Thursday, February 28, 2008

Miscellany

A few years ago I picked up a book entitled Scott's Original Miscellany. It had a motley of useless trivia. I was fascinated by the content that ranged from Victorian Mourning to the Time's Person of the Year from 1927 (the recognition's inception) until 2002 (the year Schott's book was published).

Martha Stewart had Ben Shott on her show today. I was amazed at how young he was (according to him, he gets this frequently). He is only in his early thirties. He was peddling his new book being sold in the states. It was an almanac of trivia for 2008. He plans to release a new one each year. He included interesting words for 2008 such as "peerant". A peerant is a parent who tries to be a friend to their child.

Another term describing parents that teachers have heard in recent years is "helicopter parent". This term refers to parents who hover (I think "smother" is a more appropriate term) over their children. They often refuse to let their children take responsibility over their actions.

If your looking for an unusual read (keep in mind there is no plot but lots of fascinating facts for bibliophiles or people who love to further their knowledge), here is a definite gem.

Tuesday, January 01, 2008

Not a Labor of Love

The majority of teachers, when asked, will profess their love for their job citing many reasons: a love of learning, a sense of helping mold the next generation...What about those jobs that people don't love-those jobs that someone has to do. They may be stinky, dirty, and may even pay small wages.

Mike Rowe has experienced some of those jobs in his show Dirty Jobs. Needless to say, those jobs are some of the most unglamerous jobs in our society-many of which I never knew existed. The History International Channel has a series called History's Worst Jobs.

Check out various jobs from different eras in history.

Think you already know about history's most horrible jobs? Take the quiz.

If you have students who are considering various careers, have them check out "One Week Job." A 26 year old Vancouver man, Sean Aiken, decided to experiment with a new job on a weekly basis. Imagine 52 jobs in one year. He also has a blog and videos chronicling his experiences that you can access via the website.

Thursday, December 20, 2007

A Woman's World?

With the election race heating up a lot of attention is focusing on gender and politics. Will Hillary be our first woman president? We'll have to wait and see but it is predicted to be a close primary election.

Many people don't know that Nancy Pelosi is the highest ranking female in our national government today. She is the Speaker of the House and in line to become the head of the U.S. government should anything happen to the President. The presidential succession order is as follows: Vice President, Speaker of the House, President pro Tempore of the Senate, Secretary of State, Secretary of the Treasury,...


The highest ranking female had at one time been Madeline Albright who had served as Clinton's Secretary of State. She was appointed in 1997. During a question and answer period during a speech she gave in 2004, someone had asked "Was your tenure of secretary of state an isolated one-time-only occurrence, or can we expect another woman or women to represent us internationally as secretary of state sometime in, say, the next 20 years?" One-time ocurence it was not. On January 26, 2005, Condolezza Rice was appointed Secretary of State.

Friday, December 14, 2007

Blogs, Blogs Everywhere

I've recently started looking at other blogs just to see what is out there. I had not realized how many people had blogs. One blog that has been featured on the USA Today's website and also the NJEA's website is the World History Blog. Miland Brown comments on various aspects of world history. He had wrote a post on historical ignorance which I thought was interesting. I even commented on it because that was a topic I addressed in my one graduate class (where we had to begin our master's thesis). He has recently added a poll on the site. This week's poll is on who was the most evil Roman emperor. Check it out.

Thursday, December 13, 2007

Mysteries

I love mysteries. There is a website listing "History's Most Overlooked Mysteries". Some I have never heard of such as Rongorongo and the bog bodies. Alas, the list does not contain very detailed information. If your interested in additional reading you'll have to do your own research.

Wednesday, December 05, 2007

Photos


This photo is of the Trevi Fountain in Rome, Italy. My sister-in-law and I traveled from Rome, Italy to London, England last summer. Other photos from my trip to Europe can be viewed on Flickr.

Wednesday, November 07, 2007

Need Extra Money?

Attention Teachers: Most teachers spend hours upon hours creating innovative lesson plans to capture their students interest. Have you ever thought about making money sharing those lessons with other teachers? Now you can with the following website https://www.teacherspayteachers.com/index.php. There is a fee ($29.95) to post and sell your lesson plans on this site. You determine how much to ask for a lesson or unit and you also receive 85% of the profits. If your looking for ideas for lesson plans, it would also pay to check out this site. Some authors even allow you to view samples of the lessons. If you find something you like, it may cost you a few cents or a few dollars to download the lesson. From the few I have viewed, the costs ranged from free to $10.00. The majority of lessons are around $2.00.

Friday, May 04, 2007

14 Things Student Teachers Shouldn't Do or Say

When I was a student teacher, I obsessed over making a good impression on the faculty where I did my placement and doing the best job I could. Unfortunately, there are some who view student teaching differently. I have heard stories from other teachers about their personal student teaching experiences when they were in college and also what it was like to have someone else come into their room to complete their student teaching placement. For any future teachers reading this, take notes. Here are some things a student teacher should not do or say.

1. Telling your cooperating teacher the excuse for your inapporpriate behavior is because your coop doesn't have a sense of humor.
2. Sitting on top of a student desk with your feet propped up on a student's seat.
3. Sitting on top of the teacher's desk with your feet on his/her chair.
4. When your coop asks what you would have changed about your lessons for the day after discussing what hadn't gone well, you shouldn't say "I wouldn't work Fridays. At my last job it was great because I could make my own hours and I didn't usually work on Fridays."
5. When your coop tells you to not sit on top of desks and to act professionally and be on time, don't respond, "I'll try but I can't promise. Sitting on desks is a mannerism I have and like other habits, it will be hard to break."
6. If your coop asks that your lesson plans are to be turned in by the start of the prep pd. when you meet, don't email them to him/her at 10:30 pm the night after they are due.
7. Don't walk into the classroom 10 minutes past when you should have arrived and when your coop asks why you were late, don't respond, "I was late?"
8. When your coop is out sick and calls for your lesson plans don't say, "I got it. I'll roll with it. Don't worry the roof won't fall in without you."
9. When your coop tells you three times to sign in in the office in the morning for security purposes, this isn't optional.
10. Having students do a presentation and a one page paper, and when your coop asks if you read the papers, "Nah. I didn't bother. They were only worth a small percentage of the total presentation."
11. After your coop has told you twice to dress professionally, don't respond, "I don't think I should be held to higher standards than the rest of the faculty."
12. Hand your coop a worksheet with questions on it and when she asks how this is different from other worksheets you've given, say "Oh, that, that's a graphic organizer."
13. When grades are due, don't hand your coop a blank gradebook with no grades filled in after she's reminded you seven times and respond, "Oh, I didn't get to it."
14. Asking your cooperating teacher or a sub to make copies for you because you "forgot".

Saturday, September 30, 2006

HELP!!!

I have read about how teachers are using blogs and how they can be used in the classroom. I'm not the most technologically proficient (God, I am beginning to hate that word) individual so I thought I would try this out on my fellow peers and see what uses I can derive from my experiences. If you have something to add let me know through comments, etc...

Tips for New Teachers

*Borrow a copy of the previous year's yearbook and make a copy of the teacher and staff pages before school starts. This will alleviate some of the stress from remembering everyone's name and committing the faux pas of calling someone the wrong name. (Thanks Sue F.)

*Keep plants in your classroom. You can buy little hooks to attach to the ceiling tiles. Kids love to take care of them.

Humor

How ironic that this site has a font type called "trebuchet". Anyone want to sling words around? How far do you think they fly? Sorry. This is what happens when you've been teaching a unit on the Middle Ages.

I usually try to get to work by about 7:00 am-7:15 am. You'd be amazed how much there is too do. One morning on my desk was a scrawled note stating, "someone lost their marbles" and an arrow pointing to a dish on my desk. In a little blue flowered clay dish that I had picked up in Mexico, amidst my paperclips, were two marbles. I had a good laugh. As of yet, those marbles are unclaimed.

Friday, April 07, 2006

Literature for the World History Classroom

Middle Ages
Henry IV -Shakespeare
Canterbury Tales-Geoffrey Chaucer
Adventures of Don Quiote-Miguel Cervantes
Eleanor of Aquitaine and the Four Kings-Amy Kelly
Three Musketeers-Alexandr Dumais
A Conneticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court-Mark Twain
Ivanhoe-Sir Walter Scott

Renaissance
The Inferno-Dante (example of vernacular literature)
Romeo and Juliet-Shakespeare (example of arranged marriages, etc.)
The Prince-Machiavelli*
The Book of the Courtier-Baldassare Castiglione

Reformation
Here I Stand:Life of Martin Luther-Roland Bainton

French Revolution
A Tale of Two Cities-Charles Dickens
Les Miserables-Victor Hugo
Queen of France-Andre Castelot

Enlightenment
Candide-Voltaire

Scientific Revolution
Madame Curie-Eve Curie
Men in Mathematics-Eric Bell (emphasis on mathematicians who lived from the 1600s-1800s)

Industrial Revolution
Hard Times-Charles Dickens
Queen Victoria-Lytton Strachey

Russian Revolution
Animal Farm-George Orwell
Dr. Zhivago-Boris Pasternak

WWI
A Farewell to Arms-Ernest Hemingway
All Quiet in the Western Front

Sunday, October 09, 2005

Creative History Classroom

  • Use artifacts if possible-kids love to handle objects
  • Have a book gallery-use plate stands to showcase books (fiction and non-fiction) on the topic you are studying with your students
  • Use milk of magnesium tablets to neutralize the acid in newspapers (this will keep them from turning yellow)
  • Use the WWW-Quia is great for online quizzes
  • Have your students create bulletin boards (grade with rubrics)
  • Incorporate literature, if possible