I am trying to brainstorm fun and interdisciplinary mall scavenger hunt items. My friends with older kids could use these on rainy days when their children are bored.
Items can require internet research, since our local mall has an Apple Store whose demonstration computers could be used during the activity.
Here is an example list. It's not great, but it will show what I'm thinking about.
What are other good items for kids to look for?
Where in the mall is...?
1. (Biology) - an example of Ursus arctos
2. (Business) - an advertisement that uses bandwagon
3. (Nutrition) - a lunch or dinner main dish with less than 30% of its calories from fats [an example in a book counts!]
4. (Visual Arts) - an illustration that uses foreshadowing
5. (Economics) - a store whose stock price has outperformed the S&P 500 during the past month
6. (Religion) - an advertisement or retail product whose artwork contains a reference to a text a religion considers holy
7. (Health) - an eye chart
8. (Business) - an item priced with a chain discount
9. (Business) - a store that uses markup on cost, and another store that uses markup on selling price
10. (Visual Arts) - a golden rectangle
And bring back to the host...
11. (Mathematics) - a mall map on which the center of gravity of the mall's exterior walls has been marked
12. (Chemistry) - an example of NaCl
13. (Politics) - the name of a mall customer able to correctly identify five differences between President Obama's and Ron Paul's visions for our country
14. (Music) - after asking at least five mall customers to chant "air ball..." identify if the phrase is usually a major or minor interval, and usually a third or fourth
Saturday, October 29, 2011
Wednesday, October 26, 2011
BlendTec - Spicy Tomato Soup
I have recently mentioned enjoying injera with spicy tomato soup.
My wife makes some amazing spicy tomato soups. But what about when I do not have any leftovers of those for lunch and thus want to quickly make something simpler for lunch?
Time for a second BlendTec soup that uses canned tomato!
Ingredients:
Directions:
Put everything in the blender and blend on "soup".
(This is a nice soup, spicy but simple, and good with injera. I am working on a more complex version that also has peas and carrot, but have not finished tweaking it yet.)
My wife makes some amazing spicy tomato soups. But what about when I do not have any leftovers of those for lunch and thus want to quickly make something simpler for lunch?
Time for a second BlendTec soup that uses canned tomato!
Ingredients:
- 1 can diced tomato
- 1 cup nearly boiling water
- 2 Tbsp instant mashed potato (I use Costco's Excel Potato Pearls)
- 1/4 tsp berbere
- a little raw onion
Directions:
Put everything in the blender and blend on "soup".
(This is a nice soup, spicy but simple, and good with injera. I am working on a more complex version that also has peas and carrot, but have not finished tweaking it yet.)
Ethiopian Cuisine Basics
I have added a copy of the recent injera blog post to the recipes part of my website. Then it also made sense to add our family recipes for berbere and niter kebbeh.
During Fall and Winter we often have the bowl of injera sponge/batter living in our oven for two weeks. Not only does my wife make great Ethiopian dinners, it is handy at lunch times to be able to make a few injera pancakes to go with some spicy soup or some boxed Indian food. After two weeks we start to get tired of it, use it all up, wait two or three weeks, and then begin a new batch three days before we want to use it.
During Fall and Winter we often have the bowl of injera sponge/batter living in our oven for two weeks. Not only does my wife make great Ethiopian dinners, it is handy at lunch times to be able to make a few injera pancakes to go with some spicy soup or some boxed Indian food. After two weeks we start to get tired of it, use it all up, wait two or three weeks, and then begin a new batch three days before we want to use it.
Friday, October 21, 2011
The Missing American Girls
A few days ago my family inexplicably received an American Girls doll and book catalog.
The company certainly does its historical fiction schtick well. The books are only slightly expensive, and contain historical and social lessons a parent could want a child to read about. Then the dolls are expensive: sort of like Harry & David meets Toys 'R Us.
Personally, I find entertainment in inventing the "missing" historical fiction characters.
Victoria: During the Prohibition era, this daughter of a mob boss uses her friendship with the police chief's daughter to help her father teach others that family is the most important thing.
Liz: This daughter of the Wild West's most secretive highwayman knows the keys to success: an abandoned and crying girl will stop any stagecoach, her parents are both excellent snipers, and when you hide a derringer in your doll's skirts no one suspects you also carry a second in your sleeve.
Indigo and Trixie: With a sharp blade, sharper wits, and a few palms greased with pirate gold this pirate captain's daughter helps her best friend keep open the brothel that three generations of matriarchs have built into a cornerstone of the New Orleans French Quarter.
The company certainly does its historical fiction schtick well. The books are only slightly expensive, and contain historical and social lessons a parent could want a child to read about. Then the dolls are expensive: sort of like Harry & David meets Toys 'R Us.
Personally, I find entertainment in inventing the "missing" historical fiction characters.
Victoria: During the Prohibition era, this daughter of a mob boss uses her friendship with the police chief's daughter to help her father teach others that family is the most important thing.
Liz: This daughter of the Wild West's most secretive highwayman knows the keys to success: an abandoned and crying girl will stop any stagecoach, her parents are both excellent snipers, and when you hide a derringer in your doll's skirts no one suspects you also carry a second in your sleeve.
Indigo and Trixie: With a sharp blade, sharper wits, and a few palms greased with pirate gold this pirate captain's daughter helps her best friend keep open the brothel that three generations of matriarchs have built into a cornerstone of the New Orleans French Quarter.
When Ten Thousand is not Enough
This past weekend my wife and one of her friends made and canned lot of applesauce.
Our Coleman Fold 'n Go camp stove had some trouble keeping both large water baths boiling.
Less portable camp stoves, such as the Camp Chef Explorer, have triple the BTU rating.
Odd that ten thousand BTUs is not enough for a household job! Triple that would probably suffice.
Our Coleman Fold 'n Go camp stove had some trouble keeping both large water baths boiling.
Less portable camp stoves, such as the Camp Chef Explorer, have triple the BTU rating.
Odd that ten thousand BTUs is not enough for a household job! Triple that would probably suffice.
BlendTec - Tomato Broccoli Soup
I have twice mentioned our BlendTec Total Blender. Time for a recipe!
None of the soups in the blender's included recipe book use any type of canned tomato. Several include one raw tomato as an ingredient.
I'm not sure I could taste the difference between a soup made with a fresh tomato or canned. Canned tomato is much less expensive. So my first lunch mission as the weather cools off is to create a tomato-based soup with canned tomato. I'll use diced tomato, since that is what we buy at Costco and keep in the garage.
Costco also has affordable fresh broccoli. Since I like most tomato-broccoli soups, and already have a use for spinach (in my spinach-mango or spinach-raspberry smoothies) the refined mission is to use canned tomato and fresh broccoli.
After one dreadful attempt, here is a nice second version.
Ingredients:
Directions:
Put everything in the blender and blend on "soup". Garnish with grated cheese and perhaps black pepper.
None of the soups in the blender's included recipe book use any type of canned tomato. Several include one raw tomato as an ingredient.
I'm not sure I could taste the difference between a soup made with a fresh tomato or canned. Canned tomato is much less expensive. So my first lunch mission as the weather cools off is to create a tomato-based soup with canned tomato. I'll use diced tomato, since that is what we buy at Costco and keep in the garage.
Costco also has affordable fresh broccoli. Since I like most tomato-broccoli soups, and already have a use for spinach (in my spinach-mango or spinach-raspberry smoothies) the refined mission is to use canned tomato and fresh broccoli.
After one dreadful attempt, here is a nice second version.
Ingredients:
- 1 can diced tomato
- 1 cup nearly boiling water
- 1 clove garlic
- about 3 cups fresh broccoli, steamed in the microwave
- a little raw onion
Directions:
Put everything in the blender and blend on "soup". Garnish with grated cheese and perhaps black pepper.
Tuesday, October 18, 2011
Cthulhu's Artistic Relative
Heh. An ancient giant kraken lair contains carefully arranged bones.
In the fossil bed, some of the shonisaur vertebral disks are arranged in curious linear patterns with almost geometric regularity, McMenamin explained.The proposed Triassic kraken, which could have been the most intelligent invertebrate ever, arranged the vertebral discs in double line patterns, with individual pieces nesting in a fitted fashion as if they were part of a puzzle.
Even more creepy: The arranged vertebrae resemble the pattern of sucker discs on a cephalopod tentacle, with each vertebra strongly resembling a coleoid sucker. In other words, the vertebral disc "pavement" seen at the state park may represent the earliest known self portrait.
Monday, October 17, 2011
Green Bike Lane Portions
Eugene and Springfield now have portions of bike lanes bright green.
I understand the intention. But bright green?
Dark green would make sense as a Federal recommendation. Years ago a Federal study proved that white on dark green is the most visible contrast (not white on black), which is why freeway signs are white on dark green.
Yellow would make sense, since yellow already means "caution" to drivers.
But bright green means "go! your turn! accelerate!".
Why not orange? It would at least be different, and imply "a mix of caution and braking".
I must conclude that some of my undergraduate friends whom I have lost track of, who back at Pomona formed an I Hate Orange club, have risen to positions of governmental influence and forced some pro-orange study to be ignored.
I understand the intention. But bright green?
Dark green would make sense as a Federal recommendation. Years ago a Federal study proved that white on dark green is the most visible contrast (not white on black), which is why freeway signs are white on dark green.
Yellow would make sense, since yellow already means "caution" to drivers.
But bright green means "go! your turn! accelerate!".
Why not orange? It would at least be different, and imply "a mix of caution and braking".
I must conclude that some of my undergraduate friends whom I have lost track of, who back at Pomona formed an I Hate Orange club, have risen to positions of governmental influence and forced some pro-orange study to be ignored.
Washer Magic
Most folks who own front-loading HE washing machines use too much soap. Residue can build up, causing a bad smell and perhaps even bad performance.
I've written before about how for years we have been using Allens Naturally, a very gentle soap, and only half the jug's recommended amount. From that old post:
Earlier this month we used the first bottle, more than three years later. Hooray for Allens Naturally!
I've written before about how for years we have been using Allens Naturally, a very gentle soap, and only half the jug's recommended amount. From that old post:
We had the last annual free maintenance on our washing machine. The repair guy taught us to run the machine empty on the "pre-rinse" cycle every few months to check for soap buildup. If this test cycle was sudsy then we were using too much soap.Back in 2008 we ordered a box of six Washer Magic bottles for machine maintenance. That repair guy recommended them. "Use it any time bubbles remain after the washing is done."
Earlier this month we used the first bottle, more than three years later. Hooray for Allens Naturally!
Saturday, October 15, 2011
How We Make Injera
The weather is getting colder. Time to make injera!
Actually, I started making it on Sunday and ate it for the first time this Fall at lunch time today: three pieces to go with with spicy soup.
Injera has the world's simplest sponge recipe: in a mixing bowl whisk together
Preheat the oven to just over 100 degrees, then turn off the oven. Put the bowl in the oven and forget about it until you use your oven that day or until the next morning.
Each day, add a quarter cup more teff flour, perhaps some more water, whisk again, and return to the warm oven.
After three days it has fermented enough to be ready to cook, although you can wait additional days without problem. No ingredients are added: the "sponge" is now "batter".
A few tricks make the potentially tricky task very simple. Get these right and the pancakes come off easily and when you are done the griddle or skillet dusts clean with a dry rag. Ignore them and the batter sticks like crazy.
Save at least a little as a starter for the next batch. No need to add more yeast. Add teff and warm water in that two-to-three ratio until you have replenished your sponge.
During Fall and Winter we often have the bowl of sponge/batter living in our oven for two weeks. Not only does my wife make great Ethiopian dinners, it is handy at lunch times to be able to make a few injera pancakes to go with some spicy soup or some boxed Indian food. After two weeks we start to get tired of it, use it all up, wait two or three weeks, and then begin a new batch three days before we want to use it.
Actually, I started making it on Sunday and ate it for the first time this Fall at lunch time today: three pieces to go with with spicy soup.
Injera has the world's simplest sponge recipe: in a mixing bowl whisk together
- two cups of teff flour
- one teaspoon yeast
- three cups of warm water.
Preheat the oven to just over 100 degrees, then turn off the oven. Put the bowl in the oven and forget about it until you use your oven that day or until the next morning.
Each day, add a quarter cup more teff flour, perhaps some more water, whisk again, and return to the warm oven.
After three days it has fermented enough to be ready to cook, although you can wait additional days without problem. No ingredients are added: the "sponge" is now "batter".
A few tricks make the potentially tricky task very simple. Get these right and the pancakes come off easily and when you are done the griddle or skillet dusts clean with a dry rag. Ignore them and the batter sticks like crazy.
- The batter should be slightly thicker than stew. It is not as thick as dough. But it is thicker than crêpe batter. Add extra teff flour to thicken the batter appropriately.
- Use a cast iron griddle or skillet with a glass lid. Trust me that this is a huge help.
- Spray oil onto the griddle/skillet before starting. No need to reapply oil between pancakes unless you are making a whole lot of them.
- Use medium heat, and let the griddle/skillet heat up before you start. Really. Once drops of water bounce and sizzle, wait a couple more minutes.
- When you pour the batter swirl the griddle/skillet a bit to spread the batter flatter (like a crêpe).
- Cover the poured pancake. Watch it change color, starting at the edges and going to the center. Uncover it when the center has changed color. If you like them moist then it's done. If you prefer them drier then let it cook another minute or two.
Save at least a little as a starter for the next batch. No need to add more yeast. Add teff and warm water in that two-to-three ratio until you have replenished your sponge.
During Fall and Winter we often have the bowl of sponge/batter living in our oven for two weeks. Not only does my wife make great Ethiopian dinners, it is handy at lunch times to be able to make a few injera pancakes to go with some spicy soup or some boxed Indian food. After two weeks we start to get tired of it, use it all up, wait two or three weeks, and then begin a new batch three days before we want to use it.
Qualities of Classic Horror Stories
Way back in 2009 I wrote some about a favorite horror story, a great book I found about designing a horror story, and how horror stories have similarities to stories about political intrigue.
This week I helped create a short horror story writing contest for school age children (which may or may not actually happen). The rules were pretty simple:
1. The danger is personal. The protagonist, or a loved one, is threatened.
2. The first shock happens early. Often the opening scene involves the protagonist (or a loved one) witnessing or suffering a freakish situation.
3. The mood builds slowly with few releases of tension. The eeriness, helplessness, desperation, confusion, and dread grow gradually but relentlessly.
4. The protagonist becomes wrapped up in more and more problems. Yet although tensions abound, few become violent. The protagonist is not in an action story and cannot simply fight his or her way to freedom or victory.
5. The protagonist witnesses things that cannot be explained and is opposed by varieties of people or creatures that have never before been encountered.
6. Things that should be permanent act temporary. (A shouted curse has a long-lasting effect, the dead come back to life, etc.). Things that should be temporary act permanent. (Fog never leaves the town, the abandoned asylum is haunted by flashes of illusionary memories).
7. Because of the inexplicable events, unique opponents, and mixing of permanent and temporary, the protagonist is ignorant for many problems about which of his or her options will calm or inflame the situation. The growing mood includes new uncertainties about what to do and new worries that a new strategy will actually make things worse.
8. When the protagonist does feel a sense of victory, the gain is partly hollow. As examples, a clue explains why the monster appeared but not how to defeat it, rescuing someone alerts the villain that protagonist is an opponent worth monitoring and dealing with, or defeating one opponent reveals a deeper layer of evil in control. (Note: for young writers this is often the most difficult criteria to include, but also perhaps the most powerful for improving the story. Don't settle for a struggle only one layer deep!)
9. Purity has real value. Evil hearts draw evil forces. If the protagonist can remain pure, he or she can escape being attacked, detected, or slowed by the evil forces.
10. The unexpected happens! (In any or all of the first nine criteria, for example... Another friend or family member is involved. Another freakish event happens. Another part of the protagonist's history is revealed as a source of tension. A strange creature
ambushes the protagonist. A strange phenomenon causes the protagonist to doubt his or her sanity. An unforeseen complication provides additional worries. A partial victory is surprisingly easy but alarmingly hollow. The protagonist recognizes another habit or
mindset that counts as a helpful kind of purity.)
This week I helped create a short horror story writing contest for school age children (which may or may not actually happen). The rules were pretty simple:
The submission must include two items: the horror story and a short explanation of how each of the ten attributes below were used. The explanation should be clear and accurate: it will be more important for judging than the story itself. Younger children may simply write a phrase or two after each of the ten attributes; older children should compose their explanation in paragraph(s).Here are the ten attributes I came up with. What others am I missing? What makes a classic horror story? After all, shouldn't there be thirteen attributes of a classic horror story?
1. The danger is personal. The protagonist, or a loved one, is threatened.
2. The first shock happens early. Often the opening scene involves the protagonist (or a loved one) witnessing or suffering a freakish situation.
3. The mood builds slowly with few releases of tension. The eeriness, helplessness, desperation, confusion, and dread grow gradually but relentlessly.
4. The protagonist becomes wrapped up in more and more problems. Yet although tensions abound, few become violent. The protagonist is not in an action story and cannot simply fight his or her way to freedom or victory.
5. The protagonist witnesses things that cannot be explained and is opposed by varieties of people or creatures that have never before been encountered.
6. Things that should be permanent act temporary. (A shouted curse has a long-lasting effect, the dead come back to life, etc.). Things that should be temporary act permanent. (Fog never leaves the town, the abandoned asylum is haunted by flashes of illusionary memories).
7. Because of the inexplicable events, unique opponents, and mixing of permanent and temporary, the protagonist is ignorant for many problems about which of his or her options will calm or inflame the situation. The growing mood includes new uncertainties about what to do and new worries that a new strategy will actually make things worse.
8. When the protagonist does feel a sense of victory, the gain is partly hollow. As examples, a clue explains why the monster appeared but not how to defeat it, rescuing someone alerts the villain that protagonist is an opponent worth monitoring and dealing with, or defeating one opponent reveals a deeper layer of evil in control. (Note: for young writers this is often the most difficult criteria to include, but also perhaps the most powerful for improving the story. Don't settle for a struggle only one layer deep!)
9. Purity has real value. Evil hearts draw evil forces. If the protagonist can remain pure, he or she can escape being attacked, detected, or slowed by the evil forces.
10. The unexpected happens! (In any or all of the first nine criteria, for example... Another friend or family member is involved. Another freakish event happens. Another part of the protagonist's history is revealed as a source of tension. A strange creature
ambushes the protagonist. A strange phenomenon causes the protagonist to doubt his or her sanity. An unforeseen complication provides additional worries. A partial victory is surprisingly easy but alarmingly hollow. The protagonist recognizes another habit or
mindset that counts as a helpful kind of purity.)
Thursday, October 13, 2011
The Wicked Bad Guys in Far Away Land
In my previous post I mentioned Far Away Land without providing any background. Time to remedy that!
My wife and I both saved many books from our childhood to share with the children we hoped to have. Since Smiley enjoys fairy tales, we brought out some of her books of fairy tales that are sentimental because of their wonderful illustrations.
We should have anticipated that Hansel and Gretel would be so frightening...
Smiley knew about plenty bad guys. But Hansel and Gretel introduced two unprecedented levels of badness. There was the witch who wanted to eat someone and got burned up in her oven: people eating people was newly wrong, and a person burning in a fire was startlingly horrific. Even worse was the wicked stepmother who wanted to abandon her own children in the wood.
The part about the oven turned out to be easy to smooth over. We talked about our stove downstairs in which we burn wood to heat the house. The fire does not hurt me when I put logs in. The fire only burns the wood. Witches are not real people: they burn like wood.
(Not universally true about fairy tale witches, but for now it works. In his mind a witch is some sort of hybrid doppelganger-scarecrow.)
But thinking about a stepmother abandoning her children was really disturbing. Smiley had trouble falling asleep that night.
The next night he wanted to read Hansel and Gretel again, and he asked me what the word "wicked" meant. I saw a great opportunity to help ease his troubled mind.
We talked about the bad guys he knew about.
Most of them were not bad all the time but did make bad choices: his imaginary friend Magalene, the two bad mice, the troublesome trucks of the Railway stories, etc. I emphasized that these characters wanted to behave but had trouble behaving. I reminded Smiley that he also had times where he wanted to behave but had trouble behaving--but he was a good boy, not a bad guy. Some stories are about good people making mistakes.
However, he also knew about a few character that never even try to be good: Goliath, the Big Bad Wolf, the ninjas that try to tempt Magalene, the fierce bad rabbit, the rats who wanted to put someone in a roly-poly pudding. These were "wicked", I explained. Someone who is wicked does not even try to be good.
(That is not quite theologically correct, of course. But it as close as I could manage with a three-year-old.)
Smiley felt much better. He knew it often required a lot of effort to be a listening boy when he was not inclined to behave. Yet he almost always tried, and usually succeeded. Suddenly he saw himself as stronger than Goliath or the Big Bad Wolf, who lacked the willpower he daily practiced exerting.
Then we talked about how in Hansel and Gretel the stepmother and witch are both wicked. They too were not even trying. They were scary, but also slightly pitied.
Yet Hansel and Gretel was still troubling for another night.
Then Smiley started to ask whether any of his friends were wicked. I assured him none were. Smiley realizes that most of his playmates are not as wonderfully behaved as he is. (Although his impression is biased. We host much more than half his play-dates, and disobedience often happens when it is time to stop playing and leave. Smiley is just as susceptible to those minor fits as his friends, but sees it less often.) So we talked about all of his friends, and how they all try to behave and listen.
Again Hansel and Gretel was still troubling that night.
Then, the next day, Smiley decided that "wicked people live in Far Away Land". Ever since that proclamation he has never had trouble sleeping because of thinking about villains in stories.
I am still finding out what Far Away Land is like. I knew it would be complex because I have read the original Peter Pan:
My wife and I both saved many books from our childhood to share with the children we hoped to have. Since Smiley enjoys fairy tales, we brought out some of her books of fairy tales that are sentimental because of their wonderful illustrations.
We should have anticipated that Hansel and Gretel would be so frightening...
Smiley knew about plenty bad guys. But Hansel and Gretel introduced two unprecedented levels of badness. There was the witch who wanted to eat someone and got burned up in her oven: people eating people was newly wrong, and a person burning in a fire was startlingly horrific. Even worse was the wicked stepmother who wanted to abandon her own children in the wood.
The part about the oven turned out to be easy to smooth over. We talked about our stove downstairs in which we burn wood to heat the house. The fire does not hurt me when I put logs in. The fire only burns the wood. Witches are not real people: they burn like wood.
(Not universally true about fairy tale witches, but for now it works. In his mind a witch is some sort of hybrid doppelganger-scarecrow.)
But thinking about a stepmother abandoning her children was really disturbing. Smiley had trouble falling asleep that night.
The next night he wanted to read Hansel and Gretel again, and he asked me what the word "wicked" meant. I saw a great opportunity to help ease his troubled mind.
We talked about the bad guys he knew about.
Most of them were not bad all the time but did make bad choices: his imaginary friend Magalene, the two bad mice, the troublesome trucks of the Railway stories, etc. I emphasized that these characters wanted to behave but had trouble behaving. I reminded Smiley that he also had times where he wanted to behave but had trouble behaving--but he was a good boy, not a bad guy. Some stories are about good people making mistakes.
However, he also knew about a few character that never even try to be good: Goliath, the Big Bad Wolf, the ninjas that try to tempt Magalene, the fierce bad rabbit, the rats who wanted to put someone in a roly-poly pudding. These were "wicked", I explained. Someone who is wicked does not even try to be good.
(That is not quite theologically correct, of course. But it as close as I could manage with a three-year-old.)
Smiley felt much better. He knew it often required a lot of effort to be a listening boy when he was not inclined to behave. Yet he almost always tried, and usually succeeded. Suddenly he saw himself as stronger than Goliath or the Big Bad Wolf, who lacked the willpower he daily practiced exerting.
Then we talked about how in Hansel and Gretel the stepmother and witch are both wicked. They too were not even trying. They were scary, but also slightly pitied.
Yet Hansel and Gretel was still troubling for another night.
Then Smiley started to ask whether any of his friends were wicked. I assured him none were. Smiley realizes that most of his playmates are not as wonderfully behaved as he is. (Although his impression is biased. We host much more than half his play-dates, and disobedience often happens when it is time to stop playing and leave. Smiley is just as susceptible to those minor fits as his friends, but sees it less often.) So we talked about all of his friends, and how they all try to behave and listen.
Again Hansel and Gretel was still troubling that night.
Then, the next day, Smiley decided that "wicked people live in Far Away Land". Ever since that proclamation he has never had trouble sleeping because of thinking about villains in stories.
I am still finding out what Far Away Land is like. I knew it would be complex because I have read the original Peter Pan:
I don't know whether you have ever seen a map of a person's mind. Doctors sometimes draw maps of other parts of you, and your own map can become intensely interesting, but catch them trying to draw a map of a child's mind, which is not only confused, but keeps going round all the time. There are zigzag lines on it, just like your temperature on a card, and these are probably roads in the island, for the Neverland is always more or less an island, with astonishing splashes of colour here and there, and coral reefs and rakish-looking craft in the offing, and savages and lonely lairs, and gnomes who are mostly tailors, and caves through which a river runs, and princes with six elder brothers, and a hut fast going to decay, and one very small old lady with a hooked nose. It would be an easy map if that were all, but there is also first day at school, religion, fathers, the round pond, needle-work, murders, hangings, verbs that take the dative, chocolate pudding day, getting into braces, say ninety-nine, three-pence for pulling out your tooth yourself, and so on, and either these are part of the island or they are another map showing through, and it is all rather confusing, especially as nothing will stand still.I have learned that Far Away Land is where pretend things live. Animals wearing clothes, toys that talk, witches, ninjas, and everything else make-believe lives there. Despite its name, it is inside Eugene, unlike California which takes days and days to drive to and staying in motels. It is surrounded by a tall wood wall that keeps the wicked people inside.
Tuesday, October 11, 2011
Assisting, Demonstrating, Scaffolding
Yesterday Smiley had some friends over for some "Art Exploration Time". I'll use the event as an example of three types of teaching.
Assisting
Smiley had not seen a hole punch in many months and probably did not remember ever using one. He wanted to make holes in a paper plate. Since his hands were not strong enough to use the punch, he got some continued assistance. (The photo is not very clear about this, but you can just see Smiley behind his friend Stern, with Stern's mom helping use the hole punch.)
We also made gingerbread cookies. Smiley is a good helper in the kitchen but needs continued assistance. If I measure out ingredients he can dump them in the mixing bowls. He can stir the mixing bowls without spilling, but does not stir adequately for most recipes.
Smiley likes being a helper. He does not shy from activities that require continued assistance. He can still feel more capable and knowledgable despite requiring constant help.
The same can be true for adults, too. Many activities for adults, from scuba tours to kitchen canning classes, offer participants as much continued assistance as they desire.
Demonstrating
In that same photo you can notice Smiley's stamp set. A multi-colored stamp pad was something new for his friends. So I demonstrated how to use a damp cloth on a plate to clean the stamps before switching colors. Even three-year-old Stern caught on immediately and needed no continuing help.
Stern's sister, Giddy, wanted to help roll the dough flat between the silpat baking sheet and the plastic wrap. But she immediately realized the new challenge: unlike rolling clay on a table, this task involved boundary conditions since the dough should more-or-less fill the silpat. "What do I do?" she asked. I demonstrated starting from the middle and moving dough towards an edge that still needed more dough. She caught on and needed no other help.
In my math classes at LCC I do too much demonstrating. A constant issue is how to better use class time for assisting students that are struggling more, and how to design activities that use scaffolding for students that do not require as many demonstrations.
Scaffolding
A fun part of silpat gingerbread cookies is looking at the pieces between the cookie-cutter shapes and wondering what they look like. I thought this piece looked like a wild boar, but Giddy decided it was a lion.
After making the mane with orange glaze she paused, unsure what to do. "I have a hard time seeing the tail with that shape," I commented. "Could you help me see the tail?" She did: it is starting at the back, curving across the lion's yellow side, and ending in the red tuft of hairs.
My small and vague suggestion was just enough to get her going again. This kind of small nudge is called scaffolding, after Vygotsky's theories. A good teacher notices when a student is almost capable of more but needs a tiny nudge.
Smiley needed a more physical type of scaffolding when he tried to thread some colored yarn through the holes he punched around his paper plate. Although he is practiced at making bead necklaces using wire or using dental floss and a blunt needle, he could not get the soft yarn through the holes. So I made a stiff "needle" of tape on one end, which allowed him to proceed.
By doing as much scaffolding as possible we show our kids that they can be independent learners, but also that all learners sometimes get stuck and need small nudges to continue.
UPDATE: Smiley's friends names have been changed to "blog names".
Assisting
Smiley had not seen a hole punch in many months and probably did not remember ever using one. He wanted to make holes in a paper plate. Since his hands were not strong enough to use the punch, he got some continued assistance. (The photo is not very clear about this, but you can just see Smiley behind his friend Stern, with Stern's mom helping use the hole punch.)
We also made gingerbread cookies. Smiley is a good helper in the kitchen but needs continued assistance. If I measure out ingredients he can dump them in the mixing bowls. He can stir the mixing bowls without spilling, but does not stir adequately for most recipes.
Smiley likes being a helper. He does not shy from activities that require continued assistance. He can still feel more capable and knowledgable despite requiring constant help.
The same can be true for adults, too. Many activities for adults, from scuba tours to kitchen canning classes, offer participants as much continued assistance as they desire.
Demonstrating
In that same photo you can notice Smiley's stamp set. A multi-colored stamp pad was something new for his friends. So I demonstrated how to use a damp cloth on a plate to clean the stamps before switching colors. Even three-year-old Stern caught on immediately and needed no continuing help.
Stern's sister, Giddy, wanted to help roll the dough flat between the silpat baking sheet and the plastic wrap. But she immediately realized the new challenge: unlike rolling clay on a table, this task involved boundary conditions since the dough should more-or-less fill the silpat. "What do I do?" she asked. I demonstrated starting from the middle and moving dough towards an edge that still needed more dough. She caught on and needed no other help.
In my math classes at LCC I do too much demonstrating. A constant issue is how to better use class time for assisting students that are struggling more, and how to design activities that use scaffolding for students that do not require as many demonstrations.
Scaffolding
A fun part of silpat gingerbread cookies is looking at the pieces between the cookie-cutter shapes and wondering what they look like. I thought this piece looked like a wild boar, but Giddy decided it was a lion.
After making the mane with orange glaze she paused, unsure what to do. "I have a hard time seeing the tail with that shape," I commented. "Could you help me see the tail?" She did: it is starting at the back, curving across the lion's yellow side, and ending in the red tuft of hairs.
My small and vague suggestion was just enough to get her going again. This kind of small nudge is called scaffolding, after Vygotsky's theories. A good teacher notices when a student is almost capable of more but needs a tiny nudge.
Smiley needed a more physical type of scaffolding when he tried to thread some colored yarn through the holes he punched around his paper plate. Although he is practiced at making bead necklaces using wire or using dental floss and a blunt needle, he could not get the soft yarn through the holes. So I made a stiff "needle" of tape on one end, which allowed him to proceed.
By doing as much scaffolding as possible we show our kids that they can be independent learners, but also that all learners sometimes get stuck and need small nudges to continue.
UPDATE: Smiley's friends names have been changed to "blog names".
Painting Objects with Parts
Towards the end of September we noticed a change in Smiley's painting.
Most of what he did and does for "painting" with colored paints was mixing colors in this dish of paints and in the bowl of water supposedly for cleaning his brush. Making lines and curves on the paper not as interesting or engaging. That much has not changed.
But previously he did not have any structure to his lines and curves, even if he named them (usually as escalators, train tracks, or roads). Now he is painting objects made up of parts.
That purple item mystified us for a two weeks. Smiley finally decided it was a flower. Even if it was not originally anything in particular, it still demonstrates his slowly developing awareness that where on the paper he puts his lines and curves can be an important choice.
Yesterday he painted another mystery.
We know what this is: a map of Far Away Land. He has been drawing these on his doodle pads, and now made one with paint. The circle around the outside is the fence that separates Far Away Land from the rest of Eugene.
I am not yet sure if the placement of his other lines and curves has any intentionality. I have not had yet an appropriate time to sit with him and repeatedly ask, "Who else lives in Far Away Land?" and "Where is their home?".
Most of what he did and does for "painting" with colored paints was mixing colors in this dish of paints and in the bowl of water supposedly for cleaning his brush. Making lines and curves on the paper not as interesting or engaging. That much has not changed.
But previously he did not have any structure to his lines and curves, even if he named them (usually as escalators, train tracks, or roads). Now he is painting objects made up of parts.
That purple item mystified us for a two weeks. Smiley finally decided it was a flower. Even if it was not originally anything in particular, it still demonstrates his slowly developing awareness that where on the paper he puts his lines and curves can be an important choice.
Yesterday he painted another mystery.
We know what this is: a map of Far Away Land. He has been drawing these on his doodle pads, and now made one with paint. The circle around the outside is the fence that separates Far Away Land from the rest of Eugene.
I am not yet sure if the placement of his other lines and curves has any intentionality. I have not had yet an appropriate time to sit with him and repeatedly ask, "Who else lives in Far Away Land?" and "Where is their home?".
Saturday, October 08, 2011
Political Parties: Unions versus Corporations
I remember that back in the 1980s I figured out the difference between Democrats and Republicans. (I make no claim that my observation was correct, since I was not very aware of politics at the time.)
Surely my observation about the difference between the parties was incomplete. Perhaps it was entirely false.
Today the contrast is sadly clear, and quite divorced from the normal folk who belong to either party. The Democratic leadership is in bed with the unions. The Republican leadership is in bed with large corporations.
Today Instapundit had amazing examples of both. The "Occupy Wall Street" protests are astrotrufed with unions hiring union members and unaffiliated Hispanics to participate. The ABA is a great example of regulatory capture.
Most Americans are neither union leaders nor managers of large corporations, and are increasingly realizing how little we are represented in our republic.
The obvious way to reduce cronyism is to shift Federal power back to the states. As Stephen Bainbridge writes:
Democrats valued caution. They did not want to use the environment in ways that might wreck things, change how unions worked, or relax regulations on corporations. Republicans valued progress. They believed that America was prosperous enough to fix anything it might damage, and favored tinkering with policy in the hope it would foster innovation and improve average wealth.
Surely my observation about the difference between the parties was incomplete. Perhaps it was entirely false.
Today the contrast is sadly clear, and quite divorced from the normal folk who belong to either party. The Democratic leadership is in bed with the unions. The Republican leadership is in bed with large corporations.
Today Instapundit had amazing examples of both. The "Occupy Wall Street" protests are astrotrufed with unions hiring union members and unaffiliated Hispanics to participate. The ABA is a great example of regulatory capture.
Most Americans are neither union leaders nor managers of large corporations, and are increasingly realizing how little we are represented in our republic.
The obvious way to reduce cronyism is to shift Federal power back to the states. As Stephen Bainbridge writes:
Corporations do influence the government, of course. But then so do labor unions, the legal profession, the medical profession, special interest groups based on one form of racial or ethnic grievance or another, and lobbying interests ranging from Iowa corn to Texas oil. The problem isn’t corporations, the problem is that we have a government that has its fingers in nearly every aspect of the economy. That means that policy makers have the ability to pick economic winners and losers every day, and it’s only natural that those policies would be of concern to the people that they’re going to impact most directly, the businesses affected by them.
Eugene's Busy Three-Year-Olds
Since the rainy days are approaching I'm compiling a list of things that kids Smiley's age are invited to do around town for free or for little cost.
Please chime in if you know of other activities!
Eugene Park and Recreation (calendar, news) offers occasional, usually free activities. For example, this weekend had an interpretive walk through Delta Ponds.
Springfield Parks (calendar) also has occasional, usually free events. For example, next week has the Edible Festival at Willamalane Center on Saturday ($5 per adult).
The Eugene Library (kids page) has free weekly story and song events. For three-year-olds the time is Wednesdays at 10:15am or 11am.
The Museum of Natural and Cultural History has free monthly Little Wonders stories and activity days for preschool-age kids on the first Wednesday of each month. If you can find parking in the small lot next to the museum then the front desk will provide a temporary parking pass.
The Science Factory also has monthly Tot Discovery Days on the first Friday of each month. These are only free if you are a member, but if you have a little kid in Eugene you probably are a member anyway since the Science Factory is a great thing to do on rainy Winter days.
The Schnitzer Museum of Art has free admission on the first Friday of each month. Not as age-appropriate as the Science Factory offering, but free for families not Science Factory members.
The NAAG Gym has an open gym hour most days. The cost is $4, or $3 for gym students. This is less expensive than Bounce. Smiley also prefers the equipment at NAAG. (Smiley is currently a student in the weekly class on Thursdays at 2:30pm. If you want to visit the weekly class, it's free the first time as the guest of an enrolled kid!)
The local homeschooling network, Barnraisers, often organizes activities for younger kids as well as school-age kids. For example, yesterday I took both boys to River Turns Farm in Coburg for a tour and fruit picking, and most Mondays afternoons in October we are hosting an "art exploration" time.
Please chime in if you know of other activities!
Eugene Park and Recreation (calendar, news) offers occasional, usually free activities. For example, this weekend had an interpretive walk through Delta Ponds.
Springfield Parks (calendar) also has occasional, usually free events. For example, next week has the Edible Festival at Willamalane Center on Saturday ($5 per adult).
The Eugene Library (kids page) has free weekly story and song events. For three-year-olds the time is Wednesdays at 10:15am or 11am.
The Museum of Natural and Cultural History has free monthly Little Wonders stories and activity days for preschool-age kids on the first Wednesday of each month. If you can find parking in the small lot next to the museum then the front desk will provide a temporary parking pass.
The Science Factory also has monthly Tot Discovery Days on the first Friday of each month. These are only free if you are a member, but if you have a little kid in Eugene you probably are a member anyway since the Science Factory is a great thing to do on rainy Winter days.
The Schnitzer Museum of Art has free admission on the first Friday of each month. Not as age-appropriate as the Science Factory offering, but free for families not Science Factory members.
The NAAG Gym has an open gym hour most days. The cost is $4, or $3 for gym students. This is less expensive than Bounce. Smiley also prefers the equipment at NAAG. (Smiley is currently a student in the weekly class on Thursdays at 2:30pm. If you want to visit the weekly class, it's free the first time as the guest of an enrolled kid!)
The local homeschooling network, Barnraisers, often organizes activities for younger kids as well as school-age kids. For example, yesterday I took both boys to River Turns Farm in Coburg for a tour and fruit picking, and most Mondays afternoons in October we are hosting an "art exploration" time.
Total Blender, Part 2
In August I wrote about our super-blender. Time for an update.
Its ability to make soups quickly without heating up the house as much as using the stove did improve our summer dinner routines. The types of soups that we made exclusively with the blender was limiting, but my wife had no trouble adapting a few of her tomato-based soups so that most of the preparation was done with the blender and the stove was used only a few minutes*.
The blender does grind grain well simply by putting in two cups of grain and running the blender on its highest speed (for the default 50 seconds the "speed up" key runs). The result is finer than with our grain mill.
But it will not replace our grain mill. Doing two cups at a time requires too much babysitting, compounded by the fact that the blender is so incredibly noisy at maximum speed that being anywhere near it is annoying**. The grain mill is slower but its large hopper and quieter noise win the prize. However, it is nice to have the blender as a backup for when we are out of flour mix but want to quickly throw together a loaf of bread dough before bedtime to ferment and rise overnight.
My wife and I have discovered we like vastly different fruits and vegetables in our raw juices.
I have found that I like filling the blender with spinach. I like spinach, and eating more is a healthy idea. I add half a cup of milk so it blends, and on top dump about half a cup of either frozen mango or frozen raspberries. (For me, blueberries, banana, or apple do not combine well with spinach. And those five exhaust the list of fruits we can affordably buy organic year-round.)
My wife makes her juices with cantaloupe, carrot, and then some fruit. Surprisingly, I do like carrots and cantaloupe but have learned that I like to eat those flavors, not drink them.
Lastly, we're making more pancakes and waffles in the mornings. But that is simply because we have a reliable blender. A normal blender would help with those equally well.
* She uses the stove before blending to saute onions and garlic, and/or uses the stove after blending to bring the soup to a rolling boil for a few minutes so it will safely keep longer in the fridge.
** We also had to explain what we were doing to the confused FAA personnel who knocked at our front door.
Its ability to make soups quickly without heating up the house as much as using the stove did improve our summer dinner routines. The types of soups that we made exclusively with the blender was limiting, but my wife had no trouble adapting a few of her tomato-based soups so that most of the preparation was done with the blender and the stove was used only a few minutes*.
The blender does grind grain well simply by putting in two cups of grain and running the blender on its highest speed (for the default 50 seconds the "speed up" key runs). The result is finer than with our grain mill.
But it will not replace our grain mill. Doing two cups at a time requires too much babysitting, compounded by the fact that the blender is so incredibly noisy at maximum speed that being anywhere near it is annoying**. The grain mill is slower but its large hopper and quieter noise win the prize. However, it is nice to have the blender as a backup for when we are out of flour mix but want to quickly throw together a loaf of bread dough before bedtime to ferment and rise overnight.
My wife and I have discovered we like vastly different fruits and vegetables in our raw juices.
I have found that I like filling the blender with spinach. I like spinach, and eating more is a healthy idea. I add half a cup of milk so it blends, and on top dump about half a cup of either frozen mango or frozen raspberries. (For me, blueberries, banana, or apple do not combine well with spinach. And those five exhaust the list of fruits we can affordably buy organic year-round.)
My wife makes her juices with cantaloupe, carrot, and then some fruit. Surprisingly, I do like carrots and cantaloupe but have learned that I like to eat those flavors, not drink them.
Lastly, we're making more pancakes and waffles in the mornings. But that is simply because we have a reliable blender. A normal blender would help with those equally well.
* She uses the stove before blending to saute onions and garlic, and/or uses the stove after blending to bring the soup to a rolling boil for a few minutes so it will safely keep longer in the fridge.
** We also had to explain what we were doing to the confused FAA personnel who knocked at our front door.
Wednesday, October 05, 2011
In Real Life
Smiley had his first day of preschool today.
I would write more, and put up photographs, but I am also terribly sick with an awful cold.
Yet I cannot go to sleep before retelling this conversation after we got into the car this morning:
I would write more, and put up photographs, but I am also terribly sick with an awful cold.
Yet I cannot go to sleep before retelling this conversation after we got into the car this morning:
Me: Remember, when we had the tour of the room two days ago we were told that today Daddy could not stay long. But in a few days I can stay with you more and see what you do.
Smiley: Okay.
Me: But when I do stay, I might not be able to play with you. I will have to do what your teacher says. Maybe she will ask me to help other kids. In preschool the teacher is the boss.
Smiley: Yes. In classes the teacher is the boss, not the daddies. That's how it is in real life.
Tuesday, October 04, 2011
Gallant at Four Months
Yesterday Gallant had his four month checkup. His measurements (and percentiles) were length 23.4 in. (10%), weight 12 lb., 6 oz. (10%), head 16.3 in. (25%).
He is very slightly shorter and heavier than Smiley was when he was four months old.
Smiley at four months:
Gallant at four months:
He is very slightly shorter and heavier than Smiley was when he was four months old.
Smiley at four months:
Gallant at four months:
Yerba Maté, Part 2
A bit more than a month ago I wrote about drinking yerba maté.
I decided to buy some from Eco Teas. That brand is a good product: unsmoked for a more pleasant and healthier taste, and well-processed to include very few branch bits.
Amazon seemed to have a good deal, but the Eco Teas website is even less expensive if you actually want five pounds (which I did not).
In any case, compared to quality tea it is very cheap!
I soon realized that I only like yerba maté if I treat it like black tea. I use about a tablespoon per 40 ounce teapot (instead of a tablespoon per eight ounces). I add milk. I really like the result, but it is nothing like the traditional experience.
It also means I am only getting about 6 mg of caffeine per eight-ounce cup, according to my handy caffeine chart. That is comparable to decaff tea or hot cocoa!
I decided to buy some from Eco Teas. That brand is a good product: unsmoked for a more pleasant and healthier taste, and well-processed to include very few branch bits.
Amazon seemed to have a good deal, but the Eco Teas website is even less expensive if you actually want five pounds (which I did not).
In any case, compared to quality tea it is very cheap!
I soon realized that I only like yerba maté if I treat it like black tea. I use about a tablespoon per 40 ounce teapot (instead of a tablespoon per eight ounces). I add milk. I really like the result, but it is nothing like the traditional experience.
It also means I am only getting about 6 mg of caffeine per eight-ounce cup, according to my handy caffeine chart. That is comparable to decaff tea or hot cocoa!
Herbal Tea: 0 mg
Decaffeinated Tea: 1-8 mg
Hot Cocoa: 8 mg
Decaffeinated Coffee: 4-10 mg
Milk Chocolate (4 oz.): 4-40 mg
Dark Chocolate (4 oz.): 20-140 mg
Soda: 22-55 mg
White or Green Tea: 30-60 mg
Yerba Maté: 30-40 mg
Oolong Tea: 50-100 mg
Black Tea: 80-140 mg
Energy Drinks: 75-160 mg
Instant Coffee: 90-200 mg
Espresso (4 oz.): 180-220 mg
Drip Coffee: 160-300 mg
NoDoz (2 pills): 200 mg
Sunday, October 02, 2011
Project Five or Bust
One of my LCC colleagues, Phil Moore had great news in February. I'm finally getting around to blogging about it.
He organized a search named "Five or Bust" on a math forum to organize a "proof" by overpowering evidence for the conjecture that
He organized a search named "Five or Bust" on a math forum to organize a "proof" by overpowering evidence for the conjecture that
k = 78557 is the smallest positive odd integer such that k + 2n is never a prime number for any positive integer nPhil writes about his project's completion:
It is easy to show that 78557 + 2^n is never prime, being always divisible by 3, 5, 7, 13, 19, 37, or 73.Congratulations, Phil and Engracio!
To show that 78557 is the smallest number with this property, we need to find for each odd k < 78557 some value of n which makes k + 2^n prime.
A collaborative search in 2001-2002 narrowed the search down to 8 values of k for which a prime or probable prime value was not known for the sequence k + 2^n. A probable prime is a number which passes a number of tests that all prime numbers will pass and most, but not all, composite numbers will fail. I started searching these 8 sequences in summer of 2007 and eliminated three of them by discovering three large probable primes. My largest discovery in June of 2008 at 358,640 digits was at that time the largest known probable prime.
In October of 2008, I organized the distributed search project "Five or Bust" to search the remaining 5 sequences. In November 2009, we found the fourth probable prime, narrowing the search to the single sequence 40291 + 2^n.
In early February, Engracio Esmenda of Chicago discovered that 40291 + 2^9092394 is a probable prime. This number contains 2,737,083 digits, and if written in 12-point font on a single line, would be over five-and-a-half miles long. We are pretty sure that we have found our prime, but we can't actually prove it. The probability that a random number of this size which has passed all of our probable prime tests is actually composite is about 1 chance in 10^1800. To prove it is actually prime would take about 4 trillion years on a typical computer of today, maybe only 300 billion years if the Generalized Riemann Hypothesis is ever proven.
Twenty of the values that have been discovered over the years of this search are probable primes as opposed to proven primes, so in order to make a mathematical theorem out of this, we are going to need some improvements in theory, technology, or both!
This project has been so much fun that I am a little sorry to see it end, but I am also relieved, as there was no reason to think that in the worst case, the search could easily have gone on for decades.
Saturday, October 01, 2011
Smiley's Weapons
Even toddler Bibles have swords, bows, and arrows. At the beginning of the summer Smiley began asking about these.
So my wife and I made him a pair of boffer swords.
He is still too young to learn the Four Rules of Boffer Sword Safety, which is okay. He and his friends do not move fast enough or hit hard enough to be dangerous. At this point the one rule "Swords hit legs" is sufficient.
He likes them. They are a great way to be energetic outside.
I also retrieved from the garage my children's bow an one arrow.
Smiley was able to notch the arrow next to the bead attached to the string, but then lacked the coordination to shift how he held the bow or draw back the arrow. Perfect!
The bow and arrow are now back in the garage, having served their purpose for now.
Both types of weapons helped him continue to learn the difference between tools and toys. In general, tools have more rules, have one way to properly use them, and are less indestructible. Tools need more respect.
So my wife and I made him a pair of boffer swords.
He is still too young to learn the Four Rules of Boffer Sword Safety, which is okay. He and his friends do not move fast enough or hit hard enough to be dangerous. At this point the one rule "Swords hit legs" is sufficient.
He likes them. They are a great way to be energetic outside.
I also retrieved from the garage my children's bow an one arrow.
Smiley was able to notch the arrow next to the bead attached to the string, but then lacked the coordination to shift how he held the bow or draw back the arrow. Perfect!
The bow and arrow are now back in the garage, having served their purpose for now.
Both types of weapons helped him continue to learn the difference between tools and toys. In general, tools have more rules, have one way to properly use them, and are less indestructible. Tools need more respect.
Unremembered Loss #25
Douglas Clarke, a cousin-in-law, publishes a monthly newsletter named Unremembered Loss about what he is learning as a writer. He does not write much, but he writes worthwhile stuff well.
Some issues are about technique. For example, issue #24 was about writing a strong opening paragraph. Other issues are about his personal growth either as a writer or as a father who tragically lost a teenage son.
Most issues are two pages. Some months almost half of the newsletter's text is examples cited from his own novels and short stories, included to make his commentary clear.
The latest issue is #25, which discusses how he wrote this short story. Its lessons directly apply to writing a short story about any life lesson.
If you like making up short stories, writing, or reading about someone's personal growth, consider subscribing. Unfortunately, Douglas does not update his Unremembered Loss archive page well, so you do need to subscribe to reliably get new newsletters.
Some issues are about technique. For example, issue #24 was about writing a strong opening paragraph. Other issues are about his personal growth either as a writer or as a father who tragically lost a teenage son.
Most issues are two pages. Some months almost half of the newsletter's text is examples cited from his own novels and short stories, included to make his commentary clear.
The latest issue is #25, which discusses how he wrote this short story. Its lessons directly apply to writing a short story about any life lesson.
If you like making up short stories, writing, or reading about someone's personal growth, consider subscribing. Unfortunately, Douglas does not update his Unremembered Loss archive page well, so you do need to subscribe to reliably get new newsletters.
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