Monday, January 30, 2012

Valentine's Art




Here's some more Valentine's "art."  I found some cool frames from various stores and the back of my closet and painted them silver a while ago.  I decided to switch out the pictures in them with some holiday-appropriate artwork.

I started with some pages of an old textbook entitled "Physical Education in the Elementary School" from 1951 that I found at the thrift store.  I used pages that had these great songs on them, like "Hot Cross Buns" and "Push the Business On" and "Gustaf's Skoal."  Don't you remember singing these in your PE class?  Classics.

I glued a stencil heart on the top of the music and popped it into a frame.  I mixed up these frames with ones filled with black and white pictures and put them on the wall.  Here's the finished look:

Sunday, December 19, 2010

Homemade Cat Play Mat

I got a new sewing machine a couple of weeks ago and I have loved it. I came up with the idea for this great new cat toy. My cats love pouncing on anything that moves underneath a blanket, so I thought they might enjoy this little mat. I know that you probably aren't a crazy, overindulgent cat mom like myself, but I will tell you how to make this thing anyway. It only took me like 5 minutes and I just used scrap material and old cat toys, so it was practically free.






To make this toy, I got two pretty large pieces of fabric that were about the same size. Then I cut a little slit about two inches long near one corner.



Next I tucked a catnip mouse under one of the slits and used a zig zag stitch to sew over its little tail a few times. The idea is that the cats can barely see the mouse and can have fun digging around for it through the slit, but it won't come out.



I flipped the fabric over and did the same thing on the other side with a little fish toy. This toy has an elastic string attached to it and I thought it might be fun for the cats to pull on.



Next, I sewed two wiggly parallel lines down the fabric to make a kind of track. I placed a jingle ball in there and then sewed up all the sides. The cats can pounce on the ball and move it around, but they can't actually get to it.



So that's it. Pretty simple. And ugly, unfortunately. Next time I'll probably purchase some more attractive fabric. Here's a picture of little Brother playing with his new toy.







Friday, December 10, 2010

Thanksgiving Table Setting



This year I volunteered to design the tablescape for our Thanksgiving dinner at my parent's house. I had been watching that show "Wedded to Perfection" on Netflix and absolutely fell in LOVE with all the incredible designs they created on that show.

We had 12 people coming to dinner. My brother Matt invited his roommate and a friend from India and two friends from China who would be celebrating their first Thanksgiving. I focused on warm colors and natural materials. Here's some pictures of the table:
I started with a plain ivory tablecloth and used these awesome gold chargers and warm yellow napkins from Walmart, then added a rich, red ribbon for just a bit of color.
For place cards, I set out a pear at each plate and tied a little gold ribbon on the stem. I found some fabulous vintage ads at a scrapbook store and selected a different one for each person that I thought represented their personality a little. I mounted the ads on golden yellow cardstock and handwrote names on them.

For the table centerpieces, I tried to use a lot of harvest-themed pieces. I made flower vases out of pumpkins and gourds. Unique gourds were also placed on top of large candlesticks and pedastals. I collected a variety of candlesticks, but used the same ribbon to tie the design together. I also filled small mason jars with layers of colored beans and corn and lentils and placed a tea light in the top.


My mom prepared the meal and it was amazing. Overall, it was an excellent Thanksgiving dinner!

Autumn Applique Dish Towel


So one of my friends gave me this awesome book full of applique projects and I have finally gotten around to completing one of them. This is a fall dish towel. Applique took a long time for me to learn, but I'm getting better at it and my machine is just so easy to use. All it takes to make this project is a few fat quarters in some different fall colors and some off-white cotton.


First, I cut the off-white cotton fabric a little larger than one of my dishtowels. Then I hemmed the sides.



Next, I went online and searched for line drawings of fall leaves. I cut and pasted them into a word document and resized them to fit my project. I printed out a bunch of different shapes and sizes.

Then I cut out the paper leaves, traced them on my printed fall fabrics, and cut them out of fabric.

Next I placed a leaf on a brown square and appliqued it on. There are lots of different methods for doing applique on a machine. My machine came with a foot that works well for applique. I just lower the feed dog and I can move the fabric freely beneath the needle. I don't have quite a steady enough hand for this yet, so I just used my standard foot and did a lot of stopping and turning the fabric so that my fabric didn't start getting all bunchy.

Next, I appliqued the brown square onto the dishtowel and added another leaf for good measure.
To make the ruffle, I folded a strip of printed fabric about 3 inches wide in half the "hot dog" way with the right side out. I ironed it so it would stay flat. Then I sewed a long running stitch across the open end (not the folded end). I pulled the bobbin thread to gather it.

I pinned the ruffle onto the bottom of the dishtowel and just sewed it on. I liked the fraying of the fabric here--it seemed to give it that folksy-homemade-rustic-autumn look that I was looking for.

Friday, January 15, 2010

I'm not a babysitter

So, I'm listening to the New Moon soundtrack, which I have to say I'm pretty obsessed with because it is pretty fabulous.

On a completely unrelated note, whenever Taylor tells anyone that he is going to be a doctor, everyone immediately makes some comment about how he must be so smart and such a hard worker, which is totally true; Taylor is all those things. But when I tell people I am a special ed teacher, I get a completely different reaction. Mostly it's people telling me that they could never, ever do my job. Not because it's so difficult, but because it would be super boring to push kids in wheelchairs around all day (Seriously, someone actually thought that was what I did. Needless to say, she was shocked to find out that people could actually get a masters degree in that.)

But I realize that when we were kids "special ed" was a VERY different thing for most of us than it is today. And it is very different even today between schools and states. So let me clear up some possible misconceptions:

I work with kids who need extra help in school. These kids are in their classrooms most of the day, and they come to my room for a hour or so a day and I teach them in small groups.

But my job is awesome because it's not like just teaching the same lesson every day to every student. These are kids who really need extra help. So I do a lot of testing to find out exactly what skills are missing and then I decide what to teach. Everything that I do is based on data that I collect. Of course, I can't just go to the teacher store and grab one of those cutesy books and give them a worksheet. Everything that I do has to be research based and created for individual students. And so I'm reading a lot of books and research articles and talking to specialists all the time. I lead our teachers in meetings where we talk about students who are not making progress and we dig through research and we debate about which intervention we should try next. And then we collect data every day that tells us if our students are improving or not and keep making changes and trying new things until we find something that works.

And these are the kids who have a hard time with learning, so we have to be pretty creative with finding solutions that will actually work. There's a lot of disappointment, but that makes it even more exciting when we finally see some sixth grader who is reading on a first grade level move from reading 6 words per minute to 30. The kids that I work with are really amazing. I can't imagine going to school day after day and not being able to do most of the work that my friends can all do without any problems. But they keep working (sometimes it takes some interesting motivation strategies to get them to work) and they are really great kids.

I really love my job. I never know what to expect when I come to work and my kids are always surprising me. Some days I am running from class to class rescuing teachers from my students who decided to bite, kick, or scream the f word over and over instead of doing their assignments. And some days I'm making phone calls at 6pm to help kids with their math homework. And some days I'm hitting my head against the wall because seriously, the word is "take" not "tacky" and I know I've only told you this a hundred times, but you should know it by now. But most days I'm just looking at data and researching new ideas and trying to come up with solutions and teaching and teaching and teaching and remembering to celebrate the times when a student looks up at me with a big smile and says, "Hey, look, Mrs. Turner! I did it!" Because that's what my job is all about.

Thursday, December 31, 2009

It's About Time

That's right, I'm finally updating our blog. I have finished my first year of grad school in special education and I have one more semester to go. My classes are really helpful and practical, but this last semester I had 18 credits, which meant that I was going to class 4 nights a week from 4:30-8 or 9 at night. Also, I changed jobs in August and now I'm teaching resource for grades 4-6 at Fox Hills Elementary in Granite School District. I work with some awesome people and I have the most amazing kids. I was a little scared to work with the upper grades at first, but they are so much fun and not nearly as sassy as I had imagined. This next semester I am taking way fewer classes and finishing up my graduate project and TAing for a class, so it should be a little more relaxed than last semester. Taylor is in his third year of med school and so he is no longer taking classes, but he is doing rotations in the hospital and he really likes it and doesn't complain even when he has to be at the hospital at 4am.

Our kitties are still as sweet and playful and snuggly as ever. Brother loves walking around in the snow (it's almost 1 kitty deep in our backyard right now) and Sis is currently sitting in her favorite place, my lap. We had a lot of fun at my parents this Christmas and took a cruise to Mexico together. This week we are finishing up some projects around the house, but mostly just enjoying having absolutely nothing to do for the first time in a long time. I have been crocheting and rewatching some of my favorite movies. Taylor is reading Eclipse and I think it's pretty safe to say that he has a bit of a mancrush on Jacob.

We hope that you all had a wonderful Christmas and have a happy new year!

Saturday, October 11, 2008

the weez boys in concert

This week was awesome. We saw the weez on Tuesday and they were sweet. They played tons of their old songs, which was awesome because I love them. They came out in these white jumpsuits and Rivers had this goofy looking sock-thing on his head. Then they took off their jumpsuits and were wearing bright red track suits with lightning bolts on them. It was just such a fun show and they did a hootenanny and that was way fun, too. Angels and Airwaves opened for them and they were cool, too. I have been waiting to see Weezer since I missed my chance back in high school and it was definitely all I could have ever hoped for. Also funny, I told my kids about the concert and taught them to make the weezer sign and one boy said, "Yeah, I've heard of weezer, they have Ozzy Osbourne, right?"

The next day I took the gre, since I'm trying to get into grad school and I did alright so hopefully the rest of my application checks out and I will be starting school again in January. It was really cute because my kids were all excited for me to help me study and take my test and they all started cheering when they found out that I passed. Then Thursday night I did this literacy training at my school for parents. We had a great turnout--about 80 people and everything went really well. Tay and I both ended up getting really sick this week and so this weekend we have pretty much just tried to catch up on some sleep. http://www.weezer.com/images/local/news/9644ea07-5133-4476-a7fb-9c36f0e3effd.jpghttp://www.weezer.com/images/local/news/711d5958-aedc-45ae-b1aa-57a0636f0256.jpg