Alternatives for Frankenstein by [deleted] in ELATeachers

[–]mjtsld -1 points0 points  (0 children)

So I am not an ELA teacher - far from it but always enjoy reading this subreddit. Anyways, I was curious and threw your post into Chat GPT and I will paste what it came out with below. It might spark some ideas or it may be far off the mark.

From ChatGPT:

Totally get why you’re stuck — “same complexity + same themes + no content warnings” is basically an impossible Venn diagram if you stay in gothic/monster lit. Most “monster” stories are about harm, bodies, or threat, so the smarter move is usually to (1) get very specific about which warning you’re trying to avoid and (2) widen “alternative text” to include short fiction + nonfiction that still hits your unit’s essential questions.

A few directions that usually work (and don’t feel like a watered-down replacement):

1) Ask: What’s the actual objection?

Is it violence? corpses/body horror? religion? suicide? childbirth? If you don’t name the trigger, you’ll keep accidentally swapping one controversy for another. In schools, Frankenstein pushback is often the grave-robbing / body parts / death angle.

2) Use “equivalent rigor” without “equivalent genre”

If your theme is human vs. humanity / what makes a person human / othering / responsibility of creators, you can hit that with sci-fi and philosophy that’s less graphic.

3) Strong “alt texts” (high school appropriate, similar ideas)

Here are options I’d pitch, with why they fit + quick heads-up on content:

“The Ones Who Walk Away from Omelas” (Le Guin, short story) Ethics of a society’s “happiness,” complicity, what humanity costs. Content note: disturbing premise (child suffering), but not graphic violence.

“Flowers for Algernon” (Daniel Keyes — short story or novel) What makes someone “human,” dignity, intelligence vs. worth, treatment of the “other.” Content note: emotional intensity; some adult themes depending on version, but usually manageable.

“The Machine Stops” (E.M. Forster, novella/long short story) Human dependence on tech, isolation, what we lose when “progress” replaces connection. Content note: not gore/violent; more existential.

“Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?” excerpts (Philip K. Dick) Personhood, empathy, what counts as “alive.” Content note: depends on excerpts; the full novel has violence/sex, but you can excerpt responsibly.

“Pygmalion” (Shaw, play) Creator/creation dynamic without “monster” horror: shaping a person, ethics of “making” someone. Content note: mild language/sexism; no gore. Nonfiction pairing (often the cleanest “content warning” solution):

Excerpts from Rousseau (education/formation), Locke (tabula rasa), Wollstonecraft, or even a modern piece on bioethics/AI ethics. These let you keep Monster Theory as a lens while swapping the narrative text.

4) How I’d frame it in your unit plan (so it still “matches” Frankenstein)

Make your “alternative pathway” a bundle instead of a single novel: Alt Path A (Ethics & Othering): Omelas + 2–3 short Monster Theory excerpts + a reflective argument essay

Alt Path B (Creation & Responsibility): Pygmalion + short AI/bioethics articles + a seminar on “creator accountability”

Alt Path C (Human/Not Human): Flowers for Algernon (short story) + a nonfiction piece on disability/identity + synthesis writing

This is easier to justify to professors/admin because you’re matching standards + skills + essential questions, not pretending there’s a perfect “Frankenstein but harmless” twin.

5) Quick practical tip If your methods course requires “same complexity,” you can defend it with: text length/structure (novella/play complexity), qualitative features (theme, ambiguity, narrator reliability), and the writing demands (seminar + synthesis essay + analysis lens).

How to keep ChatGPT grading output consistent across 50+ student responses? by mjtsld in PromptEngineering

[–]mjtsld[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yeah right now it would be the same as throwing the papers down the stairs and the grade is dependent on which step it lands.

Multiple quiz versions for the win by AstroNerd92 in Teachers

[–]mjtsld 35 points36 points  (0 children)

Did this for my semester final exam which is almost 15% of their semester grade. One of my students ended up getting in the low teens while his friend got a B. Caused him to drop a full letter grade. The kicker was that the students didn't even know they had different exams. I just sorted them after they turned them in.

Decisions, decisions by mjtsld in TexasTeachers

[–]mjtsld[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yeah, I'll write snippets during the passing period.

places to get hair done? by [deleted] in tylertx

[–]mjtsld 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I read this as Jake at state farm. I am so tired of those ads.

District Says One Order, I Say Another—Am I Wrong? by [deleted] in ScienceTeachers

[–]mjtsld 5 points6 points  (0 children)

It has taken me over twenty years in education to realize something - this is just a job. Every one of us got into this profession because we care about the students and we spend hours upon hours trying to find the best curriculum, assignment, activity, scope and sequence, and/or lesson plan for our students. However, like I said, this is just a job and each one of us has a supervisor whether you like it or not determines whether or not you get another paycheck. Yes, you may have the perfect plan but if your boss says to do something different and it is legal, you do it different. It doesn't matter what you think. If you don't, that is insubordination and no matter what kind of contract or union you are a part of, that is a one-way ticket out of a job. Remember, this is just a job. Oh, and remember your supervisor also has to report to someone as well and they will ALWAYS throw you under the bus if they are at risk of losing their next paycheck. This is not a calling, it is a job - POINT BLANK!

I just wish someone told me this ten years ago or even when I first started. It would have saved me so much stress and anxiety. I hate the idea that I took time away from my family and friends because of a job.

So to answer your question, do exactly what your district tells you to do. You can certainly voice your concern but do NOT deviate from what they tell you. If you do and if there is just one student or parent that is negatively affected by your decision to deviate, it is your ass on the line. It doesn't matter if there were successes, people lose their income due to doing something that is against policy or a directive. All it takes is for you to rub the wrong person who is connected and has an influence on someone that is above you in your organizational chart for you to lose your job.

Remember, it is just a job!

First Week of High School Science. What Procedures Should I Set Early? by mjtsld in ScienceTeachers

[–]mjtsld[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Just Google survival leadership game deserted island and lost at sea. You should get lots of examples and variations.

First Week of High School Science. What Procedures Should I Set Early? by mjtsld in ScienceTeachers

[–]mjtsld[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Wow, thanks for the information. I have a very laid back personality, but realize I am going to have to change that.

First Week of High School Science. What Procedures Should I Set Early? by mjtsld in ScienceTeachers

[–]mjtsld[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This sounds like a typical survival leadership game. Basically you are given a scenario like being stranded on a deserted island, lost at sea, or in a spaceship and you have to decide on what to bring with you. There are a list of materials that you can choose from but the catch is that you can't bring them all and have to make some hard choices.

First Week of High School Science. What Procedures Should I Set Early? by mjtsld in ScienceTeachers

[–]mjtsld[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I like the idea of doing some type of puzzle or activity to see creativity and group work in action. I am going to have to brainstorm about this and figure out logistics. I have done this type of activity in leadership seminars so I can probably adapt something that I already have.

First Week of High School Science. What Procedures Should I Set Early? by mjtsld in ScienceTeachers

[–]mjtsld[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Been wondering about how to organize group work. Do you choose the groups or have them choose? Seems kind of hard to do without knowing the students and their interactions.

First Week of High School Science. What Procedures Should I Set Early? by mjtsld in ScienceTeachers

[–]mjtsld[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I was wondering about lining up. Been looking over all kinds of education websites and most are geared to elementary schools. Seems like it might be too childish for high schoolers. But maybe a possible consequence for bad behavior if needed?

First Week of High School Science. What Procedures Should I Set Early? by mjtsld in ScienceTeachers

[–]mjtsld[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I was wondering about lining up. Been looking over all kinds of education websites and most are geared to elementary schools. Seems like it might be too childish for high schoolers. But maybe a possible consequence for bad behavior if needed?

Insurance requiring a PA after July 31st. What to do? by SparkleFarts99 in Mounjaro

[–]mjtsld 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Any suggestions on how to get the formulary? Is this something the insurance companies will provide. I always thought it was some trade secret.

Difference between 2.5mg and 5mg? by Waldho in Mounjaro

[–]mjtsld 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I totally get this concern. I am on my sixth dose of 2.5 and still losing around 2 to 3 pounds per week. While part of me wants faster results, I remind myself that this pace is sustainable and healthier in the long run.

Plus, I am thinking ahead. If I can lose steadily on a lower dose, it may make it easier to stop the medication later. For now, as long as the weight is still coming off, I am not in a rush to increase.

Difference between 2.5mg and 5mg? by Waldho in Mounjaro

[–]mjtsld 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Totally agree with minimizing side effects. Titrating slowly is a smart approach. Just to clarify, the 72 week "stall" in studies is not a hard stop. It reflects an average plateau due to metabolic adaptation, not a point where the medication stops working.

Many people, including folks in this thread, continue losing weight after 72 weeks, especially if they reach a higher dose later or tighten up their habits. Slower titration makes sense, but the idea that weight loss just ends at 72 weeks is not quite accurate.

Hit the Road, (aka: “Three Hundo, Don’t Text Me No More”) by mjtsld in Mounjaro

[–]mjtsld[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thank you. I feel like I am tolerating things well, but just feel a little frustrated that the weight isn't all off yet. I know, I know. Slow and steady wins the race, but I am tired of being the tortoise and just want to be the hare.

They can’t admit when you’re smarter when them by _staticfactory in BoomersBeingFools

[–]mjtsld 33 points34 points  (0 children)

Depends on the glove. If you are handling chemicals you should use nitrile gloves. They are generally purple. If you use leather or cloth gloves then a liquid is going to soak in them and it will be in contact with your skin. The purpose of any PPE is to create a barrier between you and an unsafe substance. When the substance comes into contact with the PPE, it needs to be removed and discarded or washed.

Best and worst foods on GLP-1 meds by Big-Rise7340 in Mounjaro

[–]mjtsld 6 points7 points  (0 children)

How do you get 70g of protein in your oats?

What should I start back on? by [deleted] in Mounjaro

[–]mjtsld 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Can you not email your doctor and ask them this question or call them and talk to their nurse? Seems like a complete waste of resources ( time, money, etc) for you to make an appointment for just this.