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Showing posts with label students. Show all posts
Showing posts with label students. Show all posts

Friday, October 23, 2015

The Special Pass

The Special Pass

The “Special Pass” hung on a hook by the door of Mrs. Applegate’s fifth grade classroom. The policy was that anyone was allowed to use it, one person at a time, pretty-much as needed. Lord knows, everybody needs a mental-health moment from time to time. The expectation was that no one, except in exceptional circumstances known to the teacher, should need to use it more than several times a week. It was a great system — appreciated and respected by all.

The thing about the Special Pass was that it was, indeed, very, very special. You put it around your neck, stepped out the classroom door and into a very real place that was “somewhere else.” You took the time you needed and, when you were ready, you just walked back through the door, which waited for you, upright on the floor, or ground, or beach — wherever you had gone. And, the best part was that nobody had to wait for you to come back because, however long you spent in your somewhere else, it seemed to everyone back in the classroom as if you had just turned around and walked back in, except in a better mood.

Experience had demonstrated that the “somewhere else” was both flexible and invariably safe. You were always alone, you were anywhere you could imagine that would give a satisfactory time-out, and nothing bad ever happened there. Never. Ever.

Tuesday, July 2, 2013

A Small Collection of Limericks

Information and comments on the story:

A Small Collection of Limericks

Life Will Get You in the End:
Short Stories by David Satterlee

from the book: Life Will Get You in the End:
Short stories by David Satterlee

Find out more, including where to buy books and ebooks

Read or download this story as a PDF file at: https://docs.google.com/file/d/0B4eNv8KtePyKZEJ0WnVaR3dHRTA/edit?usp=sharing

My wife, Dianna, was teaching a unit on poetry to fifth-graders and thought that I should come and give them a talk on cinquains and limericks. I knew that I could do some real damage with limericks; but, cinquains? So, I started by looking up the word "cinquain." Boy, what a pro!


A Small Collection of Limericks

These were written for Mrs. Satterlee’s 5th grade class as a contrast to the cinquains that they were studying.

I see you’ve a very nice playground
With swings and a ball field and go-round.
But I’d prefer recess
If someone could posses
A nice little puppy blue tick hound.

There once was a school in the mountains
That added some pretty new fountains.
They put in some fishes
And threw coins for wishes,
That they wouldn’t see any shark fins.
[This one was hard because mountains and fountains are the ONLY two “-ountain” words in English and I needed another one for the 5th line. So, I settled for a one-syllable match with ‘-ins” and actually managed to make it humerous.]

I think I saw sharks in the fish pond;
A shark fin just flashed ‘neath a fern frond.
If I splashed in that place
I’d be gone with no trace
‘cept a yelp that just lasted a second.

There once was a Doctor named Clark
With hair that glowed red in the dark.
She’d even breath fire
If she found out a liar
And feed them to her captive shark.
[Okay, I think we got away with that one at the time. Dr. Clark was the authoritarian, red-headed principal. But she has moved on to other work and Mrs. Satterlee has retired and moved out of state, so I’m not even going to try for a rhyming pseudonym.]
 

Poem: A Small Collection of Cinquains

Information and comments on the story:

A Small Collection of Cinquains

Life Will Get You in the End:
Short Stories by David Satterlee

from the book: Life Will Get You in the End:
Short stories by David Satterlee

Find out more, including where to buy books and ebooks

Read or download this story as a PDF file at: https://docs.google.com/file/d/0B4eNv8KtePyKZEJ0WnVaR3dHRTA/edit?usp=sharing

My wife, Dianna, was teaching a unit on poetry to fifth-graders and thought that I should come and give them a talk on cinquains and limericks. I knew that I could do some real damage with limericks; but, cinquains? So, I started by looking up the word "cinquain." Boy, what a pro!



A cinquain is written with 5 lines having 2, 4, 6, 8, and 2 syllables respectively. The first and last lines are complementary. The 2nd line may have two words in contrast.
  
A cinquain is kind of like a Haiku, only different. OK. Got it? 



A Small Collection of Cinquains

My wife, Dianna is a talented and creative teacher. For several years, with her encouragement, I served as a part-time substitute teacher. From time to time, she invited me to talk to her classes about writing. 

It helps students to have an initial model of any new idea or form. This collection was prepared for Dianna Satterlee’s 5th Grade Language Arts Class at Smokey Mountain Elementary School, just south of Cherokee, North Carolina.

A Cinquain is written with 5 lines having 2, 4, 6, 8, and 2 syllables respectively. The first and last lines are complementary. The 2nd line may have two words in contrast.

About the beauty of North Carolina

Misty,
Rocky, cascades
Dancing waters falling;
Gleaming in the early morning
Sun light.

About Mrs. Satterlee

Teacher.
Happy leader.
Guiding her new children;
Making learning fun because she
Wants to.

About Myself

Learner.
Constant reader.
Always gaining knowledge;
Seeking wisdom and to be a
Teacher.