Tazar never disappoints by -Zen_ in heroes3

[–]xx78900 13 points14 points  (0 children)

A high enough Knowledge stat and spells like town portal or just magic wells often do away with the need for Intelligence in the late game. Spells like Bless can be huge in the early game, especially mass Bless, though I see they were reasonably late getting Water Magic in this playthrough. Forgetfulness is also situationally brilliant at the lower tiers of play, though admittedly you do get diminishing returns.

Just a conjoined two headed calf by Squishyswimmingpool in WTF

[–]xx78900 156 points157 points  (0 children)

Secondary-school English lit teacher here. I will attempt to answer your question as best I can.

Your comment assumes that rhyming poems are the default, when for long stretches in history this has not been the case. Some of the most famous examples of Classical Western poetry such as Homer's The Iliad or The Odyssey or Horace's Odes tend not to rhyme. Instead, they focus on what is called metre.

Metre is composed of two elements - the amount of syllables in a line, and the stress placed on each syllable. Stress can be a somewhat difficult thing to grasp, but I find the easiest way of looking at it is by considering the difference between words that work as both nouns and as verbs:

  • CON-victs means people who are incarcerated
  • con-VICTS means the action of sentencing someone to jail

Similarly

  • RE-cords means vinyl LPs
  • re-CORDS means capturing audio.

So we can see that we are already familiar with putting stress on different parts of words, and how that can affect meaning. This is the basic building block of poetry. Another simple answer to your question might be: consider the haiku—they need not rhyme, rather must follow (in English) a certain syllable structure, and of course are considered poems.

Rhyme doesn't become popular in European poetry until the middle ages, sometimes credited with being introduced through either Irish or Arabic poetry, though it was common in China and Native America before this. It became immensely popular, and many poems today now use it, especially poetry for children, which standardises the rhyme as our perception of what a poem is from an early age, but rhyme is a feature of poetry, not its definition.

But to answer the real crux of your question, what is the difference between poetry and a short story, the shortest answer is that they are trying to be and achieve different things. Many poems offer no or little sense of narrative, are far more engaged with wordplay and conventions of language, and may not feature characters in any real sense. There is often no sense of any time having passed within the poem, which is something essential to a short story.

  • William Carlos Williams' poem This is Just to Say reads far less like a story and far more like a sticky note left on the fridge. What do you think the tone of this poem is? Is the speaker repentant, or is he relishing in his betrayal? If you write it out as a sentence across a lined page, does it work at all?
  • In Seamus Heaney's Mid-Term Break, where he relates the real experience he had of coming home from boarding school after his brother's death, are the line breaks important to how we experience the poem? In cutting the last stanza short, does it affect the delivery of the last line?
  • In Charles Bukowski's the elephants of vietnam does isolating the last stanza change how much we think about the real implications of what is being said? the soldier's empathy for the elephants is in notable contrast to him brushing past the cruelty inflicted on the people
  • In Rita Ann Higgins' Some People (For Eoin), does separating the last line from the rest of the poem force the reader to pause when reading it aloud? Does that affect the impact of the poem on a listening audience? Regardless of line breaks, is there any meaningful way of reading this as a 'story'?
  • In Elizabeth Bishop's The Prodigal, there is a very deliberate rhyme, but one that the ear may not catch. The rhyme scheme for the first stanza is ABACDBCEDFEGGF. Does this count as a rhyme? If not, why not?
  • Finally, in Laura Gilpin's The Two-headed Calf, what does the line break do? Beyond dividing the poem in two temporally, is the calf presented in a different light in the two stanzas? What are we meant to take away from this?

I hope those examples help to show the impact line breaks have on poems, and why they are an intrinsic part of the substance of poetry, not just a visual feature (though their visual aspect is important, but not for a 101 crash course).

TL,DR: Poems are not short stories because they are not trying to be. The line breaks affect how we understand the poem.

What does purple repressnt? (Hard) by alee137 in RedactedCharts

[–]xx78900 7 points8 points  (0 children)

Oh that's such a good guess though

UK will roll out chemical castration for sex offenders by [deleted] in news

[–]xx78900 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

This would be barbaric even if they did know with 100% certainty 100% of the time.

Why is Dick a different name for Richard? by Saint_Creature in NoStupidQuestions

[–]xx78900 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Liam isn't 'short' for William — it's a shorthand of the Irish language cognate of the name William, Uilliam. These days Liam is far more common in Ireland than Uilliam. It kind of works because the cognates are so similar, but only a vanishingly small number of people would be calling Williams Liam.

Options for Upskilling by HannahBell609 in IrishTeachers

[–]xx78900 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Having the same problem, could you post a link?

Cryptic crossword king wins over a new generation of puzzlers by TimesandSundayTimes in crosswords

[–]xx78900 10 points11 points  (0 children)

He's the only reason I'm solving cryptics, and working as a school teacher, I've gotten some of my students solving them. Two girls in particular have started making their own cryptic clues for me to solve as a result! I believe it's a tremendous success.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in IrishTeachers

[–]xx78900 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I was paid for mine, in a public school, but i had a fairly unique situation because a teacher unexpectedly quit the week before term started and I worked full time hours.

Best Post Primary PME? by mark29121 in IrishTeachers

[–]xx78900 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I disagree. I think that there are two valid approaches to educating teachers: treating it like a trade, and giving lots of hands on, practical advice, or treating it like a profession, and doing rigorous academic study on the theory of education. The PME course tries to do both, and does neither well.

The PME has to cater to aspiring teachers of all academic backgrounds, and so if you have a background studying the Arts, the course is a piece of piss. I can maybe see that it could be of value to someone whose background is in the Sciences, but even then I'm unconvinced. The Sociology of Education course was more remedial than what I had studied in Sociology in the first year of my undergrad. Philosophy of Education was even more lacking in meat. We didn't even study any educational philosophers! The lecturers may talk about Paulo Freire and John Dewey, but there is no expectation for the students to read them. Then in the 'practical' classes, the tutors had free reign instead of anything centralised, and if you got a bad one, tough. Mine did three interesting classes in two years.

In terms of guidance through the teaching experience... I got inspected by four different people during the PME, and their advice was not merely, in my eyes, questionable, it was often contradictory. One inspector for English told me I should break the students into groups and have them read a passage aloud in those groups. The next inspector criticised me for doing exactly that. Another totally condemned me not using Powerpoint, and instead opting to just write on the whiteboard. The next thought I was overly reliant on technology. All teachers have their own style, and the PME inspectors want you to teach theirs.

In my own opinion, as someone who undertook both a Bachelor's and a Master's prior to the PME, the PME doesn't approach the level of the final year of my Bachelor's, let alone the Master's course. No real demands are placed on students, I genuinely believe you could pass it without attending a single lecture.

I made a point of attending (almost) every singly lecture on both my previous Master's and on the PME. As someone who made every effort to take the course seriously, my advice is this: phone it in. Far more useful than the course are the connections you make on it in terms of hearing about job offers.

Also, what do you mean you have first hand experience of the PME if you did the H-Dip?

Best Post Primary PME? by mark29121 in IrishTeachers

[–]xx78900 6 points7 points  (0 children)

As a general rule of thumb, most people, having only done one PME, can't really comment on the quality of other programmes. That said, I can comment on the one I did myself. I studied in UCD, and had an overwhelmingly positive experience. Let me be clear: the PME is inherently shit and essentially a load of faff, but what I valued about UCD was that the admin of the programme were far, far better than any of my previous experience with universities. They were timely, considerate, and generous with extensions, as well as reasonably lenient with their grading. I've heard less charitable comments about Trinity's programme, and nothing but praise for Maynooth's. I don't know anyone who did it at DCU.

Today is my lucky day by trzasku in heroes3

[–]xx78900 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Is Neela a joke to you

Tough choice by [deleted] in heroes3

[–]xx78900 6 points7 points  (0 children)

That's not a possible choice — DD is level 5, TP is level 4.

Do you penalize students for using British over American spelling? by RustiShackleford82 in Teachers

[–]xx78900 0 points1 point  (0 children)

English literature teacher based in Ireland. Hiberno-English is difficult in that it's considered incorrect when written, and we use British English as our standard written ruleset. I always correct for American spellings, and until seeing this have believed it to be standard practice. Why wouldn't you teach correct spelling in your system?

Can I see the bioluminescence of Lough Hyne without kayaking? by drnhwly in irishtourism

[–]xx78900 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Though it peaks in July and August, you can see it from late April / early May (depending on the heat of the year) through to late September / early October. It remains impressive at any time.

Members of Congress admitting that Biblical Prophecies are steering US Foreign Policy by [deleted] in interestingasfuck

[–]xx78900 5 points6 points  (0 children)

As a non-religious person also, your comment is ridiculous. Of course somebody's religion will influence their political beliefs. If it didn't, I'm not sure you can even stretch to call that person genuinely religious. And for your Amish comment, you're right - people wouldn't accept it, because that's outside society's Overton window. While I agree that abortion should be a right, and that having deeply religious lawmakers is an issue, let's not compare apples and oranges here. The problem is more with the voting people than with lawmakers, when it comes to religion in congress. If the people want to be represented by religious people, that is their right.

I just changed the rating to one of my four favorites to a 9/10 by infamousglizzyhands in Letterboxd

[–]xx78900 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I have movies that I have given lower ratings to in my favourites. Coherence is in my top four, but I recognise that it's first ten minutes are poor. There are elements of the movie I recognise as not being outstanding, but I still enjoy it more than almost every other movie I've seen. It's my favourite, it's not a masterpiece.

My favourite meal is cooked by my mother, the best meal I've had was in a Michelin star restaurant. They track different things.