life beyond the well…


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Random Ramblings

I really should be working on a lesson plan.  Or several lesson plans.  But for some reason, my ability to focus has gone out the window.

I report to work on Thursday for new teacher in-service training/orientation.  And you’d think that the fact that Thursday is getting closer would motivate me to get on it.  But there are just SO. MANY. OTHER. THINGS. that I’d rather be doing right now.

Well maybe not.  I love taking this time to plan lessons, brush up on my own history knowledge, and try to prepare to be the best history teacher ever- I just can’t focus.  I think it’s because I’m really nervous- so it’s like performance anxiety or something.  At any rate, I need to get on it, because time is ticking away…and I’m only on Chapter 2…of 30.

On another note, I just completed a whirlwind mother visitation.  My mommy came and helped me get completely settled into my apartment, which of course meant saying things like “Why did you put this here?” or “Don’t you think that you need to get ___________” and “I’m not saying you have to do this, but if this were my apartment, I would _________________.”  With her help, my apartment is now a cozy little home complete with a microwave, toaster, and vacuum cleaner.  THANKS MOM!

I’m starting to get used to the idea of living in Florida- at least for right now.  I’m a big believer in making where you are where you want to be.  And, I think the change is quite welcome for me.  However, I will say that I do need to venture out and do the things that people do to meet people.  I started the church visitation process (another post completely), but if there are any South Floridians out there that know of some nice adult things going on…feel free to let me know.

Until then- I’m going back to lesson planning.  Be encouraged 🙂


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spare the rod, spoil the child…

…At least that’s how they’re starting to feel in Central Georgia.  According to this article in the AJC, some schools in Central Georgia will be bringing back the paddle.  Here’s an excerpt of the article:

The Twiggs County school board reinstated its corporal punishment policy this summer to allow students to be spanked to curb misbehavior.

Some board members felt that in many cases, detention for students or a scolding wasn’t working.

“We had a policy but we weren’t using it,” said Ethel Stanley, one of the board’s five members. “Sometimes smaller kids will obey better if they have a paddling. The more you give them rope, the more they try.

“It’s something to deter them,” she said.

Last year, Twiggs County schools reported more than 300 student misconduct incidents and 62 fights, according to a state report. The system has about 1,100 students.

At least two board members said student discipline problems are also a factor in higher-than-normal teacher turnover this past school year, and officials are trying ways to improve student achievement.

Most of the system’s source of misbehavior comes from middle-schoolers, said Levi Rozier, Twiggs County’s campus police chief.

“That’s when they’re finding themselves,” Rozier said.

But for the deterrent to work, teachers and principals will need to be consistent when correcting students’ behavior, and parents will have to accept the change, he said.

“It has to be bought in by parents,” he said.

Twiggs parents will have to sign a permission slip for their child to be paddled by an administrator, and witnesses will have to be in the room, Stanley and board member Johnnie Moore said. There also will be a meeting to inform parents of the changes, Stanley said.

The teacher part of me agrees that sometimes you do want to paddle- and maybe even bust a kid in the head.  I was paddled in school, and I was spanked at home.  I think I turned out alright.  However, the other teacher part of me doesn’t want to be placed in a situation where the parents are angry at me for spanking their child, even if they did sign the permission slip.  There’s always the chance they could feel like you went too far or that the child’s behavior doesn’t warrant a paddling.

On another blog on AJC.com, a reader commented that there would also probably be a racial component, where black parents wouldn’t want a white teacher paddling their child.  I’m not too sure about the racial component- I think all parents are hesitant about letting someone else lay hands on their child.  Period.  Anyhow, this could be very interesting.  I wonder if they keep statistics about who’s paddled and for what.  I’d like to know that information.