Tuesday, November 20, 2007

Freecycling tidbits

I am a member of a freecycle group. It is online and hosted (I think) by yahoo. It has quite a few odd rules, but basically, you may post anything for the taking, as long as it is free. Nothing is too big or too small and I've seen some strange
listings. I have collected a few to share here. They may be things that you'll
look at and think aren't odd, but from my perspective, they are odd or maybe just sound odd. Here they are:


offer: large divided plate(looks like hen) From: mims_4_hkt

I'm trying to picture this one!


Offer : Preggy pop drops From: Marla Vargas


Offer: Bag 7/8 Girls From: Rebecca IS THIS LEGAL????


offer: two safari kids rugs From: kmabela


Offer: Juvenile bearded dragon pellets From: struesda (ewwwwww!!!)


Offer: boat canal From: Nathan


TAKEN: PPU Muscle & Weight Gain

PPU means "please pick up" and I'd gladly offer my weight gain if someone would please pick it up, but not my muscle--or what there is left of it!



offer:4 needlework books for babies From: mims_4_hkt Don't they hurt themselves when they work on it? Perhaps that is why the books are available. Or maybe the baby didn't finish the work and is now a toddler!


Offer: Adult disposable Brief From: mhomesch Just one? What condition is it in???


offer:Patches of Joy From: mims_4_hkt I want ALL the Joy I can get--not just patches!


Offer: Fold Away Basket Ball Thing From: Rebecca

OFFER: foam stickers From: ses8292001


Reoffer: Camping Wood From: Lisa Okay, how can you re-offer camping wood. Isn't it out in the woods someplace? What differentiates it from regular wood?


OFFER: Barbie Swan Lake costume From: sicmck2652


OFFER: Mosquito lantern Must be very tiny!



I have recieved quite a few seriously good things from freecycle. You may want to join one, too!

Gotta run see if I can find anything to post!

Friday, November 16, 2007

"Turkey" day

Today was the annual Thanksgiving dinner day at my school. I work in the office of a VERY busy elementary school. Over 1000 students. The logistics of a regular day's lunch for all 42 classes is astounding, but when you add in the hundreds of parents we get on Turkey day...you can imagine.

I love watching the first classes of the youngest students walking down the hall to lunch wearing the head dressings they have made this week. I saw turkey hats, pilgrim hats, Native American Indian hats, you name it. The little kids generally have BOTH parents visit and everyone eats the turkey from the cafeteria. The Sixth grades send a few volunteers to serve and clean tables for everyone (a job they are usually loathe to do) and very little actual school work is done. They ask for teachers and staff to help serve the food, as the cafeteria staff simply helps keep the serving lines stocked. The teachers/staff who serve usually give out waaaaay too much food, so that the cafeteria manager said she always orders 500 extra meals that day. Otherwise, she says, the last classes would be getting Thanksgiving pizza! She says since the food for the children is subsidized, she only makes profit off of the adult meals. Interesting.

My job is to do attendance, so I am generally too busy to be able (ha!) to help out on the serving lines. I served my time working in food service while I was in college, so for me, the thrill is gone. One of my office colleagues came back from serving with a lunch for me to eat at my desk. That's where I eat anyway, so I was quite appreciative. Another colleague brought me another lunch later. I think I've had my fill of turkey for a while and we haven't even hit Thanksgiving!

Another activity the kids do in the weeks before Thanksgiving is decorate placemats. They have appropriate lessons all about the Pilgrims and lots of those placemats depict that. The office staff helps check to see that nothing inappropriate is drawn. Our office stopped four that we loved, but they weren't ready for prime time. One was a cartoon of Bugs Bunny flinging a pumpkin at a turkey. Another was a rather morbid story of a turkey's life. A third one was an empty ship asail in the ocean and it was entitled, "The Ghost of the Mayflower." The last one was a brightly colored platter with a turkey drawn on it. Its caption read, "The Last Turkey On Earth" and had holes punched in the turkey with the turkey exclaiming, "Oh, no! I'm dead!" See, nothing too awful, but just normal sixth grade boy humor. I laminated those and we'll use them in the office when we need placemats to protect the table. Or at least we'll use them until the administrators take the time to read them and throw them out.

One very nice thing happened today, too. One fifth grade teacher who is, to say the least, innovative, paraded his class throughout the office saying "Thank You!" to every person in the office. This teacher has a most unique academic history including dropping out of high school to travel around in Europe for a year and then coming home to finish his GED. I am sure he had to work very hard to get into a college after that even though he is brilliant and probably had good grades with little effort, but he finished college and spent a few years in the Peace Corps. Wouldn't it be nice if every kid had a chance to have a teacher like that? One day when his fiancee was undergoing medical treatments, I went to stay with his class while he left to take a phone call. He gave them some order and took off. I watched in amazement as they carried on by themselves. One student took over leadership and directed the exercise and the entire class participated the way they would had the teacher been there himself. I think the fact that this is a Gifted and Talented class helped. Anyone who has seen a GT class can attest to the natural competitive nature of these rooms. When my daughter was in General Education classes, she and one or two other kids were the only ones who attempted to answer questions and seemed engaged in the subject. Once she moved to GT, it was a very different atmosphere.

Next week is a short week. And the real Turkey Day!

Sunday, November 11, 2007

Congratulations!

Congratulations to Ky for being accepted to Virginia Tech next fall into the College of Engineering! Also, congratulations to Ky for making the A Honor Roll at school. I've never known anyone who worked so hard in school! Now, we all need to pray for her to know what God wants her to do.