Life is Good!

This is not just an endorsement for a company - it's an endorsement for a deliberate choice I have made to look for the good, the encouraging, and the quirky in my life.

Loons on a Lake

Loons on a Lake

Wednesday, September 16, 2015

Foods 12 Recipe evaluation

Last week my students made chocolate chip cookies for annual high school camping trip. I asked them all to evaluate the recipe as fresh cookies and as less fresh cookies eaten while camping on the Kettle River.
I won't share all the recipes they make, or every evaluation, but it will be fun to see their progress over the semester.



Chocolate Chip Cookies
2 ½ cups flour
½ cup oatmeal
1 tsp baking soda
½ cup butter
½ cup shortening
1 cup packed brown sugar
½ cup white sugar
2 eggs
1 ½ tsp vanilla
2 cups semisweet chocolate chips

Stir together flour, oatmeal, and soda.  In a mixer bowl beat butter and shortening on medium speed for 30 seconds.  Add sugars and beat till fluffy.  Add eggs and vanilla; beat well.  Add dry ingredients to beaten mixture, beating till well blended.  Stir in chocolate pieces.  Use a food scoop to make evenly sized cookies, and drop onto an ungreased cookie sheet.  Bake in a 375o oven for 8 to 10 minutes or till done.  Remove from pan and cool on a wire rack.  Makes about 48.

M

I thought the recipe for the cookies was pretty good. I liked adding oats to it because they give it a firmer, healthy taste. We baked them for too long, so they were a little burned, but overall the recipe was good.
B1
The cookie dough was really tasty and delightful. I only had one on the trip but its the kind I like to eat, lightly soft and not too hard. There were too many chocolate chips in the dough, so they were over powering for me.
B2
This past Thursday we made chocolate chip cookies for the high school camp out. It was an interesting adventure! M and I had fun with it. We didn't exactly do the recipe right. We forgot to add the brown sugar before we added the eggs, so we didn't follow the instructions to the tee. Although, that didn't seem to hurt the cookies too badly! Plus, M ended up adding about an extra 1/2 cup of chocolate chips, not that that was bad, just made it a little more chocolate oh! We also ended up burning a batch which was sad, but I scrapped the burnt stuff off! They were still good though. Even on the weekend! It was fun and yummy! 
T
I really enjoyed these chocolate chip cookies. I will say I've have different recipes I've liked better but these were quite good right out of the oven. The ones I had during the camp out I didn't like nearly as much but that's usually how it is for me when I eat cookies. I would have liked the cookies to spread out just a bit more. It usually just makes the bites a bit more evenly spread out for me. So they were good but not the best I've had.
A
This recipe was a delicious success. I not only enjoyed the cookie dough before we baked them, but also fresh out of the oven. Then on our campout we ate the cookies, and they were equally as delicious. Some of them were a little more "browned" than others but again, they were still yummy!
Overall, and as always, I love making chocolate chip cookies!


Sunday, September 6, 2015

New Paint for a New Year

I repainted my classroom, and the transformation reflects the hope and optimism I feel going into this school year. I still love my yellow walls, but the new trim colors help me feel even more at home. I based my color choices on a beautiful bulletin board border which I found last summer in New Mexico. New paint led to so much more - - -




 Next I needed to cover the windows so that students could really see what I was projecting on the Smart board. I also wanted to be able to work at my desk in the early morning without fighting sun glare. Curtains let me block light right at my desk without keeping out the view.

Then I discovered that two of the book shelves were missing a little support plug, so I bouth a package of those.

 Next I put black paper on each of the bulletin boards, and centered a little quilt made by some Math 11 students a couple of years ago. Math really is everywhere!
 I bought a few containers, painted those a denim blue, and then added pencils, hole punches, pencil sharpeners, erasures, and highlighters. Each set of 4 desks has a container, which should, in theory, keep my grade 6 students from spending 5-10 minutes each class block looking for basic supplies.

I hung my diplomas and  certificates behind my desk, added a poster I love, and have a cozy little corner to work in.
 


 I have a large bulletin board just waiting to showcase student work,
 a microwave for students to heat lunches, and a space for two or three plants by a window.
 Then, I decided that black chalk boards would look so much nicer than green chalkboards, so painted those also!
 Today I finished prepping the chalk boards, finalized my lesson plans for the week, made grad folders,and re-tidied everything. Tuesday I'll take the plants to their winter home and be all set for students. 

I think the year will be a happy one. I know my classroom is cheerful!

Tuesday, August 25, 2015

Getting Ready for the New Year

I think I'm ready - not for school to start, but for getting-ready-for-school to start. I love the promise a new school year brings - the chance to start again, without mistakes. Each pre-school session is a way to extend that looking-forward-to-school time, a chance to make time stand almost still.
I'll attend staff meetings, plan the high school camping trip and the Terry Fox Run, move file folders into their new positions, update my course overviews, arrange for Foods 12 field trips, rearrange desks, put up bulletin boards, and look forward to welcoming my kids back.

I'm looking forward to Biology 11 and 12 this year, to changes I'm hoping to make for Chemistry 11, to Precalculus 11 and 12, to Foods 12 (especially if I can swing field trips to the farmers' market, an orchard, and a goat farm). I'm looking forward to NOT having the grade 10s in Bible. It will be lovely to just have a two grade (11/12) split.

This year will be the first time in a while that the grade 12 class will be bigger than the previous year's class. I think there will be 9. It isn't a huge number, but it is more than before. I firmly believe that the only way OKAA will thrive is to grow from the preschool up, but I'm looking forward to this little bump of growth. It is so much easier to teach, and probably to learn, in a traditional school setting when there are more than 3-5 students in any given class.

So I'm rested, rejuvenated, and ready to start getting ready. 2015-2016 will be a great year!

Thursday, August 6, 2015

Excellence in Education Award

I thought I was just treading water for the past two years, and still think that I was very overwhelmed by the amount of teaching/mentoring that needed to be done, but I was very pleasantly surprised to be awarded a 2015 Excellence in Education award, one of  four given out across Canada this year by the Seventh-day Adventist Church in Canada. The award criteria include commitment to Adventist education, to life long learning, to community involvement, and to mentoring students and other teachers.


 One of my mentors presented the award and concluded her remarks with: "This year, one of Okanagan Adventist Academy's own has been chosen for this honour. This teacher has excelled in all the categories mentioned. She works tirelessly for her students, for Okanagan Adventist Academy, and for her church both local and conference. Anyone who has ever seen her in action at Orchard City Church Vacation Bible School, organizing events like International Supper and the Terry Fox Run, advising and teaching high school students, being the Grade 12 class sponsor, and leading out in Camp Meeting children's divisions for the last 25 years, knows there is no one more deserving of this award than our own Cherri Gerber!" 

It was so nice to be thanked publicly. 

Here are some pictures from this Spring/Summer VBS,camp meeting, and school groups. I'm saving this to remember when I'm tired, discouraged, and don't think the work I do matters.

OKAA high school students and staff posing after our sea kayaking excursion

Grade six and seven science students on our end-of-the-year geology field trip


We tested Mentos in Coke and Diet Coke to see which foamed higher. The VBS students (and volunteers) sure had fun!

I'm reading a story to a group of three-and four-year old children and their parents at camp meeting. I looked up to see a number of my high school students also listening in.

Monday, July 13, 2015

Try, try, again

Treading water was the best I could do for the past 2 years. I gave up blogging, asking my students to blog, revising my classroom wiki, even gave up contacting parents in a timely way. The best I could do was just hang on.
I'm going to try again. If I can get in the habit of staying in contact with my students, their parents, and the larger school community over the summer maybe I can keep it up next school year.

Sunday, September 29, 2013

Professional - and Personal - Development

Some weeks I can't seem to keep up with myself or my students. This has been one of those weeks. My poor Math 11 students - all 5 of them in two different classes (which run simultaneously!)- deserved a teacher more prepared to differentiate instruction, but all I could do was go back and forth between the two groups  (pre-calculus and apprenticeship and workplace) with muddled explanations. Somehow I needed to explain the ambiguous case of the sine law and the usefulness of stacked bar graphs at the same time. Luckily we found one example of a useful stacked bar graph in biology 11. Unfortunately, I finished Friday afternoon knowing that neither of the pre-calculus students understood that there was an ambiguity much less why I cared. The physics 12 students who I check on couldn't understand the point of the game their teacher was using to help them understand parabolic motion, and I was of very limited help. Biology 11 students struggled with natural selection and variation, the math is going to get harder next week, the service class was disappointed that their plans didn't work out for the Terry Fox run, it seemed that the book of Romans wasn't captivating my religion 10-12 students, and I even struggled with the science 6/7 lab class.

So why do I love teaching?
I think it is the promise that next week just might be better - maybe I'll see the light come on in a student's eyes. Maybe one of my students will understand the connection between the quadratic equations I help them learn and the population biology or the physics that they are learning.

Maybe something we do in class will be the bridge between where they are now and the place they want to go - or maybe it will just be an interesting detour. Either way, I want to help my students explore the possibilities. So I keep trying, keep learning, keep struggling to become a more effective teacher.



This week I started another online course - Inquiry Through Science & Engineering Practices - from Montana State University. I'm hopeful that some of what I learn I'll be able to use to shape the way I teach - and by extension - the way my students learn.

(I should probably take Physics 12 next!)

Monday, September 2, 2013

Back to School - It's New Year's Eve



Labor Day marks the end of summer holidays for most British Columbia students - there are a few who have already started the 2013-2014 school year, and some university students who won't start classes until a little later in September - but for most students today is New Year's Eve. New clothes, pencils, markers, backpacks, and routines.

We teachers have been working for at least a couple of weeks to ready our selves and our classrooms. Tomorrow we'll tell our students a little about our own summer, but mostly listen as students describe theirs. We'll hand out text books and course outlines, talk about expectations, and try to keep a little of that feeling of anticipation alive. I expect that my students will be endearing, entertaining, and even challenging - at least I hope they will be.

This year I hope to showcase student work on one  of my chalkboards, and student artwork on the back wall. Right now my classroom looks a little bare because there are two great big spaces just waiting for someone's - or several someone's - masterpieces.

In the meantime - this is how I spent part of my Labor Day weekend:

 (The description below is from the geocaching website with my editorial comments bolded and italicized.)
Library shelf is a cache located in Scenic Canyon Park. Fairly rugged terrain, but a great cache to combine with Cake Topper, Pillar Assault, and Crevasse Rock. (We did all four, plus hid one or more new caches.) The cache is located on the edge of a cliff and is not suitable for children.(I'm quite certain that I would never have done this on my own, but I had a great time with other "responsible" adults - and one soon-to-be 8th grader!)

The cache is a larger sized lock n lock (camoed of course), with a book theme ....bring a book along to trade when you come! (I forgot to bring a book, but I would be willing to go back to trade books. Luckily the Rutland branch of the Okanagan Regional Library is much more convenient!)
 
There are many ways you can access the cache, depending if you are hiking up from the bottom or top. The park has recently expanded, but the new area isn't very clearly marked yet, but some newer maps do already have the new part on it. If you enter via Gallagers Road just go through the gate next to the private property, (that is what we did) and if you're coming up from Pillar Assault there are several shoots to make your way up. (That's how we got back up - walking back along the Greenway would have been the easier way out, but life is full of challenges.)

 
IF you are comfortable with a bit of rock climbing the cache isn't too hard to get to, but it sits in a very precarious position on the edge of a cliff where there is a lot of loose/unstable rock ...PLEASE be EXTREMELY careful ...if you are the least bit unsure bring a rope incase the rocks below you slide or break away ...you DON'T want to fall off this cliff ...it's a long ways down!! (We did not use safety ropes, and at least one person was heard saying "Jordan, don't tell your mom!")

 
There is a small ledge that if you're so inclined you could relax and read and take a break. (We just took pictures.)

 
Please be careful when removing and re-hiding the cache ...it's hiding spot is designed so the cache doesn't itself fall victim to a rock slide ...please re-hide it carefully ...Thanks :) (You are welcome)

(The view from back up from "Pillar Assault" - the one cache we found near the bottom of the canyon.)


This was exactly what I needed to do before school starts tomorrow - face a challenge, work really hard, and remember that there is life outside my classroom. 

Now I wonder what amazing things my students did over the summer.

Happy New Year!