Tuesday, March 31, 2009

Science, USC, and Mr. Chris

Today I took my AVID class on a fieldtrip. We went to the California Science Center to watch a really cool 3D Imax movie about the wild ocean off the coast of Africa and visit the CSI Exhibit, and then we walked across the street to get a tour of USC. Just as a side note, I have never been really into the whole USC/UCLA rivalry, but being a UCLA alumn I felt like a traitor today, and my students made sure to rub it in :)
But anyway, the best part of the day was that my husband or Mr. Chris as the student's like to call him, was able to take a day off of work and come. I really love that he could be a part of the trip and see what I do. A lot of teachers like to keep their personal life away from their students, and I really think that that is counterproductive. For students to trust you and respect you, they need to kow that you are a person, and that you care enough about them to share things with them. Now there is definitly a delicate balance that needs to be kept, and oversharing can lead to them thinking that you are friends, which we are not. But anyway, it was a lot of fun for me and the students to have Chris there. He is so wonderful with the student's as well. If you know Chris, you know that he has an amazing way of mixing sweetness and humor into whatever he says and does, and my students really respond to that. He would be a great teacher, and I know he will be a wonderful father one day. Overall, it was a great day!

Wednesday, March 25, 2009

Scary

My principal just announced that we are on campus lock down. It is not a drill. Whenever I here those words my heart skips a beat. In order to lock our doors we have to go outside and I automatically think the worst. "Is there someone on campus with a weapon? What is going to happen if I walk outside." The locking of my door was a success and now I am just sitting here in a locked classroom. I am just glad I do not have students this period. Last time they freaked out. It is just scary to not know why we have to be locked in our classrooms. I'll keep you posted. By "you" I mean anyone that actually reads this :)

Tuesday, March 24, 2009

Oh my goodness it has been a bad day!

I am trying to do something for the kids. I am working my ass off and all I get is shit for it! Now I know why some of the old timers at my school avoid doing anything but teaching for their seven hours and then leaving!

Teacher of the Year

What a joke! Recently my high school sponsored our anual awards banquet. It is actually a really great event. Teachers and administrators nominate students and teachers in a bunch of different categories and then we all vote. One of the categories is teacher of the year. Apparently, to become teacher of the year at my school you have to give out hugs instead of teach. Apparently, to be teacher of the year you have to allow students to put on make-up and straighten their hair in class. Aparently, you have to talk up yourself but actually follow through with nothing. Apparently, this school values slackers and gives hard working teachers pink slips. Everything is so political, and it is really sad that teachers that bust their back, take on extra responsibilities, and pull the weight of others are looked over. I personally do not care about the award, but so many wonderful teachers were nominated and did not get the recognition that they deserve. Robin if you are reading this, take a wild guess who won :)

Friday, March 20, 2009

Things I've never done before #4- Spin-a-holics

So I have been trying to loose a few pounds lately and the excercise is going well. Unfortunately you have to stop eating like a cow when you want to loose weight. I am still working on that part of it. But anyway, I have joined a soccer team and I have been going to the gym. Two wonderful ladies that I work with also go to my gym and they Spin. So, I used to be terrified of spin. I have heard bad things, and I had an akward and degrating experience with a spin instructor back in the day (i'll tell that story another day). But anyway, I decided to give it a try and I love it! I feel so accomplished after a class, and it is really motivating to be in a room of people pushing themselves to the max. I have to admit that one of the reasons I continue to go back is because of the spin-a-holics. These are the people in there tight spandex and fancy spin shoes. They pedal faster than anyone and at moments of extreme exhaustion when everyone is ready to fall off the bike, they yell out a big "Wooooo! Yeah!" as if they are feeding of the pain of those that surround them :) It is so entertaining! There is this one guy that just looks at other people with this condescending smirk as if he is thinking "I am a spin god compared to you" I'm serious. It is so funny! It's like I get excercise and a show all in one!

Thursday, March 19, 2009

i love socal

Yesterday after work chris and I decided to take the puppies to the beach for a walk. It was such a beautiful day yesterday. At 5 it was 72 degrees with a tiny breeze. I had a t-shirt on and didn't need a jacket. I feel so lucky to live near the beach. Our beautiful evening walk was the perfect end to a stressful work day. Here are a few photos that I took of the silly puppies.

In the car on the way to the beach




Wednesday, March 18, 2009

Update

Monday I went to the doctor to get some blood test results. All of the tests were negative. It is kind of funny, but I was hoping that one would be positive. I mean I don't want anything to be wrong with me, but I do want an answer. I am happy that I am healthy, but if I am healthy than what is the problem. I guess I have always been a problem/ solution person. If there is a problem I want to fix it right away. If I do something I want to do it well. It is just frustrating to me that there seems to be no answer at this point. The one thing I desperatly want to succeed at, I can't, and there are no answers for me right now. I am looking into seeing other doctors. I just don't know what they can tell me that is different at this point. I just want an answer and there is the possibility that I will never get one.

Friday, March 13, 2009

Heroes

This was forwarded to our staff today. Many of the nations educational shortcomings are blamed on teachers but we are constantly faced with hurdles we can't climb. This article helped me to appreciate the proffession I am a part of and the amazing people that do what I do. I added a little story of my own that happened today in red.

Real Life Heroes


An essay written by an assistant principal in Ohio .
By J. Bradley:

"Where are the heroes of today?" a radio talk show host thundered.
He blames society's shortcomings on education. Too many people are looking for heroes in all the wrong places. Movie stars and rock musicians, athletes, and models aren't heroes; they're celebrities.

Heroes abound in public schools, a fact that doesn't make the news. There is no precedent for the level of violence, drugs, broken homes, child abuse, and crime in today's America. Education didn't create these problems but deals with them every day.

You want heroes?
Consider Dave Sanders, the schoolteacher shot to death while trying to shield his students from two youths on a shooting rampage at Columbine High School in Littleton , Colorado. Sanders gave his life, along with 12 students; and other less heralded heroes survived the Colorado blood bath.

You want heroes?
Jane Smith, a Fayetteville, NC teacher, was moved by the plight of one of her students, a boy dying for want of a kidney transplant. So this woman told the family of a 14-year-old boy that she would give him one of her kidneys. And she did. When they appeared together hugging on the Today Show, Katie Couric was near tears.

You want heroes?
Doris Dillon dreamed all her life of being a teacher. She not only made it, she was one of those wondrous teachers who could bring the best out of every single child. One of her fellow teachers in San Jose, Calif., said, "She could teach a rock to read."
Suddenly she was stricken with Lou Gehrig's Disease which is always fatal, usually within five years. She asked to stay on the job ... and did. When her voice was affected, she communicated by computer.

Did she go home? Absolutely not! She is running two elementary school libraries! When the disease was diagnosed, she wrote the staff and all the families that she had one last lesson to teach .... that dying is part of living. Her colleagues named her Teacher of the Year.

You want heroes?
Bob House, a teacher in Georgia, tried out for "Who Wants to be a Millionaire?". After he won the million dollars, a network film crew wanted to follow up to see how it had impacted his life. New cars? Big new house?

Instead, they found both Bob House and his wife still teaching. They explained that it was what they had always wanted to do with their lives and that would not change. The community was both stunned and grateful.

You want heroes?
Last year the average school teacher spent $468 of their own money for student necessities ... workbooks, pencils, supplies kids had to have but could not afford. That's a lot of money from the pockets of the most poorly paid teachers in the industrial world.

Schools don't teach values? The critics are dead wrong.
Public education provides more Sunday School teachers than any other profession.

The average teacher works more hours in nine months than the average 40-hour
employee does in a year.

You want heroes?
For millions of kids, the hug they get from a teacher is the only hug they will get that day because the nation is living through the worst parenting in history.

An Argyle, Texas kindergarten teacher hugs her little 5 and 6 year-olds so much that both the boys and the girls run up and hug her when they see her in the hall, at the football games, or in the malls years later.

A Michigan principal moved me to tears with the story of her attempt to rescue a badly abused little boy who doted on a stuffed animal on her desk .. one that said "I love you!" He said he'd never been told that at home. This is a constant in today's society .. two million unwanted, unloved, abused children in the public schools, the only institution that takes them all in.

This made me think of something that happened today. I have this boy in my class that did nothing last semester. He always seemed down and annoyed, and he rarely completed any work. Now admitedly, I noticed this but when you have 140 students it is hard to give the personal attention and push to every student. At the end of last semester I spoke to him briefly and told him that he could do better. The new semester began and things started to improve. He is doing a lot more and I have been impressed with some of his work. Now just to back track for a second, for the entire year, everyday he has been the first one to walk into my class. He does not look at me when he walks in, and he will never say a word. So yesterday I was walking through the room checking homework and I stopped and told him "You are doing so well lately. I am really proud of you!" You will never believe what happened today. He walked in smiling and said cheerfuly, "Hi Mrs. Pompey." I was floored. Is that all it takes? I took two seconds to tell him how great he was doing, and today he was a different kid. It made me so happy and so sad at the same time. Why had I not told him that sooner? Really all they need is the same thing I need some times, a "good job" or "thank you." I by no means think that I am a hero, but I am so glad that I could tell him something that he obviously needed to hear. Back to the article.


You want heroes?
Visit any special education class and watch the miracle of personal interaction, a job so difficult that fellow teachers are awed by the dedication they witness. There is a sentence from an unnamed source which says: "We have been so eager to give our children what we didn't have that we have neglected to give them what we did have."

What is it that our kids really need?
What do they really want?
Math, science, history, and social studies are important, but children need love, confidence, encouragement, someone to talk to, someone to listen, standards to live by. Teachers provide upright examples, the faith and assurance of responsible people.


You want heroes?
Then go down to your local school and see our real live heroes - the ones changing lives for the better each and every day!

Now, pass this on to someone you know who's a teacher, or to someone who should thank a teacher today.

Wednesday, March 11, 2009

Stand up for Schools!

The State budget recently signed by the Govenator cuts schools funding by a magnitude unlike we have seen in California's history, slashing 11.6 billion from public schools, which translates to over 8 million for my district over the next couple of years. Because of this, 106 teachers, counselors, and administrators from my district have been told to find new jobs. How can this happen? How can this be? Everyday I talk to another friend that is scared and unsure about his or her future. One of my friends cried today as she looked at her pink slip. Schools are really just sad places right now, and it makes me so mad that despite everything we are expected to smile, teach, and changes the lives of those around us. How will I do that when I have 45 students in a room next year? Besides the cuts of teachers, we are looking at extremely large classes, and the cutting of all or most special programs and services. Teachers across California are observing Friday, March 13 as Pink Friday, in sad recognition of an anticipated 16,000 layoff notices (pink slips) being delivered statewide. Our president just addressed congress and spoke about how the education level of our country is declining and more people need to go to college. We can not focus on bettering education and then strip its recources. We can not touch a student's life when they are shuffeled into an overflowing classroom. And we cannot create excitment and inspiration whithin our students when we are staring at a pink slip. I thankfully have not received a pink slip, and I am so thankful that as of right now, I have a job next year. But the more I think about it, I wonder if this is a place I am going to want to be after the cuts have all been made.

Monday, March 9, 2009

Things I've never done before #3- Indoor Soccer

I have been going to a new Gym latley and one night during my Wednesday night class I got to talking to one of the girls. She looked really familiar and we came to find out that we both used to play soccer in Oxnard. After a little more chatting she invited me to play on her Women's indoor soccer team that started yesterday. My gut reaction was "No way! I am old and out of shape." But since I am trying to be a yes man I forced myself to accept her invitation. Yesterday was our first game and I was so nervouse. I am no where near soccer shape and I knew it was going to be rough. I have also never played indoor before so I didn't know how different it would be. I must say that I had a lot of fun. It took 8 minutes before I was gasping for air and needed a sub which, okay this might sound sad, I was pretty impressed with. I did end up having quite a bit of playing time and I was the only one on my team to score a goal!!!! I scored a goal! It has been a long time since that happened. Unfortunately we lost 8 or 9 to 1, but hey there is always next week. Maybe I'll score two next time :)

Monday, March 2, 2009

The things kids say

A teacher friend of mine sent this to me. I never have theses types of responses but I still thought these were so funny and cute.

TEACHER: Maria, go to the map and find North America.
MARIA: Here it is. TEACHER:
Correct. Now class, who discovered America?
CLASS: Maria.

TEACHER: John, why are you doing your math multiplication on the floor?
JOHN: You told me to do it without using
tables.

TEACHER: Glenn, how do you spell 'crocodile?'
GLENN: K-R-O-K-O-D-I-A-L'
TEACHER: No,that's wrong
GLENN: Maybe it is wrong, but you asked me how I spell it.

TEACHER: Donald, what is the chemical formula for water?
DONALD: H I J K L M N O.
TEACHER: What are you talking about?
DONALD: Yesterday you said it's H to O.

TEACHER: Winnie, name one important thing we have today that we didn't have ten years ago.
WINNIE: Me!

TEACHER: Millie, give me a sentence starting with ' I.'
MILLIE: I is..
TEACHER: No, Millie..... Always say, 'I am.'
MILLIE: All right... 'I am the ninth letter of the alphabet

TEACHER: George Washington not only chopped down his father's cherry tree, but also admitted it. Now, Louie, do you know why his father didn't punish him?
LOUIS: Because George still had the axe in his hand

TEACHER: Clyde, your composition on 'My Dog' is exactly the same as your brother's. Did you copy his?
CLYDE: No, sir. It's the same dog.

TEACHER: Harold, what do you call a person who keeps on talking when people are no longer interested?
HAROLD: A teacher :)