Saturday, December 11, 2010

Young Adults night

Last night all of the young adults at our church had a Christmas party at the house of a family from church. The Lawrence's live on 8 acres of property half an hour out of town, and last night I couldn't resist taking some pictures of the beautiful scenery.




On top of having 4 dogs, they also have 2 horses, a cow and 2 ponies! They pretty much have their own farm!

This was one of their ponies.



Keisha realised the pony had the same hair colour as she did!



Lisa (the eldest of the Lawrence kids) with the other pony


Me, Claryse & Keisha











Monday, December 6, 2010

3 Girls and a Christmas Tree

This is the scene that unfolds when three girls put up a Christmas tree.

Putting up Keisha's Christmas tree took us two nights, because we couldn't find the beads that serve as her "tinsel" until a day later! And of course, we found them in a box that we had searched through many times! Isn't that always the way?!





Claryse untangling the strands of lights









Stringing the beads



Keisha placing the star on top

The 3 of us with the completed tree





Tuesday, November 30, 2010

The BEST choc chips cookies

The Pioneer Woman has been Twittering her favourite cookie recipes, and blogged about her new favourite Brandy Snap recipe, which inspired me to make some too! I posted my favourite choc chip cookie recipe on my Baking blog, and thought I'd share it on here too!


Choc Chip Cookies125g (4 oz) butter
1/2 cup sugar
1/2 cup brown sugar
1/2 teaspoon vanilla
1 egg
1 3/4 cups self raising flour
125g (4 oz) choc chips


Cream together butter, sugars and vanilla.
Add lightly beaten egg gradually, beating well.
Mix in sifted flour.
Add choc chips, mix well.

Shape teaspoonfuls of mixture into small balls and place ontogreased trays, allowing for spreading.

Bake for 10-12 minutes in moderate oven.

Monday, November 29, 2010

Flash Mob in the city!

On Saturday night, Claryse, Keisha, Laura, Elisha (Laura's fiancee, who filmed us), Claryse & I went into the city with a very specific purpose- we created a Flash Mob in Circular Quay!

A Flash Mob is a dance sequence where one person starts dancing, then another person standing unassumingly nearby joins in, then another joins, then another! And the whole time, the rest of the bystanders don't know what's happening, and dancers just keep popping up out of nowhere! It is so fun to watch.

Claryse is doing a dance degree at uni, and this was one of her assignments! She roped us in to help, and this is the final result (after lots of practice sessions at each other's houses!)

I am the last dancer to join- which was the hardest, because I had to stand nearby and not look suspicious, and like I didn't know what was going on!

Have a look (there's no music until the 25 second mark):

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FokH1LoqrVQ

Friday, November 12, 2010

Reflecting on Teaching

We had to answer this questionnaire about reflecting on our teaching after our last week of prac at school, and I thought I'd post it on here, so you could see what I've learnt whilst being a teacher for 3 weeks!


What I consider the 3 most important things I've learnt:
1. Don't be afraid to change something if you realise it's not working in the middle of a lesson.
2. Positively reinforcing students who are doing the right thing usually has the added benefit of detering students who aren't, and is far more pleasant than always dealing out punishment.
3. Being excited about a lesson usually makes the kids excited and engaged too.

What I consider the 3 most challenging things I'll face during my next prac:
1. Timing of lessons. In PP1 I would often go overtime with my lessons without realising it.
2. Planning for a new grade, now that I've gotten used to Year 2.
3. What to do if I don't have a Smartboard! I've gotten so used to using this as a resource to engage the students that I'll be really sad if my next class doesn't have one!

What surprised me:
How much I was influenced by my supervising teacher's teaching style. Without consciously realising it, for the majority of the time I was in 2J I imitated the way he taught the class, following his rewards and discipline systems and the way he organised the classroom, even when I was teaching full day lessons.

What the strengths of a positive relationship between the school and the community are:
It makes the whole process of communicating with parents and the community easier. Because my supervising teacher was the Assistant Principal for K-2, I saw how he dealt with calling parents abut behaviour or discipline issues, and it was always a lot easier if a positive relationship already existed.

The most important connections I've made betwen the theoretical and its application:
Behaviourism has its place, with punishment and reinforcement, but so does Humanism, and creating a warm and supportive environment for the students each day.

Questions I still have:
How do teachers find time for everything? Between the lesson planning, teaching, school events, discipline issues, dealing with parents, etc, it just seems like there's never enough time in the day for everything in the timetable! How do they ensure their students learn everything they need to in a year with all of the interruptions and scheduling changes that take away from class learning time?

What I've learnt about myself as a future teacher:
I enjoy letting the students have fun while learning. However I also learnt that you still have to remain an authoritive figure, and I think I found a good way of balancing this in the classroom.

What I've learnt about myself as a person:
I learnt that I am definitely heading towards the right career! I just had such a great time on prac, looking forward to seeing the students every day. All the elements of my personality just seemed to be a good fit for teaching, which is what I always assumed, but it was nice to have it confirmed.

How what I learnt and discovered will influence my future actions:
I learnt that students like having something tangible to learn from, whether this be a video or a song or concrete materials that they can engage with, and I will endeavour to include this in future lessons.

3 things I hope to improve about my teaching practice in PP2:
1. Develop a more consistent method of gaining students' attention, now that I have had the opportunity to try out so many (eg. hand claps, hands on head, ringing a bell, etc).
2. Continue to develop my knowledge and use of Smartboards and associated technology.
3. Investigate students' prior knowledge in more depth before launching into a lesson.

Monday, November 8, 2010

The Gold Coast

Last weekend we flew to the Gold Coast for Kayd's 21st birthday party. We got there early in the morning, so we went and had breakfast at the surf club and then went to Burleigh North beach for a while.










It was only 9 or 10am, but it was so sunny and hot that the water was so warm it was like bathwater!





I pretty much grew up with Kayd and his older sister Paige, so we're all pretty much family and it was fun to be around everybody again, seeing as we don't see them much since we live in Sydney and they live in Queensland.



Myles & Lisa always have the best moves on the dance floor.



I don't usually have many photos of me, because I'm always the one taking the photos, but Lisa managed to snap these ones:



Neil with the birthday boy


Kayd's dad Martin and sister Paige


Time for speeches


Cutting the cake

We had such a great time, we stayed and danced and partied until 2am!

And then the next day I had to fly home by myself, because on Monday morning I had to be back at school for my final week of prac teaching!

Friday, October 22, 2010

Things I Don't Do

I'm reading Shauna Niequist's new book Bittersweet at the moment, and I've just finished the chapter called "Things I Don't Do".

"Things I Don't Do" are things that take unnecessary time and energy away from the things I do do.

Thing I Do include:

I eat chocolate. I just do. In fact, I've got a block of the new Cadbury Dairy Milk roast hazelnut and honey roast cashews sitting right beside me that I've been plowing through for a few days now. I just love nuts and chocolate together. And I try not to make myself feel bad about it.

I bake. It's the one time where my mind is quiet. I like everything about baking- the mixing, the cooking, the eating. Seeing all these different ingredients turn into something so different from how they all started. All of it. Love.

I teach. I'm a teacher. And I'm good at it. It's the one thing about myself that I know that I know that I know. If everything else about me changed, I think I'd still be a teacher somehow. I'd find a way.

I have to have music in my everyday life somehow. Whether it's listening to the radio in the car, putting MTV on the TV when I get home, practising my violin or plugging in my iPod, I have to have music. I like the rhythm, the sound, the science behind the melody and the harmony and the beat and how it all intertwines.

I like photography- looking at photos, taking photos, being in photos. Something about preserving a physical memory, a place in time representing everyday life and the people that are in it just seems important to me.

I love kids- from tiny babies all the way up to upper primary and beyond, give me a child to interact with and I'll be happy. Their innocent happiness just makes me a better person when I'm around them.

I'll probably always be interested in clothes and hair and makeup and other things that make me look pretty. Part of it is just being a girl, but the other part is me wanting to look nice. And I'm okay with that. If something so simple makes you feel better about yourself, as long as it's not becoming an overarching obsession or taking away from more important things, then I'm okay with that.


Things I Don't Do:

I don't cook. The Food Network, Masterchef, Top Chef, etc do not amuse me unless they do a segment on baking. As much as I love baking, cooking is just not the same. Whether this is because cooking is less focussed on sweet things, I can't say, but I just haven't got the knack. And I don't feel feel any desire to, although I admire those who can and do.

I don't get obsessed with my weight. I know from past experience how caught up I can get with those red numbers on the scale, so I tend to avoid the whole thing. This might mean that there are times when I'm heavier than others, but eventually I'll go back. And I judge the whole thing by how my clothes fit, and not by numbers or digits on a little electronic box that sits on the bathroom floor.

I don't spend as much time studying as I should, but I'm okay with that. I lead a busy life, and I do the best I can and sometimes a person needs to give themselves a break. I've realised that I'm still an excellent student whether I've read the whole textbook or not, and that getting an exemplary grade doesn't make any of the other parts of your life better or worse, really.


And I'm okay with all of that.


And by the way... this is my 200th post! Happy 200th Anniversary/Birthday/ whatever celebration is appropriate to my little blog.