May 2015 Posts

Cloud Number Five

Welp.

It’s that day.12

There isn’t much I can say about the day of the AP Exam that I haven’t written already, so here are two blurbs from last year, from about the same point in the campaign, that pretty much sum things up:

The predominant feeling I have this time around?

Relief.5

I’ll be the first to say that this exam needs to be done with so that everyone involved can breathe and remember the taste of food again.6 A few days from now,7 I’ll be able to exhale and admire the journey of the past dozen moons, but for the moment, I am way too close to the trees to see anything but the dang trees.

This year, we’re back to the second Wednesday afternoon for the exam. Each of the last two seasons, College Board had us on the first Friday afternoon, which is about the worst thing imaginable, taking a high-stakes exam that centers on logical reasoning and clear communication, late on a Friday.8 Though truth be told, I am a bit envious of the teachers who already have their exams out of the way. One of the fellow Calculus teachers in my hallway and I were saying how we wished that our exams were reversed,9 given the pacing and schedules of our respective classes, to which I agreed.10

As for the actual AP Exam scores,11 the topic of how important these things are is a complicated one.12 Being my first year on at my current campus only serves to further complicate the complicated.

At the end of the day though, it’s just one test. A number. That’s all. And it .13. Like I’ve said before, the worst-case consequence of bombing this exam is having to take a Statistics class in college, where you might make some new friends and perhaps meet your future soulmate.14

But these are wrinkles for another day’s forehead.

For now, we get to sleep,15 eat, 16 and breathe.

(And maybe watch some movies.)1718

  1. Naturally, since it’s past three in the morning and I can’t get any sleep. []
  2. It’s also THAT day. Incidentally, if you go to my teacher website and mouse-over — or tap — my face, you’ll notice that my head spins and my shirt changes color to yellow. My face also smiles, which is a bit ironic now that I think about it, as this is usually a day of agony and/or relief… but not so much happiness. Hmm. []
  3. Noteworthy this time around: I do NOT have the last period of the day free. We have one hundred eighty-something students taking it this year. Also not a whole lot of kids showing up for tutorials… yet. And it is obviously not the last day of the week, as our exam was moved from Friday to Wednesday. []
  4. Yes, I still fret that something might happen to the exams in transit. That would be absolutely heart-breakingly sucky. []
  5. As in, “Thank you, Lord, I made it without hurting anybody.” []
  6. And some of my students have been way too eager to express similar sentiments. A couple have done so in quite inappropriate teen-angst fashion, even. Comes with the territory, it seems. []
  7. mmm… maybe weeks? []
  8. Although you might not know it by looking at our exam scores. I suppose that’s because taking the exam on a Friday afternoon was the worst thing imaginable for everyone else on the planet as well. []
  9. Calculus was on the first Tuesday, Statistics eight days later. []
  10. Next year, our exam is on the second Thursday. Not quite sure how I feel about that, but the jerk in my knee says that I do NOT like it. []
  11. which come out the week after we celebrate our country’s freedom []
  12. I have loooong blog posts written months ago that I have yet to publish about the significance of the darn scores. Perhaps one day I’ll actually get around to polishing it up enough for show. []
  13. including, I believe, teachers. That is definitely a topic for another day — perhaps the end of all days. []
  14. Hey, it could happen. Might not be plausible at the five percent significance level, but it could happen… []
  15. not during class! []
  16. again, not during class… probably… []
  17. Don’t know about during class… []
  18. For the record, “Pitch Perfect 2” and “Mad Max” come out this weekend. Hopefully the combination of the two can make up for the disappointment that was Avengers 2… []

Learning Under Fire

Note: this is one of a number of posts that I started writing in the past year that I never got around to “finishing”… and upon realizing that I’d probably never really “finish” them proper, figured I would go ahead and publish as-is.

This post was originally written on January 3, 2015.


A few weeks ago I was helping a kid during after-school tutorials with their AP Stat homework,1 when she said something that struck me funny:

“I wish this stuff came to me naturally.”

I retorted with a “This is STATISTICS. This stuff doesn’t come naturally to ANYONE.”


Nobody goes to school to learn how to change diapers.

And yet there are millions of people on the planet who know how to change a diaper better than anything they went to school to learn how to do. That’s because for most people, at some point in life, changing diapers is just one of those things that you have to figure out in order to make it to the next day.

I feel like being a teacher is full of those types of moments.


This is sure to blow some minds out there, but here’s the truth:

Just about anything that any teacher has taught you, they first had to teach it to themselves before teaching you.2

As far as AP Stat goes, I’ve said it before: It’s at least a degree of magnitude in difficulty above any other high-school level math course, in terms of learning everything well enough to teach to others.

Which got me to thinking: What are some of the most difficult things I’ve taught myself for recreation?

Here is one in particular:

How to read [basic] Japanese

Final Fantasy 3 was released here in America in the Fall of 1994 for the Super Nintendo.3 I rented it from Blockbuster Video4 and after realizing that I wouldn’t be able to finish the game during a rental period, I decided to scratch up some loose change and headed over to Best Buy to buy myself a copy.5 That sucker cost $84.99. 6

Final Fantasy VI - released stateside as "Final Fantasy 3"
Final Fantasy VI – released stateside as “Final Fantasy 3”

A year later, during freshman year at UT, the internet7 taught me that gamers outside of Japan completely missed out on a Final Fantasy game in between 2 and 38. Thanks to a number of dedicated fans who were literate in both English and Japanese, it was possible to get basic item and even script translations via the internet.

This gem never got released stateside... at least not until long after the Super Nintendo died.
This gem never got released stateside… at least not until long after the Super Nintendo died.

So in the summer of 1996, I called a video-game import shop in San Gabriel, CA that I found in the back of a video game magazine and ordered a copy of Final Fantasy V.9 But even with basic translations available via our dial-up connection to the world-wide web, attempting to slog through a text-heavy role playing game in a foreign language was one of the most mentally frustrating things I’ve ever attempted — I remember wanting to almost quit midway through the first world.10

I finally started taking Japanese classes11 in the summer of 2000,12 which was mostly for sport at that point.


(back to present day…)

If you ask me what the hardest week of the year is, I would say it is without a doubt, unequivocally, hands-down, indisputably, indubitably, the week leading up to the AP exam.

One bright spot for the week: When a couple of kids asked if I had pictures of my prom from back in high school, and I had to explain that that was before we had digital cameras. -_-

Also: the big head13 made its debut this week. Gotta love what kids will do with it:

image

  1. rules for calculating means and standard deviations with transformations of random variables []
  2. Though, to be fair, I didn’t fully understand this until I became a teacher myself. []
  3. Final Fantasy 2 was a gem during my freshman year of high school, in 1992 []
  4. this also ages me []
  5. Another reason I felt the need to actually buy a copy was that my local Blockbuster had 3 copies of the game, and I feared that if I rented it again, I might not get the same copy that my save data was on. We didn’t start keeping our save games on memory cards until the Sony Playstation came out a couple of years later — necessitated by the fact that it was impossible to save your games on the CD itself []
  6. Yes, that is $84.99 in 1994 U.S. dollars. People forget: back when games were on cartridge, the amount of memory the game took up directly related to its cost in dollars. Final Fantasy VI — or rather 3, as we knew it in the states — was a 24 megabit game. To put it in context with other SNES games of the time: Street Fighter II Turbo was 24 megabits — while the original Street Fighter II was 16 megabits — Chrono Trigger was 32 megabits, and Super Mario All-Stars was 24 megabits. Also remember that there are 8 bits in 1 byte. To put that in context, the last selfie you took with your cell phone probably took up more storage space than any Super Nintendo game ever made. []
  7. in the Dobie Hall computer lab, in between study breaks []
  8. FF2 was actually IV in Japan, and FF3 was actually VI… apparently Squaresoft thought Final Fantasy V wasn’t worthy of release in the US. I remember a letter-writing campaign in an issue of EGM implored gamers to write in to Square to petition them to release FFV in the US. It didn’t happen. []
  9. Oh, that sucker cost $110 to import — as it was a 16 megabit cartridge, let alone an import — and I paid COD – cash on delivery — do they even do that anymore?! []
  10. I later played through Final Fantasy 7, 8, 9, and 10, as well as Chrono Cross and Xenogears — yes, freaking Xenogears — in Japanese before they were released locally — typical lead time for an RPG to get translated and released stateside was something on the order of 6-8 months. Final Fantasy X was the first of those to have voice acting. []
  11. Present-day comment: I thought of this when I was looking over the released AP Japanese free response questions, which came out today. []
  12. when Shaq and Kobe won their first title over Indy []
  13. thanks to the season seven Divaz. []

Teacher Appreciation Week

This pic is from last year, but still appropriate :)
This pic is from last year, but still applicable :)

Of course, I appreciate all of my past school teachers. Here are just a couple of moments that I recall of the top of my head on this Wednesday1 evening.

My 2nd grade teacher, Ms. Okamoto back at Swain Elementary. She forced me to spend half an hour cleaning out my desk2 while the rest of the class was learning social studies on the day of Open House.3

Also to Mr. Petrilla back at Lexington, who for Algebra I4 in the eighth grade, gave us a conic sections bonus problem5 for homework that prompted me to ask my sister that afternoon to mute the TV in the next room for half an hour so that I could access that last four percent of my brain.6 To this day I still remember that being one of the most difficult problems I have ever completed.7

Oh by the way, it’s teacher appreciation week!8


Things heard this past week:

Student #1: Mister Youn, are you going to make us goodie-bags on the day of the AP Exam?
Student #2: He doesn’t really seem like the “goodie-bag” type of guy…
Me: I’m not really sure I know how to make a goodie bag…?
Student #3: Uh… you put goodies… in a bag!9

Also, after one of my classes found out my age:10

Me: When I was a kid in elementary school, I remember…11
Student #1: The Cold War?
Student #2: The Great Depression?!12

Trying to manage this stretch run is a delicate act, to say the least. On one hand, we have a job to do13 yet on the other, most of the seniors have had one foot out the door since Spring Break.14 It’s like coaching a college athlete on a team that’s not making the playoffs during the last week of the regular season when they’ve already signed a big contract with the pros and they have little to play for aside from personal pride. Or something akin to landing a aircraft with two busted engines and bad weather in the middle of a cornfield. The balancing act is a constant game of choosing between the lesser of undesirable outcomes.

image

image

One week left until number five.15

  1. in a hectic week that I keep forgetting what day it is []
  2. sitting in the floor with a waste basket next to me, pulling out old papers and tossing them into that bin. []
  3. I remember the first ten minutes or so feeling shamefully awkward, and after that I just wanted to throw everything away. []
  4. Not a typo. Algebra ONE. []
  5. required completing the square for “x” and “y”! Crazy, right?! I still remember him saying that only one other person figured it out. To this day I wonder if that kid’s parents helped her out with that one… []
  6. That day, it worked. []
  7. Well, for its place in time. Along with perhaps the original TMNT and the sixth level of Ninja Gaiden on the NES. Oh, who can forget world 6-3 on the arcade version of Vs. Super Mario Bros:
    vs super mario bros 6-3 []
  8. Which, again like last year, comes during the first week of AP testing and STAAR testing. That cannot be coincidence… []
  9. Yes, thanks for the clarification :) []
  10. which they somehow didn’t know yet []
  11. I can’t even remember how I intended to finish this sentence. []
  12. And this would be what earned the “Can’t make this stuff up” tag. All productivity essentially ceased after “The Great Depression”. There was no recovery from this one. []
  13. especially with a week to go until the AP Exam []
  14. or, arguably for some, much, much earlier. -_- []
  15. And hanging on by a very thin thread. []