Spike's Bitches 41: Thrown together to stand against the forces of darkness
[NAFDA] Spike-centric discussion. Lusty, lewd (only occasionally crude), risqué (and frisqué), bawdy (Oh, lawdy!), flirty ('cuz we're purty), raunchy talk inside. Caveat lector.
Erin, I hope you get the job! Good luck. Your answer to that awful, awkward question sounds good to me.
Gronk, y'all. I got an unexpected half day off work yesterday, due to a power outage, but here I am again. Stayed up too late last night and I'm soooo tired but I can't have caffeine due to meds. Tension Tamer tea is not. cutting. it.
I read the hair grooming and bathroom discussions with extreme amusement. (ftr, I have so little hair on my legs that I don't need to shave; I do shave my pits and trim elsewhere. Have never waxed anything ever. I talk on the cell phone in my home bathroom, but not in public. During any given phone convo with one of my sibs, someone will pee. It's pretty much guaranteed.)
Vortex, they teach Shakespeare freshmen and senior year. Which probably makes many students happy, but I taught Shakey all four years; R+J frosh, Shrew soph, Othello jr, and Hamlet sr.
I have the deep teaching-Bill lurve.
Yeah, that question, I hates it. What I want to say is "They didn't renew my contract 4 days after I told them I would be out for the last month of school for major surgery, and they threw me a lame-ass "I didn't turn my lesson plans in enough" excuse. They suck, and you should be smarter than they were and HIRE me, because I'm a fucking awesome teacher, and they're morons."
But that's not politic.
Vortex, if they care about money, can you institute a late fee for every assignment turned in after the deadline?
next year, for DAMN sure. I might even do it this year. I did reserve the right to reduce their stipend.
Vortex, they teach Shakespeare freshmen and senior year. Which probably makes many students happy, but I taught Shakey all four years; R+J frosh, Shrew soph, Othello jr, and Hamlet sr.
oh, that makes me feel
slightly
better.
I remember R&J freshman year, Hamlet senior year We didn't read Othello. Too controversial in a Virginia school :) I am trying to remember what else, but it's escaping me. I will go to this stupid meeting and try to remember.
The only year we didn't have Shakespeare in high school was Junior year because it was an American Literature class. Romeo and Juliet freshman year, Julius Caesar sophomore year, and A Midsummer Night's Dream senior year.
Kristin, I'd have 24 computers in my classroom!
So unfair! But I'm glad the interview went well.
NO Shakespeare, tho! I'd be teaching sophomore classes and a newsletter class.
What! That's crazy talk. Only doing Shakespeare during 2 years of school seems strange. However, the school district I teach in doesn't do Shakespeare during the Junior year of English (American Lit). The play for that year is Crucible.
Yeah, that question, I hates it. What I want to say is "They didn't renew my contract 4 days after I told them I would be out for the last month of school for major surgery, and they threw me a lame-ass "I didn't turn my lesson plans in enough" excuse. They suck, and you should be smarter than they were and HIRE me, because I'm a fucking awesome teacher, and they're morons."
I think employers can often read between the lines and see all that behind the polite, politic answer. And if they like you, they think, "We have to hire her, because she worked for jerks before, but she has enough aplomb and self-control to keep her cool about it when appropriate."
Vortex, they teach Shakespeare freshmen and senior year. Which probably makes many students happy, but I taught Shakey all four years; R+J frosh, Shrew soph, Othello jr, and Hamlet sr.
When I was growing up, we had R&J frosh, Julius Caesar soph, nothing junior year because that was our American Lit year, and senior year AP classes got Macbeth and Hamlet, while I think everyone else just got Hamlet.
If I were in charge of the Alabama English curriculum, I would've put at least twice as much Shakespeare on it and mixed in some histories (well, Henry V, at least, because I'm a sucker for all the usual speeches) and comedies.
What I want to say is "They didn't renew my contract 4 days after I told them I would be out for the last month of school for major surgery, and they threw me a lame-ass "I didn't turn my lesson plans in enough" excuse. They suck, and you should be smarter than they were and HIRE me, because I'm a fucking awesome teacher, and they're morons."
Heh. I've been avoiding a similar answer myself.
We had
Julius Caesar
as freshman,
Merchant of Venice
for sophmore year, and
Othello
was either junior or senior year. I can't quite remember because, through a bizarre set of circumstances, I skipped ahead a year in English. I do know that one of the Honors English junior trimesters was all Shakespeare so I always felt cheated out of my Bill Fix.
I'm fairly sure we did R&J-fresh, Julius Ceasar-soph, and then Hamlet Sr. year. Jr. year was an Am. Lit and Am. History block with Webb and Pardue.