Monthly Archives: December 2015

Idle Teenage Hands are the Devil’s Fascinating Workshop

At the school where I work one of the rituals we go through is pass back classes for exams. This ritual involves teasing with scores, handing out answer sheets and exams, fielding questions and correcting mistakes and rejecting appeals for higher marks. That all takes about 20 minutes.

Unfortunately, the pass back class is 50 minutes long.

There then ensues a dilemma: do I waste paper and provide some sort of activity, do I only provide an activity to the class with the lowest average to punish then for doing badly, or do I let them do their winter homework whilst I mark other exams and/or write and/or simply waste time.

Today I opted for the latter with my junior high school classes. Unfortunately, for two of my classes, I was one of their first pass backs and they didn’t yet have homework. This meant I told them to relax with the caveats “No fighting, no kissing, no sports”. At least not while I’m in the class. (Note: the first and last are more common; as for the second, well, some guys have done things that might as well have involved kissing.)

Left with nothing else to do, the students fall back on games. There are brief rounds of Bloody Knuckles, which I stop because that counts as a sport. There is also a game involving groups of boys making fists and raising their thumbs whilst each takes turns guessing how many thumbs will be raised. There is a countdown and at “zero” one boy says a number as the others raise one thumb, both thumbs or no thumb. (It is possible to guess “none”.) If the guesser is right, he stays in the game and the guessing moves to another boy. This goes on until someone makes the final guess.

There is also a game involving flicking erasers around the table that is one part shuffle board and one part paper football. As near as I can tell–the rules seem to change every game–the winner knocks everyone else off the board. There is also a version involving coins. However, I always remind them that house rules are that any money that falls on the floor belongs to me, er, the house, and that’s why they switch to erasers.

Eventually, the bell rings and I go off to do this with another class in another room.

Journals Among the Piles of Confusion

Yesterday, December 9th, was decreed by writer Patrick Rhone, to forever be known as Journal Day. It’s a day for people who keep journals to reflect on the past and for them to try to spread the infection, er, encourage those who don’t keep journals to start keeping them.

One of his suggestions is that people look back through their journals and wheeze, gasp, feel sick and get depressed (aka “reflect on the past as recorded in the journal”).

I dug through the piles of stuff in the variety room and decided to revisit my confusion journal. This is not always a good idea as it’s a bit like taking off the bandage and snipping out the sutures to see inside the wound “just because”. However, this year I didn’t have my normal (more or less) depressed October and I decided to go back and review what past entries have been about. Except for October, I don’t see any patterns, but this recent October was warmer and less rainy than usual so maybe it’s a weather related issue.

Now that it’s getting colder and darker I’ll probably find out.

Another part of Journal Day is for journal writers to encourage the people who don’t keep journals to keep them. In the past, as part of Christmas, I’ve given our girls blank books. and required that they do some sort of daily entry (which, until this blog became a daily event, was totally a case of “do what I say and shut up”–see this link again.)

This went well for about a year and a half until I felt they’d developed the habit. I haven’t checked in a while, though, so I’m not sure if they’ve been keeping up on their journals this year (I’m 90% certain our oldest has not, unless Twitter counts as a journal). This coming Christmas I think I’m going to encourage a different kind of journal idea–one more project based–but as the only parent interested in such things I’ll have to do all the follow up myself.

Whatever happens, it’s a chance for me to visit various stationers and see what the latest products are. That’s the other fun part of Journal Day.

 

The Test Time Continuum

The test pile this year is smaller than in years before but it never gets any smaller. It is very much like a plate of pasta or a car trip across Nebraska. The more progress you make, the less progress you seem to have made.

Relatively speaking, I have already made a lot of progress: I’ve finished one batch of exams (my smallest batch) and am almost halfway through my second batch, although it seems to have taken a long time to get there.

The third batch taunts me.

Complicating matters are an evening class that steals away some of my official time-wasting time (because I’m pretty sure I wouldn’t actually be marking that quickly even with lots of time to mark) a piano recital this coming Sunday, the arguments affiliated with piano recital practice/lack of practice, and in-bound in-laws.

Although I like my in-laws their arrival will involve a lost Saturday night filled with lots of food and beer. There will also be long explanations of why She Who Must Be Obeyed has not been feeding me properly when they see that I’ve lost almost 33 pounds since the last time they saw me. This will be made worse by the fact that most of my clothes are now baggy as I’ve been putting off shopping until I reach my weight goal (which is more-or-less what I’ve just done).

The only good thing will be that I’ll actually be able to go this year, unlike last year., which will earn me back some Good Graces Points. (I will probably lose those, though, if I decide to take exams to mark for when our girls aren’t performing. It might actually be worth it to try.)

I will have Monday to finish, but by then I’ll have failed to establish any rhythm. Until then, the test pile, no matter how hard I work, will always be the same size.

And the third batch will keep taunting me.

 

Field Notes Two Rivers Edition–End of Book Review

I was probably spoiled long before I started using the Field Notes Two Rivers edition. This is because the second edition I used extensively was the America the Beautiful edition, which used Finch “Soft White” paper that held up to fountain pens well.

I got a subscription to Field Notes colors editions mostly based on the looks of the Two Rivers edition. They are wood block printed by the Hamilton Wood Type & Printing Museum in Wisconsin. They come in four color stocks with nearly unlimited cover designs. I even bought a couple extra packs because for each sale a donation was made to support the museum.

When I came to finally use the Two Rivers edition, though, my reaction to the paper was “well, yeah, okay, hmmm”. First, compared to the AtB edition, the Two Rivers notebook is thinner, even though both have the same number of pages. The advantage of that is that it fits better in both covers and pockets. It also means the paper (Finch Opaque Smooth 50#T) is going to bleed.

I used my Two Rivers notebook as my most recent food journal which let me test several different pens on it. They all had a funny look to the lines and some odd bleed through. For the most part bleed through doesn’t bother me, but this paper seemed rough and the things I wrote seemed fuzzy and, in places, blotchy, but that might be an optical illusion from the grid lines on the pages. I don’t remember that happening in the Red Blooded edition I used.

The other issue I noticed was that the center pages started to come loose from the staples. This is something that didn’t happen with the Red Blooded or the AtB editions, even though the latter had thicker paper.

The paper coming off the staples.

The paper coming off the staples. You can also see the blotchy way the ink bleeds through on the top right. 

Keep in mind, I used this notebook in a cover so there wasn’t any extra stress on the notebook that it might get in my back pocket, but the pages still started falling out.

Granted, you don’t use a Field Notes notebook for fancy things. They are brainstorming books and places for random notes. In the case of the Two Rivers edition, I am judging them by their covers and  will end up using them all. I also may end up passing them out as “gateway drugs” for people interested in notebooks.

Or I will hoard them. I haven’t actually decided yet.

Out with the old: The Workshop Companion edition (right) has now replaced the Two Rivers edition.

Out with the old: The Workshop Companion edition (right) has now replaced the Two Rivers edition.

One Pen Two Pen Red Pen Purple Pen

Last week I was given a red pen by the head of the English department at the school where I work. She been given a bunch by a salesman of some sort who was promoting something or other that had obviously left her unimpressed. (It had something to do with education, which doesn’t impress me, either; if it had been a Pilot representative, though, I still would not be speaking to her.)

I decided I was going to use the new pen for marking exams. Then, today, I changed my mind.

The pen is a Pilot Patint, which I believe is called the Pilot SnapClick outside of Japan. (As you’ll soon see, that’s a much better name.) With the oversized clip (with built in lanyard hole) it looks a lot like a Zebra Sarasa but the Patint’s website claims it has a longer ink refill that gives it 45% more ink.

The tip is deployed with the nock and retracted by squeezing the clip. The nock has a satisfying click and and squeezing the clip gives a satisfying snap. It is probably the noisiest pen I’ve ever used and the six of us who comprise the native English speaker staff did our best to drive the rest of the staff out of the office as we repeatedly clicked and snapped our new pens. A rocking motion with the tip of the thumb allows you to click and snap in rapid succession without having to move your hand.

Then today I tried to write with it and realized it was just a ballpoint pen, and not even a gel refill. The contoured rubber grip is comfortable, but I was underwhelmed with the thin line and decided I would only use red ink for the junior high school second years and would switch pens when I started marking my high school exams.

I wrote a little more and decided I would only use it for my worst class.

That idea lasted right up until I actually started marking today. I put the Patint away and broke out the TWSBI Classic Mini I used last time and started marking. It was a lot more comfortable to hold and I like the better line.

Oddly, this has been my only attempt to delay marking today. I’m actually almost finished with my junior high school second years. The Patint is still on my desk, though. Every now and then I stop and make some click and snap noises as a way to relieve stress by transferring it to others.

An Outer Shell With Common Parts

A philosophical issue I have with some of the pens I own has me thinking about a car in an old TV show.

About a thousand years ago when I was in high school, I was horrified to learn that the awesome looking Coyote X sports car in Hardcastle and McCormick was mostly a shell built on a Volkswagen Beetle chassis. (Note: yes, we totally had sports cars 1,000 years ago.) Sure, it had the engine from a Porsche 914 and, yes, it was common to build fancy looking kit cars on a Beetle chassis, but it still kind of seemed like cheating to me and the Coyote X lost some of its appeal (especially after it was replace by a boxy monstrosity in season 2).

This brings me to the issue I have with some of the pens I own: they are attractive shells built on a common chassis. The fountain pens, with a few exceptions, all use nibs from the same manufacturers and take the same converters and cartridges. This doesn’t bother me as much as it should, though, because I can use different inks and the nibs all write differently. I can also get the shell designed the way I want it, so that at least some of it is not off-the-shelf.

It’s the ballpoint pens that have me thinking. The ones I use the most all have the same “chassis”, in this case the Pilot G2 refill. The G2 is a terrific gel ink pen that writes better than most ballpoint pens but when I put it in a $40 shell I’m still using a $1 pen, it’s just disguised with a fancier surface.

The Karas Kustoms Retrakt, The Pilot G2, the TactileTurn Mover, KarasKustoms Bolt.

The Karas Kustoms Retrakt (top), Pilot G2, Tactile Turn Mover, Karas Kustoms Bolt. They all use the same refill.

This has me pondering exactly what I’m getting for my money. I’ve used Pilot G2s at work and during travel and I find the rubber bit around the end starts to get sticky and to move around. It also tends to collect dust and random white bits. The plastic cracks if you’re not careful and I’ve broken off the clip on at least two by trying to attach them to books.

In the end, the main rationalizations I come up with are that  the machined pens are more durable than the plastic G2 which means I don’t have to replace them as often which makes them, after a long stretch of questionable logic I won’t go into more environmentally friendly, especially as I don’t toss them out when they are empty. (Granted, sometimes I buy a G2, take out the refill and toss the pen in a “variety” drawer, but that’s an issue for another post.)

The machined pens are thicker than the plastic G2 body, which makes them more comfortable for me to use. Also, because they use the common refill, they are easier to maintain. If I run out of ink, I get a replacement for a dollar without having to track down a specialty shop and take out a personal loan.

I’ve turned down the chance to get some new ballpoint pens from the above manufacturers and I’ll probably try to sell a few of the ones I do have. I still like them and use them, but that Volkswagen Beetle chassis is bothering me a bit.

 

 

Lots of Lessons With Hardcore Teaching Actions

Today’s post is a follow up to yesterday’s in which a teacher ate my students’ homework. Sort of.

In my classes at the school where I work one of my rules is that if I see work or books from other classes (including English classes) I give you a warning to put the stuff away and dock you a few points. If I see the stuff again I confiscate it and, if you are lucky and I’m in a good mood, I’ll hand it to your homeroom teacher to pass back to you at the end of the day. If I’m not in a good mood, which is more likely this time of year, I’ll keep the stuff until the next class.

What I never thought of doing, though, was confiscating the stuff and throwing it away. That is a level of hardcore teaching I can only aspire to. (Mostly because I don’t have anything even resembling tenure, unless momentum counts as tenure.)

What strikes me as odd about this situation is that the posters that were confiscated were of Fukui Prefecture which is not the kind of thing you’d expect teenage boys to be playing with in class. If the posters had been of, how shall I say, augmented scantily clad women, I can understand the posters ending up in the trash (especially since the teacher in question is married) but since they were obviously some sort of homework (unless there are some very, very odd fetishes of which I am unaware–call me if there are) throwing them out seemed very hardcore. (Granted, Fukui does kind of look like “Fuk U I” but not to a Japanese.)

I suspect a number of warnings were involved, and since I’ve had issues with these two students myself I can imagine they didn’t actually listen to the warnings and that the teacher finally went past discipline to vengeance.

Either way, I now have a new threat: “If you don’t put that away, I’ll dispose of it like I’m a math teacher.”

No, that will take too long to explain. I’ll just take it and threaten to throw it away.

The End of the Second Term Arriveth With Lobbying and Oddities

Well, maybe NOW I’ve seen it all.

For various complicated reasons involving the calendar, the second term at the school where I work is longer than the first. It feels shorter, though, because it has more, and better placed, days off. However, the end of the second term is also the time for lobbying and, this year, for odd things to happen.

Lobbying:
The lobbying occurs because high school third year students (12th graders) are finishing their classes, sort of, and finding out if they will graduate with a good enough score to get automatic recommendation to the affiliated university. Because of this, their classes end early and they have exams whilst we are still teaching other grades.

My one student suddenly became worried about his final mark during the last class and began a near epic lobbying campaign with all his foreign teachers. (I’m guessing he lobbied all his teachers, but I only have evidence of him lobbying us). I told him that the end of the school year is a little late to worry about his score and then told him what mark he needed on the final exam to get a “9” (81-90%). He earned the score with room to spare. I then had to spend the better part of an hour babysitting him at a test pass back until I could let him go.

He also announced that he would not be attending our one class together next term. (Note: the HS 3’s are finished and will receive no more grades yet they are scheduled for classes next term; however, if they don’t show up, there is no actual consequence except I get to sleep in or not.)

Oddities:
The odd thing happened yesterday, when two of my more troublesome students explained that they couldn’t do their final presentations because “A teacher ate our homework”. Actually, it turned out they meant “A teacher stole our posters.” As near as I can tell, they were practicing for my class during their math class–note: English requires a higher final average than other classes for automatic recommendation–and their math teacher confiscated the visual aids they were going to use for the Sell a Prefecture TV commercial.

After class, I led them down to the teachers’ room where they managed to track down the math teacher in question. They explained the situation and he looked confused, dumbfounded and then horrified. He explained he’d thrown the posters away. He then dug in the trash and, much to the relief of the students and my stifled, therefore painful snickers, he found the posters and the students were able to complete the assignment.

Of course, the tablet I was using as my timer ran out of battery right as they were finishing so I don’t know if they actually met the time limit yet or not.

Normally I’d torture them a bit by threatening to make them go again. However, since they’d shown me an event I’d never seen in 26 years of teaching, I decided not to torture them. This time.

 

Karas Kustoms Ink Roller Ball–Long Term Review

A year ago I bought a pen that I liked a lot but then stopped using. I’m not sure I can explain why I did that except to say that it just didn’t feel quite right. It wasn’t the pen; it was me.

The Karas Kustoms Ink Roller Ball was part of a Kickstarter set I ordered. I opted for black anodized aluminum with a copper section. It doesn’t quite look as good as the green and copper fountain pen version, but it still looks great. The parts are interchangeable so I can put the green cap on the black pen and vice versa. I can also switch the sections and reverse which is the roller ball and which is the fountain pen. (I don’t know why I haven’t done that yet except “work” and “effort”.)

The Karas Kustoms Ink Roller Ball and Fountain Pen.

The Karas Kustoms Ink Roller Ball and Fountain Pen.

The pen is about 1.7 ounces and just under five inches uncapped and comes with a Schmidt Cap-less p8126 refill that’s held up well under heavy use and a lack of any use. The section on both pens is well designed and I find I can use the pen a long time with out my hand getting sore or my fingers sliding around on the section.

During the time I used it, the anodizing didn’t show any dings or scratches, even around the sharper parts on the cap and bottom or where the cap meets the body.

My only real complaint is that the tip on the refill is a bit thin and dry for my taste. It writes well and it writes smoothly but the line it leaves doesn’t look dark enough to me and it doesn’t feel right when I use it.

Despite that being the only complaint, and perhaps because I liked the fountain pen version so much, the Ink RB slowly got relegated to my pen case rather than my pocket and eventually I moved it to long term storage. I broke it out to use today before I did this review and I still like it, just not enough to keep carrying it. I’m tempted to buy a fountain pen section for it (if they are still available for this pen) as a way to get it back into my rotation.

If I don’t, as much as I like it, it will most likely be up for sale soon.

The Karas Kustoms Ink Roller Ball still has some original copper color.

The Karas Kustoms Ink Roller Ball still has some original copper color.

The Family of NaNoWriMo Pens–Follow-up

I’ve mentioned before how, in a fit of madness, I decided to hand write my National Novel Writing Month novel this year. (I’ve also mentioned how I fell short.) I did this partly as a way to use up homemade notepads and to put three of my fountain pens to everyday, intense use. To wax fake Shakespearean about not “winning”, the fault, dear reader, is not in my pens, it is in myself.

Well, some of it was the pens’ fault.

Out with the old, in with the next.

For the most part, I cannot blame these pens.

It was fun to be writing by hand again. As tedious as it can be, there are a lot fewer distractions in a paper tablet than a piece of electronics attached to the internet. The main hassle, as I’ve mentioned before, is that writing two pages takes long enough that you begin to feel as if the scene is dragging on endlessly when, in fact, it’s only a page of printed text. I find that I underwrite when I write by hand as I always feel compelled to change scenes and get things moving. The result is more of an outline and random scenes than a coherent work.

There’s also the problem of random ideas coming in and demanding to be recorded. This can lead to lots of confusing shifts and asides that cause me to go “what the hell was I thinking” and “is my handwriting really that illegible” on a read through.

To help provide a meager sense of order to the proceedings, I used different color inks to show when I changed scenes or when I switched to character background and other forms of world building. I also developed a system of marginal marks that let me know when I was changing direction. This will make assembling the “assembled draft” a lot easier. (Note: I reread and cut up the manuscript and past it together in a better order before I start typing.)

The TWSBI 580 did most of the writing at first. I like the larger ink capacity of its piston filling mechanism and that its nib is broken and write’s well. Towards the end I started using the Levenger Sunset and the Namisu Nexus more.

The Levenger Sunset was, at best, okay. The nib is scratchy and in need of some tuning and it didn’t seem to get better the more I used it. I’m trying it now with a different ink, but unless it gets worked on (or I learn to work on it myself) it may be destined for a return to long term storage.

The real surprise was the Namisu Nexus with a titanium nib. Out of the box the titanium nib was squeaky but I wrote with it until the squeak went away and was replaced with a dull scratch. Towards the end of the month, I found myself reaching for the Nexus more often than before and I could feel the difference as the nib broke in. It doesn’t quite have the ink capacity to by my number one workhorse, but it may have just earned its way off the sales block.

I’ll keep working on the novel, by hand of course, but at this point it’s more of a long outline and random notes than a novel.

A family portrait, with a celebratory whisky.

A family portrait, the pens and the notepads, with a celebratory whisky and one of the marginal marks.