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Summer Song Refrain

Posted by Tim at 22:44 on 2008/08/05
Aug 052008

I made one of my semiannual treks to Louisville a couple weeks ago. The whirring of the cicadas filled the air. There are lots more cicadas where I grew up than where I live now. Their song is part of the soundtrack of my youth. [There are more lightning bugs there too, but that's another story....]

Elizabethtown is about an hour south of Louisville. [We always call it E-town, not that it matters....] The Cameron Crowe movie [supposedly] based there was pretty mediocre in my opinion. I found the errors in geography especially distracting.

[rant]Yeah, I know… movies require suspension of disbelief. I suppose exit 60-B was intended to be a comic device. (And it’s really exit 94 anyway; you can even see that in the film.) But Drew (Orlando Bloom) didn’t miss an exit so much as he drove in the wrong direction! I guess taking a wrong turn out of the airport is not as funny as missing an exit later…. And cute young flight attendants that give out their phone numbers to help with directions? Now that’s southern hospitality! I would say that I clearly fly the wrong airlines but you could as easily point out that I am clearly nowhere near as good looking as Orlando Bloom….[end rant]

Anyway, when Drew stepped out of his car after [finally] making his way into E-town the cicadas were there in force. It sounded just like home. “Wow. He nailed that,” I remember thinking at the time. And then… well you’ve probably seen it already. At least it had a good soundtrack.

The Summer Vacation Myth

Posted by Tim at 23:59 on 2008/06/09
Jun 092008

I am not on vacation. I am on summer break.

For many people in “normal” jobs, the difference may be… um, academic. [smirk]

But here’s why I never refer to my time off in the summer as a vacation. I don’t get paid. I work a ten-month contract and I am unemployed for two months. After all, people that work Monday through Friday don’t refer to Saturday and Sunday as vacation days. They are days off. A short break before returning to work. It’s just a lot easier to stretch your paycheck through a weekend than it is through a summer.

“But,” I am usually asked when I make this distinction, “can’t you get paid in the summer?” Not really. Most school districts will withhold a percentage of your paycheck through the year and then give it back to you in the summer. If you have the self-discipline to put money in a savings account at least you would earn interest on it. As much as I love [cough] the school board, I’m not willing to lend them some of my money interest-free for most of the year….

So I’ve learned to budget. Sometimes I work other jobs in the summer. And I relish my breaks. Because even though I love my job, I also hate it. And I like being away from it for a while each year. I like having a lot of flexibility in my days when there is virtually none when I work. [A bell rings and I teach until another bell rings, and then a few minutes later a bell rings and I teach until another bell rings, and then a few minutes later....]

I am on summer break. I am not on vacation. But I will be taking a vacation soon!

Two Words

Posted by Tim at 17:24 on 2008/06/05
Jun 052008

I’ve got two words for you…

But today I’m celebrating two words I don’t expect to hear again until school resumes in August: “What page?”

Because I teach students how to make drawings, we don’t have a lot of traditional “book work”. But we do have textbooks as references and sometimes I find it valuable to assign some reading and even to have students write answers to questions based on the reading.

Me: “Read chapter 12 and write the answers to the review questions at the end of the chapter.”
Student: “What page?”

Okay. It’s a chapter assignment, not a page. And it’s chapter 12. If only the authors had thought to put them all in order….

I will often refer students to a textbook to answer a question, especially if it is an answer that A) I just gave them, B) should be in their notes, but isn’t, or C) was a research assignment. Usually I will even tell them which book to look in.

Me: “You don’t have that in your notes? Look it up in the Mechanical Drawing book.”
Student: “What page?”

Hmmm. If only there were some way to look that up, like an index or something….

Many of the drawings I assign are based on examples from one of our books. Typically, these are labeled with chapter-illustration numbers. So the tenth illustration in chapter 12 would be figure 12-10.

Me: “Draw figure 12-10 from the Mechanical Drawing book.”
Student: “What page?”

Aaarrrrggghhhhh….. Now, there is a specific page number that I could give in answer to that question. But the truth is, I rarely remember the page number. If I’m looking for figure 12-10 I find chapter 12. If I open the book to chapter seven I need to go further in the book. If I open it to chapter 15 I need to go back. (If I really want to show off, I’ll use that index thing to find exactly which page chapter 12 starts on!) Once I find chapter 12 then I find figure 10. If I see figure 12-3 I need to go further in the book. If I see figure 12-23 I’ve gone past it.

I guess I never realized what a tremendous skill that is. I should be a rocket scientist. [Or a brain surgeon. Or a double-naught spy. Or just about anything else besides what I am....] Until then, I’ll relish these two words: summer break.

Have You Got the Time?

Posted by Tim at 15:23 on 2008/05/12
May 122008

There is an old joke that goes back at least to the cold war. The setting is always some exotic world capitol.

On the busy city street an American tourist stops a man carrying two suitcases and asks for the correct time. The other man sets the cases on the ground, looks at the dial of the instrument on his wrist and says with a heavy Russian accent, “It is 8:39 Greenwich Mean Time, 12:39 in Moscow, the temperature is 19 degrees Celsius — 67 degrees Fahrenheit — with 47% humidity, and the barometric pressure is rising.”

“That’s fantastic!” exclaims the first man, “You can tell all that from that little watch?”

“Da. Latest Russian technology.” [In the telling, this man usually sounds a lot like Henry Kissinger, but I'm not sure that's relevant.... ~Tim]

“Wow. You could make a fortune with that in the States.”

“Not until we get rid of these,” said the Russian picking up the two large cases.

“Why? What’s in there?”

“The batteries.”

I never imagined myself being nostalgic for the cold war, but in some ways I am. The dangers of nuclear annihilation were all too real, but the memory of school children learning to duck and cover under their desks in the event of an attack makes it all seem quaintly benign. In retrospect it seems almost as if we spent years trying to scare communists while they tried to scare us. Any war is bad, but I’m pretty sure that no one on either side was scared to death….

Anyway, I recently read A Walk in the Woods by Bill Bryson, a very entertaining account of his attempt to hike the Appalachian Trail. I don’t think I’ll ever be (or ever was, for that matter) in good enough physical condition to hike the whole thing. Only a small percentage of those who attempt it complete the trek. I’m not sure I would try even if I were in better shape. But I definitely want to see parts of it. I was reminded of the joke above when I read this exchange:

Eight or nine other people were scattered around the summit, including one youngish, rather pudgy man on his own in a very new and expensive-looking windcheater. He had some kind of handheld electronic device with which he was taking mysterious readings of the sky or landscape.

He noticed me watching and said, in a tone that suggested he was hoping someone would take an interest, “It’s an Enviro Monitor.”

“Oh yes?” I responded politely.

“Measures eighty values — temperature, UV index, dew point, you name it.” He tilted the screen so I could see it. “That’s heat stress.” It was some meaningless number that ended in two decimal places. “It does solar radiation,” he went on, “barometric pressure, wind chill, rainfall, humidity — ambient and active — even estimated burn time adjusted for skin type.”

“Does it bake cookies?” I asked.

He didn’t like this. “There are times when it could save your life, believe me,” he said, a little stoutly. I tried to imagine a situation in which I might find myself dangerously imperiled by a rising dew point and could not. But I didn’t want to upset the man, so I sad: “What’s that?” and pointed at a blinking figure in the upper lefthand corner of the screen.

“Ah, I’m not sure what that is. But this –” he stabbed the console of buttons– “this is solar radiation.” It was another meaningless figure, to three decimal places. “It’s very low today,” he said, and angled the machine to take another reading. “Yeah, very low today.” Somehow I knew this already. In fact, although I couldn’t attest any of it to three decimal places, I had a pretty good notion of the weather conditions generally, on account of I was out in them. The interesting thing about the man was that he had no pack, and so no waterproofs, and was wearing shorts and sneakers. If the weather did swiftly deteriorate, and in New England it most assuredly can, he would probably die, but at least he had a machine that would tell him when and let him know his final dew point.

Kneel down with your head between your knees and cover the back of your neck with your hands [and kiss your ass good-bye...].

Initial Reactions

Posted by Tim at 16:10 on 2008/05/05
May 052008

iScream, uScream, weallScream, for no apparent reason.

iHate this trend. iEverything everywhere. [iExpect any day now to see a new perfume: iSmell. Or a new deodorant: iStink. And then we will truly have hit rock bottom. iThink.]

Integrating numbers did not bother me as much. 2 good + 2 be = 4 gotten was just 2 stupid 2 last 4 long anyway.

MidCaps [also called BumpyCaps, CamelCase, and several other terms] did not bother me as much. In fact, I like using it for the little bit of scripting and programming that I do. And when writing my name.

But this iThing irks me. [It could even iRk me iSuppose.] I’m not [or should that be iAm not?] one of the iPeople — I have an mp3 player, but it’s not an iPod… I have computers, but not iMacs…. And iLike 2think that is not the only reason iHate iWords. But it CouldBeSo.

Career Counsel

Posted by Tim at 17:46 on 2007/12/03
Dec 032007

Do you live where you want to work or do you work where you want to live?

Many of us choose a career path (or change career paths) and go where the jobs are. Certainly in my case I ended up moving 850 miles away from all my friends and family — the most difficult transition I have ever made — because this is where the jobs were in my chosen profession. And the longer I am here, the more vested I am in one retirement plan, the more difficult it is to pull up stakes and move again. My family makes no secret of the fact that they want me to move closer to where most of them are [what we all generally refer to as "home", except that my home has been elsewhere for more than 20 years]. And I either dismiss the thought as wholly impractical until after retirement or consider dropping everything here and find a job — any job — back there. Especially when I’m having a difficult year. As this one is turning out to be. Hmmph.

And then, out of the blue, a colleague asked me, “What would you do if you were just starting out today?” And at that particular moment I did not immediately think, “I would still teach.” And that surprised me a little bit. Because even though they say we are not supposed to define who we are by what we do for a living, I always have. I am a teacher. Nothing else has been so fulfilling — or so frustrating — as teaching. I know there are other things I can do. I’m not always sure there are other things I can be. But if I were just starting my career today… I don’t think I would make the same choice. I definitely find it harder than ever to recommend teaching as a career to someone else. But if they really have the passion for it, it won’t matter much what I tell them anyway. And if they don’t have that passion, there is no way they will survive in it. [For at least the last thirty years or so, half of all the people that go into teaching don't make it past five years -- a statistic I find wholly believable and more than a little embarrassing professionally . It's not like the reasons are a mystery or unresolvable. But that's a topic for another day. Or another blog.] Anyway… I promised myself when I started on this journey that I would never be one of those teachers that is just putting in time until retirement. I will quit if I ever get to the point where I am not still learning. I’m not there — not by a long shot. I will quit if I ever get to the point where it’s just not fun any more. I’m not there… yet. It’s been not fun a lot more lately.

I think that we can become too comfortable sometimes. Discomfort encourages change. Change prevents stagnation. Even though I have remained in Central Florida, I have changed schools [or school systems] every few years or so. I’m thinking it’s time for another change. I just don’t know how drastic the change should be. The opportunities to remain in teaching [in my subject area] are not as plentiful as they used to be. So, faced with the choices of changing subject areas or leaving teaching, I have to wonder what’s keeping me here? And if I leave, do I take the relatively easy path back “home” or strike out somewhere new [as difficult as I know that can be]? If I go somewhere new, where would I go and what would I do when I get there?

Usually when I get this restless, this uneasy, an opportunity presents itself. Or maybe I just take more notice of opportunities that have always been there. Right now though, there is nothing specific. And that makes me wonder if it’s not the what I should be considering as much as the where. But I need to narrow it down from “anywhere but here”. Where should I go to decide what I want to be while I don’t grow up?

Do you live where you want to work or do you work where you want to live?

You Creep

Posted by Tim at 18:54 on 2007/10/24
Oct 242007

There is so much I don’t understand. Here’s another one. You stop at a red light. [And by "you" I don't necessarily mean YOU, of course. I'm giving YOU the benefit of the doubt....] And then, while the light is still red, while there are still half a dozen cars between you and the intersection, you creep forward. It’s just a few inches. After all, you can’t really GO anywhere what with the red light and all the other cars in front of you.

And then a few seconds later you inch up a little more. [Could we still inch up if we switched to the metric system?] The entire duration of the red light you creep forward a little at a time. Nowhere to really go and apparently oblivious to what a waste of gas it is. [Bet you'd sit still if you had to push the car those few inches instead of just easing the pressure under your foot!] If there was room for you stop up there, why didn’t you stop up there in the first place? And what have you really gained if you’re six inches closer to the bumper in front of you? [I'd have gotten home 0.2 seconds earlier, but there was a car in front of me with a bike rack....]

And you should know, If I’m sitting anywhere near you in traffic while you [not YOU] creep forward, I’m thinking, “What an idiot. Can’t you sit still for two minutes?”

And, when the light changes, may I [emphatically] suggest: hang up the freakin’ phone and drive….

Play It Again?

Posted by Tim at 21:26 on 2007/10/23
Oct 232007

I’ve never been a sports nut. Maybe that’s why I don’t get it.

Some people can’t stand to watch a recorded game if they know the final score before they see the game.

I don’t watch a lot of sports to begin with. But either it’s a good game or it’s not. And since I’m not a sports nut, I rarely care much which side wins. Sure, it’s more entertaining when the sides are evenly matched — or if the underdog rises above expectations to make it an even match. Sure, well-officiated games are less frustrating.

But I’ll read good books more than once. I’ll watch good movies [and some not-so-good ones sometimes] more than once. I’ll listen to favorite songs over and over and over. Repetition in those forms of entertainment can enhance the experience. We can find nuances that we miss the first time through.

Sports professionals watch opponent’s games more than once to plan strategy. But the fans rarely watch more than once for any reason. More than that, they won’t watch once if they know the outcome first.

But wait — I kinda get that. There’s a tension — anticipation — in not knowing. Tension builds energy. I can see how that adds to their enjoyment. I get that. But those same people, the ones who won’t watch the game if they know the final score, those people will watch an instant replay of a part of that game repeatedly. And I hate to break it to them, but it’s gonna turn out the same way every time. They’ll even watch the highlights, which are typically those same replayed scenes, on the nightly news. And it’s gonna turn out the same way every time.

So is it some form of attention deficit? They won’t watch a game if they know the final score. But they’ll watch 30 seconds of the game several times. From different angles. In slow motion. In reverse. Computer enhanced. Hours or days later. Even though they know….

I don’t get it.

Celebrating European Aggression

Posted by Tim at 18:13 on 2007/10/08
Oct 082007

Happy Columbus Day!

I’m about half-way through reading The World Is Flat: A Brief History of the Twenty-first Century by Thomas L. Friedman. [Get the Book] I may write more when I finish it, but there was something that almost had me stop before I finished the first chapter: Mr. Friedman seems to suffer from a persistent myth in American education [and I find this really irritating in a book that seems to be fairly well researched in so many other areas and which hasn't been corrected in subsequent editions]. Let me be clear, Columbus did not prove that the world is round.

The idea of a spherical earth was deduced at least as early as the sixth century BC and was estimated remarkably accurately at least as early as the third century BC. Educated people and virtually all sailors and navigators at the time of Columbus’ voyages agreed that the earth is a sphere.

This misconception seems to stem from inaccuracies in a Columbus biography by Washington Irving. Damn him. To be honest, I haven’t looked in any current history books to see if this garbage is still being repeated [I hope not!]. (Columbus apparently did drastically underestimate how far he would have to sail westward to reach the east, but that’s another story….)

Oh, Yes I Did!

Posted by Tim at 22:19 on 2007/09/04
Sep 042007

Most people that know me or work with me (the latter not necessarily fully inclusive of the former — or should that be the other way around?) will tell you that I am very patient and usually polite. Usually. There are a couple notable exceptions.

Some days “The System” sucks the life right out of me. Some days frustration leads to utter despair… or anger. Like the song says, “Some days are diamonds. Some days are stones.” Last Friday was a stone.

I got an email from a coworker that came out of left field and had the potential to make my job a lot harder. And I started writing a reply, got two paragraphs into it and then typed, “You know what, I need to stop typing now because I’m really pissed off.” Now at that point I normally would realize that I was in no state to be putting things into print, delete the whole thing , and take a walk looking for a cat to kick or something to throw. But no. I sent it. Not just to the individual. To a group.

I’d like to say that it made me feel lots better. I’d like to say that the coworker expressed concern over my agitation. I’d like to say things that could get me into lots more trouble if they got out from here…. But instead I had a pounding headache by the time I left work. Instead any responses by the coworker were not directed to me. Instead I stayed pissed off most of the weekend. Instead I apologized today and made a compromise that I really didn’t want to make (nor think that I should have to make). Today is better than Friday, but it ain’t exactly sparkly. Still, there’s a smile on my face [painted] and a song in my heart [Some days are diamonds. Some days are stones. Sometimes the hard times won't leave me alone. Sometimes a cold wind blows a chill in my bones. Some days are diamonds. Some days are stones.]

You know what, I need to stop typing now….

[P.S. I know this sounds all doom and gloom, but I'm really pretty much over it now. Otherwise I never would have posted it here.]

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