Prolog...

In this part of pilgrim, I pick up these scattering notes along the pathway. Whether they are friend’s words or mine that is touching and inspiring. Maybe, in these traced footprints, there are memories worth reflected, there is flame that flare up spirits, and there are inspirations that flashing imaginations. Hope you love reading my notes.

One Minute Wisdom

Spoon boy: Do not try and bend the spoon. That's impossible. Instead only try to realize the truth. Neo: What truth? Spoon boy: There is no spoon. Neo: There is no spoon? Spoon boy: Then you'll see that it is not the spoon that bends, it is only yourself.

What If?

What if, GOD couldn't take the time to bless us today because
we couldn't take the time to thank Him yesterday?

What if, GOD decided to stop leading us tomorrow because
we didn't follow Him today?

What if, we never saw another flower bloom because
we grumbled when GOD sent the rain.

What if, GOD didn't walk with us today because
we failed to recognize it as His day?

What if, GOD took away the Bible tomorrow because
we would not read it today?

What if, GOD took away His message because
we failed to listen to the messenger?

What if, GOD didn't send His only begotten Son because
He wanted us to be prepared to pay the price for sin.

What if, the door of the church was closed because
we did not open the door of our heart?

What if, GOD stopped loving and caring for us because
we failed to love and care for others?

What if, GOD would not hear us today because
we would not listen to Him yesterday?

What if, GOD answered our prayers
the way we answer His call to service?

What if, GOD met our needs
the way we give Him our lives???

--- Author Unknown --- Read More..

Deciding

Outside my window, a new day I see,
And only I can determine
What kind of day it will be.
It can be busy and sunny, laughing and gay,
Or boring and cold, unhappy and gray.

My own state of mind is the determining key,
For I am only the person I let myself be.

I can be thoughtful and do all I can to help,
Or be selfish and think just of myself.
I can enjoy what I do and make it seem fun,
Or gripe and complain and make it hard on someone.

I can be patient with those who may not understand
Or belittle and hurt them as much as I can.

But I have faith in myself,
And believe what I say
And I personally intend to make the most of each day.

--- Anonymous --- Submitted by Pat Carley --- Florida
Read More..

Successor

The old Zen master's health was fading. Knowing his death was near, he announced to all the monks that he soon would be passing down his robe and rice bowl to appoint the next master of the monastery.
His choice, he said, would be based on a contest. Anyone seeking the appointment was required to demonstrate his spiritual wisdom by submitting a poem. The head monk, the most obvious successor, presented a poem that was well composed and insightful. All the monks anticipated his selection as their new leader.
However, the next morning another poem appeared on the wall in the hallway, apparently written during the dark hours of the night. It stunned everyone with it's elegance and profundity but no one knew who the author was.
Determined to find this person, the old master began questioning all the monks. To his surprise, the investigation led to the rather quiet kitchen worker who pounded rice for the meals. Upon hearing the news, the jealous head monk and his comrades plotted to kill their rival. In secret, the old master passed down his robe and bowl to the rice pounder, who quickly fled from the monastery, later to become a widely renowned Zen teacher.
Read More..

Purpose In Life

One clear autumn morning a single mother of two, peers out the window of her bedroom admiring the clear day and watching as the wind blows through the tree in her yard.

The woman named Samantha sits wondering what purpose in life has God in store for her. She realizes is she thirty years old and a single mother of two. Any other day she would not feel the pressures of life except for this day is the day before an operation that will forever change her. She wonders how people will see her and react to her once the operation is complete. More importantly she begins to worry about how she will see herself.

Samantha was suddenly startled by both of her children rushing into her bedroom with smiles upon their innocent faces wanting what they expect every morning, a hug and kiss from their Mom.

She is distracted long enough to give her children the hugs and kisses they so very much desire. A few moments are spent making small talk and casual play until the children run off to fix themselves some cereal. As she hears her children laughing and occasionally arguing, her mind begins to wonder into her past.

Starting with her childhood, she recalls growing up in a family she can’t help but love today, but questions her love and understanding while growing up in her family.


Her father; being a hard man whom stubbornly held to his convictions in life without hesitation. Her mother, a teacher of the word of God always ensured they knew the Gospel. Her four bothers and sisters wrapped up in their own world and not understanding her. All of this was racing through Samantha’s mind.

Her attention was again diverted when she heard the dreaded words from her son, "UH OH." Samantha went into the kitchen where she found that her son had an accident with the milk as he was pouring it into the cereal bowls. She patiently wipes up the milk and fixes their cereal before she retreats back to her room to take her shower.

Sitting on the end of her bed wondering what she will wear today, she again begins to think of the experiences in her life. She recalls a traumatic event whereupon she was attacked as a child. She vividly recalls the events of that day and begins to weep. She recalls how she refused to tell anyone, for fear of upsetting her family.

Her mind then drifted to how her now divorced husband helped her through this terrible time, when it was triggered later in her life. She pauses for a few moments and recalls how her relationship with God became so much more fulfilling during this time in her life.

All of a sudden Samantha is overcome with laughter as she sees her daughter standing before her wearing her clothes backward in an attempt to dress herself for the day. As Samantha helps her daughter get dressed she wonders if she is doing the best she can in raising her children.

As she finishes helping her daughter the phone rings. It’s Christopher, a new found friend she met only a few months ago. They say hello’s and talk about the coming day and each other’s plans. A few minutes later she gangs up the phone and steps into the shower.

While in the shower, she again thinks of how she’ll be after the operation. She thinks to herself that she’s not getting any younger, and if she’ll be appealing enough for any man to ever want her again. She abruptly puts the thought out of her head and begins to think of her friends. She can’t help but think at first if they will treat her any differently than they do now, especially her boyfriend, William.

As she gets out of the shower and feeling somewhat refreshed, she realizes how fortunate she really is to have the types of friends she has. She tells herself that she has always tried to be there when they needed her and how good she felt when they called upon her in times of need. Samantha gets dressed and begins to face another day, putting the previous thoughts out of her head for now.

The day goes by uneventful, as any other Saturday would. She enjoyed her times with friends and her children throughout the day. Now the day is over and the children are asleep for the night. Unfortunately, Samantha can’t seem to get to sleep.

While lying in her bed she drifts back to what she was thinking about earlier in the day, still having the nagging feeling of wondering what her purpose in life is. Chris pops into her head and she begins to think of him and what kind of troubles he’s going through in his life right now and how she’s tried to help him through them by helping him trust in God.

She also recalls how he has offered his shoulder to cry on and a compassionate ear whenever she has needed one. Her other friend, Donald, comes to mind. She again thinks of how he’s troubled in life and how she has tried to pull him through his times of need, and then William, and Vicky. She starts to realize that she has been there for all of them. She wonders if this is it, "is this why I’m here?"

Samantha gets out of bed and gets on her knees and begins to pray. She prays for those in her life: first her children, then William, Chris, Donald and Vicky. She then prays for herself. "Dear Lord, help me understand the things that have happened to me and show me my purpose in life."

She remained on her knees for a few minutes, completely silent, hoping for something, anything. Then she heard it, the most calming and compassionate voice she had ever heard. The voice filled her soul with warmth and peace as she heard it proclaim:

"Samantha, your hurt and sorrow is not punishment, but a precious gift. I have provided you with the experiences in life to give you the knowledge and wisdom to help others. You have fulfilled and will continue to fulfill what I have in store for you. For what you seek, you have become. A healer of souls and a guide to my door step for those who have strayed or forsaken me. You cannot begin to replenish or heal lost souls without feeling their past experiences. You question that which is your purpose. You will understand that which is your body is only but a shell and what is inside you will shine brighter than the stars themselves, and you will be better prepared for your task at hand. You will be rewarded in your mortal life and in your everlasting life. Keep your faith and trust in me, for my hand is always upon you. Rise up and accept my gift and continue to help those in need."

Samantha wept for a period of time and realized again, how fulfilled she was to know the Lord. From this day forward she will continue to go to the aid of those in need and trust in the Lord.

Samantha then went into her children’s rooms and hugged and kissed each them again for the night. Samantha finally went to sleep with anticipation of a new day dawning tomorrow.

--- Robert Vickers --- California

Read More..

Obsessed

Two traveling monks reached a river where they met a young woman. Wary of the current, she asked if they could carry her across. One of the monks hesitated, but the other quickly picked her up onto his shoulders, transported her across the water, and put her down on the other bank. She thanked him and departed.

As the monks continued on their way, the one was brooding and preoccupied. Unable to hold his silence, he spoke out. "Brother, our spiritual training teaches us to avoid any contact with women, but you picked that one up on your shoulders and carried her!"

"Brother," the second monk replied, "I set her down on the other side, while you are still carrying her."

(some versions of this story describe the monk as carrying the woman across a mud puddle )

Read More..

Strength from Adversity

A man found a cocoon of a butterfly. One day a small opening appeared, he sat and watched the butterfly for several hours as it struggled to force its body through that little hole.

Then it seemed to stop making any progress. It appeared as if it had gotten as far as it could and it could go no farther.

Then the man decided to help the butterfly, so he took a pair of scissors and snipped off the remaining bit of the cocoon. The butterfly emerged easily. But it had a swollen body and small, shriveled wings.

The man continued to watch the butterfly because he expected that, at any moment, the wings would enlarge and expand to be able to support the body, which would contract in time.

Neither happened! In fact, the butterfly spent the rest of its life crawling around with a swollen body and shriveled wings. It was never able to fly.

What the man in his kindness and haste did not understand was that the restricting cocoon and the struggle required for the butterfly to get through the tiny opening were God's way of forcing fluid from the body of the butterfly into its wings so that it would be ready for flight once it achieved its freedom from the cocoon.

Sometimes struggles are exactly what we need in our life. If God allowed us to go through our life without any obstacles it would cripple us. We would not be as strong as what we could have been. And we could never fly.

--- Author Unknown --- Submitted by Tom Allred --- Wyoming
Read More..

Classroom Climate

Creating a positive classroom climate for learning

I’ve come to the frightening conclusion that I am the decisive element in the classroom. It is my personal approach that creates the climate. It is my daily mood that makes the weather. As a teacher, I possess a tremendous power to make a child’s life miserable or joyous. I can be a tool of torture or an instrument of inspiration. I can humiliate or humor, hurt or heal. In all situations, it is my response that decides whether a crisis will be escalated or deescalated and a child humanized or dehumanized.
Haim Ginot, Professor of Psychology


If we were to recall a teacher who we felt had a positive influence on us during our student days, we are most likely to think of a teacher who had made us feel comfortable and through the teacher’s ability to make us feel comfortable, we are able to learn what we have been given to learn. Modern cognitive research also shows that the brain cells would shrink in the face of a hostile environment as for example when we feel fear or unsafe. On the other hand, the same brain cell would grow and develop if the environment is safe and comfortable. A teacher, therefore, ought to be aware that the classroom climate is the most important condition for learning to take place. The teacher must cultivate positive attitudes and perceptions about learning among the students.

The creation of safe, non-threatening and conducive environment to learning is a pre-requisite to good teaching. A teacher must make the effort to create such an environment. The teacher would have to ask several questions to achieve this goal. For example, the teacher must ask what makes the students feel accepted in the class. Acceptance here, refers to acceptance not only by all the teachers teaching that class but also the student’s peers.

The teacher must also ask what makes the student comfortable. Is there order in the class? Do students know where to look for things? Do they know the classroom procedures? Do they know what is expected of them when they come into the classroom and when tasks are given? A well-run classroom will give the student that feeling of stability and focus.

There are also many things that the teacher can do to make the classroom a less threatening and intimidating place. A classroom should be a safe place for learning. The student must be free from not only physical hurt but also, and perhaps, more importantly, hurt from the words of their peers and teachers. I believe all of us know that words can harm the confidence and motivational level of students more than perhaps physical threats. Unfortunately, threats and intimidation are quite often the norm in classrooms all over the world.

The teacher also must seriously attempt to make the learning as suitable as possible for the learner. Students like to see relevance. Teachers must make the extra effort to connect for the students what they are learning to their own lives. If the students’ perceptions of the learning is that it has little relevant to them, they are less likely to be interested or motivated to learn. Furthermore, as I have mentioned in a previous posting, making the connection for students is actually teaching for transfer.

The teacher must also ensure that the learning is not too difficult for the student. The teacher should stretch the student but the stretching must not be done at the expense of learning being done in progressive and logical steps. The teacher must make sure that bridges are made during lessons so that the student can understand easier the new content. Scaffolding becomes important in the teaching and learning. The student should feel that the learning is manageable and that it does not require a quantum leap in the mental processes.

Teachers who are mindful of their students’ perceptions and attitudes towards learning will find that their students will be more enthusiastic and motivated to do well in class. Teachers can make or break students. That is how pwerful a teacher can be. As insinuated by the quotation that I began this post with, that power demands greater responsibility on our part in how we treat our students.
Read More..

Judy Rex's Classroom

A Visit to Judy Rex’s Classroom via Video
By Agepe

How can I ensure that every student in my very diverse classroom will demonstrate growth and reach a measure of success?” It is Judy Rex’s question at the opening of video A Visit to a Differentiated Classroom. The utterance above is a both question and statement at the same time exhibits the efforts done by her to reach classroom’s learning climate. It is not only a classroom learning climate for the 25 students in the class, but, it is rather a differentiated learning climate for every individual in the class. A differentiated classroom is one in which a teacher actively plans and teaches to address the varied learning needs of students in the class.

It is hard to imagine how a teacher teaches 25 students, age 8-11 years old, based on each student characteristic or background. In the video Judy said that two of her students have Individual Educational Plan for special education. Another three might be in the student study team process for possible identification for emotional or learning difficulties. Three students will be identified as gifted. Two of her students are generally second-language learners (ESL). Several others take medication for attention or hyperactivity disorders, or both (ADD). Indeed, in 60 minutes watching, I was amazed to see the hard-working Judy Rex in her classroom of 3rd and 4th graders in Scottsdale, Arizona.

I am going to describe my analysis results on the video. I focus my analysis on three things: (1) Classroom Management, (2) Learning Climate, and (3) Student Engagement.

1. Classroom Management


The most obvious thing when we talked about classroom management is that Judy was aware of all activities in classroom. The morning meeting activities, language arts, portfolio meeting, and social studies were all well-organized. It seemed that the class had much freedom, but it was clearly structured as well. Judy trusted her kids. She was certain that the students’ activities all worked smoothly. Of course, the activities worked well because of a clear and consistent rule of behavior. Though it was seen in a glance, on the blackboard there was classroom agreement.

The ring of the bell, hand clapping, and the 1 to 10 counting for students to prepare the next class activity are merely upon-agreed tools to maintain the class dynamics. The use of the bell or other verbal tools such as hand clapping shows there was a consistent schedule and maintenance of procedures and routine.

Morning session: reading message, for me, is a meaningful activity. The reading activity is a good means to build a community, to develop togetherness, to remind activity of the day, to measure language skills, to review the last lesson. Through the reading activity, there is a chance for the teacher to deliver message, to advice wisely or without insisting. What a wonderful classroom management! In short, the morning session was meaningful.

The seat arrangement was flexible so that the students could possibly learn in groups, to use the reference books, dictionaries, or internet/computer sets, to record their works and so on. It was clear that the students learnt happily. At the same time, Judy was moving freely among the students. Everything was well-organized. She established routines for all daily tasks and needs. The cleaning up classroom activity at the end of the video supported the idea of establishing the class routines.


2. Learning Climate

As I said earlier, the classroom learning climate was well-organized. In the video, it seems clearly that Judy created supportive and warm classroom climate. The supporting incentives such as-be productive, good job, great job-motivate the students to learn and work in a more optimal way.

It is seen clearly also from the video that Judy helped the students warmly in their learning. The utterance “…I see myself as a guide, a facilitator, maybe even a conductor of sorts. A lot of what we do is driven by the students, and I am there to help them along the way. In our classroom, we say there are 25 children, but there are 26 learners and there are 26 teachers. I learn from them. They learn from me. We learn from each other, and we teach each other also...” is her low-profile classroom management or her humble attitude which deems that her kids are also her teachers. It shows a really good partnership between teacher and students.

Though it is described in a glance, the portfolio meeting gives me insight that there were efforts to create situations for all students to succeed. A portfolio is a useful tool for looking at children's growth over time. Portfolios are also used to communicate to parents in parent conferences.


3. Student Engagement

Giving the students responsibility is a direct impression when we talk student engagement. Every student was responsible for his or her personal tasks. Judy had her own strategy to check whether each of her students is working. Clueing one finger, two fingers, clapping, snapping the finger, pointing thumb-pinky finger were clues used spontaneously to evaluate students’ work.

Judy also explored students understanding. In a social science session, the students defined questions on a piece of paper and then attached it in front of the class. In the discussion session on what students had learnt, she provided chances for students to ask. This activity stresses student responsibility and accountability.

The next interesting thing is that Judy formulates a habit for students to make reflection. Through the video, we can see students filled the classroom cues rubric with certain symbols that represented their learning intensity and passion. The students’ activity to fill the reflection rubric exhibits her good will to invite the students to learn how to measure and value them selves. In other words, the activity teaches the students to be honest to them selves. The reflection on the port-folio can be viewed as students deep-understanding.

What a wonderful class! I truly mention it at the end of my analysis. I am really astonished by what she did. I salute for her dedication as a teacher, a friend, and educator to her students. I am amazed by her deeds in exploration to accompany her differentiated students. I am jealous, too, for her idealism and efforts to explore and dig more. I am jealous to see that her students, age 8-11, have already understood to self-directed learning, to use dictionaries, to browse internet, and to speak about ‘government.’ While in Indonesia, the students still learn with limited learning resources and a centralized-curriculum which kills creativity. *** agepe-school supervision***
Read More..

Never Give Up

In 1832, he was a 22-year old business failure.


That same year he ran for the legislature and was defeated.


In 1833, he was a business failure once again.


In 1836, he was said to have suffered a nervous breakdown.


In 1838, he lost in an effort to become Speaker of the House
in the State Legislature.


Five years later, he ran for Congress--again it was in vain.


In 1846, he ran for Congress and won
--- only to lose his re-election bid in 1848.


He ran for the Senate in 1854, and lost.


He ran for the Vice-presidential nomination in 1856, and lost that too.


In 1860, he became the 16th President of the United States.


Honest Abe Lincoln
--- Author Unknown --- Submitted by Scott deGuzman --- California Read More..