the grades of several other charter for-profit schools.  Amazing, innit?

Here’s the thing: honestly?  I ain’t mad.  This entire “school accountability”/charter school thing has nothing to do with educating children.  It is solely and singularly concerned with shoveling taxpayer money into the pockets of corporations and people who are already rich.  The system is already so corrupt and evil to begin with that it’s hard to imagine anything that would make me see it as worse.  I already knew these people were lying scum who were out to get me and enrich their friends.  Additional proof of same isn’t gonna make much of a difference.

Wanna hear a secret, though?

All grades are arbitrary bullshit.

Lemme say that again:  All. Grades. Are. Arbitrary. Bullshit.

We all know this, but we don’t like to talk about it much, because everybody likes to pretend that that grades actually mean something.  But every teacher on Earth has at some point or another adjusted something because somebody who should have gotten some grade got some other grade instead.  And if they haven’t done that, they’ve set their grade system up to prioritize some sort of behavior over some other sort of behavior.  It’s all gamed, one way or another; the only thing is how honest and how transparent you are about it.

Lemme give some examples.  The easiest way to grade is just to make everything worth the same number of points as the number of questions in the assignment.  So if I give you fifteen questions tonight, that’s worth fifteen points, and the 50-question test is worth fifty points.  At the end you divide the total number of points earned by the total number of points possible and then you have a score.  Problems with this:  one, it’s a lot of grading, and two, it leads to weird inequalities like Monday’s homework being worth a lot more than Thursday’s just because Monday’s worksheet had a lot more questions on it.  It also leads to difficulties in quantifying anything that isn’t a worksheet or a textbook assignment, and makes grading things like essays a huge pain in the ass.

So, okay, use rubrics, or something?  And make every paper worth X points, where some percentage of that is grammar, some is “style,” some is awarded for some nebulous idea of how well the essay adheres to whatever the essay was supposed to be about.  You’re still making arbitrary determinations here about how much you prioritize papers over other things.  You’re still gonna give the kid who turns in every single assignment but can’t write to save his life a “C” because his papers weren’t good enough, where Billy who is a decent writer but misses assignments and half-asses everything gets a “B” because papers are worth more than the assignments he skipped.

And you’re gonna make some sort of decision about how to change your grading based on your feeling that Kyle deserves a better grade than Billy because he works harder.

Let’s throw some special ed kids in the mix.  What if Jenny’s got an IQ of 60 and doesn’t have a chance in hell of being able to do the same assignments that Monica can handle?  Should she just automatically fail?  Or do you alter your grading policies somehow to account for the fact that she’s doing the best she can do and that ought to be worth something?  Maybe she on her best day on Earth can’t do better than Billy-the-halfasser can do.  Should Billy get better grades?  Is the sanctity of your precious grading system worth more than convincing Jenny that trying at school is worth something and tossing her a little bit of success once in a while?

What kind of person are you if you determine that not breaking the Rules of Your System is more important than keeping a kid from tuning out school altogether?

What happens if you give an assignment that you plan to grade a certain way and then all your kids bomb it?  What if some of the kids who bomb it are kids who habitually get everything done right?  Is that your fault?  Can you change your grading system to give some kids better grades?  Or just throw the whole thing out?

How do you tell the difference between Amber-the-A-student getting a C on something because your grading system was BS and Amber getting a C because she’s slipping?  And, again, do you care about the difference?

How do you handle missing work?  Do you accept it?  Because you’d better be prepared, in some schools (mine’s one of them) to fail 2/3 of your kids if you don’t take late work and if you record it as a zero.  Or do you have a “floor” beneath which no assignment can fall?  Where do you set that?

For the record, here’s my grading system, for whatever it’s worth:

  • I accept late work up until a formal progress report goes out; this basically divides a quarter in half, so you can turn in late work from the first half of a quarter until halfway through it and then those grades are locked.  I send informal PRs home every couple of weeks.  Late work gets docked two points from a turned-in assignment.
  • Missing work is a 0.  No turned in assignment receives less than 50% as a score unless it’s clearly halfassed or not finished.  It’s incredibly rare for ANY turned-in assignment to receive less than 30%.
  • Assignments from the textbook are worth five points, period, and are graded on completion.  I do not grade them item-by-item and do not correct them.  If they’re turned in and done roughly according to instructions (ie, work is shown, stuff like that) it’s going to get full credit unless I can tell you just wrote some shit down and hoped I didn’t notice it.
  • Assignments from the workbook are worth ten points and are graded on partial correctness:  in other words, I arbitrarily choose ten problems from the two pages and grade those.  Not every problem will count.  I grade the same ten problems for everyone, though.
  • Tests are usually worth fifteen or twenty points and are graded completely.  Occasionally I will give bonus points for spelling your name right if a test happens to have twelve questions or something like that.  Tests are the only exception to the grade-floor rule; if you turn in a test with no correct answers you are going to get a zero for it.
  • Occasionally I will collect morning bell-ringer work and grade that on completion; it’s usually worth a point or two and cannot be made up.
  • Extra credit is crazy-rare and is only given if it’s available to everyone.  I won’t make up an assignment for you specifically.

Here’s what I’m prioritizing:  I put a heavy emphasis on effort, which is why those textbook assignments are pretty much automatic As if you turn them in.  Similarly, the grade floor: if you tryyou’re going to get some points for your effort.  I accept late work because I feel like kids should be able to make up for their mistakes; I don’t accept it after a certain point because those mistakes should cost you something.

And, yeah, I’ve taken a look at my grades, gone “Damn, Chelsea should be getting an A, what happened?” and taken a look at how to fix it.  Not to the degree that Bennett did, obviously; his shit was pretty egregious no matter how you look at it.  But I can’t pretend I don’t get it.  Because grades are arbitrary.  Period.  We shouldn’t pretend otherwise.

In which I am still a bad student (pt. 2 of 3)

Ukulele Chord Chart page1 If you haven’t read yesterday’s post yet, you probably ought to; this is part 2 of at least 2 and it may turn out to be three. We’ll see how I feel when I’m done writing it.

We’ve established two things about my ukulele classes: first, that I am a poor student, and second, that Dale is, at least for me, a poor teacher. Current “reformer” theory in teacher training states that so long as we get people who are trained in subject matter and good at said subject matter, it’s not actually very necessary to actually have any training in teaching. Teaching’s just something you can pick up– after all, anybody who knows a lot about something should be able to pass that knowledge on, right?

Well… obviously not. There is a hell of a lot more to my job than mere subject matter. Now, I’m both smart and arrogant, so I’m not going to pretend that the wealth of knowledge that I bring into my classroom doesn’t help– but it simply is not sufficient to make me a good teacher. Dale’s a perfect example here; someone with an immense amount of practical and technical and theoretical knowledge of his field who is, nonetheless, entirely incapable of passing that knowledge on to someone who lacks it. This is what we lose when we, as Indiana does, start suggesting that all you need to be a math teacher is to major in math, or that a competent engineer ought to be able to teach science. It’s truthy: it sounds right, but it’s bullshit. Teaching doesn’t work that way.

Conversely, you get people with comparatively little subject knowledge who are nonetheless great teachers provided that they’re in the right position. I couldn’t teach kindergarten or nursery school to save my life; does anyone really feel that you need to be an especially book-smart person to do either of those jobs successfully? Hell no. You need a firm knowledge of child development, a hell of a lot of patience, and more compassion and empathy than any two normal people should have. Many of the band and orchestra teachers I’ve met haven’t necessarily struck me as musical prodigies but they don’t need to be to make kids love music. They need to be able to teach.

In my career I’ve taught computer classes to preschoolers through eighth graders, language arts and social studies to seventh graders, math, science and social studies to sixth graders, and now I’m about to start teaching math to seventh and eighth graders. I did not take a single math or computer class in college. And I am better at my job than you are at yours. (Also more of an asshole, but that’s neither here nor there.) I’m not a good computer teacher or a good math teacher because I have exceptional skills in either area. I’m good at communicating my knowledge. That’s the important part. And that’s what we need to focus our teacher training efforts on– not on acquiring knowledge, but at developing the skill to pass that knowledge on. It ain’t the same thing.

And, for a rough segue into evaluation: let’s pretend that Dale isn’t just teaching uke classes on the side at a little community music center. Let’s assume he’s trying to make a career of this. Does he, regardless of whether I actually think he’s skilled at teaching, deserve to be evaluated by how well I play the ukulele after I’m done with his class? I’ve already been clear, I hope, on both my own initial lack of skill and– importantly– the fact that I really haven’t done much of anything to make myself better in between our sessions. Is me being bad his fault? Is my lack of trying, my lack of practice, my fuckin’ ridiculous schedule what with my jobs and my two-year-old and (let’s own it) my laziness toward improving at his craft Dale’s fault?

Should I count toward his evaluations, if they give me a uke test at the end of his class and I fail it? How much? A little? A lot?

Tomorrow (yeah, this is going three, since I still haven’t gotten around to talking about Tony Bennett yet) we discuss grading. And cheating. It’ll be fun! Assuming this damn thing uploads and doesn’t delete itself.

(Make with clicky for part three.)

In which I am a bad student (pt. 1 of 2)

viva_la_ukulele_by_rathawk

Lemme put the tl;dr right at the beginning: I had a ukulele lesson yesterday, it didn’t go well, and I’ve turned it into an exemplar for everything that’s wrong with teacher training and evaluation nowadays.

I am not musically talented.  I am an at-least passable singer; I believe this is true because I have been complimented on my singing by people who had no reason to lie to me about it.  But that’s it.  I have, in my life, attempted to play the violin, the French horn, the trombone, the recorder, the harmonica, and the ukulele, with scattered examples of sitting in front of a piano and tapping at keys until I figure out how to play whatever song is in my head.  I can play none of those instruments.

Important secondary fact: I am an autodidact.  The way I learn best is by trying to figure out shit by myself, and I never learn anything unless I am interested enough in it to work on it on my own.  My ideal circumstance for learning (and this, incidentally, is precisely how I have “learned to cook” over the course of 2013) is to muddle through on my own but to have a clear set of guidelines for what to do and– and this part’s important– to have access to an expert (generally, my wife) nearby who can either answer my questions (“does this look done to you?”) or occasionally check on me and note terrible mistakes in progress or provide advice for things I have missed.  Everything, and I mean everything, that I am good at doing or know a lot about, I taught myself to do.  It’s how I learn.  I know this about myself.

But back to the lack of musical talent thing: I know nothing about music theory; talks of diminished chords and As and flats and sharps and such goes right the hell over my head.  I also, and this is super important for learning a stringed instrument, have very little dexterity in my left hand.  My fingers, even when I’m at my thinnest, tend toward the short, chubby, and clumsy.  I am also the most right-handed person I have ever known; my left hand is basically useless for most tasks.  How the hell I’m such a good typist I’ll never understand (honestly: this fact– I type faster than you, and that person you’re thinking about right now who types really fast? I’m faster than them too) and, in fact, typing may be evidence that this whole “can’t get my left hand to cooperate” thing may be wrong.  But anyway.  My point is that being able to fluidly and quickly move the fingers on your left hand to precise spots along the neck and the frets of a stringed instrument is, obviously, critical to being able to play.  I can’t do that.  I used to be really into Guitar Hero and Rock Band, right?  I topped out at Medium difficulty.  I could 100% basically any song I wanted on Medium, because I didn’t have to move my left hand– but as soon as I moved into Hard and that blue fret came into play, meaning that I’d have to move my hand and remember where it was if I wanted to keep playing, I failed completely.  The jump was too big.  And I tried really, really hard to master that difficulty level, or at least get decent enough at it that it was playable.  Never happened.

For these and other reasons, I am a poor student for anyone trying to teach me the ukulele.  This is a fact.  It is undeniable.  I am also busy and, at least lately, not terribly prone to use free minutes to pull out my uke and practice.  This is also an undeniable fact.

Now let’s talk about my teacher, and I’m going to try very hard to be fair, because despite everything, I actually quite like the guy.  I’m gonna call him Dale.  That’s not his name, but it’ll do.

Dale is clearly impressively musically talented.  He plays five or six different instruments and appears to have working knowledge of many more.  He has perfect pitch; he’s had me retune my uke a few times based on something that he heard and has then pronounced satisfactory a change in tone that I couldn’t even hear.

He’s also, at best, incredibly socially awkward.  He’s a giant of a man, probably a few inches over six feet tall, and bulky even at that height, he’s got a lazy eye, and it’s clear within a moment or two of talking to him that this is a guy who has always felt like he’s stuck out.  He doesn’t like to touch people; he was clearly uncomfortable when I tried to shake hands with him when we first met, and did not have a confident man’s handshake.  I did not repeat the experiment for our second meeting.  I wouldn’t be surprised– no, let me rephrase that; I would be surprised if he were not on the autism spectrum.

Now, again, I want to make absolutely sure I’m being clear here:  none of these things make Dale a bad person.  Okay?  Is that obvious?  On top of everything else, he’s nineteen at most, and heading off for college this fall, and I am willing to cut alllll sorts of slack to high school students for being gawky and awkward.  It’s entirely possible that I’m completely off on the autism thing and the kid’s just been the oversized music nerd his entire life and is socially withdrawn as a result, and a few years in the music school he’s headed toward will turn him around.  I wasn’t exactly a fuckin’ butterfly at nineteen either, y’know?

Unfortunately, this combination of high amounts of technical and practical knowledge combined with little to no skill at communicating them mean that Dale is a bad teacher.  He can show me how to play the ukulele and the mandolin and the guitar and hell probably the aquaggaswack all day long; he cannot teach me.  It may be that if he had a student who had similar levels of musical talent to his, who knew how to play other instruments but didn’t know the uke specifically, that he could teach that student.  He cannot teach me how to do it.  His method is to sit there with his uke– which, complicating things, is about 2/3 the size of mine, constantly out of tune (so he claims) and lacking many of the frets that mine has, which makes it impossible for me to follow what he’s doing– play something in some way, then say “or you could do this,” and play it another way, then spend a minute talking about what he just did, using vocabulary that loses me so instantly and completely that I can’t actually give you an example, then do it again, then do another thing.  It hit me about halfway through my lesson yesterday that I couldn’t come up with a way that Dale might do things differently if I hadn’t brought my ukulele with me at all.  He never actually asks me to do anything.  He’ll show me something, I’ll try to replicate it (poorly) on my own, he’ll tell me what I did was right, most of the time, even if it’s wildly apparent to me that it wasn’t, then he’s off to some other thing.

It is a sign of my own utter confusion and his lack of teaching skill that I don’t even feel like I can complain adequately about how this lesson went.  I don’t have the vocabulary; I can’t even tell you what he was trying to show me.  I can’t tell you what he was doing.  He would play, look at me for a second, I would strum something, then he would go right back to what he was doing.  Both of us checked our watches a lot.  I think both of us felt like we were wasting each other’s time.  It was awful.  Ugh.  I literally can’t tell you the last time I was in a situation where I was supposed to be learning something and been so completely in the dark as to what the hell was going on around me or what I was supposed to be doing.  Complete, total failure.

(That’s as critical of Dale as I’m going to get, by the way.  Again, I like the guy.  He’s very very talented.  But he’s not a teacher.)

..actually, you know what?  This is already too long.  I’m going to break it into two parts.  We’ll talk about how this is relevant to the state of education in Indiana tomorrow, I think.

(Click here for part two.)

In which we try again

I’ve got the BlueTooth keyboard hooked up to the phone again; this resulted in a deleted post yesterday, so I’m probably pointlessly repeating history here, but we’ll see what happens. I’ve been in the building for about three and a half hours so far today and have succeeded in completely moving myself out of the old classroom. I’ve got some more teardown to do in there, but we’re probably talking about twenty minutes, max, and I may not even do it until I know who the new teacher in the room is going to be. For all I know he or she may want to keep some of the stuff I’ve got up.

I did break down and buy a new laser printer yesterday, but I bought a new laser printer for home, not for work, and brought the old one here. The new one is wireless and AirPrint ready, so I can print from my iPad and my wife can print from her computer and her laptop, none of which we ever figured out how to do with the older printer hardwired to my Mac. It cost more than I was planning on spending, but I think it was probably the right move. The old one, luckily, quickly paired with my work computer, which I was nervous about– the school corporation has a terrible record on pointlessly disabling useful technologies, and I was nervous that I wasn’t going to be able to use my printer on the work computer because of some nonsense over OMG VIRUZZIZ or some stupid shit like that. (“Viruses” is always, always the answer to any why-can’t-I-do-this-perfectly-reasonable-thing question, even when the activity in question is one that cannot possibly produce any sort of computer security issue– like, say, hooking a non-wireless-capable printer to a desktop computer.)

Anyway. I have another ukulele appointment in a couple of hours; constant scheduling conflicts have kept us from meeting again since the first one, so this one will be a double session. Hopefully I’ll walk out of the session feeling like I have some idea of what I’m doing. I haven’t been practicing as regularly as I should have, which probably won’t surprise anyone. I have, however, discovered that the boy is positively entranced by watching Daddy play, which will give me some motivation to keep going. The boy certainly likes music; he apparently was over the moon about watching a drummer at SerbFest last weekend. That’s worth some extra practice time.

Possibly a double post day, especially if this one actually goes through. Stay tuned.

Things I want to learn

Had to cancel another ukulele appointment yesterday; it’s been two weeks since the first one, which is still the only one I’ve been to.  Other things keep intervening on both our parts.  I’m practicing occasionally but not really committing to it.  Still can’t handle that whole three-finger-chord thing.  I suspect when I topped out at Medium difficulty on Guitar Hero and Rock Band that was life telling me that I was never going to be any good at playing stringed instruments.

That said, it got me thinking about what other shit I was terrible at that I didn’t want to be terrible at any more.  Here’s a partial list.  Add your own!

  • Cooking.  I’m actually making great progress on this so far this year, as shown by the fact that half of my posts are about something I made.  But I want to be better.  I’m still doing pretty well for someone who could barely boil things at the beginning of 2013.  My next target is going to be chicken paprikash; sometime in the next couple of days.  In the meantime I need to find some hot paprika.
  • I have failed at learning two academic things in my life.  The first is calculus, which I dropped out of about 2/3 of the way through my senior year when I realized that a) I didn’t need it to graduate; b) I was already admitted to and scholarshipped at my school of choice, and c) I was a goddamn second-semester senior and screw calculus.  I took no math whatsoever in college, unless statistics count, and I loved both of the statistics courses I’ve taken– I tested out of all of the requirements my college had.  But I would like, as a grown-up, to have at least a vague understanding of what calculus is about and how it works.  There is a course on my iPad.  I’ve never opened it.
  • The second thing is Arabic, which I made the mistake of taking my first semester of my freshman year in college, and I wasn’t prepared for it so I dropped it.  I’ve learned Hebrew since then so I know I can handle non-European scripts.  There’s a course for this on my iPad too.  I don’t even necessarily want to learn to speak or understand it; I just want to be able to read and write in it.  I can still read (pointed) Hebrew, if slowly, despite the thirteen years that have passed since I had any formal instruction, so I figure once I’ve learned it it isn’t going to go away.
  • The building trades.  I could make this four bullets if I wanted to, but I gotta leave for work in a few minutes.  In no particular order:  Carpentry, plumbing, electrician…ing, and enough basic mechanical engineering that I feel like I know my way around an engine.  I’d like to know enough to be able to wire up a lamp to a switch or build a bookshelf or replace drywall or fix a spark plug or trade out a toilet without screwing it up.  It’s entirely possible that I’m already capable of these things if I take my time and am careful about it, but I’d like to know enough to know that what I’m about to do isn’t going to work, rather than my usual method of repeatedly screwing up until I get it right.  I’m not completely clueless; I managed to install a new radio in my current car without electrocuting myself, but still.  Better is the metric here.
  • Botany.  There’s a bunch of goddamn plants in my back yard; I wanna know what they are.
  • Music, specifically ukulele and harmonica, and whatever music theory knowledge is required to be able to competently handle those two instruments.  I have a story that I need to remember to tell you about going to Guitar City yesterday.  I very nearly did something bad.

I’m sure there’s more; I’ll edit if something obvious comes up.  What do you want to know about that you don’t?

On larnin’

2013 has been a good year for learning new shit.  I’ve gone from someone who never ever cooked to somebody who, more or less, can find his way around a kitchen (although I’ll note that I haven’t cooked in a bit; I’ll fix that tonight– chicken tikka masala again, and something new this weekend) and I had my first ukulele lesson yesterday.

I was really, really hoping for a good story, guys, but it didn’t quite happen.  There’s not much room for shit to go wrong in a half hour of instructional time, and I think if I tried to force it into a good story it would devolve mostly into making fun of my instructor, who seems like a good guy and is obviously quite musically talented but… well… picture an eighteen-year-old who’s way way way into instrumental music and then turn down his social skills a wee bit in your head.  He’s kinda hilariously, adorably awkward, is what I’m saying, and adorable is not a word I apply to teenage males all that damn often.  He spent most of the session showing me the right way to do things, then when I noticed (key word: noticed) I was doing them wrong, telling me that my way was also right.  I was kinda picturing somebody who was gonna be repositioning my fingers on the frets, right?  None of that.  I don’t think this guy is too comfortable touching people.

That said, I’m going to take this seriously and spend some time each day between now and next Tuesday practicing on the five notes or chords or finger positions or whatever they are that I sorta-learned during our first session.  I’ll save the pedagogical observations for when I think he has a better student.

I am hoping for a busy, productive day today.  Yesterday was mostly unmitigated nonsense from start to finish punctuated by an actual hurricane which trapped me in the mall, of all fucking places, for like an hour and a half, where I was accosted and abused by a kiosk employee who began her sales pitch by rubbing cream on my arm, unsolicited.  I was able to tear myself away once she pointed out in what might have been an Ecuadorian accent that the cream she wanted me to buy cost $125.  No, sorry, I’ll stay dirty, g’bye.

Oh.  Also, David Lee Roth.  No, I’m not sure why either.  But yesterday had lots and lots of David Lee Roth.

In which my wife calls my bluff

black_pearl__pineapple__wheel_bigger_size_003I haven’t mentioned it in this space yet, but I have a ukulele.  I can’t actually play it. It’s not quite accurate to say that I have no musical talent– I can look at a piece of music and passably hum a reasonable approximation of what it should sound like, but without being able to name any of the actual notes and it’ll probably be off-key.  The last time I actually played an instrument was in sixth grade, I think, and other than being able to belt out the Indiana University fight song on my trombone at the drop of a hat I was neither terribly interested or very good.

I have a ukulele because I find the sound of the thing pleasant and it was inexpensive to buy.  The uke’s so easy that you can literally pick the thing up and, assuming it’s tuned properly (oh: I can tune my ukulele) you can just strum it and come up with something that sounds at least a little bit like real music even if you have absolutely no idea what you’re doing. I can do that.  At various points I have made noises about how I really ought to take a lesson or two and learn how to actually play this stupid little thing, but in the same sense that people say they ought to skydive sometime.  (Which I also ought to do.)

Also: my birthday is tomorrow.

Yesterday my wife walked into the living room, handed me an envelope, and said “Happy Birthday!”

A gift certificate for four private ukulele lessons.  With, presumably, some sort of actual musician.

Well, shit.

Part of me is really looking forward to this and the rest of me is looking forward to the blog post I’ll write with my nose and tongue once my instructor cuts my fingers off to keep me from coming near an instrument ever again.  Apparently their uke guy is heading out of town in August to go to some fancy-schmancy music school somewhere (please god don’t let him be a high school student) and so I have to get all of my lessons in in July and the early part of August– fine with me, as I know I won’t have the time or inclination for it once school starts.

So y’all have that to look forward to now.