Tuesday, September 27, 2005

School and food


I never get up at this time voluntarily. It is 7 am and this is prime sleep time, but what I am making my list for the day and here I are...

This picture was taken in Xi'an China in the the summer of 2003. My friend Judy Barr (Bahh with her aussie accent) is in pink, Rocky (our interpreter) is making little antennas on my head and I am on the far left. We are at a very old monument --crazy old like 800 years or something like that--it's actually tilted, but thats hard to tell. We were working there and every weekend we all piled into taxi cabs and went to a gazillion places. The trip was intense...between the teaching and the going around on the weekends, I slept for 5 days straight when I got home. Ok maybe not 5, maybe only 4. The best thing about the whole experience was that it didn't cost me a dime... in fact I came home 1000 richer. Mmmm that's how to travel.

I put a link to allrecipes up. I have been going to this site for umm 3 years at least? If I am going to make something not using a recipe, which is most of the time--for instance chili or spaghetti sauce-- I may print up 3 or 4 recipes to reference them to see what the realm of possibilities are for ingredients. Then I usually substitute half of them with what I have in the house. I also use allrecipes when there is something I want to make but have no recipe for it at all, like risotto or something. I will go take about 3 recipes for it and use all three in some combo. The area it is most conspicuously lacking is ethnic food. You will not find any recipe for like Roti or the things that are less well known.

Then to organize this whole mess I use a gigantic binder or two with sections and I just pop the recipes in sheet protectors and organize them into what meat or other main ingred. they contain.

The school I work at, David Douglas, is considered a school heavily affected by poverty. It is about 70 percent free and reduced lunches and while the ESL population is about 20 percent, if you were to include the kids who are not receiving direct ESL instruction and have been exited from that program, the number would go up more to like 50 or 60 percent.

Whenever I consider these numbers, I always feel proud of my school. The teachers care alot, the kids know it. I have heard horror stories about what happens in other high schools...and I can genuinely say I know our school is different. There are those moments, there always will be with the poverty level as it is here. I know there are lots of kids at our school grappling with totally unacceptable home circumstances, and that comes to school with them, plays out as clear as day in the class and halls. But overall, the kids know that the adults care at our school, and there is a good atmosphere to that end there.

I took the effortless top ten down becuase I too was a pain in the rear kid as a high schooler. I thin it sounds negative, even if it is true, and I guess that's not what I want to put out there, because I like my place of work. Rather than being guilty of the things I put up there, I was more of the sullen/goofy contrary non confrontational and poor attitude kid who dressed really strange.

3 comments:

RunningWheel said...

Now is this list about teachers or their students? ;)

Madam Sakura said...

Ok, so I guess I'd be on your bad list then. I feel sorry now for all I put my poor teachers through.

suleyman said...

I would love to go to China, but the things I wanna see are kinda off the beaten path. I can see the tilt in the tower. I want to travel the Silk Road some day. That's a definite future trip for me.

I'm a student and I hate it when people are obviously not paying attention to what's going on, especially when it's college students.

I sat next to a girl in middle school who left a puddle of urine in her seat (these were bucket seats). She was picked on mercilessly after that.

And I've seen some crazy things on whiteboards.