eftychia: My face, wearing black beret, with guitar neck in corner of frame (pw34)
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posted by [personal profile] eftychia at 05:02am on 2006-01-14 under

[With apologies to The Who for that subject line.]

Thinking back on my education ... babbling to [livejournal.com profile] anniemal and comparing notes on our high school experiences ... reflecting on middle school, high school, and university, and my good fortune[*] in having had several excellent teachers ...

... And I was reminded yet again what a huge debt I owe to Anne Riley. And to Maria Montessori, of course, but I feel more personally grateful to the woman who was my teacher from age three and a half until I left her school to enter the seventh grade when I was eleven[**], than to the inventor of the instructional method she used.

Mrs. Riley deemed me ready to move on, despite feeling uncertain about my math skills. She'd prepared me better than she realized. (And math turned out to be my strongest subject.)


[*] Much of that "luck" was manufactured by my parents, by choosing to send me to Key and jumping through whatever hoops it took to get financial aid, and paying for what the aid didn't cover, as well as their having kept me in Montessori before then. Still, I'm lucky these schools and these teachers existed and were nearby, and I'm lucky to have had parents who made those decisions.

[**] I see from the web site that the school now includes a junior-high program. When I was there, it didn't.

There are 6 comments on this entry. (Reply.)
 
posted by [identity profile] anniemal.livejournal.com at 03:30pm on 2006-01-14
And me, I worshipped teachers. Just as a habit. They were the people who kept the other students from beating me up too much. So I will hereby leave my love to every teacher I've had except Halina Margula, who got way the hell bent out of shape because I fucked up her precious spelling bees, and was hypercritical of my alleged peers. And then I got Kathleen Dougherty, who accepted me as I was and taught two classes because I needed one. and Dr. Stanek, who let me go to Jr. High a year early, thus enabling me to start over.(I had a crush on him from the get-go. He made moustaches look good. And dark blue eyes. Bestill my adolescent heart!) I grew to have friends there. And when I needed out of high school he got me into college. It's amazing what school psychologists can do. They can even go over the head of a guidance counsellor who is hiding exactly the needed program's fliers in his bottom drawer. May Mr. Rudin rot in hell after a protracted bout of prostate cancer. And I hope Dr. Stanek is living whatever his happily ever after is.

Along the way I have to give Mr. Mohammed Husami his due. He actually noticed that I was a diligent scholar. And Mr. Sager, who gave me many religious arguments against blue eyeshadow. He was probably aesthetically right. And Mrs. Neville. And Mr. Greenberg. And Mrs. Goff, whom I much later introduced to my friend Tim, with surprising results. Well, I told him he'd like her. I felt sorry for her having to teach such a boring curriculum, with me sitting there in the back row doing embroidery without shame. She obviously wanted to break out and make English lively.

And the list could go on and on. I loved my teachers. But love is my default setting.
 
posted by [identity profile] realinterrobang.livejournal.com at 07:30pm on 2006-01-14
Maybe on you blue eyeshadow is an aesthetically poor judgement, but on me, it's one of the best makeup choices I could make, if I were feeling into wearing makeup... *grin*

On the subject, let me say I owe an amazing debt of gratitude to Andrew Osler, who convinced me to go to grad school (he was my Media Theory prof for half a term in first-year university; how astonishing), and also to Ken Fleet, my high school music teacher. There are more, but those are the two who really stick out in my mind.
 
posted by [identity profile] anniemal.livejournal.com at 01:48am on 2006-01-15
Without knowing it heretofore, I owe an extreme and belated debt of gratitude to John Peel.
 
posted by [identity profile] netpositive.livejournal.com at 07:44pm on 2006-01-14
Y'know, I started trying to picture the Childe D'Glenn, and I immediately got a tiny version of what you look like now, only in a red-and-white checked gingham dress. Not meant as an insult to your fashion sense in any way :), just that I so strongly ID you as "having the best legs in fandom" that even early on you would be showing off your gams in an sweet and very age-appropriate way.
 
posted by [identity profile] anniemal.livejournal.com at 01:45am on 2006-01-15
i read the Childe X by Lois Gould. about the time that she wrote it. It made so much sense. But I've always preferred overalls to skirts. Skirts bind my legs. I had to have stitches because of a trip over one. They're Glennie's thing. I just like skirts for dancing. They have to have the right swirl, lift, and twirl quotient to be good for anything.

But yes, I confess to noticing D'G's calves and thighs and... Well, her twinkle.

I just have a hard time picturing a childe D'Glenn without a beard.
 
posted by [identity profile] jmax315.livejournal.com at 05:27am on 2006-01-16
"Y'know, I started trying to picture the Childe D'Glenn"
I have pictures (well, *a* picture)...

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