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Go to first message Go back 20 messages Messages 23048 - 23067 out of 29260 Go forward 20 messages Go to most recent message
23048. jexster - 12/1/2007 4:24:28 AM

We dated when he was at Columbia

23049. Magoseph - 12/1/2007 2:49:28 PM

How was he, Jex?

Arky, just kidding...

23050. Magoseph - 12/1/2007 2:50:48 PM

...but I sorely miss thoughtful!

Wonks, a big snowstorm is coming your way.

23051. jexster - 12/1/2007 6:04:52 PM

I don't kiss and tell.

Obviously memorable 30 years later

23052. David Ehrenstein - 12/1/2007 7:05:22 PM

Yeah I know Charlie Kaiser. FABULOUS guy. Always has a stunning boyfriend on his arm.

So TELL!

You're amopng friends.

23053. jexster - 12/1/2007 7:14:54 PM

He was a HOTTIE back in the day....about 1975 we went out a couple times in DC..I went up to NyC...ain't gonna tell any more than that.

Kinda outta my league sociallly

23054. jexster - 12/1/2007 7:16:20 PM

Great sense of humor as I recall. Always made me laugh. I got to thinking about him a few months ago when he had an OpEd in the LAT on of all things the Iraq War.

23055. wonkers2 - 12/1/2007 8:48:51 PM

Mago, there you go again! Sending us bad weather.
Whatever happened to thoughtful? I miss her, too. Did the Wiz run her off?

23056. arkymalarky - 12/1/2007 9:52:33 PM

Well, Judith, they've closed the middle bridge in the bottoms--the big metal and wood one. I don't know if they're going to replace it or not, but for now we can't get there from here. I hope they don't tear down the bridge.

23057. judithathome - 12/1/2007 9:59:54 PM

Oh damn....why did they do that? All in the name of progress, I suppose?

That was about the coolest bridge I've ever been on...damn, damn, damn it.

23058. arkymalarky - 12/1/2007 10:21:47 PM

We looked underneath and it was rusted. I know they won't pay to restore it, so either they'll leave it closed, which would be fine by me, or they'll tear it down and replace it, which will take a while. If they do that, I told Bob I want it. We could put over the creek by the trail.

23059. Ms. No - 12/2/2007 1:42:08 AM

Mags,

School is going well. I'm in the crunch here with papers and projects before finals. I'm actually getting kind of sad that I won't be in school next semester. The last week or so I've been seriously thinking about a Masters degree. I won't do that until after I get my credential, but it wasn't anything I'd really much thought about before in concrete terms.

At this very moment I'm getting ready to go write my paper for my African American history class. The issue is one I've worked with before, but the challenge for this paper is that it is so short but has a ton of sources, all of which have to be quoted. I'm sitting here wondering where in the heck my actual paper is supposed to show up between all the quotations. ;->

23060. arkymalarky - 12/2/2007 2:16:36 AM

My advice is go for it now, No. Mose is glad she's doing it, even with her teaching load, and I waited too long and had to do it too fast, which I'm sure is much of the reason I'm dealing with heart problems now.

And my next advice would be that as soon as you know teaching is for you, go for your National Board Certification. I would like to have that accomplishment before I retire (not to mention the money), but it's looking like that's not likely.

You all know I try not to say much about myself professionally, but I think I've been a good teacher. Unfortunately that's measured as much by the credentials in the eyes of many people--more, really--than the actual work you do in the classroom. And the more creds you can get early, the more money, the less stress later, the more options for you during your career, and the better your retirement or career change options down the line.

By the time I started my MSE I had to finish it in a year and a half, and not getting it would have meant retirement would be very difficult and my options if my school consolidates, which is very likely to happen after next year, were significantly limited. Now I could fully retire, work part time, or continue as I am right now if the stress is not too bad. The stress can't come back. That's the one factor that's got to be a part of whatever I do after next year. And teaching is ZERO stress for me. It's all the other crap, and/or changing schools. I'm just not willing to do it any more, even the fun crap, which there's a lot of in teaching.

If my school stays open I may never retire. I'll go to part time when and if I get ready, and keep on trucking until they wheel me out the door.

23061. arkymalarky - 12/2/2007 2:17:47 AM

What's your paper, btw. I did at least two on A-A education issues.

23062. Ms. No - 12/2/2007 2:27:41 AM

What's National Board Certification? I swear, I've been so haphazard about all of this stuff. Actually, that's not true. What I did was get the runaround from too many people who didn't really know all the ins and outs of everything and just decide that I had to figure things out on my own. The problem seems to be that there isn't any ONE person or office that knows everything or even the majority of things so that you can go there and get answers.


My paper is on W.E.B. DuBois' concept of two-ness as presented in his work The Souls of Black Folks, and how it is represented within the required 10 sources as it relates to The Great Migration, WWI and the Harlem Rennaisance.

In five to six pages, Chicago style.

Seriously, the paper must be five pages long but cannot exceed six pages or she's docking the grade. Talk about learning to be concise and very, very focused! The problem isn't writing --- there's enough material there for a freakin' dissertation --- the problem will be getting what I need to say said in the allotted space.

I'm looking for very, very short quotations.

23063. arkymalarky - 12/2/2007 2:37:53 AM

It's a national accreditation process.

What I did was get the runaround from too many people who didn't really know all the ins and outs of everything and just decide that I had to figure things out on my own. The problem seems to be that there isn't any ONE person or office that knows everything or even the majority of things so that you can go there and get answers.

This is almost universal with people who decide to go into education. Most people do what you've done, largely because state departments of education and education departments in most universities are infamous for being unable to find their butts with both hands.

GREAT topic. I'd love to read it after you're done if you have time to email it. I'll send you one of mine on Invisible Man, though I don't know if there are any resources or direct source quotes used in them that might help you. Might be worth a skim through the references and quotes, though. My paper had to be very long, but I still had real problems editing it down to the maximum length of 20 pages. And it's not error-free, but the main thing is whether there's any short-quote stuff or place to find them that might help you out.

23064. Ms. No - 12/2/2007 2:44:48 AM

I'm using the inro to Invisible Man as one of my sources.

We're required to use 3 poems, 3 short stories, and 3 essays from an anthology we use in class as well as referring to the relevant chapters in our official class text.

Hold on, I'll give you a list in a sec. I've got water boiling for noodles.

23065. Ms. No - 12/2/2007 2:51:10 AM

Poems:

We Wear the Mask - Paul Lawrence Dunbar
The Daily Grind - Fenton Johnson
America - Claude McKay
Theme for English B - Langston Hughes

Short Stories:

Temptation (from Tales of Simple) - Langston Hughes
Invisible Man (Inrtoduction) - Ralph Ellison
McDougal - Frank London Brown

Essays:

The Souls of Black Folk - W.E.B. DuBois
The Ethics of Living Jim Crow - Richard Wright
No Day of Triumph - J. Saunders Redding


I was REALLY irritated that there wasn't any Zora Neal Hurston in the anthology, but it was published in 1968 so she may have been politically out of favor at that time.

23066. jexster - 12/2/2007 3:33:16 AM

I took African American Lit at Tulane back in the day...for an easy English credit...hehehehe

That's partially how come I be so enlightened

23067. Ms. No - 12/2/2007 3:40:47 AM

This is actually a history class, but there's a lot of literature involved which makes it especially engaging. Depressing as hell, sometimes, but most of this material isn't new to me. I don't know if I got this stuff through osmosis, or what. I think having family roots in South Carolina makes one a bit like a West German.

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