The Core Knowledge Blog is back, comparing teaching to tapping out tunes without the melodies.
VG
Miss Brave isn’t losing her “wackness,” but her “wackiness”! (I checked the link.) One thing I’ve learned from the kids is “wack” (whack?), as in, “Miss, this test is wack,” or some such. It didn’t seem right that a teacher would rue a loss of wackness. But wacky, I can understand. That quality can help.
Michael M.
I propose Miss (not Ms.?) Brave be heralded as “Her Wackiness.”
I mean that as a good, er baad, thing.
And I’m going to leave the “h” out, given a google search pinged 10 times as often with as without, in a bad context (one “a”), as in per Whitney Houston channeling Keith Haring, “Crack is whack,” though Keith did not use the “h” and I think Houston and Haring were of like mind on the subject.
To be clear, I “propose that,” not “propose to”… miss-ness notwithstanding, not to mention the courageous Mr. Brave-to-be. (There may be no Ms. M., but there is a Ms. C.)
New Yawk needs more like her, him, and them. All three. Wackiness works for me.
(Note to self: Next time, decaf.)
http://www.gothamschools.org Philissa Cramer
VG: Thanks for the correction. I must have been thinking about this movie, where the wackness is definitely not a good thing for a teacher to have!
http://clair2jensen.diaryland.com/100522_28.html Irena Lingefelt
Oprah Winfrey is a fantastic person….she’s a powerful woman……I enjoyed her show.She helps people with their medical issues and money troubles.She’s not afraid to speak up.She discusses matters that all of us as an audience can easily agree with.Love Oprah!
“I wonder whether school are more or less integrated along socioeconomic lines than they are along racial lines. I could imagine the title of that article being "why don't we have any rich kids?"
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