Friday, February 12, 2016

Primary Source: A Human

     I like to think that one of our unofficial slogans at Woods is "Keepin' it real!"  Well, yesterday Ms. Lalley was keeping it real for her 8th grade history students by inviting a group of Vietnam veterans to speak with them about their various experiences as soldiers in the war in the late 60's.  As one of the veterans said, "So often in school you're learning from someone who learned from someone who learned from someone.  We are here as a real primary source, human beings with direct experience of the war."
     These veterans are part of the Bridge Back Foundation whose mission includes helping students understand the lesson of the Vietnam War.
     Thank you to the veterans for giving their time and for the generosity in sharing their experiences.  Thank you to Ms. Lalley for helping us keep it real at Woods.

Wednesday, February 10, 2016

Happy New Year Woods!

     We were lucky to have the cousin of two of our students visiting from Taiwan this week, and she spent time in art classes throughout the school to teach lessons in calligraphy and landscape.






Here's Happy New Year
with the symbol for Monkey
on the right.  (February 8th marked
the beginning of the Year of the
Monkey in the Chinese calendar.)












And here's the symbol for Woods!






And the work of our students that our visitor inspired . . .


Getting Particular About Particulates



     Even our relatively small school parking lot offers an array of different vehicles . . . and that's what Ms. Younger and her 7th grade scientists needed for testing the particulates produced by different engine types.  They took exhaust samples from . . .
     one of our school buses,
     a large and old Ford pick up truck,
     a Subaru Crosstrek, and
     a Prius.

Then, it was back to the lab, and under the microscopes, to take a closer look at the different particulate levels produced by the four different engines.

Steering Clear of the Shallows


     Peter A. Coclanis's column in this past weekend's News and Observer reminded me of the compelling argument that Nicholas Carr made a few years back in his book The Shallows: What the Internet Is Doing To Our Brains.

     No Luddite am I, but I do share Carr's and Coclanis's concerns for the effects of digital communication on our live, in-person, and in-public conversations, particularly when we engage in conversations that are difficult, gray, and gritty.  I hope that Woods is a place where we can be "counter-cultural" by engaging in conversations that have real depth and where we maintain civility and respect even when we, perhaps, disagree passionately.

     Here are a few excerpts from Coclanis's column that have stayed in my mind:

“Not to romanticize pre-digital times, but people today get bored easily, are afraid to be alone and are uncomfortable with the spontaneity and messiness involved in unedited human communications and civil, sober public dialogue and debate. Hence, part of the reason that we do face-to-face increasingly badly.”

"Without regular face-to-face conversations, we increasingly lose the ability to empathize with others, much less to engage their views. Indeed, we seem to be detaching from people even when we’re ostensibly with them."

Read more here: http://www.newsobserver.com/opinion/op-ed/article58702328.html#storylink=cpy
"Not to romanticize pre-digital times, but people today get bored easily, are afraid to be alone and are uncomfortable with the spontaneity and messiness involved in unedited human communications and civil, sober public dialogue and debate. Hence, part of the reason that we do face-to-face increasingly badly."



Read more here: http://www.newsobserver.com/opinion/op-ed/article58702328.html#storylink=cpy