Sunday, September 22, 2019

Literary Pet Names

When Louie and I were discussing our new little German Shepherd puppy, we had very different ideas about names! I liked another spice name, since Pepper had been such a wonderful dog. But he didn't like Basil, Coriander, Oregano, or anything else I came up with. He liked German names, but I didn't care for Franz or any of the others that I saw on lists.

Then I found this site: The Best Literary Pet Names: Canine Edition by Derek Attig. I was already a fan of the Book Riot website, so this was an easy "sell" for me. As I read through some of the names, Louie and I both liked "Titus" and so that's what we chose. It fits him well! I liked the site so much, I wanted to save it here and share it with others!

Here are some shots of Titus when he was a pup and at age 2 years old.


Student Teaching in 1989

Louie asked me what I was working on the other day. I was typing info into a GoogleDoc. It was student feedback from my student teaching experience in the spring of 1989 at Nicollet Junior High in Burnsville, MN. He thought it was crazy, naturally. I had contemplated just chucking them in the recycle bin . . . but since I have touched them a number of times and haven't been able to get rid of them, I decided to digitize. My husband's next observation was that it would be quicker to take photos of them rather than typing student input. My response is that I would do it however it worked best for me.

Now that I've finished, I scanned two to add to this blog. Some observations:
  • I used a mimeograph machine in 1989! I remember the smell, the feel, the purple, but it's so weird to see that again! We didn't use Powerpoints back then. (Just Googled it. Powerpoint was released on my son Morgan's birthday!) Here's what Wikipedia has to say:
    • Microsoft PowerPoint is a presentation program, created by Robert Gaskins and Dennis Austin at a software company named Forethought, Inc. It was released on April 20, 1987, initially for Macintosh computers only. Microsoft acquired PowerPoint for $14 million three months after it appeared.
  •  I should have spent more time and energy teaching those students about to and too, alot is not a word, etc.
  • I sometimes question why I became a teacher, my abilities, etc. I believe I have more positive qualities as an educator than weaknesses. I care enough to try to improve on my weaknesses.
  • I'm not positive, but I think these responses were from my "gifted" class . . . I had 3 or 4 sections of regular ninth grade English and one gifted group.
  • I'm so grateful to my cooperating teacher, Steve Ketcham, for all he did to support and encourage me. What a blessing! I should send him a letter of thanks.

Here are two that I scanned
of the 30-ish I typed:

If anyone actually wants to read all the responses, they're here.