The Last Test

Mr Bean sets an exam for which he doesnt know how to answer a single question.

In order to qualify for state certification in Maryland, prospective teachers must pass a series of tests called the PRAXIS exams.  They are loads of fun, as you might imagine.  The first one, a general-knowledge test, was embarassingly easy and I regretted every minute of studying; afterward, I was miffed to learn that I actually could have submitted my SAT scores instead.  The second, a content-area knowledge test, was more challenging but still easier than I’d thought it would be, and again I studied much too long and hard: it was a 2-hour exam and I finished in about 45 minutes.  (This wouldn’t have been so bad except that it was about fifty degrees in the exam room; I was dressed appropriately for the July weather.  The proctor said that if I left before the test was over, my score would be canceled, so I tucked all four limbs into my T-shirt and huddled in the corner for another hour, taking breaks to go outside and warm up every so often.)

This last exam was based on pedagogy.  From what I could gather online, in one hour I had to answer two multi-part questions: the first about a work of literature and how I would go about teaching it, and the other in response to a piece of student writing.  Although I thought I could probably pass without studying, I had an added incentive in that the system itself was changing; if I failed this one, I would have to conform to Maryland’s new state requirements, which would mean a different test that combined pedagogy with content knowledge.  So I dutifully reviewed, compiling a list of seven works I thought were likely to be on the list and main features of each one.

Because I had registered late, all the testing centers in Maryland were booked solid, so I registered for Howard University in DC, consoling myself with the fact that a good friend lives nearby and we’ll have lunch afterwards.  The rest of the story is most effective with a timeline format:

9:15 Leave home half an hour early just in case of traffic.

10:15 Arrive half an hour early.

10:16 Slight panic about the lack of change for parking meters.  Resolve this by paying remotely with my cell phone (score one for technology!) and then leave it in the car, heeding the warning on my ticket.

10:20 Enter the testing center.  No discernible order, proctor or instructions anywhere, just a crowd of college kids scarfing down bagels and texting.  Wonder whether they are stupid or smart for ignoring the warning.

10:45 Test time comes and goes.  Nothing.

10:55 Woman in sweats and a T-shirt enters the lobby and assigns groups of students to different testing rooms.

11:00 My group arrives at its room.  The proctor is at the door, checking IDs and assigning seats.

11:05 Chatting in line with another student, I hear that the format of the test is completely different as of December (she failed the last one and is hoping for better luck on the new test.)  Different how?  All multiple choice, with a lot of questions about psychology, she says.

11:06 Blind panic.  Well, it’s too late to do anything now.

11:10 I am seated.  The proctor reads instructions in a heavily island-accented voice that would be charming if my own pulse would quiet down.  I can’t understand her pronunciation of “pedagogy,” which she says “ped-DA-go-JI.”

11:15 Tests are distributed. I ask casually when we’ll begin.  “Around 11:30.”  I really, really regret my obedience to the cell phone rule, since no one else’s has been confiscated and I’d like to let my friend know I’ll be almost an hour late.  Also, I’m wondering if I have any chance of passing this new test.

11:30 We begin filling out all the paperwork associated with the test.  Student ID number, Social Security number, zip code, test center code, university code, linkage number, serial number and probably more I’ve blocked from my memory.

11:45 Everyone finally finishes the paperwork and the test begins at exactly the time I thought we would be finishing up.

11:46 I look at the first question and know my hapless new friend was wrong.  The format is unchanged, and what’s more, two of the seven works I prepared are on the list.  I choose Hamlet and prepare to wow the graders with my extensive mental catalogue of quotes (I watched the Kenneth Branagh version on a continuous loop for most of 11th grade.)

12:45 The exam finishes and we have to endure yet another set of instructions, this one about when we will receive our scores and how to cancel them if we want to.  I wonder idly if this couldn’t be accomplished some more efficient manner, perhaps by an instantaneous system of electronic communication in advance … 

12:55 I arrive back at my car, happy that I paid for the maximum number of hours, and call my friend.  Lunch with her and her adorable daughter, at this homey-chic pub, is perfect.

As the conclusion to my test-taking career, I’d like to offer this brief meditation, with which I now sympathize just a little more.  I think they concentrated on pedagogy LAHHHST year.

Savings for Students (and Teachers)

When Rob goes away, I have to keep myself busy.  For the last week-plus I’ve been sanding, scraping, varnishing and painting the upstairs and planting the garden: projects that are eleven and three months later (respectively) than I meant to begin them, but at least they’re done now.  And, clearly, at the expense of my blog!

I promise to post something more meaningful soon, but I thought these bargains deserved their own private shout-outs:

  1. Amazon Prime: free two-day shipping and $4-per-item overnight shipping for a year, plus special sales and promotions.  $80 per year.  Or, if you have a .edu e-mail account, completely free.  No joke!  As of now, they’re saying it’s at least a one-year membership; they “might choose” to extend it. Either way, it’s quite a deal, and they have an alternate method for non-edu e-mail addresses.
  2. Scholastic Warehouse Sale: All educational materials are on sale, most around half of their normal price, through this weekend.  Search for a location (the closest to me is in Odenton) and click the “Sign Up” button to register and receive a coupon for an additional 10-25% off.

You Really Like Us!

1) The Newseum* does.  Free admission in April to any teacher with a valid ID.

2) The Container Store does: 15% off in 2011.

3) Jo-Ann Fabrics & Crafts does: 15% off through August 31.

4) Ann Taylor LOFT does: 15% off indefinitely.

5) Barnes & Noble does, sort of.  20% discount on "most" books, toys and games.

*In case you didn't know, the Newseum is pretty much my favorite museum.  Except for maybe the liger museum. Or the Decoy Museum, though it's a little disappointing once you realize it's, well, a decoy . . .

Still Waiting?

In case my glowing review of Waiting for Superman wasn't enough to drive you off the couch and into the theater, here's a good excuse to go: teachers can see the movie at a discounted price this week.

Okay, so it's only a three-dollar discount, and it's only for three days.  But you really should see it anyway.  And I might even go with you!  :)

Falafel Found, Finally

Falafel is one of those foods you take for granted until you can't find it anywhere.  In New York, there were a dozen little shops within walking distance of my apartment where, for about five bucks, you could get a pita crammed full of veggies, tahini sauce and delicious warm nuggets of fava beans and parsley.  In Baltimore, falafel is a specialty item, mainly found at upscale mezze restaurants.  An Arab lady briefly opened a gelato shop up the street from our church, and when we found out she made falafel on the side, we tried hard to keep her in business.  Unfortunately, she closed after less than a year (probably because the Middle Eastern side of the menu was insider's information.)

But today, on a Groupon adventure, Rob and I found falafel.  Tahina's is so well-designed and efficient, it looks for all the world like a chain restaurant; Rob dubbed it "the Middle Eastern Subway."  I would say it's closer to Chipotle, as the ingredients are all fresh and beautiful. My research, however, turned up an even better scenario: it's a brand-new venture by a marketing firm who wanted to try out some of their tactics on their own business.  They're calling it the "first of 300."  Boy, do I wish I had enough venture capital to be number 2!

Like Chipotle, you choose a centerpiece (beef, chicken, or falafel -- and who in their right mind wouldn't choose falafel?!) and a presentation (pita or salad.)  Then the fun begins.

There are a staggering number of vegetables (crispy fried eggplant rounds, red cabbage, sprouts) and salads (carrot and cilantro, cucumber and tomato, spiced chickpea) and sauces (baba ganoush, hummus, and yes, tahini.)  You can also get slightly inauthentic toppings like pickles, cheese and honey mustard. As many as you want (my salad teetered precariously as I carried it to the table) for about $6 per entree.

The restaurant also sells fries; eggplant and sweet potato options are a nod to the Mediterranean, and a "sauce bar" is meant to evoke Belgium's frites shops, I think.  After our falafels, we didn't want anything else.  But we will be back.  And you should join us!

A New Love

I love to learn.  This might be why I occasionally love to teach, too.  I also love a good deal.  This might be proof that I'm Armenian.

Thus, I purchased a Groupon awhile back for a month of yoga classes at Charm City Yoga (turn volume down if exploring that link!) which has four locations around Baltimore; I got to six classes in a month, most with my friend Jamie, and I'm sad to know it will end tonight.

As I drove home from class, I reflected on some of the things I love about yoga, none of which I could have predicted until I tried it.  From least to most important:

1. It's a great workout. Anyone who thinks it's simply stretching is woefully misinformed.  I left my first Vinyasa class drenched in sweat and was sore for several days afterward.

2. It leaves you feeling peaceful. As much as I loved running and hated to give it up, I never liked the way I felt afterwards: tense.  Yes, I got a nice feeling of exhaustion and a rush from the endorphins, but my neck and shoulders were always tight, and my feet hurt, even before I developed plantar fasciitis.  When you leave a yoga class, you feel tired, but very peaceful; more flexible, more open.

3. It's centering. I know I have shared this Tolstoy story before, but in case you haven't read it, please do; it explains so much of what I hate about modern life.  I feel we are always looking back, with nostalgia and relief, or forward, with anticipation and dread.  We try to accomplish so much at once that we rarely take the time to ground ourselves in the beauty of the present moment.  Yoga forces you to do this: you concentrate on your breath, your body, the room you're in, the presence of others, the voice of your instructor -- all the visceral and tangible signs of the world around you.  You have to pay attention and be present.

4. It's deeply spiritual. I have always thought Orthodoxy had much in common with other Eastern religions, and I have found yoga to be very much in line with its tenets.  At the beginning of each session you set an intention, a prayer -- something you lift up and ask for throughout the practice, either physical or spiritual.  As I breathe, I say the Jesus Prayer. I often find myself praying for others in the class, for the instructor, and for myself: as my body grows stronger, I pray that my faith will, too.

So.  Yoga.  Who knew?  This is why learning is such an amazing thing.

Ten Pens

Remember that lame thing everyone was doing on Facebook awhile back?  It was called "Twenty Things" or "Forty Things" or "A Whole Bunch of Unrelated Self-Centered Thoughts" or something like that.  Somehow it became undeservingly and wildly popular in a short amount of time.  (Which, normally, never happens on the Internet.)

Well.  I hereby present Ten Pens.  It's way more fun, and just as free.

Take ten pens from around your house.  They must be free promotional pens.  If you're short a few, I'll lend you some: I rounded up 58 just by looking in the study.  They're all going to school, in case anyone there wants to play (and because, seriously, they seem to multiply exponentially every 13 days or so.  I'm worried about the load-bearing capacity of my desk.)

Now, try to imagine how they might have entered your house.  Word limits are lame, but keep it short or your audience might fall asleep.  (All three of them.) Here are mine:

  1. Mini Cooper: Let's Motor. This is one of those cool moving pens; when you tilt it, the little red car sliiiiiiides back and forth from the Hollywood sign to the Statue of Liberty.  And it was completely free!  All we had to do was buy a car.

  2. Revlimid capsules. Please see accompanying full prescribing information, including Boxed WARNINGS. I guess these prescription drug giveways must work, or no one would continue doing them.  I just have one question: "Boxed warnings"?  They don't sound too bad.  Better than the free-roaming warnings that catch you by surprise, anyway.

  3. My school. Awwww. Actually, to be fair about 12 of the 58 were from my school.

  4. My school's archrival school. What th--?!  I did tutor a couple of students from there, but I think I would have noticed this pen before now.  At the very least, I would think my school's pens would be ostracizing it, but noooo, they're playing nice and being friends.

  5. Best Wishes in the year 2003, Enslin & Son, Hattiesburg, Mississippi. My father's family's butcher shop.  We last visited there for my grandmother's funeral.  It was a sad time, but wonderful to see them all, and I loved the tour of the slaughterhouse and my dad's accompanying anecdotes from the summer he worked there as a teenager.  We also got married in 2003, so I think their best wishes might have helped a little.

  6. Mark & Anna's Wedding: The Highlight of 2009. Most original wedding favor ever, from a very original couple!

  7. Sauza Tequila. Once again, what th--?!  We don't own a bottle, and I've never even heard of that brand.  Tequila is not my scene.

  8. Microsoft. Steve, this means nothing to us!  We swear!  We don't know how it got here or where it came from!  We're burning it right this very instant and burying the ashes in the back yard under the Apple tree!  Isn't that poetic justice?  Steve?  STEVE!  DON'T YOU WALK AWAY!

  9. Kone Elevators & Escalators. Courtesy of my husband, who goes to trade shows and can't turn down a freebie to save his life.  Really, if he had to choose between certain death and a duffel bag of stuffed animals with building product manufacturers' logos imprinted on their bums, I might have to raise Maia by myself.

  10. My high school alma mater. This isn't technically a pen, it's a letter opener -- but it counts solely because of the number of times I've reached for it intending to pick up a pen.  A clever ruse, but I'm wise to it now.  Away, fiend!  Into the bag with the others!


Okay.  Your turn.  Comment here with a link to your Ten Pens post!  If it doesn't go viral within a week, I'll be personally offended.

A Great Idea

In my experience, these don't come around often.  But last week, the Newseum (where I recently took a group of students on a fantastic field trip) e-mailed me to say that there were discounted tickets available at a site called Groupon.  It's pretty simple:  basically, when a lot of people promise to buy something, businesses can afford a drastic discount and still make a profit (and, hopefully, lots of repeat customers.)  Simple, but effective.  Hence, a Great Idea.

Every day the site features another local business with a deal in the neighborhood of half-price.  Many times it's a $50-for-$25 deal, or similar, at a local restaurant.  Or a discounted oil change or massage. And sometimes it's cheaper tickets to a very expensive museum.  Over 6000 people bought tickets Friday (sadly, I was not one of them; I meant to, but missed the 24-hour boat.)  They have dozens of cities on their site, so have a look at yours, your families,' and any you might be visiting in the next few months.

Enjoy!

It's Long. And Gross.

But you owe it to yourself to read this article about E. Coli food poisoning and its close relationship with mass-processed meat.  It says a lot of what Eric Schlosser said in Fast Food Nation.  Both are terrifying, horrendous and true.

Yes, it's more expensive to buy meat from people who care about things like natural and humane processes.  It's a lot more expensive.  Ground beef from our Amish farmer is $4.50 a pound, and chicken breasts are $8.50 a pound.  So we eat less of them.  We eat more eggs and more produce, much of it local.  Not such a bad deal.

Outsmarting Amazon

As a teacher, I frequently have to buy materials from Amazon.  And it seems that no matter what I do, the total comes to a dollar (or even less) short of the amount needed for free shipping.

I wish they had a "round up" option.  (This is what I do when a store won't accept my credit card payment for being under the minimum amount.)  But they don't, so I am forced to scroll through the Bargain Books section in search of one that won't embarrass the rest of my library.

NO MORE!  I just found this wonderful site, which lists "filler items" starting with the lowest price (currently, 42 cents.)  Do you need a glue stick?  A guitar string?  A light bulb?  It's your lucky day.

The other thing to do is look for Dover items.  They have Thrift Editions of most books, starting at $1.00 for poetry and short stories.  They also sell Activity Books (mazes, stickers, dot-to-dot) and even blank notebooks that are surprisingly pretty for $1.50.

Score one for the little guy!