Friday, June 24, 2011

Unscheduled post number 2

Just my luck, a sick day is also a DepEd-cancelled class day.

Teacher Perk number 14: DepEd cancels classes when the weather is bad...

Of course, most of us use the day to either do errands or catch up.  Even if we wanted to sleep all day, when an idea for class hits you, you don't rest until you've written it out (or typed it up).  The class even plays itself out inside your head!


Rainy Day Things you can do by yourself (me-time for teacher) or with your kids.
  • I was up very early today, and at this time I had already sent out all the rainy day online, off-campus work. Stumbled upon a site called 750 Words, which encourages you to write 750 words a day. It's very similar to Julia Cameron's Morning Pages in The Artists' Way, and if I'm not mistaken, that's what inspired it.  It's daunting, at first.  It gets easier after a few minutes, once you get into mind-dump mode.  It actually counts words. This is also the first site I've seen that includes statistics: like state of mind while writing, frequently used words, it even reminds me that I type, on the average, 21 words per minute. 
  • Make something out of clay.  Make clay out of flour, water, salt.  A little oil makes it more malleable.  Flatten with a rolling pin (or wine bottle if that's what you have) before toasting in the oven.  Otherwise, it'll bubble up.  Paint; then coat with fixative or clear nail polish to make it nice and glossy.
  • De-clutter.  Then give away stuff: Toys to friends or the Loyola Heights Toy Library.  Upcycle old clothes or turn them into Chinese jack stones (since you can't find those anymore).
  • Clear out book shelf of books-you've-read-but-are-unattached-to.  Then swap with friends. 
  • Bake. I try to. I fail, but I try. 
  • Upcycle magazines.  I have these magazines that have the kind of art I like, and the paper (thickness, texture, matte-ness) is great.  After I read the useful and informative articles, I take a metal ruler and line it up against the spine, and use a cutter (regular box cutter with an adjustable blade to cut the spine out.  Just keep the cutter blade lat against the ruler, and cut in light long strokes, over and over, until the blade runs smoothly against the ruler and the friction is gone.
    • I fold the magazine into envelopes, or make scratch paper sketch pads with the some of the pages.  Luckily, this magazine uses a light-colored font.  I draw right on the page even when there is type on them.
    • You can make your gift bags out of them, too.
  • Read and Roll! 
    • Read a story, then roll one with your kids. You start, then they add.  At school our rolling story circle only has 1 rule: Nobody dies before 2 rounds are completed.
    • If you have a Filipino-language challenged learner, the rolling story (in Filipino, or any other language they're learning) makes for a good review tool.  It encourages the child to think in the particular language.  You can translate as you go along, too.  When we did this in the first week of school, the kids asked to do a second story!

Wednesday, June 22, 2011

New Discovery

This unscheduled post is just to inform you of a new discovery!
Very helpful for the math teacher who's background is art education!



My inner geek is happy about this discovery.
Maybe yours will be, too.

Monday, June 20, 2011

Flashback!

 
I found remnants of my first and only adventure teaching art at a traditional school, where I had started the high school art program.  I finished my contractual obligations, then I left; and never looked back. 

These were backdrops for a party, or a soiree, or something. Concept and some execution by the Art Club. The photos are by Mary Anne, who was a high school junior at the time.  Taken in the second semester, SY 2004 - 2005.


I hated that school.  Wearing the uniform and withstanding a department head that knew little about the subjects in his department was only worth it because I got to stand in front of eager, interested faces (some of them were, anyway), and talk about drawing, and colors, and the Renaissance.

Teacher Lei

Catching up on my reading.  Very happy to see that Teacher Lei updated Pinoy Weekend Warrior.  Here is an excerpt, where he trains for a marathon, and helps a young person out by accepting [the young person's] offer to help.


As some of you already know, my full-time job is not the typical M-F, 9-5 workweek, which wreaks havoc on a training program that is best followed to the letter. Right now, I get a run in whenever I can, and fortunately, I have found a little help from a friend.

I told the young person I am working with about my plan to run my first marathon in September, and since he found out, he has taken on the role of being my personal coach. It's incredible. If I am on shift, at half past eight in the morning, he would tell me to lace up and go for a run while he rides his bike beside me. We do this twice a day, once in the morning, and again in the evening. In terms of training, this is great for me; but with regard to personal development, this is a step towards the right direction for him. The set-up we have could not have worked better.

For the fund raising portion of the run, I have found inspiration with some of the kids I used to work with at Kids Ahoy. Together, they have all raised money to contribute to the organization I'm running for, by performing chores around the house, or doing some fund raising of their own. I am grateful and truly inspired by the support they have shown.
 

Off Campus Reading List

Part of the Blended Learning curriculum, are off - campus supplement work.  Even the teachers do this. Since today is a non-working holiday, I'm catching up on a lot of reading, via Google reader, where I store a few blog subscriptions.

Here are my most-read and must-read.
  • Imaginative Bloom - great visuals, great stories about people who hand-make; the independent craft makers and sellers.  It makes me want to make stuff.
  • Cut out and Keep - Again, handmade heaven! And this site teaches you how.
  • Peppercliff - like minded teacher keeps blog.  Shameless, shameless plug.
  • Teacher Tales - Like minded pre-school teacher. Another Shameless plug.
  • Moonlight Chronicles - From the author of Radical Simplicity.  The articles are a bit old, but I never tire of reading them and looking at his drawings.
  • RePlayground - Easy and cheap how-tos
  • Design Sponge - when my interior-design-consultant past comes back to remind me of good design.
  • The Art of Nonconformity - You already know most of what is written here, but often forget it as you go through the frustrations of have to as opposed to want to; when you want to strangle that salesperson. Chris Guillebeau's posts are short and underwritten, yet packs that punch that you want.  You'll keep re-reading until your day is all better. 
  • Ben Does Life - He's funny, he's inspiring. Best when read in the morning, right before or right after you look at Marc Johns artwork.
  • Marc Johns - see Ben Does Life
  • Danny Gregory and Nina Johansson - The sites that got me drawing again.  You'll want to start after you see them.
  • The Hero Handbook - the name speaks for itself, yeah?
  • Pinoy Weekend Warrior - Possibly the coolest, nicest, kindest person I have ever met.  The kind of person who embodies heroic attributes; a hero if I ever saw one. A good writer, to boot.  The blog isn't regularly updated, but when he does update, the posts are nice and lengthy.

Hopefully there are some good reads there for you as well. The weather is just right for a reading day, isn't it?