Mentorship and Teaching

I’ve committed to trying to read something “real” each school day this year and to write a bit about it.

I found this back essay in Reviews in American History, where historian Michael Kammen talks about mentorship and looks at this topic over time. I don’t want to write about my own awesome, inspiring mentor who took me through the dissertation process but about the ways in which teaching anywhere ought to resemble this process.

Near the beginning of the essay, Kammen quotes another hero of mine describing his own grad school mentor:

He had a gift great teachers have, of simultaneously intimating the imminence of marvelous revelations and projecting his own inability to attain such revelations unaided. . . . Some of us took up his monumental intellectual project. We would help him accomplish the end he put so palpably before us, of unriddling the mysteries of the American character.

I got to thinking about the differences between entering graduate school to become a historian and entering 12th grade. A fledgling grad student usually has some basic skills and a passion for the topic. Most of what follows in grad school builds upon that passion (the dim prospect of a tenure-track position hardly motivates on its own).

What I think drops out of most conversations about high school is the fact most kids have at least one similar passion that’s probably not acknowledged or even central to their school experience. But, if as a teacher or a school, you can find it, you see that your student can rapidly build on whatever basic skills they possess and find ways to quickly develop others. The quote above underscores the possibilities of education when a teacher and a student can simultaneously engage around an exciting problem, be it the meaning of the American character or the replacement for a combustion engine. A high school teacher ought to be engaged in the same kind (if not always the same level) of joint inquiry with their kids as a historian in a seminar room…

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Article opens with this quote:

“A teacher affects eternity; he can never tell where his influence stops.” The Education of Henry Adams

refrigerators and energy efficiency

We’re always trying to get our house running as efficiently (and as cheaply) as possible. We’re re-doing our kitchen and have thought about moving the old refrigerator the basement. I had a start when I saw this graphic in Grid suggesting that getting rid of the refrigerator might save $252 or 1800 kWh. Damn — that’s a lot.

But then I went to the and entered the model number of my fridge:

GTS18FBS 18.2 cubic feet Top Freezer

This unit uses 552 kWh a year. Using the Energy Cooperative (.1025) price that’s $55.55 per year.

Lessons learned:
1. We’ll happily $55 extra a year to run a second fridge/freezer, money that we’ll more than recoup by buying in bulk.
2. Older refrigerators are outrageous power hogs.

Q: Will the basement, where it’s generally 55 degrees year round, make it cheaper to run this unit?

Perfect cup of coffee

Step One: Boil Water
Step Two: Select coffee

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Step Three: Grind Coffee in Burr Grinder (course setting)
Step Four: Thirteen tablespoons of coffee into French Press Device
Step Five: 36 oz of boiling water
Step Six: Stir and let sit for seven minutes
Step Seven: Press down. Drink immediately with 1 tbsp of half and half and 1/2 tbsp of sugar.

Tomorrow: If I use twelve tablespoons and let it sit for ten minutes, what will happen?