Saturday, November 23, 2013

Happiness :)

Hello Everyone!

As my title says, I am happy, happy, happy! I have finally got my schedule down at Lake Region, and I have my group of kids who come to me with any homework help. It's so awesome being told hi by your students in the hall ways. And, all my kids have raised their Fs to Cs!!!!!!!!! That is what makes me the happiest. We were having a really big problem with a boy in third period. He does not get along with Cathy at all, and she has sent him to the office several times. I moved a student in from his regular study hall to my classroom so I can keep track of his grades better. Come to find out, the two boys are best friends. I was helping Nick one day and Eli asked if he could please join our group since they have the same schedule. Ever since, both boys have been doing so great. And to top it off, I snuck up on them talking about me in the hallway. They were telling one of their friends that I'm the best teacher they've ever had and that they finally understand math thanks to me. It's truly the little things that warm your heart :) :) :) :)

Cathy has also said several parents have emailed her asking who this Ms. Barnett is that their kids love so much. My heart just melts! I love them. She told me to call my parents and tell them Lake Region is never letting me go. I'm so fortunate to have such an awesome job. I love how things fell right into place and brought me to Vermont.

Speaking of Vermont, I officially have snow tires! And I got to drive on ice for the first time with them. I slid a little bit, but I didn't realize that snow tires would make such a difference. We still haven't got any major accumulation, but we have got one snowfall that covered the grass. I can't remember the last time I saw snow covering the grass.

Something off topic but still amazing to me is the fact that these kids are too young to remember 9/11. I am currently helping a few of my students read and interpret an article about Afghanistan and the Taliban and everything else that goes along with that topic. All of them were two or three when 9/11 happened, so they don't have that emotional reaction when it is brought up like people who remember exactly where they were when they found out the US had been attacked.

The newest word no one understands that I say is oil. I was talking to my room mates the other night about cooking a cake with bananas and Dr. Pepper (Hey Caroline!) in place of eggs and oil, which veered off to all the different types of oils there are. Sam spaced out somewhere in the beginning of the conversation and came in right as I was saying oil. He gave me the weirdest look. I noticed it, but neither of us commented on it. Me and Bridget continued our conversation, and about three minutes later Sam says, "OHHHHH! OIL! THAT'S WHAT YOU WERE SAYING!"

That's all for now! I'm headed to Connecticut on Wednesday to spend Thanksgiving with my room mates' families. I'm excited for a real Thanksgiving meal.

Monday, November 11, 2013

Vermont Living

Well, two weeks have passed since I moved to Vermont, and I am settling in quite well. It has snowed two or three times since I've been here, and the ski resorts are open for the season. I am definitely under estimating the winter. I keep telling myself it won't be so bad, but I know I'm just fooling myself. However, everyone is so nice, and they are more than willing to help me with the transition.

My first week at Lake Region went very well. I work with two teachers in the Academic Achievement Center at the high school, and I am really enjoying my job so far. There is just something about teaching that I love, and helping students understand concepts they are struggling with makes my day. The education system in Vermont is a lot different than in Tennessee, so I have a lot more lee way teaching a particular concept the way I think will be most effective. Right now, my job title is "Math Interventionist." Anyone who knows me knows that I prefer writing and reading over math, but I'm actually really enjoying teaching math. It's nothing extremely complicated- pre-Algebra thru Algebra 2 and Geometry/Trig- but it's a subject I've definitely lost touch with. I make sure to get a list of concepts that I need to know at the beginning of the week so I can reacquaint myself before it's time to help a student.

The AAC is a room that kids are assigned to, but students are also free to come and go as they please if they need help with something or need a quiet place to read/study. Lake Region students are required to attend two study halls a day. The AAC is a structured study hall for freshmen and sophomore, so I rarely see juniors and seniors. Everything is online at Lake Region, and teachers do not give zeros, so students have to do the assignments whether they want to or not. The teachers in the AAC have access to grades for every student, so we make sure assignments are getting turned in. At the end of every grading period, students are actually assigned to AAC if they need a more structured study hall, but they can be reassigned to a less structured study hall if they show success after that particular quarter. Lake Region students are given a lot of free time if they have good grades, so the AAC is kind of in the middle of that. I am still getting used to how things work because Cumberland Gap operated so much differently. I always see kids in the hallways, and at first it freaked me out because I just assumed they were getting into trouble. However, Lake Region is so good about letting the kids have free time if they deserve it, and it seems to be working very well.

Since I've been at the school a week, the kids are still getting used to me. I have a few students I work with on a daily basis, but the majority will be students I only work with because they aren't quite understanding a certain math concept or they need help with a couple problems versus an entire lesson. However, I do have students who I have to work with an entire class period because they learn better one on one versus in the classroom where they can't get as much attention and be walked through a step by step math procedure for every single problem. I know I'm playing a valuable role, and that makes me happy.

Life in Vermont is a lot like TN, but it's also a lot different. I am not any more bored here than I was at home. I read and watch Netflix with all my free time, which is exactly what I did back home. It is definitely a lot more rural, though. The town I live in is considered less rural, so there is a pharmacy and a grocery store, but it's still nothing like Middlesboro or even Harrogate. Most people think Harrogate is a tiny little town with nothing in it, but come to Derby, VT, and you will think differently. However, I like small town living. It's a lot different than living in DC, and I wasn't sure I would like it because I loved the hustle and bustle of DC so much, but I like what I'm doing here, I like my room mates, I like the people I've met, so the adjustment has been a lot easier than what I thought.

I am slowly but surely teaching people here about Appalachian living. We played Appalachian hang man in homeroom the other day, and the students really got a kick out of that. I used bless your heart, mess of beans, and fixin dinner as my words, and no one could tell me what they meant after they guessed the letters. They got pretty close, but no one ever hit the nail on the head. However, I won the round with kyarn and quare. I told them the meanings of both words and challenged them to use them in their conversations today. As two boys were walking out the door, one said, "Man, you are so kyarn." They didn't understand why I was laughing; they still probably don't realize they mixed the meanings up.

No one knows what pop is, no one has ever drank Peach Nehi, people who live back in the hollers didn't even realize it. No one knows that Daniel Boone blazed a trail through the Cumberland Gap. C'mon, that's basic history. I thought for sure they would know that, haha. No one eats corn bread, no one knows what pone bread is, no one has ever had a fritter. They do have crappi fish though, so I'm definitely having me some of that this summer.

To summarize everything you just spent forever reading: I've adjusted to Vermont, and I love my job.

The End!