Thursday, June 19, 2008

something to think about...

"If a doctor, lawyer, or dentist had 30 people in his/her office at one time, all of whom had different needs, and some of whom didn't want to be there and were causing trouble, and the doctor, lawyer or dentist, without assistance, had to treat them all with professional excellence for nine months, then he/she might have some conception of the classroom teacher's job."

-Donald Quinn

Monday, June 9, 2008

Summer School

I have been looking for a summer job to have some extra income for a few things. I had a meeting at school this past Thursday at my school for a disciplinary committee and was pulled aside by our principal. He wondered if I was still willing to teach summer school.
OF COURSE!
Perfect. Summer school runs from June 9 - July 10 and it's only until 2:30pm M-Th. I still have long weekends with my family, and I'm home early enough to spend quality time with my boys as well!

Tuesday, June 3, 2008

Thank goodness for summer!

The title just about says it all. This year has been particularly interesting. Teaching a split proved to be possible, yet difficult. I may have to do the same next year... we'll see when next years numbers come in. Here's for hoping!

Saturday, April 26, 2008

I've been too serious

My wife read my posts and told me I needed to lighten up. So I'm climbing off my soap box for a while. I really am a funny guy, at least I think that's why people keep laughing when I'm around. I have all kinds of hobbies like sports and camping that I never seem to have enough time for. My oldest boy is getting old enough now to take camping so I think we'll go this year. I love a good joke or story, and I can't understand why some comedians can't be funny and clean at the same time! Sorry I almost got back up on that soap box again. I worked a graveyard shift at Macey's in Orem, Utah while I was in college, and I saw a kid come in who had an intellectually funny shirt. It read, "There are 10 kinds of people in the world . . . those who understand binary and those who don't." (For those who don't get it, binary is a number system that only uses "1's" and "0's", hence 1=1, and 10=2 , 11=3, and 100=4 in our normal base ten system.)

Going along with my theme of having more fun with this blog, I have been reading the funniest book recently. "How I got this way" by Patrick F. McManus. FUNNY. And he's pretty clean about it too!
Gotta go for now, check out one of his books for a really good read.

Saturday, April 19, 2008

Where did the innocence go?

I am not that old, but I remember when Nintendo first came out. I remember the black computer screens with orange or green letters. I remember when gas was 88 cents a gallon, maybe 79 cents if I really tried to think. I remember Mister Rogers, the Polka-dot Door, Today's Special, Sesame Street,(before everybody knew about Mr. Snufflupagus), I remember when baggy pants that were hot pink were in style for boys. I remember big poofy hair worn by my older sisters. I remember when the first color screens for computers came out for the general public. I remember when the World Series was brought to a screeching halt because of the Oakland earthquake. I remember when the worst thing that a kid ever brought to school was a dog. I remember being a kid and wondering if that cute girl across the room liked me. I remember being devastated when she didn't. I remember when kids were actually innocent.

What happened to those days? Why do kids now know more about sex than I did until high school? Why do kids stay up till all hours of the night? Why is it that kids are more violent these days? Where are the parents of the children who do nothing after school but watch tv and play assorted video games? Where is the word NO?!!! Why can't parents say "no" to their children? Is a little self-denial such a bad thing for this generation of overstimulated children? Where is the public, outraged at what is on MTV and other obscene cable channels? (better yet, where is the outrage over the sex and violence viewable on regular tv? Why are the sweet innocent girls being dressed up like tramps? (and why is it called cute?) Where are the morals that society used to have?

Am I old fashioned? If so, I think I am still right! High moral guidelines, like classic cars, get more valuable as the years go by. Ignoring them, doesn't depreciate their value. Parents need to, well, BE THE PARENT!!!! Your child needs friends, but he/she doesn't need YOU to be his/her friend.

If your child recently threw a tantrum because you made him turn off his video game to do his homework . . . BE THE PARENT! Take the entire game system until his grades improve. If your child cannot appropriately use their cell phone . . . (when it became necessary to have one of those I'm not sure) . . . BE THE PARENT! Take the phone and make them stay with you (or even better, a babysitter) so they don't have to "check in!" If your child has inappropriate music playing . . . BE THE PARENT! Break the CD, take the ipod/mp3/(insert newest invention here) and lock down the computer and cable channels with a code that they won't be able to think of in ten minutes of guessing. If your child acts out at school . . . BE THE PARENT! GO to the school and ask a teacher or administrator what your child can do to make up for his or her rude behavior. If your child commits a crime no matter how small. . . BE THE PARENT! Get the proper authorities involved, be it school, mall security, police, etc. and see that the child makes restitution to a proper extent! BE RESPONSIBLE!!! MAKE THEM TAKE RESPONSIBILITY!!
If your child procrastinates an assignment in class . . . BE THE PARENT! Let them fail. If they fail at something small, it may teach them a valuable lesson so that when the stakes are higher they won't fail! Failure can be a very useful tool if used properly.

I decided to sluff-off an entire unit in a 7th grade health class. I wound up with a "C" in the class for that term. My dad found out that I had completely ignored assignments, and left them untouched. He sat me down and explained that I was going to finish every single assignment and turn them in to the teacher at her house after school was out for the summer. There was no argument, there wasn't even any "or else ______." I was simply expected to do it. I received no credit for my work, but I learned an extremely valuable lesson during that first week after school got out. I'll never forget it. BE THE PARENT, and your child will be a better parent for the next generation.

Tuesday, April 8, 2008

Hi there, I'm back. It occurs to me that I may not have as much to say about things as I thought. I guess my life has been a little busier than I expected. I am in my third year teaching, and I still enjoy it. You may laugh at that statement, but you wouldn't believe how many teachers there are who start out teaching, and then run out of steam really quickly and leave the profession for something less stressful. I learned a lot by watching the crusty old teachers that I had growing up. Mainly my dad. He made sure that he was engaged in learning himself so that he could be a better educator. He 110% for 33 1/2 years. Of course, he learned by watching his mother, my grandmother who taught in Utah and Nevada for 40 years. As you can imagine I take great pride in my teaching heritage. There are no more noble people than teachers, except maybe nurses. Of course there are bad eggs in every profession, I know of teachers who get burned out before their time, and I definitely know of nurses who don't actually care about their patients and show it through their actions. I could tell you stories, but I fear retaliation against my loved ones who have to frequent hospitals. In either case, there are wonderful men and women in both professions who deserv our gratitude. Next time you come in contact with one of the nurses or teachers in your life. Take a minute to express your gratitude. It only takes a minute, and you'll both feel great afterward!

Sunday, March 30, 2008

Why I started this blog . . .

My wife started a blog on the family and suggested that I start one too. My head is full of random bits of information so I thought it would be fun to share some of it. I will not pretend that I will be a dedicated blogger, I didn't even learn to use the internet until 2002 when an English 2010 research paper required me to find info that wasn't already crammed into my head. However, I do like to to type on the computer ever since I met my wife. In the early stages of our courtship, we would instant message all the time. I didn't have a cell phone so texting was out, (thank heaven) and she lived two counties away so the long distance charges would have killed me off on my meager college budget.

Anyway, I am an elementary school teacher. Being a male in this profession is a challenging situation to be in. I guess I can't complain too loudly since I chose to be in this situation, but think about it. Being a teacher puts a lot of stress on your life. I have noticed that every now and then you see a blurb in the news about a great teacher doing extraordinary things in his or her classroom. Usually the story is stuck somewhere in the middle of the newscast between a lost dog and the weather forecast. Then, when a teacher does something wrong--it is front page, breaking news. I groan every time I see something like this in the news. I am all about protecting our kids. I have two boys of my own, and frankly, if I found out a teacher didn't something to one of my kids, I don't think that man or woman would make it to a courtroom, at least not without a quick trip to the hospital. But when these stories break, it has made my job one notch harder. In college they warned us two guys in my teaching courses. We learned that we would be under the heaviest scrutiny just because we were male. Oddly, if the same kind of sentiment were extended to women, there would be an uprising of epic proportions. Personally I think our society could use some decent male role models. No, a professional athlete who does charity work doesn't count. I'm talking about real people, doing everyday jobs, teaching kids how to grow up and be a contributer to society instead of a burden.

Kids are the greatest untapped resource in the world today. It is beyond me how some parents can take no thought for their child's education. I have seen kids come to school that have never considered the possibilities that lie ahead of them in the future. I am one of the lucky few among teachers, I have had about a 98% attendance at parent teacher conferences during my first three years. Sadly, I know of many other teachers who haven't had better than half of parents show up.

My wife tells me that people don't like to read novels on blogs so I'm going to sign off for now. Let me know what you think. Remember, I'm a first time blogger. I'm still new at this.

I love what I do, and hope you do too