What Does this Mean to You?
Labels: quotes, Sand Lake Elementary
This is dedicated to my amazing students. The goal is for each and every one of them to feel unstoppable by the time they walk out of the classroom door for the final time in May. This chronicles their journey; their own Chronicles of Self-Actualization.

Labels: quotes, Sand Lake Elementary
Don't worry about what other people think. Most people are too busy worrying about others think of them. With your intelligence it's natural for insecure people to worry that you may be thinking you're better than they are, because it's so obvious you are so much smarter than they are. You can't hide it. And you don't have to.
But feel strong for them, not sorry. And instead of being insecure yourself and putting them down for their emphasis on being cool, athletic, popular, etc. to gain a sense of importance, share your strength. Share your knowledge that everyone of them has gifts too. Recognize and appreciate this in others and they will learn to do the same for you. Make Minnesota a better place by your presence and attitude.
Don't shrink from this challenge. Expand in it. Be more by becoming more. Get in shape yourself. Don't be one dimensional. Don't limit yourself to incredible intelligence. You CAN be gifted in more than one way. A man can be both sensitive AND strong, intelligent AND physical, a poet AND a warrior.
It's OK for you to be you. It's OK for you to be better than others in certain areas, just as it is for others to be better than you. Teach and share your knowledge and wisdom. Learn from and grow from others knowledge and wisdom. Be patient in this process. Be courageous in the challenge.Alexis Lemaire, a 27-year-old Frenchman, correctly calculated the 13th root of a random 200-digit number from a possible 393 trillion answers.
The so-called 'mathlete' produced the answer of 2,407,899,893,032,210 in 70.2 seconds, beating his previous record of 72.4 seconds, at London's Science Museum.
A computer was used to produce a random 200-digit number before he sat down to calculate the answer in his head.
The museum's curator of mathematics, Jane Wess, said: "He sat down and it was all very quiet -- and all of a sudden he amazingly just cracked it.
"I believe that it is the highest sum calculated mentally.
"He seems to have a large memory and he's made this his life's ambition. It's quite remarkable to see it happen. A very small number of people have this extraordinary ability; nowadays there is only a handful."
Lemaire, who attends the University of Reims in northern France, began demonstrating his prowess by finding the 13th root of a random 100-digit number but gave up trying to improve his performance when he calculated an answer in under four seconds in 2004.
Like an athlete, he trains his brain daily for the far harder task of finding the 13th root of 200-digit numbers.
I told you that the world needs real thinkers, real problems solvers, and real, fully alive people.
You ARE being prepared for that every time I get you to
- stop waiting for me to give you assignments and start telling me what your own data says you need to work on today
- stop trying to memorize answers and start thinking for yourselves,
- stop waiting for me to tell you the answers and start with what you do know about the problem and build from there
- stop asking me if you are right and start telling me why YOU THINK you are right
- stop giving up after a failure and start getting excited about knowing you are another step closer to finding the solution
- stop seeing school as a boring necessary evil to get good grades, get in a good college, and get a good job....
...and start seeing every school day as a decision YOU MAKE to individualize YOUR OWN learning, discover what subjects and concepts BLOW YOUR MIND and THRILL YOUR SOUL, and LEARN TO LIVE FULLY ALIVE and GIVING IT YOUR ALL...
....NOW! THIS DAY...and not wait for some day way off in the future after all this schooling is done.
You HAVE started doing this!
You ARE being well-prepared for the challenges ahead!
YOU ARE the FUTURE!Labels: Sand Lake Elementary, video



The good thing about pushing yourself to your limits, and then going past them, is that you're so tired that the kinda-funny becomes funny, and the funny-funny becomes hilarious.
Comedic genius can be a real form of high intelligence. I hope all my students go on to a happy life that's filled with laughter, and at least one of them a comedy skit writer. I have given them complete freedom to imitate me to the funniest extreme.
Another picture I wished hadn't been erased was one of me trying to motivate a Number 2 pencil he could be a Number 1 pencil in a Knute Rockne / Mike Meyers voice.
At the very least, we're going to be able to say we couldn't have had a better time learning.
At the very most, these kids will learn they don't need drugs because they're bored or trying to escape from their problems...........Not when their own hearts are filled with such confidence, laughter and love.
Love, toughness, and laughter...Some great things for anyone to see in themselves........along with healthy doses of Will Ferrell.Labels: will ferrell
Two members of our class are leaving us, Daiquan
and James.
Both sets of parents are moving, and I couldn't convince them to allow the guys to commute.
James has some excuse about it being too long.
But the meaning of that moment still lasts.
No matter how hard we try as adults (teachers, parents, etc.), it won't have any real affect unless they see us as a trusted ally.
Lianbo (James) has been in nine schools in six years (his father is a sought-after scientific engineer).
It took me ten minutes to write that last line.
On the other hand, leaving this environment and having its members leave us hurts.......It just does.
Teaching can be a very risky business. So many people say teaching stinks. No, no....teaching is amazing.....if your willing to risk opening your heart and develop your mind, and then ask the students to do the same.
So to our two young friends, here are a few pictures and quotes to send you on your way.
I can't remember what I say in class, it just comes out, but from what former students tell me I sound something like this (thank you Jess and Ryan):
Our first teacher is our own heart.

A single disturbed thought creates ten thousand distractions.
Consider life as a sequence of cause and effect, and never rely upon luck.
Do the right deed, and do it for the right reason.
A little bit of worry each day adds up to years over a lifetime.

A peaceful life is ours when we find work that we love to do.