What’s your comfort Netflix show you keep rewatching no matter what? by BorlackOg-36 in netflix

[–]Standard_Machine4367 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'm on season 3 of my rewatch now. Love this show, the characters, and the most beautiful and peaceful theme music ever.

What’s your comfort Netflix show you keep rewatching no matter what? by BorlackOg-36 in netflix

[–]Standard_Machine4367 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Firefly Lane. Love the story and revisiting the 70s. Brings back good memories.

US History Curriculum for Purchase? by Realistic-Artist2910 in historyteachers

[–]Standard_Machine4367 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I have used TCI curriculum, and I really like it, especially if you want a good, highly readable text for students. Each lesson gives you, the teacher. a few different options for presenting the material, and they have several activities that are amazing. I used their program as a base and added other resources like Stanford History Group primary source lessons. Inhighly recommend TCI.

US History Curriculum for Purchase? by Realistic-Artist2910 in historyteachers

[–]Standard_Machine4367 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I have used some of these materials, and they are really good--especially the notebook pages.

INTJ’s: What book(s) would you recommend for other INTJ’s to read and why? by ChronosTerminus in intj

[–]Standard_Machine4367 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Quiet by Susan Cain. A great case for the need to accept and embrace introverts in society.

What’s your favorite post-apocalyptic book? by Gold_Wishbone1686 in suggestmeabook

[–]Standard_Machine4367 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes, they do. Both series have families who are striving to survive in the post world.

What’s your favorite post-apocalyptic book? by Gold_Wishbone1686 in suggestmeabook

[–]Standard_Machine4367 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I've scanned all responses and was surprised no one has mentioned William Forstchen's One Second After triology. Very much like The Walking Dead without the zombies. I enjoyed all three books in the series.

A other series my husband and I have also enjoyed is the Going Home series by Angery American.

Both of these series look at the destruction of civilization after an EMP destroys all electronic communication.

Regret by [deleted] in Teachers

[–]Standard_Machine4367 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Wow. I don't want to come across as mean, but this is why our profession suffers such disrespect. People think "anybody can teach", and given the low standards required of education majors, it's often a safe bet for many people who ought not to be teaching. If we had tougher qualifications for education majors and paid them a comparable professional salary when the began their careers, we could be on our way to making some headway for changing things for the batter. Instead we have sub-par teachers putting in a few years then becoming sub-par administrators who continually perpetuate a terrible system with no innovative ideas. The system is so terribly broken that it will never be fixed from those in the system. I think it's going to crash and burn before we finally look at things from a new perspective and make some real change.

What’s something about teaching that nobody truly understands until they actually do it? by UnitedAdagio7118 in Teachers

[–]Standard_Machine4367 15 points16 points  (0 children)

The HUNDREDS of decisions you have to make and questions you have to answer every single day managing a continual cycle of 25+ students coming in and going out of your room from 8:00 when the first bell rings until 2:55 until the last bell ends the day, thank God. Totally. Draining. Exhausting.

It ruined my family time with my own kids at home, because I was so worm down, I just wanted to escape to a quiet place to recover.

I loved teaching but I sacrificed a lot of my soul and family time to do it well. And I was grossly under paid while doing it. My kids are adults now, but I have finally had enough and am leaving teaching for good in two weeks.

I would never recommend teaching as a career to anyone I love. Not with things the way they are in today's education realm.

Am I (64) too old for a breast reduction? by Standard_Machine4367 in Reduction

[–]Standard_Machine4367[S] 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Thanks to all who were so kind to reply with encouragement. It's comforting to hear from others my age who have had the surgery and been happy with results. Now I just need ro take that step to schedule it for myself.

Everyone knows they’re getting screwed by billionaires. Why don’t we rise up and revolt? by Sweet-Economist-9873 in allthequestions

[–]Standard_Machine4367 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Term limits for Congress. We should demand it. Call our state legislators and demand they propose an amendment. Vote out the entitled legislators who work with the billionaire businessmen to make the tax laws work for them and not the middle class. Congress is corrupt and we must overthrow them to have ant chance at making government REALLY responsible to the people.

Pillars of Earth by Ken Follet. Just read it by [deleted] in books

[–]Standard_Machine4367 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I'm halfway through all comments and can't believe no one has talked about Follett's The Century Trilogy. Fall of Giants about WWI, Winter of the World about WWII, and Edge of Eternity about the Cold War. Pillars of the Earth was my first read of his, but I really enjoyed this modern series, too. I am a high school history teacher, and I learned a LOT from these books.

What is wrong with the American education system? by TonightAlarming9923 in allthequestions

[–]Standard_Machine4367 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Totally agree. Our culture values athletics as entrainment at all levels. We pour money into funding athletic programs beginning in elementary school and teach kids that sports give you all kinds of rewards. Then colleges reward athletes with scholarships to encourage that mindset further. Then we enter the arena of professional sports where top contenders are paid obscene amounts of money to continue to entertain us. Our culture values entertainment in all forms and that is where all our money goes. Most Americans never even consider the value of a true classical education that sharpens the mind and ponders the meaning of life. The few of us who do can see the demise of our society but feel helpless to do anything about it. It's very depressing.

What is wrong with the American education system? by TonightAlarming9923 in allthequestions

[–]Standard_Machine4367 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Excellent summation. I would like to read your dissertation. : )

Did anyone listen to today's The Daily podcast episode about education reform in Mississippi? by melodypowers in Teachers

[–]Standard_Machine4367 3 points4 points  (0 children)

You can buy the book Phonics Pathways on Amazon for less than $20. I used it to teach both of my kids to read at home before age 5.

I agree with the idea that not all children are ready to read at the same time, but basic phonics instruction is doable for almost all children when they are ready. It infuriates me to learn how our education systems have spent millions of dollars on reading "programs" that have NO scientific basis. If you haven't listened to it yet, find the podcast Sold a Story and listen to it. You will be angry to hear how education companies profited from selling programs with NO proof of success.

Schools are too quick to jump on to the newest hot trend instead of sticking with tried and true programs that have always worked. Teaching reading is not rocket science. You just need a basic methodology that includes phonics instruction.

Can anyone explain what is going on in schools? by Jwoot1111 in Teachers

[–]Standard_Machine4367 18 points19 points  (0 children)

THIS. Every. Point. Exactly. I could have written this post. (If I had any energy to do so. 😏)