I am an artist & teacher with a ❤ for visual expression, educational methodology, homesteading, & Jesus. My geek-love is The Joshua and we have three peanut-butters: Caleb, Jack, & Louritta.

My Cropped Career

04/04/2007

Since Josh announced our impending parenthood, I have found myself lacking pants that will actually button. It all started one morning as I pulled up my favorite jeans and sucked in my belly only to realize that I still couldn’t button them. So, I went for the next pair on my shelf only to have the same thing happen. Apparently, most of my pants are the exact same size, and my belly expanded just enough to exceed them overnight. As I fought the nervous breakdown (“How can I go to work without pants!?!?!”), Josh came to my aide and gave me a budget to spend on maternity clothes. I love a man that wants his wife to be comfortable and happy during pregnancy.
It’s HARD to find maternity clothes that (1) don’t make you look like a hippie, (2) are reasonably priced, and (3) don’t make you look like an overweight golfer. But, I found that JCPenney was the best for my budget and style. Unfortunately, my favorite pair of pants has a horrible name that Josh laughs at every time I wear them.
The Cropped Career Pants.
What worse name could you give a pair of maternity pants? Maybe I shouldn’t have asked that. The point is, every time I put them on, I hear Josh in the back of my head, “Well, there goes your career.”

Cupertino Courier Article

03/24/2007

The Cupertino Courier just posted a news article about technology use in our district, which has a great edu-speak quote by me. I’m not sure where they’ll end up posting the perma-link, so I just made a pdf of it here for future reference. Read the article here.
The summary is that CEEF has a technology program that encourages “innovation, creativity, and partnerships” in our school district. They do this by offering Innovation Awards to teachers (I got one this year, which is why I was interviewed for the article) and they also have an ePic Film Festival of student work. It’s super fun to go with all the students and let them view each other’s films in a film festival setting. By doing this, CEEF encourages both teachers and students to engage in innovative projects and innovative thinking. Overall, I think what CEEF is doing is awesome and really does a great job getting people in our district to consider creative uses of technology to get curriculum content across to students.
Here is the exerpt of my quote from the article:

Stephanie Lewis, an art teacher at Hyde Middle School, also decided to include the iMovie ePic contest into her curriculum.
“It seemed to be the perfect marriage of technology and cinematography practice,” she says. Lewis used the project to help teach one of her instructional units on the entertainment industry that included cinematography. The students were required to use at least five different camera techniques as well as some symbolism in their iMovie films.
“I want my students to do more than learn and regurgitate facts,” says Lewis. “To encourage high-order thinking skills that span across subject areas, students need to be given the opportunity to sit in the driver’s seat of their learning and actually do something with the facts and techniques that they learn. Involving technology in the curriculum gives students a place in that driver’s seat.”

Getting Much Closer to Done!

03/22/2007

Well, I have two months left. Two trecherous, painful months until I can arrive on the other side of my master’s degree standing tall with a keen focus on my future. Or, perhaps I will just be weathered from my many trials, curled in the fetal position singing quietly to myself. Not sure of the outcome yet, but I’m hoping for the former.
As of yesterday, my portfolio is officially finished. I got the sucker up and posted at designsplendor.com.
designsplendor.jpg

So, there’s the proof that I didn’t just drop off the planet for the last two years. I’ve actually been doing something, lots of things actually, and here they are in a tidy little website. If that doesn’t depress a person to see her entire life in a few nicely aligned columns, I don’t know what will. But, it is good to know that progress is being made and that I am nearing the end of my goal. I still have an insane amount of things to finish up in the next two months (maybe insane is too weak of a word?). But, better two months than ten, right?
I was eating lunch with some people at work the other day and they were all talking about the new episodes of television shows that are supposedly really popular right now, but that I’ve never heard of. I finally figured out that it’s because I have essentially been off of the planet for the last two years — when these shows came on the air. It’s as though I still think Swiss Family Robinson is the popular family hit, when now it’s Norbit… er… or whatever the kids are watching these days. Okay, not that bad, but still.
Then it dawned on me. These people, these “normal” people, have time to watch television. And to watch it regularly. I suddenly got really excited (and a little panicked) at the prospect that people actually have gobs and gobs of free time with which they can do whatever they please. GOBS. Actually, I consider having a half hour to watch a television show to be a huge blessing, so you get my point. I currently have no time and certainly no gobs of it.
After this master’s degree, I may have a few gobs of free time. And how will I spend it? I’m considering some hobbies. The other day I was at Border’s and I actually picked up a book on knitting. KNITTING. (Don’t worry though, I put it down after scanning the table of contents, then slowly backed away from the general craftiness section). I also considered golf. GOLF. It’s most likely that I will just fall back into the hobbies I knew and loved before my master’s degree came and killed them off. Things like volleyball, surfing, cooking, gardening, reading (books I actually want to read), hanging out with other people (gasp!), and perhaps even watching movies.
The prospect of being able to enjoy my free time amazes and boggles my mind. But, I’ll have to slowly ease myself back into the waters of real life lest it put my body into some kind of permanent shock.

Hearing Educational Blunders

03/17/2007

Well, I just received two of my favorite e-mails from another professional in my district. Our students just did the hearing screening and we were notified of the results.
E-mail #1: “*Student’s Name* just failed the hearing test in his left ear. Please make sure that he is seated in the class so that his left ear is facing you.”
LOL. I imagined me tying a string to his stool and always turning his stool so his left ear faced me as an educational accommodation.
E-mail #2: “*Student’s Name* just failed the vision screening test in both ears. Please seat him at the front of the room.”
WHAT?!?!?! Josh imagined them blindfolding a child, then asking him to read the vision poster on the wall by listenting to it. Heh, this’ll keep me chuckling for days…

Why My Children Will (Probably) Not Be Raised in California

03/17/2007

farmcows.jpg
I just read the article Students Are Udderly Amazed by Visiting Dairy Cow and Calf as presented in our local paper, the Cupertino Courier.
While you may not see the humor in it, I pretty much laughed my way through the entire article. I imagined this same scene playing out in my hometown in Minnesota.
“Okay kids, a cow is going to come visit our school. Let’s all line-up outside because I know how eager you are to see it.” I can already hear the complaints and groans by children who already had to milk their own cows before coming to school.
I also imagined a rural Minnesotan child (or even a North/South Dakotan or Iowan child for that matter), upon seeing the cow, exclaiming, “It’s just like we’re on a farm!” That kid would immediately get punched and shunned because he is obviously “city folk” and “don’t fit in ’round these here parts.” Although, he would have already been pegged a city kid before this incident because of the way he wore his boots on the outside of his pants.
The best part of the article was at the end when the educators thought that, because the kids saw a cow, they might be enouraged to major in agriculture and become world leaders in food production. Who knows, maybe some of them will. But, I just imagine them going to college with all the other kids who grew up on a farm. The city kid would probably be instantly frustrated by the insane amounts of grunt work associated with keeping animals, as well as the bizarre problems that occur on a farm like old Bessie going down to the neighbor’s house again or ‘dem varmits eatin’ all ‘da veggies from ‘da garden. I’m sure they’d learn about it all in a sterile, academic environment. But, quite frankly, I’d rather have the academic child who actually grew up on a farm running the world food production. Not the city kid who saw a cow in elementary school and felt forever inspired.
Why don’t schools consider having, I don’t know, small farms within the district that the kids help run? Or gardens that they manage? I don’t think showing them a cow, watching movies, and reading from textbooks is going to adequately prepare them for any real understanding of agriculture. Then again, I’m a proponent of learning by doing. Oh well, maybe showing them a cow is a good start. It’s just hilarious to a former farm girl like me.

Gilmore Girls Ban

02/23/2007

gilmore-girls.jpg
It’s official. After last week’s Gilmore Girl’s episode, I have officially decided to ban the show. You’re talking to a girl who owns seasons 1-6 on DVD (but I got season 6 a little begrudgingly…). The problem with Gilmore Girls is that after season 5, the characters started acting like complete idiots. Lorelai, who was usually somewhat intelligent, suddenly started making blaringly obvious idiotic choices. Rory, who always knew her direction in life, became a faltering barrel of emotion. While the other characters haven’t irritated me as much as those two, having the two main characters suddenly go stupid has made me say enough is enough.
I refuse to watch the show.
The Gilmore Girls fan club is putting together a campaign to make sure there is a season 8 of the show. I’m tempted to start a “let it die before it gets worse” campaign.
I would mark the death of the show beginning when the original writers, Amy Sherman-Palladino & her husband Daniel, packed up and left. The writing at that point became like a checklist of things to include. “Lorelai makes another stupid decision – check. Seven to ten remarks about something current and hip – check.” You get the point.
I’m having major issues with the television industry not giving space for it’s best writers to be great. I mean, cancelling Firefly was bad enough. Cancelling Futurama was also unforgiveable (luckily, it’s making a comeback). I’m sure we could all go on and on about the quality shows that got cancelled. The roller coaster of falling in love with a show, only to have it yanked out from under you, actually makes me consider avoiding television altogether. Then, I could spare myself the pain. Maybe just stick to movies instead.
Josh has started a new addiciton in me, Heroes. I’m enjoying the X-men-like storyline and action/adventure parts of it. This is a character-driven show, which is my favorite type, and the actors pull it off very well. But, when I watch it, I still have this underlying fear that it will get pulled off television, or that the writers will get fired and replaced by someone less expensive as soon as the show has a good following, or that the producers will want their nieces in the show even though they can’t act, or that some financial backer will only give money if a giant mechanical spider is written into the script… Sigh.

Can’t a Girl Get Some French Dressing?

02/11/2007

french.jpgWhen Josh and I first moved to the Bay Area, we noticed several changes from our life in Minnesota. Some of the changes were big obvious things. But others were small, confusing things. Like the time we were eating at a restaurant and I ordered a salad with French dressing. The waitress looked at me very confused. She asked if I meant thousand island dressing. (The last time I ate thousand island dressing it made me sick and I threw up, I shudder to think of the stuff even now). I replied that no, I wanted French dressing. She didn’t even know what it was; the restaurant didn’t have any. This same scenario played out at several different resaurants.
(NOTE: I couldn’t even find a picture of regular French dressing. The pic to the side is of creamy French dressing. You can find that at certain stores in California. But I’m talking about real, bright red-orange, tangy French dressing. Not low-fat. The real stuff. The good stuff.)
I grew up with French dressing and bleu cheese dressing (only we called it “Roquefort”). My favorite garden salad has both dressings drizzled on it. But here in California, time after time, I was told that I could only have one of my favorite dressings because no one had heard of the other one. One time a waitress told me that they had French dressing; I was totally stoked. Then, she brought me my salad with ranch dressing… and said she thought French and ranch were the same thing.
Can’t a girl just get some French dressing around here?
OrganicFrench.jpgWe were eating at El Caminito (one of my favorite Mexican restaurants), and they had French dressing on the tiny salad they gave me. I was so excited, it was so sharp and tangy! That set me off with hope that perhaps I could acquire some French dressing somewhere. I went to all of the major supermarkets: Safeway, Albertson’s, PW Market – all to no avail. Then, I was at Whole Foods, where I saw French dressing! It was a brand I hadn’t heard of, but was willing to take the risk.
So, I got it home with some lettuce and was so excited to finally, after five years, indulge fully in the delight that is a good French dressing. But, alas, the Annie’s French Dressing unfortunately did not taste like French dressing. It tasted like a sad, organic attempt at French dressing. It surely did not taste like the French dressing of my youth. It had a sour, vinegar-like taste to it with only a subtle hint of real French dressing, which only haunted my memory with thoughts of better days.
I’m thinking of just breaking down and having it shipped in. My only fear is that it will have the same result as Hog on a Log has had. Hog on a Log is a pork chop spice that our folks send us from the MN State Fair. There is no way to get it in California except to have people wait in line at the MN State Fair for you and ship it out. The only problem is, I brought some leftovers to eat at work and every single person was asking what smelled so good. They started eyeing my pork chops and even got so bold as to ask for a taste. The intoxicating smell and satisfying taste is simply too much to keep people in a civil, polite manner. Before I knew it, they were asking if I would sell them some (I sometimes wonder if Hog on a Log is laced with some addictive cocaine or something), or if they could come over for dinner. What if, like Hog on a Log, French dressing just turns the native Californians into gluttonous beasts, circling my plate while wiping the drool from their lips?
I will get me some French dressing, oh yes, I will get it. And I will not share. And I will keep it in a secret compartment that even the most cunning of detectives could not locate. Then, late at night, with all the lights turned out, I will enjoy my feast of Hog on a Log pork chops and a simple garden salad with French dressing. I will need to be super stealth about it, but it’s all worth the risk.

The Complexities Within

01/07/2007

cell.jpg
You totally have to watch this video: Cellular Visions: The Inner Life of a Cell. A colleague sent ti to me. It’s an animation done by XVIVO, a scientific animation company, for Harvard biology students. It took academic data and narrative from the biology lab and Harvard, and made it in a way that simple folks like you an I can look at it. Simply put, it’s an animation of what’s goin on in the human body. “All of those things that you see in the animation are going on in every one of your cells in your body all the time,” says XVIVO lead animator John Liebler (see linked article above). Wow.
So, again I am astounded by the complexity of the body. To think, all of that is going on inside of our bodies…. For me, it points even more so to an awesome God, who knit us all together carefully and completely.
Hope you like it!

Hardest Back to Work Day of All

01/01/2007

Well, I go back to work tomorrow. It’s the most difficult to go back after the holiday break because I’ve had a little rest, a little play, and gotten a little work done — but never as much as I wanted to. Now I wake up today (around 1:30 p.m. to boot, gotta love the New Year’s party), and I’m less than twenty-four hours from teaching again. And it makes me feel a little panicked and rushed.
It’s not hard going back after the summer, because you get a little tired of summer by then, and you get prepared by seeing all the new pencil cases and lunch boxes for sale at the store. You also get teacher work days to prepare and anticipate with. This break, you just kind of get thrown back in to the middle of the quarter with no prep.
Unless you go in to work over the holiday break. That’s what I’m going to do and I’ll bet you that half the teachers are there too. That kind of makes it fun because you get to have all of the,”Hey, what are YOU doing here?” conversations and maybe strike out in search of coffee together.
Still, I miss my break time. It went by too fast.

6. The Solution for Peace on Earth – or – Why Didn’t We Think of This Sooner?

12/30/2006

My team of middle school helpers were assisting me with unloading and reloading the kiln at school. One of them, while carefully lifting fired projects, wanted to run an idea by me. He seemed very excited, like he was on the brink of starting a worldwide revolution. Anyway, here is what happened:

Him: Mrs. Lewis? I think I know how we can have peace on earth.
Me: After thousands of years of horrific bloodshed, I’d love to hear your thoughts.
Him (growing more excited): Okay. So, I was thinking that a lot of the fighting is between different religious groups fighting over holy land and their beliefs and stuff.
Me: Yes.
Him: And I was thinking that a lot of the groups responsible for starting a lot of these fights are the Christians, the Jews, and the Muslims.
Me: Some would agree with you but others would disagree.
Him: So anyway… I realized something really important. Why don’t we just tell all of these people that they have nothing to fight about because they all actually worship the same God.
Me: Okay, you’re going to have to explain this thought to me.
Him: So, Christians worship Jesus. The Muslims worship Jesus. And, the Jews worship Jesus. Right? So, if someone just told them that they all worshipped the same God, then they would have to be peaceful because there is nothing for them to fight about.
Me: !?!

So, yeah. I think this kid’s solution would just cause more conflict, don’t you? I tried to explain to him why the concept of Jesus was such a point of conflict for these different groups as best as I could. The main point being that the Jews and the Muslims do not worship Jesus and that Christians believed that he was God incarnate. I encouraged him to keep thinking about solutions for world peace though.

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