Monday, April 28, 2008

More quotes...

I'm having a lot of fun finding these good quotes. I need to figure out a good way to store them, though. Hmmm...a journal would be great, but then it'd be hard to go back through to find a specific one. I'll work on that.

"When the solution is simple, God is answering."
Albert Einstein


"If kids come to us from strong, healthy functioning families, it makes our job easier. If they do not come to us from strong, healthy, functioning families, it makes our job more important. "
Barbara Colorose

"I'd rather learn from one bird how to sing than to teach ten thousand stars how not to dance."
ee cummings

Some inspiring quotes

I saw a quote from H. Jackson Brown, Jr. on a website the other day. I decided to look him up, and I found some more. Even though this site started as an extra credit assignment, I want to continue to post things that matter. Well, some maybe more than others, depending on the day. :)

"Talent without discipline is like an octopus on roller skates. There's plenty of movement, but you never know if it's going to be forward, backwards, or sideways.
"

“Don't say you don't have enough time. You have exactly the same number of hours per day that were given to Helen Keller, Pasteur, Michaelangelo, Mother Teresa, Leonardo da Vinci, Thomas Jefferson, and Albert Einstein.”

“People take different roads seeking fulfillment and happiness. Just because they're not on your road doesn't mean they've gotten lost.”

"Never deprive someone of hope; it might be all they have.”



Wednesday, April 16, 2008

Do it yourself!

I am cheap. Well, concerning some things...I am cheap. But that gives me a lot of opportunities to express my creativity. Tonight, I started painting my hand-me-down desk.

It started out (dirty) white with yucky "gold" drawer pulls. A couple summers ago, I got bored and painted the fronts of the drawers lime green, framed each drawer with a blue-green. The effect was distressed and kinda fun, but it only took 2 weeks before I was annoyed.

After dropping off 3 boxes of junk to Goodwill (one's trash is another's treasure) I had enough wiggle room to pull out the desk, unscrew the handles and start sanding. Just enough to roughen up the old paint. I have no desire to sand to bare wood, I'm anxious for it to be done!

After I got done coughing, I wiped most of the dust off with a damp rag, dried the desk and drawers off and got to work. Painting anything in an apartment is no small job--I had a fan going and the window open. Covering up white paint with black takes a lot of coats--I'm on my 2nd and its still not done.

I took the drawer pulls outside to spray paint a nice silver. They're outside drying--I thought this would be a nice way to put that terrible wind to good use.

So, my "vision" of this project is turning my Grandma's white desk to a sleek, modern piece. Plus, I hate white. I was stuck with white walls in my bedroom as a kid and I'm surrounded by white walls in my apartment. And at the risk of being charged an enormous amount of money when I move out, I decided I wouldn't touch the walls.

Does all this have a point and how can this relate to education AND technology?
Well, a lot of painting projects I learned from watching my parents. But, it doesn't help to look for advice on the internet. The DIYnetwork site and HGTV.com are full of information to help you with projects step-by-step. The DIYnetwork also has a kids section that features instructions from the show. This is a great place to find inspiration for classroom projects.

I didn't have a "before" picture of the desk, but my coffee table is going to be my next project.
It was a pain-staking process to paint this, but it no longer fits my 'grown-up' decor. What I'm planning to do is paint it all black, and create a mosaic with glass pebbles around the border where the checked paint is now. Of course, I'm already scouring my favorite sites for directions.

And, incase anyone would like to know--I did design the lizard myself. I outlined it on paper first, cut it out to create a stencil. I taped it to the table (after painting yellow) and outlined it with a black Sharpie, then painted VERY carefully. Ta da!

Wednesday, April 2, 2008

Mnozil brass

I'm not sure how educational this video really is, other than maybe you could say that brass instruments occasionally sound FOWL.....

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qkjfUhPwr3k

In My Own Backyard

This post is of the video I created for Ed Media. The purpose of this video is to be used as an example for students when creating their own digital storybook.

Saturday, March 29, 2008

I didn't anticiate posting twice in one day, but I knew I had to when I stumbled across a story on our local news station's website. Researchers found an 1860 recording, which they believe is the earliest recorded human voice. It was made by Scott, a Frenchmen who believed you could understand sound by seeing it. It predates Thomas Edison by 17 years! I guess Scott was very angry with Edison for getting all the credit, but they had two different views of the technology. I found the mp3 file online, so have a listen for yourself...

http://www.firstsounds.org/sounds/1860-Scott-Au-Clair-de-la-Lune.mp3


On the educational side of things, this would be a very cool thing to discuss in a Science or Music class. It might be a little easier for older students to understand, but I think its a great topic--students should understand how we came from this to become an iPod generation.

Long day....

After a long day at work, it's nice to come home, take a long hot shower, and then settle down in the front of the TV with a bag of chips and salsa and watch Scooby Doo. Cartoons can be very educational, by the way.. I miss the old Looney Toons, and the classics like the Smurfs, David the Gnome...

Okay, so the reason I'm posting is to tell maybe the 2 people that read this blog about this great site my cousin found. It's called myfamily.com and you can create your own family website. You can add pictures, video, and have discussions. This is great, because I and our other cousins are into genealogy. So, we've set up a site that reaches back to the Spevacek-Veverka line we all share.

My crazy hobby started as an assignment in middle school. My mom had this giant chart of my Grandma's side that went back to the 1850's, when some of my German clan came over. I got more interested by the time I got to high school and had another family tree assignment. Turns out I was related to a few kids in my class.

A couple years ago, I started working on tracing all the branches in my family, and now I have several binders full of documents. The easiest way to get started is on www.rootsweb.com, a free site where you can find discussion boards for a specific last name. Another is www.usgenweb.org. It has links for every county, every state in the US. I have met some amazingly kind and generous people online that have helped me get copies of documents, pictures of tombstones and other information.

A couple years ago when my grandpa was in the hospital, I started on my dad's line. I knew nothing, other than my grandparents and my dad didn't know his family history either. Turns out I had older cousins who have been working on it for years! They sent me a huge packet and I was amazed by what I was reading. My great-great grandparents were from Bohemia, Volduchy and Vojvanov (Czechoslovakia.) Because of discussion boards online, we found cousins in Texas we didn't know about. My grandma and I got to meet them at a family reunion, and they are so much fun!

I am very proud of my heritage, and I think it is such a rewarding hobby to have. I have a better understanding of myself. It takes a lot of courage for people to start a whole new life in another country, not knowing the language, anything.