Monday, November 24, 2008

Cornwall

John and I got up early to catch a train on Saturday morning and it was snowing in Norwich!




















We rode a train from Norwich to Cambridge, from Cambridge to London King's Cross, the tube from King's Cross to Paddington, and a last train from Paddington to Exeter, St. David. In Exeter, the Cornwallian picked us up and drove is to the home he and Tessa have in Cornwall. We stopped to have a Cornish pasty on the way.

When Tessa got home from work we went shopping for our Thanksgiving feast. Chicken, bread, a butternut squash, and a swede. I cooked the chicken and it was very burned. Tessa made the swede and it was delicious!

On Sunday, John and I explored Cornwall while Tessa and her hubby were at work.















































Tessa drove us back to Norwich and she is visiting us for a couple days! I lured her here with promises of a tapas restaurant that serves jalapeno poppers. Here is a picture of me and Tessa and her two dogs Pegasus and Toucan. (Toucan is the one that almost isn't in the picture.)





















Today I had a quick health check so that I can use John's health center. The nurse (who was new) thought I had claimed to be 11 stone when I had actually written down that I weighed 115 lbs. She was shocked that I had so grossly overestimated my weight when I had actually just done another dumb American thing and used the wrong units.

But then Tessa and I went into the city and had the promised jalapeno poppers. Hooray!

Friday, November 21, 2008

Radio Silence

John and I are going to Cornwall this weekend to have an early Thanksgiving celebration with Tessa and "the Cornwallian." I am not bringing my laptop, so I will be incommunicado. But I should have plenty of pictures and stories once we get back!

Thursday, November 20, 2008

I'll be Home for Christmas

John and I are flying home on the 16th of December and then coming back to England on the 30th. Start booking your time with us now before it's all gone!

I met with Libby today to talk more about doing school visits. I showed her the PowerPoint I've been working on (the one I had to redo thanks to another computer hiccup - and by hiccup I mean my hard drive died) and the paper airplanes I made (which were thankfully analog and so immune to my computer's problems).

She really liked them. She is going to see about scheduling some school visits beginning in January and I'll probably be doing programs in the library as well.

I'm looking forward to spending the holidays with my family and then being really busy when I return to Norwich.

Wednesday, November 19, 2008

KS1 Book Reviews

Our Big Blue Sofa by Tim Hopgood

A brother and sister like to bounce on their big blue sofa and imagine that it is other things, like a big blue car, or hot air balloon.

I love to touch things so the flocked sofa (on every page, as advertised) is pretty neat. The story is simple and fanciful, probably something I would read for story time. In the middle of the children's imaginative play with the sofa there is an interjection about how granny doesn't like it because it is old and hurts her back. This paragraph confused me and I thought it was unnecessary. It makes more sense once you get to the end and the sofa falls apart, but even so, I wouldn't have broken up the flow of the story in this way.

Not a Box by Antoinette Portis

A bunny demonstrates several ways that a box can be anything but a box, like a robot or space ship.

I have read this book in story time. The story is told through words and pictures which encourages participation. The illustrations are simple with bold colors and thick lines. In every picture you can see the box and how it is not a box. The narrative style is like that of Willems's Pigeon books. The bunny is talking directly to you. I really like this book.

Two Frogs by Chris Wormell

One frog has a stick for defending himself against dogs. The other frog is telling him how unlikely it is that he will encounter a dog in the middle of the lake when they find themselves face to face with some more common frog eaters.

At first I thought this story was going to have some sort of moral, but really it is just a combination of a few strange twists of fate. It is fun and the frogs have some great facial expressions. Each illustration is a two page spread with space left at the bottom for the text.

The Bear in the Cave by Michael Rosen

A bear goes on a sing-song journey from his cave by the sea into the city and back again. The illustrations are two-page spreads with bright colors. The story is sweet and, thanks to the rhythms, one that kids will want to chant along with you.

Kit the Cat by Alison Maloney

Kit the Cat finally flops Flash the Fish out of the pond, only to be foiled by Dig the Dog.

The tongue-twisting rhymes remind me of Dr. Seuss and the illustrations are sassy. I'm not sure I agree with the cat being categorized as the villain, though.

The Adventures of the Dish and the Spoon by Mini Grey

The dish and the spoon run away together and make it big performing but they blow all their money and then get in trouble with a loan shark.

More two page spreads. The illustrations are very busy. The story is cute but I don't think most children would get it.

I went to a discussion group today for "Key Stage One" books. The School Library Service lends books to teachers and then meets with them about every six months to hear what their students thought of them. Unfortunately, when I met the School Library Service people weeks ago, they accidentally gave me the wrong pile of books (there are two Key State One discussion groups), so the only book I read that everyone else had read was The Adventures of the Dish and the Spoon. They had pretty much the same opinion of it as I did. But I did learn that Mini Grey is a very popular children's author and people who knew her work expected something different.

The teachers got into a lengthy discussion about a reading program that some people are very into here. The books in the program have no pictures and only contain words with the sounds that the child has learned up to that point. I learned on the car ride back that there is pressure on the public libraries to carry these books because parents want their children to learn to read faster. The teachers didn't seem to think much of this system. They believe there is nothing wrong with children using pictures for context clues and that they are more interested in pleasing language and interesting stories.

Monday, November 17, 2008

Filed Under 'Not B'

My old filing system, in my old office, was to put all the papers I thought I ought to hold on to in one of the desk drawers. Now I don't really have desk drawers, so I needed a new filing system. Thanks to John getting a hanging file box of one size and hanging files of another, I got a free hanging file box! Now my important papers are arranged by category.

I decided to try and learn even more Christmas songs on guitar because, theoretically, I can. I had been practicing about 8 songs, but have upped the number to (ha, I just counted and it's more than I thought) 17. One of the new songs is "Deck the Halls." You should check out the link because Wikipedia has the lyrics in Welsh!

Anyway, I discovered while I was practicing that this addition was maybe a little ambitious because it included two different four-finger chords. I have only gotten so far in my studies and "so far" means I pretty much only feel confident playing three(or fewer)-finger chords. Strangely enough, I had gotten attached to the song in my mangled attempt at playing it, so rather than cut it from the play list I decided to change the key.

Since it was originally in the key of F, I gave numbers to each of the notes in the F scale (starting with I) and then changed all the chords in the song into numbers. "Deck the Halls" calls for the following chords, I, V, V7, IIIm, VIm, II7, and IV. Notice that there are chords based off of notes I through VI of the scale. Since I haven't officially learned any of the B chords, I decided that should be the note to be excluded. There are no chords based on VII, and B is the seventh note of C scale, so my new version of "Deck the Halls" is in the key of C.

Now I just have to hope I can sing it 3 and a half steps higher or 2 and a half steps lower than it was written.

Sunday, November 16, 2008

Migration

I moved my office upstairs into our bedroom. This is partly because I felt a little crowded in the old office and mostly because I felt cold. It is much warmer upstairs.

But future visitors, don't worry. I'll get a nice fluffy comforter to go on the bed in the downstairs room.

I had a picture of my new office set up but I can't get it to upload. I will withhold my theory on why this has happened. It is probably unrelated to the fact that John just got an expansion pack for World of Warcraft and is using up all our bandwidth playing it. At least, that's what the computer genius man says.

Saturday, November 15, 2008

The Culture of Shopping

It is strange the things about your environment you take for granted. For example, in the U.S. I have stores I like to shop at, and know which ones I like for which reasons. Some are good for inexpensive things, others for quality, others for trendy. There are some stores I almost never go in because they are too expensive, or just not my style. Occasionally I will find I have misjudged a store and will recategorize it in my mind. Or a new store might open up and I will go in to investigate.

Here, all the stores are new to me. It would be nice if I could find parallels to my favorite places back home. There is a Payless equivalent, called Priceless (one of the upshots of buying cheap shoes is that you are almost guaranteed that they are not leather). I have found nothing like Target which is one of my favorite U.S. stores. And although I don't shop at the Gap often, I could have used one today since it is the only store I have found that makes jeans in my size (I have short legs).

John's loan money came today and so I set out to find a pair of skinny leg jeans. I wanted skinny jeans because the only waterproof shoes I have are my boots and they fit more easily over skinny jeans. I used to have a pair, but the library ruined them.

Having recently scoured the mall for 1940s clothing, I had learned that H&M has trendy clothing that isn't too expensive. I was pretty happy with their jeans, although they were all a bit long. But finding a decent store was only half the battle. The sizes over here are all different.

I started off with two pairs of jeans in the two smallest sizes I saw on the rack. To compound my private embarrassment, the skinny legs of the jeans were so close fitting I couldn't get the first pair over my calves. I tried on a total of 4 jeans before I found an appropriate size and style (because there are different kinds of skinny jeans).

The H&M jeans were less expensive than my Gap jeans and they are more or less what I was hunting for. I'd say, it was worth it for dry feet. And now I've conquered another aspect of living in England: shopping for jeans.