Artistic Vision

Art Education. Straight Up.

Archive for February, 2008

Dinner at Beau Monde

We took a drive to Philadelphia to eat at a restaurant called Beau Monde. It’s a creperie meaning everything you order is stuffed into a crepe. It sounded interesting.

The lady at the door wasn’t kidding when she told us at 8:30 that we’d have a 30-45 minute wait. I suppose I shouldn’t have been surprised this being a city establishment and it being Saturday night. Needless to say, 45 minutes later we were sitting down with a menu in hand.

Read the rest of this entry »

Update about my sick days …

Ok, so here’s the skinny. I met with my Super and it went well. I had to be honest and tell her I’m not sure what I can do about the situation. In reality, this isn’t going to stop – my family comes first. She totally understood that; she actually finished my statement for me regarding me taking care of the fam so that was cool.

She commented that the letter was a form letter and needed to be rewritten because it sounded entirely too severe. It was sent because a report was run at the end of the month.

What was reassuring was that she believed she knew me and what I was trying to do with the art program. She knew that I was there late and not running out when the last bell rang. She knew that I was committed and not there merely for a paycheck. She said this wasn’t going to affect my performance evaluations because she felt confident that she knew what I was about as a professional which is a good thing to hear.

In the end, she thanked me for my conscientiousness in setting up the appointment on time and meeting with her. So, overall, a good (and reassuring) meeting.

Project Runway

Ok, call us losers BUT, my wife and I tuned in last night to the near-season finale of Project Runway. (The show reminds me of the art-school atmosphere that I had a taste of during college.) I can’t say I was amazed at the outcome. I figured Sweet P was going to be eliminated. As they said on the show, she does good design and is very practical; she just doesn’t do Fashion (with the capital “F”). I would agree with that. I have to say I was surprised by them sticking with Rami. I thought they would have punished him for his play-it-safe-mentality regarding the draping. We’ll see what happens. I think they’ll all put together interesting collections. Jillian has surprised us. My wife isn’t a fan, but I think she has shown me that she can come up with compelling pieces. Although Chris played it safe, we both like what he’s done in the past and he’s seemed very consistent.

(And, yes, we think Christian is a drama queen and arrogant, but talent can do that to you. One can only hope he matures with age.)

Next week will be interesting. I’m not sure who I think will win. Should be a fun hour.

Using sick days at school, oddities and dangers

I received a letter in my mailbox at school today informing me that I was to schedule an appointment with my superintendent because I had logged five sick days since September which was considered “excessive for any teacher or staff member to take.” I believe I used four last year and simply got a notice that my attendance issues need to be corrected on an end-of-year evaluation. This year, however, the specter of disciplinary action and possibly losing my job, or not getting renewed next year looms much larger. It was a rather sobering communication, really quite disturbing. This is one of those issues that you read in the handbook and gloss over because you’re excited to start your new job and don’t consider this as something that is “really” done.

Of course, this was a form letter and things could be fine once I speak with my superintendent. After all, I’m working hard and the administration knows that. I’ve been honored as teacher of the month and help out regularly when I see the need. However, I know that friends lost their jobs last year primarily because of this one factor. So, the specter remains.

Read the rest of this entry »

Obama, Clinton and the new socialism

“[Barack] Obama [has said] the top priority of the next president should be the creation of a more lasting and equitable prosperity than achieved under Presidents Bush and Clinton. Obama apparently missed the class that teaches government doesn’t create prosperity; people do. During [a recent] debate with Hillary Clinton, Obama said he would pay for his proposed new programs, including mandatory health insurance, by imposing higher taxes on ‘the wealthy’ and raising the tax on Social Security wages. He added, ‘What we have had right now is a situation where we’ve cut taxes for people who don’t need them.’ Should government determine how much money people ‘need’? This is Marxism: ‘from each according to his ability; to each according to his need.’ Sen. Clinton expressed similar sentiments on ABC’s ‘This Week’ when she said if people refuse to buy health insurance under her plan she might garnish people’s wages. One reason this socialistic mind-set resonates favorably with many is due to the shift in the last half-century from promoting hard work, self-sufficiency, marriage, personal responsibility and accountability and living within one’s means, to a mentality that I am entitled to the fruits of other people’s labor. That used to be called robbery before government started doing it more than a century ago through the income tax… How many politicians today talk about looking out for one’s self, not relying on government?”— Cal Thomas

« Newer entries · Older entries »
Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.