Archive for School & Uni

High School Memories #1

After blog-hopping several teacher blogs (reading one blog, checking out their blog links, and so on) after coming across the Reflective Teacher blog listed among the best blogs on wordpress, I found myself reminscing about my high-school days.

In year 8, for example, we had this kind but hopeless RE teacher. I remember, during one lesson we had one girl chasing another around the room attempting to hit her over the head with a broom (while this is going on I am happily playing my digimon and telling one of the class bitches that no, she cannot borrow it - I didn’t trust her with it  - for which she got revenge a few minutes later by telling the teacher that I had one when they weren’t allowed) and our teacher was so deep in conversation with another student that she didn’t notice until another student pointed it out.

Then there were the random acts of strangeness. I can remember seeing one girl who, not in the mood to tie her school tie, had simply looped it around her neck and stapled it together with about ten large shiny staples. Thigns like that happened all the time.

There were the hopelessly stupid ditzs, inevitable in an all-girl school, who did things like ask if Islam was a city in Iraq - during year 11 Study of Religion - or observe that they thought the polis was a disease during Ancient History. I’ll never forget in year nine, our bright-eyed, first-year-teaching science teacher started off by asking whether we thought whwther the moon was a) transparent b) translucent luminescent* c) opaque. Even after explaining what each word meant, we still ended up with slightly less than half the class convinced that the moon was transparent, the rest believing it to be translucent, while I was the onyl student who believed it to be opaque. The poor man looked as though he was goign to cry. By the end of the year he looked permanently depressed. These classes took place in the biology lab, which had a tank with a small turtle that spent all it’s life trying to dig its way through the glass, and a larger tank with two axolotls. I used to say hello to the axolotls every lesson, and the black one would swim to the surface of the water and stare at me. Once I patted it on the head, but it continued to stare at me. As for the turtle? i felt sorry for the poor thing and once picked it up and let it walk around on my desk, but was sternly order by my classmates to put it back in its tank.

When I was in year 8, students were banned from using the elevator. This was because up to twenty students would squeeze themselves in there at a time, and every lunch time there would be an elevator party, where people sat in the lift and ate junk food, pressing the buttons for other floors and pressing ‘STOP’ before it could move far so that the lift would constantly jerk up and down. I remember the elevator parties fondly.

In year 11 my English teacher was always late for class, leaving us waiting outside the locked classroom. On a couple of occasions I solved this problem by climbing in the window and unlocking the door from inside. My year 9 maths teacher was a British man with a habit of making jokes with a deadpan look so that none of the students but me worked out that he was joking, which tended to result in me laughing hysterically while my classmates tried to decide who was weirder, me or the teacher.

My year ten SOSE teacher was wonderful. I remember, when the students were let out for a drink break, fifteen minutes later when only six of us had returned she locked the door and taught those of us who were there, merely raising her voice above the noise when the other students returned and tried to burst the door in. Only twenty minutes later did she open the door, and then she gave them a vicious trimming beofre letting them in. Another time I had a toy lizard that I was throwing up in the air and catching, and she called me up so she could look at it. She then glanced at one of the girls who never stopped talking - Helen - who was in fact talkign at that moment, called “Helen!” and threw my lizard at her. Helen looked around in time to see a creepy-crawly-shaped thing flying towards her face, screamed, and leapt out of her chair, much to the amusement of the class. Our teacher recommended in a loud whisper that next time I should bring a toy spider. She had no tolerance for stupidity, and once told us that we had the “organisational skills of fleas.”

*Meant to say luminescent, don’t know why I typed anything else.

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Essays from Grade 11 and 12

Will add more.

How Water Helped Rome Kick Ass (okay, not the real title)

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Homework

Moved from somewhere else.

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When I was fourteen, I was very lax about doing homework, particularly in Religion classes, which I was failing out of sheer boredom. (They consisted entirely of very boring Catholic history.) Therefore my irritated teacher told me to write a page entitled, “why it is important to hand in homework.” Believe it or not, I actually had the breath-taking stupidity to hand the following piece in. Thank God my teacher had a sense of humor. The next year instead of continuing to take Religion classes I was able to switch to Religion & Philosophy, the advanced class, where I got top marks.

WHY IT IS IMPORTANT TO HAND IN HOMEWORK

Ninth September, 2002
It is important to hand in homework for many reasons. One that many people appreciate is so that you do not have to write about why it is important to hand in homework and about writing why it is important to hand in homework…
Another reason is that by handing in homework you can show you absorbed some information in class and didn’t go into a coma or read romance novels under the desk, or even draw moustaches on photographs of nuns in booklets about the Catholic Church.*

You may also stir your mind into thinking vaguely,
“Hey… what’s a Catholic?” which is a very good start, and even get onto more complicated questions like “why do priests have beards?” so that you can write a completely illegible and bewildering essay for some poor teacher who fantasises about being an accountant. This illogical piece of work will convince them to quit their job and make a lot more money than they do now, doing them a good turn.

You also do not have to write about homework when you would much rather be shoplifting or jumping off balconies dressed as Superman.** At such times you find the subject of homework very irritating.

However, the most important reason is so that teachers do not ask your parents about why you have to nurse your mother back to health every afternoon (leaving no time for homework) and that way you won’t be grounded for an entire year and have your pocket money cut off.

These are the best reasons I can think of as to why it is important to hand in homework.
* Two of my classmates did this last thing. Since we had to hand the booklets back in, they were kind of risking trouble.
** One of my friends elder brothers did this at one stage. He nearly broke both legs. I found this act sufficiently inspiring that I put it in here.

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Showcasing Kieran

(Well, kinda… ;) )

Kieran is the author of site Websinthe, which, before anyone of touching innocence swans off there, is probably M15+ at a minimum. It’s mostly his blog ,as far as I can tell, and while it’s littered with indecent references it is also quite funny in parts. Kieran is one of the inhabitants of the Green Room like myself, BTW. The following are the ‘references’ he included on his resume web site for his ‘Professional Studies’ assignment:

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References

Eric Meyer

Kieran was fantastic to work with, his professionalism and creativity were matched only by his friendliness and animation. If I ever get the opportunity to work with him again I’m going to hit him up for the $100 he owes me from a bet involving a car, baseball bat and a chicken.

Paul Boag

I first met Kieran online, he was an avid listener to my Podcast at the time and was eager to further his craft. Even though he was still at university at the time, he still had the forethought to write a resume including this quote roughly 7 years before I ever said it. It’s the little things like that which set Kieran apart from the rest.

God

Kieran’s work ethic has always pleased me. I first met him just after the fall of Rome sniggering to himself about ‘all that lead’ or something. I’ve never had any problems with him except for early on in his career where he attempted to write up the garden of Eden using CSS. I hadn’t built standards support into the universe at that point so we had to go with something Java based to create the world. I think that still Irks him somewhat.

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So, head on over there if you don’t mind swearing and sexual references.

Websinthe Banner

Websinthe

‘Where nobody smokes weed’

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Lots of Irritating Superfluous Parentheses

LISP: The Programming Language From Hell

The year is 1999. Current affair and news programs are running segments detailing a possible near-apocalypse, where there is no electricity or water, necessary services are down, and mobs are out looting. People are being advised to stock up on necessities, just in case the worst happens. (As it turns out, nothing very much will happen, very much disappointing a bored eleven year old girl who was looking forward to an exciting period of her life that she could one day bore her children and grandchildren with.) (Although, Sydney tested a new management program designed to automatically add a certain amount of flouride to the city’s water, and the program promptly dumped an entire year’s supply into everyone’s water. People had to drink bottled water for weeks.)

In the IT world, everyone is frantically rewriting and editing computer code to bring it into the new millenium. Some segments of this code is 30 years old or so, and though basic, are absolutely huge. Unfortunately, all this code happens to be written in a much older programming language - one that most people no longer use and therefore, no longer learn. Bugger. We have a problem.

Cut to 2006. After the Y2K Bug problem, people are once again being taught, at least to some degree, one of three of the older languages: Fortran, COBOL, and Lisp. The IT industry wants to make sure that everyone has at least some idea of how the older languages work, just in case there’s ever a case where they’re so idiotically short-sighted once more. (I don’t blame the people who wrote the original code. After all, they had some 30 years to go. I blame the stupid idiots who kept using the code without updating it. Honestly.)

Unfortunately, this means that I am now bewilderedly doing my best to program in the scheme dialect of Lisp, which is totally alien to everything I’ve ever done before, not to mention linguistically challenged. It consists of a few words and a whole heap of brackets that unfortunately make absolutely no sense to the untrained observer. Of course Lisp is, in its way, a very useful language - it’s dynamic and easy to use once you grasp it, and is experiencing a resurgence of interest among open-source programmers - but utterly frustrating to those used to, say, languages like visual basic where everything is a lot more specific and detailed, and half-English. I’m getting tutored my my neighbour for the moment, but damn I hate this stuff.

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Baggy Stuff

I just completed my first uni exam. It wasn’t that hard. I think I did okay.

Since Anne Arkham wrote a thing on the stuff in her bag (see post) I thought I’d do it too.

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Stuff in the bumbag round my waist:

Wallet. Designer pen. Public transport ticket. Uni ID card. Mobile phone. USB. ‘Make a Wish’ foundation pen.

Stuff in my backpack:

Notebook containing a novel-in-progress. Notes for an assignment that I never handed in. Pencilcase. Velvet jacket. Diary. Star Wars lanyard with my keys attached. A squashed muesli bar Mum convinced me to take with me that I refused to actually eat. A random novel. A uni notebook. An issue of Doctor Who Magazine. Chocolate.

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I also took several shots of the campus peahen using my camera phone while she was looking for food near the library.

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Gamers in Costume

I turn away from my computer to see

… a guy in a balaclava?

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The Lives We Live

First year IT common room. Guys are on the computers, playing games as usual. In walks a staff member with two strangers.

The staff member is obviously giving these two strangers the full sales pitch as they talk about how students are given wonderful facilities, with the latest hardware and software, etc etc, when one of the students moves away from his computer. On his desktop is emblazoned the message, WE SIT HERE AND PLAY PIRATED GAMES ALL DAY. The two people being shown around begin to chuckle as they see it. The staff member is in the middle of their speech when they notice the chuckling and think, ‘what’s going on?’ Whereupon they turn around and see the guys desktop.

Prospective clients are immediately ushered out of the room.

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Open Source

Exclamation of horror heard in the common room:
Oh my God, you’re not one of those open source people, are you!?…”

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