Code Monkeys Assemble

A few weeks ago I posted about the poster that I had created for the new computer programming club that I am running in my school.  “Code Monkeys” is a way for me to get the most interested students some programming experience.  We do not have a computer science course.  We used to (I wrote it), but I wasn’t entirely psyched about the dynamic, it being populated with students who weren’t really fellow travelers, and not uniformly dedicated to learning the task at hand.  So this year, I thought maybe a club would be a better way to get my grubby little hands on the students who are most interested in actually writing code.

The club, which is really an internal, communal, codeyear group, meets on Friday’s.  To make things interesting, I decided to set up a few gimmicks that add to the mystery:

  • I sent out an email to a few, handpicked students, telling them that I was going to be starting this club, and that they should, perhaps, think about joining.
  • I gave the club poster to only a few colleagues, and asked that they put it up in their room and say nothing about the club to their classes.  The idea being that this mysterious poster would start to serve as a sort of secret handshake.
  • A cryptic announcement ran all week prior to our first meeting:  “Code Monkeys Assemble.  Friday’s 256 Promptly.”  When asked about this announcement, I only repeated it back, verbatim.
  • During our first meeting, I informed the students who attended that they were now part of an “association of like-minded folks”, and that, when asked by their peers what transpired during our meetings, they could only answer “Code Monkeys Assemble.”  In this manner, I am looking to style the club in the fashion of a Fight Club for Geeks.

We had 20 students at our first meeting.  It will be interesting to see how thing develop over the rest of the year.  The grand scheme is to stoke enough coding interest that when the new AP Biology Computer Science course launches in a few years, I can populate a section with students who actually have some understanding of what it means to program.

Sometimes I’m Not Nice.

Usually I am.  My student population, and the vibe of my room don’t tend to drive me to having to be anything else.  But last Monday, at the end of four days of midterm review, I found myself becoming a bit short with a few honors chemistry students who were not demonstrating what I would consider to be a level of understanding of certain, superficial, chemistry topics (things like what are and are not elements), commensurate with having been in my honors chemistry class for half a year.  

For me, the corollary is to a coach who is dealing with a player who is forgetting bedrock fundamentals.  I don’t know too many coaches who would be psyched by that prospect.  As a teacher, how does one signal this sort of displeasure?  Most (not all) of the coaches that I know would hoot and holler.

I don’t yell when I get testy.  Instead, I modify my vocal tone to project the fact that I feel that the student(s) who are on the receiving end of my attentions are not meeting me half way in terms of doing the things that they need to be doing to stay on top of the material.  I move from jovial joking to sarcastic quipping.  My message is essentially “you should know better.”  For the student(s), it can be an unpleasant experience.  Some laugh it off.  Some feel a bit less good about themselves.  This seemed to be the case in one particular instance last Monday, when a student who was on the receiving end of such a quip took the opportunity to move into fully disgruntled mode, which necessitated two different personal conversations, an apology for any unintended generation of bad feelings, an explanation of intent, and a reinforcement of the fact that the student in question can always feel comfortable in discussing with me any time where I have made them feel less than pleasant.  

I’m not the kind of teacher who ever wants a student to feel less good about him or herself based on their interactions with me or my course.  Certainly, that’s not my intent, but sometimes it can’t be helped.  Sometimes, a student is not going to be psyched to realize, after four days of midterm review, that they still don’t know how to navigate their way around a periodic table that has been staring them in the face for five months.  Sometimes, that’s going to be a somewhat disappointing realization, made all the more disappointing by the fact that their typically kind and pleasant teacher is sounding like he is not pleased with the situation.  

This is an issue that I struggle with:  when, and where, and how to turn on displeased mode.  Short of a health or safety issue, or an affront to interpersonal dignity, I’m never going to yell at a student.  I’ll certainly never yell at a student for not knowing how to pull information off of a periodic table.  But at some point, in some fashion, I have to convey the notion that a student is not developing in their learning on the level expected of them.  Perhaps I can do it in other ways?  I’m not sure what they are.  What I do know is that teenagers being teenagers, I’m never going to find a universally agreeable mode of conveying the notion that students are not meeting their end of the deal in studying a course I’m teaching.  And in those cases, when students are reacting to the fact that I am not nice momentarily, all I can do is make sure to touch base with them, explain where I’m coming from, and hope that the experience is enough to make them think about what they are doing in my course and how to avoid being in the situation again.

Happy New Look!

It being the new year, I figured it was time to spruce up the site again, with a new theme that focuses more on posts, making pictures and media bigger, and longer posts a bit more readable.

Consider it a gift for all of the events in your life that I have missed and will miss in the future.

A November Reason For Irregular Updates

This year, I decided that I would tackle the word marathon that is “National Novel Writing Month”.  Therefore, most of my non-work-related writing for the next few weeks will be in an attempt to hit 50K words in a somewhat cohesive manner during the upcoming month.  Maybe I’ll remember to post something here or there.  Or maybe I’ll just post the whole mess here once I’m done.  Who can say.

What Have We Learned

At some point during the haze of the summer, I was invited to participate in the “Holiday Lectures” held annually at the Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s Maryland headquarters. If you are not an extant science teacher, you are probably unaware of what that is. If you are (or have been recently), then you are probably aware of just how cool it is to be invited to such a thing.

So, it was that this past Wednesday (on my 31st birthday), I found myself on a plane to Maryland for a five-day conference and work session marathon. It was a very cool experience. Not only did I get to sit in world-class lectures with world-class lecturers about a world-class topic (Human Evolution), but I then got to work with thirteen other teachers, and a team of very creative folks from HHMI’s educational outreach department to develop curricular materials to supplement the material from the lectures (HHMI distributes the lectures, on DVD, to anyone who asks for them, for free). Like I said above, it was all very cool.

You don’t need me to sit and dwell on the day-to-day minutiae of the process, but I do think it might be fun to run off a list of things that I have learned since arriving at HHMI at noon, Wednesday. So here is a brief list:  

  • “Uncle Howie” is both incredibly loaded, and thankfully dead. An organization which was incepted as a tax shelter for a reclusive billionaire, has benefited from the passing of said billionaire tremendously. I never could find out specific numbers, but HHMI is something like the second most philanthropic organization for biomedical research in the world. They seem to have more money than they know what to do with. This is by no means a complaint. All of my expenses were paid, from my plane tickets to the cab faire. The campus has a functional hotel staffed by thoroughly hotel-esque agency staff. I had a private room with a queen-sized bed. It was cleaned every day. There is a giant cafeteria that serves massive amounts of gourmet food on a round the clock basis. There is always desert. There is a work-out room. There is a bar in the basement with unlimited free drinks.  
  • I will never stop being impressed with how normal scientists are, no matter how famous they might be. Maybe it’s the fact that even the super-famous in scientific circles are still the equivalent of Joe Labcoat to most members of society. Whatever the reason, the fact remains, scientists are the best. You can talk to them about seemingly anything, and they are all as big a geek as you are (if not bigger). Sean Carroll (the EvoDevo version) is the current VP for the institute for education, and I don’t think I ever saw him without a smile on his face and an open ear during the time that he was around this week. Yesterday, I had lunch with the President of the Institute, who splits his time between HHMI and running a functional molecular genetics lab in Berkeley. How these cats keep all those balls in the air simultaneously is well beyond me, but it’s pretty damn awesome that they do. 
  • The staff at HHMI is incredible. They sure know how to treat a guy. The workshop was expertly scheduled and executed with aplomb. Outside of my classroom, I have never worked in an environment where I felt more appreciated. At no time did I want for anything that I thought I might need to get the work done. I got taken out for a Lebanese dinner. I got a tour of the grounds. I got more free schwag than I know what to do with. It’s nice to have a group of incredibly talented people telling you how incredibly talented you are and encouraging your every whim (you almost start to believe it after a while).  
  • Great teachers remain the most impressive people that I have ever had the pleasure of working with. I was one of fourteen teacher guests, and I think it goes without saying that my resume was easily the most unimpressive of the bunch. I simply do not know where people find the time to do the things that they do for their students. This is compounded by the fact that most of these folks are working a whole lot harder for a whole lot less money, and a with whole lot more administrative headache than I have to deal with. If any Long Island teacher ever starts to feel like they are working too hard for the money, let me put them in touch with some of the great people that I met this week.  That should shut them up right quick.

 I think I’ll leave it there. It was a great five days and I loved every second of it. Words can not express the gratitude I feel toward HHMI for the invite (and my district for encouraging me to go), and the awesome peers that I met and got to work with for this week. Though I would be lying if I didn’t say that I am happy to be home in the comfort of my natural environment, reunited with my favorite mammals.

Notes at 145K

A few weeks ago, I posted that a Prezi that I had created for my AP Biology class was the winner of a twitter contest, and as a result was accessible on the main page of the site.  At the time, the good folks at Prezi sent me a note informing that the thing would be on the home page for “a few days”, which has turned out to mean “four weeks and counting”.  Being on the homepage has meant a nice little bit of bragging clout, but it has also meant that something I have created has been seen by a truly incredible number of people (north of 145 thousand), more folks than have ever looked at anything that I have ever made.  Yippee for me.  

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Back to work, back to the blog

I really didn’t blog very much this summer.

And frankly, that’s a good thing.  The summer was full of other stuff to do, and I was busy doing it.

But now…

Now the school year is in full swing, and I can barely catch a breath, much less blog about breathing.  Still, I’ll try to find a bit of time.  Besides, there’s so much to talk about.

Yay me!
The screenshot above is of the Prezi homepage.  What’s that down on the lower-left corner?  Why it’s my History of Life Prezi.  
How did it get there?  It won a twitter contest.  
If you haven’t checked it out yet, go there and do that now.  I’m told it won’t be up in the “Front Page of Awesomeness” section for all that long.
Yay me!   High-res

Yay me!

The screenshot above is of the Prezi homepage.  What’s that down on the lower-left corner?  Why it’s my History of Life Prezi.  

How did it get there?  It won a twitter contest.  

If you haven’t checked it out yet, go there and do that now.  I’m told it won’t be up in the “Front Page of Awesomeness” section for all that long.

Yay me!  

Look What I Did!

My course website has been crying out for a “Colleagues” page for some time, given the amount of material that I exchange with folks.  So I made one.  The link above takes you there.

Nothing too special, just an aggregated collection of my stuff.  One new thing that I did do was make my AP Biology and Honors Chemistry Google Doc folders public and then link to them on the page.  Useful, I hope.

The Hits Just Keep On Coming

All in all, this has not been my favorite school year.  Which is not to say that I haven’t enjoyed myself tremendously when teaching my classes.  The kind of course load that I carry is the kind of course load that anyone who enjoys teaching kids science should go to sleep dreaming about.  80% of my day is AP Biology and Honors Chemistry.  20% varies between Computer Science, and Science Research.  It is a great schedule, probably the best in the district.  By all rights, the year should have been fantastic for this reason alone.  As it stands, my teaching is probably the only thing that has kept me sane this year.

While I have alluded to the grim events of the winter in several posts on this site, I have never outright stated what happened:  In late December, our first child was stillborn at 37 weeks.  As time moves on, things have gotten to the point where I don’t feel quite as awkward in writing about it.  Besides, this is not some major secret in my life, and anyone who I speak to with any regularity is already well aware of the situation (this includes an entire district’s worth of employees, and a good number of students past and present).  There is too much to be written on living through an experience like that, and much of it is squirreled away in private journals, where it will remain for a very long time.  As far as this post goes, it should suffice to say that an event like the loss of a child is enough to put an indelible negative on the school year.  I don’t imagine that I will ever have as bad a year on a personal level as I have had this year.  At least, I hope I won’t, because whatever parade of sorrow that would entail is entirely too much to contemplate.

Following the immediate aftermath of the loss, things had gotten back to normal for the most part.  And as we have moved in to the end of the school year, the pattern of wrapping up courses and preparing students for advancement has blossomed as it always does.  So I thought that things would wind down in their typical way, the summer would come, and my lovely wife and I could go on with our lives.

So it was, until my lovely wife got in to a rather dramatic car accident last night while driving upstate to her parent’s house.  Let’s state the most important fact at the beginning:  She is absolutely fine.  Better than fine, to be honest.  The hairless cat who was traveling with her is similarly okay.  But the accident, wherein she was rear-ended by some idiot traveling in excess of 80 miles per hour on a rain-slicked surface, was sufficient to cause her car to spin out of control on one of the busiest, fastest roads in the state, and total her car.  At least I assume it will be totaled.  There is no way that I can see that thing ever being road-worthy again.

I couldn’t care less about the car.  As far as I can see, it did the job we bought it to do.  And I don’t have too much use for the tide of anger that swells up when I think about the moron who caused the needless accident.  But for the life of me, I can’t really imagine what my life would be like today if things had broken differently, and my lovely wife had not been able to walk away from the events of last night.  What would today look like if I had to travel up to some hospital or other instead of the trudge that I made last night to a body shop in Harriman to kiss my wife, collect my cat, and ferry them the rest of the way to Saratoga?  Given the way this year has gone, I’m pretty sure that would have been enough for me to cash in my chips, sell the house, and flee as far as I could.  

That doesn’t have to happen.  And I don’t have the words to express how thankful I am to circumstance that it doesn’t.  Now, all I have to do is avoid having a heart attack at the prom, and I can finally tell the worst school year ever to kiss my ass.

Things looking a little different around here?

I know.  The search function is currently bricked, and in my attempt to get it working again, we have reverted to no customization of the theme.  

Hopefully we’ll be back up to our normal appearance soon enough.  In the meantime, use the current look to remind you of how things would be if I wasn’t neurotic about the design of this site.

Update:  I have been assured that this is a rather pervasive problem on Tumblr that is going to be remedied soon enough with a brand-spankin’-new backend, so I have reinstated full customization, now in black and green!

Educational Philosophy: The Default State is Free

I thought it might be interesting to run a series on some of the core tenets of my educational philosophy.

It is my contention that as educators, we have a responsibility to collaborate with colleagues to better our craft.  Taken to its logical conclusion, this suggests to me that the work that we create in our professional capacity should be shared among colleagues and students, for the purpose of their education, without cost.  In other words, when it comes to the work that we do, free should be the default condition.  

Last weekend I spent a few moments in conversation with a woman who teaches in another Long Island district.  During the conversation, she explained her idea of creating some sort of review website for one of our state exams, and declaimed that she would charge money for access.  “I am sick of teachers giving it away for free!”, was the main justification that she gave voice to.  I have no problem with her holding this opinion.  I also have no interest in paying to use her site for my students.  

I think my major issue with disallowing the use of the materials that I make to be used freely for education stems from the nature of those materials.  In education, as in seemingly all other areas of human ideas, there really seems to be very little of substance that comes along which is completely new.  The ideas for materials that I have are based on ones that came before them, and those on ones before, and so on.  How can I then ethically not put the variations that I develop into the public domain?  To do otherwise would seem to suggest that my particular modifications are somehow more valuable than the ones that they were based on.  This is not a judgement that I am comfortable making.  

The end result being that everything that I create for use in my classes is available on the internet to anyone who wants to use it in their own teaching or learning.  Thanks to modern conceptions of copyright law like Creative Commons, I can even make sure that the variations of the works that I create are offered under similar terms.  

In Which I Have No One To Blame But Myself

For the first time in my seven-year career, this week gave me the sudden and unpleasant experience of being firmly on the wrong side of an aspect of my chosen and beloved profession.  Of course, the issue at hand was not related to anything about my choice of lessons or how I acted in the major focus of the gig (teaching science to children), but rather in how I did not do as I was supposed to during a particular safety drill.  It was an experience that brought me very close to being on the receiving end of the kind of administrative counseling memo that I have seen handed down to teachers more times than I can count in my experience as a union representative, and served to remind me that while one can endeavor to be spot on perfect in all that one does, every so often, one will invariably fuck it up royally.

I can’t really explain why I didn’t do what I was supposed to during the safety drill, and whatever thoughts I do have on it, they don’t remove the onus of my stupidity from off of my shoulders.  Essentially, I didn’t really understand the difference between the “lock down” drill, and the “lock out” drill (embarrassing enough on its face), and I didn’t put in any time to learn the difference before finding myself firmly in the middle of the former, for the first time that one has ever been run in our building.  I was too busy stringing up an instructional sequence, purchasing supplies for a lab that I wanted to run AP Biology through for the first time, holding extra help for Honors Chemistry during my lunch periods, rewriting my presentations for the last few lectures before the AP exam, attending one site-based, one BOE, and one union council meeting, and generally doing all of the things that I love doing in my professional life.  This is not mentioned to absolve me of my responsibility for the transgression, but only because these things were, in fact, what I was doing with my week.  Even then, when the procedure was made clear to me, I decided that in my particular circumstance of room and students, going through the motions was not a proper course of action.  This was not the correct thought to have.

So it was that I found myself firmly on the administrative radar, dealing with a team of building administrators whom I respect in the utmost, who seemed firmly puzzled by what had to have come across as a total nonchalance for a safety drill that they had worked for a good while to roll out coming from a teacher who is often calculatedly flippant in persona, but never before seen to be nonchalant about anything of any importance.  While I did buzz through a cursory apologetic conversation about the issue on my way to preparing for an incoming class of Honors Chemistry students, and spend the rest of the day framing conversation among colleagues with a description of just how asinine my brainfart had been, I did not really appreciate the full gravity of the situation until I got home and received a puzzled phone call from the union President, wondering why it was that he had received an upset phone call from the building Principal regarding the lack of care demonstrated by this union Vice President in dealing with an issue related to student safety.  

It was then that the conceptual chickens came home to brood, and I understood more fully just how badly my actions had come across.  Once made clear, I resolved to speak to the Principal today, and wrote a brief, profoundly apologetic email to the same, in case he might not be around on a Friday during the week before vacation, or if the various feces that seem to stir up in a high school at this time of year decided to fly and he was simply too busy to deal with my piddling neuroses.

All of which led in to today, which promised to be a long one from the get go when, upon grabbing my lunch box from my car when I pulled in to work, it promptly opened of its own accord and distributed my lunch evenly upon the asphalt.  During the first period of AP Biology, as my students worked through the procedures that they had designed for a lab to assess response time in their nervous systems, my immediate boss stopped in to tell me that he had been asked to speak to me about my stupidity, and that the dreaded “write-up” was most likely unavoidable.  To suggest that this made my day any better would be a lie, but I was already expecting such a line, so it didn’t make things any worse.  Following my first three periods of classes, I made my way down to the office, where I was able to speak to the Principal for a good long while about many things, the particular offense being only a small slice of a much larger pile of personal shit that I have been working to shovel, and during which time it was made well clear to me that the demonstration that I was not, in fact, perfect at all times would not be held against me in any lasting capacity.  I left that meeting feeling rather comfortable with receiving a written warning if necessary, and began to relate to it as something that would almost be a necessary facet of experience in the larger framework of teaching, particularly if it aided the administration in the demonstration that no teacher should be considered to be above reproach, a tenet that I hold deeply to in my own sentiments of how things should be done.  

Tangentially, I can only imagine that most of the teachers whom I love and respect have, at some point or other, been called on the carpet for some stupidity or other, and reiterate that my actions were fundamentally not correct in the situation that I was in.  As it turned out, I think the conversation that I had with the Principal demonstrated that a write-up was not particularly necessary, given the fact that this is the one instance of any disciplinary issue ever evidenced in my career to this point in time, and that I was already well into a period of self-flagellation that was more effective than any administrative punishment could be.  Among other things, the fact that work had suddenly become something other than the distraction that it has been since the sadness of the winter, meant that a particular bottle of emotions that had been welled up for a few months was uncorked (to the chagrin of my better half, who found herself having to deal with a suddenly weepy spouse for the first time since early January).  For that aspect alone, on a personal level the entire experience was probably worth whatever discomfort it caused me.

So that was the end of my week.  All in all it had been a strange week, with me in a state of profound exhaustion for most of it.  Ironically, on the day of my particular safety drill offense, the better half had remarked to me that perhaps I should take a day off, but I brushed it off, given the schedule of AP at this point in the year, and the fact that I was giving Honors Chem. an exam today.  And even though my decision making was sufficiently muddled to warrant the worst blip on the radar of my entire career (I’ll leave the significance of the fact that this instance qualifies as such to the reader), I still feel like the decision to teach my classes even at a point of exhaustion is what separates those of us who love the job from those of us who like it enough.  Quite simply:  I wanted to be in school on Thursday.  Also, it turned out that my voice as the union VP was needed at the building meeting, wherein I had to remind a certain faction of the staff that the union’s job is to protect its members, in relation to something very distant from my own situation that has occupied the attention of the staff for the past little while.   For those items alone, I would go through it again if I had to (though I am certainly glad that I’ll never have to).  The worst part is the embarrassment, if for nothing else than for being a momentary part of the problem, instead of my customary gig as part of the solution.