…which would be great excep i’m already on spring break. it figures that the only snow day of the year comes when we’re all ready on spring break.

…which would be great excep i’m already on spring break. it figures that the only snow day of the year comes when we’re all ready on spring break.

after each semester, my university asks students to participate in an anonymous review of the teacher and the course. i had particular difficulty with a certain teacher last semster. the following is my review:
The strongest features of this course were:
the strongest feature of this course was the inexcusably terrible and incomplete teaching of the instructor. [teacher] clearly did not understand the material comprehensively enough to help us understand it. it is a wonder that he was considered competent to teach this course.
The best way to increase learning in this course would be to:
the best way to increase learning in this course would be to replace [teacher] with a youtube video tutorial. this is how i learned everything i did in this class. the only thing i learned from [teacher] is that sometimes life gives you shitty teachers and you need to make the best of it because no one is going to fix it for you.
Please describe the strengths of the instructor:
capable of tying his own shoes.
Please describe areas in which this instructor could improve as a teacher:
the area in which this instructor could improve as a teacher is the writing of his letter of resignation.
Please offer additional comments on the relationship of the instructor and the student.:
[teacher] did a poor job of explaining basic concepts and ideas. students had questions. [teacher] usually became irritated that students were not understanding the material and continued to repeat his previous, incomplete, explanation ad nauseum until students became aware that he had only a limited understanding of the concepts himself, and thus could not explain it to us. eventually students stopped asking questions.
last friday, january 9th, a fire truck drove into a building in boston. this happened about two streets over from where i live. this was all over the local and national news. i went over with my roommate, matt, as soon as we heard about it, which was about 20 minutes after it happened. the whole area was surrounded by emergency personnel, as can be imagined. matt and i walked down the hill that the truck went down and had a fantastic view of the scene as we did.
once we got closer, about 50 feet from the intersection it went through, the police had the area taped off. we stayed down there for only a few minutes before they started to clear that area, too, telling us that they were roping off the whole street. this was understandable because there were fresh skid marks from the truck near the top of the hill, apparently the last place the truck had brakes.
i was able to take numerous pictures while we were down at the intersection, and the Huntington News, our school newspaper, actually used one of the pictures on its front page this morning. i also posted the photos on flickr. on friday there were 400 views and on saturday, another 950.
Richard Kimball, founder and president of Project Vote Smart, has a personal blog. And his most recent post went (in brief):
Public and private debt, global warming, dependence on foreign oil and capital, drugs, the brain drain, bankrupt social security, decaying bridges and roadways, war in strange lands for confused purposes, hungry children and abandoned veterans? We are definitely not our parents or anything like the Greatest Generation.
The best and the brightest in a dozen fields point their fingers and say we better duck — we have changed the world. A world built on previous generations whose selfless nature valued independence, self-reliance, and the kind of clear thought, hard work, generous spirit and devotion to responsibility that made our nation so great.
Like a nightmare in blinding daylight, our heads jerk from the pillow, as an apparition says, “You Suck.” We see ourselves, as no Americans have ever seen themselves before.
And I noticed that there were no comments on that post. So I felt compelled to share my thoughts on the matter with him.
I hate to say it, but your generation definitely does suck. You (and not personally, mind you. I like what you do very much) took an unbelievably strong country given to you by your selfless and honest and hard-working parents who started with nothing, literally nothing, during the Great Depression and went on to claim the world as theirs to protect. And your generation took nothing away from them but the desire for more and the means to get it through greed, selfishness and self-centeredness. You’ve put my generation (those still in college and high school) in the distinct position to repeat what our grandparents had done years ago and drag this country back up by its bootstraps through hard work, discipline and the ability to see a greater good than the volume of our bank accounts. I hope and pray that my generation learns more from your generation than yours did from the one before you, and, more importantly, that we have the sense not to repeat the mistakes you made.
The failure of the previous generation is crashing down around us all daily. I hope there are still a few of us standing when all is said and done.
i swept the garage today. all the dust i kicked up made it look like i had gray hair.

once i washed out the gray, it looked like i had a blowout.
