Monthly Archives: September 2013

Summer Mixtape Blogring

 A break from your regularly scheduled programming today. Erin from The Post-Modern Talko has organized a Summer Mixtape blogring, and you can find mine over at the lovely Risha’s Read Me Anything. I’m hosting Martin from In Pursuit of Expression, so I’ll let him take it from here!

Hi, I’m MARTIN from IN PURSUIT OF EXPRESSION. I tried my best to create an

entertaining and varied selection of the music that I have been rocking this summer. I

know that not everyone will enjoy everything on the list but I hope that there is at least

something that you will enjoy or relate to.

My summer was incredibly music orientated, filled with various local gigs and bookended

by two fantastic music festivals. I listened to a hell of a lot of music and it was fun (and

super difficult) attempting to summarise that into this playlist! So, here it is

#1 Frank Turner – Four Simple Words. Ever since the release of Frank Turner’s fifth

studio album, Tape Deck Heart, in April, I literally don’t think a single week has gone by

that I haven’t listened to it. Four Simple Words is one of my favourites from the album;

an upbeat folky punk song that I cannot help but dance to whenever I hear it. If I am

in a public place when it comes on my MP3 player I literally have to skip it for fear of

embarrassing myself with impromptu dancing.

#2 Gogol Bordello – Start Wearing Purple. I saw Gogol Bordello for the first time this

June at Download Festival and they were AMAZING. It turns out that gypsy punk is the

best kind of music to dance to! Start Wearing Purple is probably the bands most famous/

catchy song. The week leading up to the festival I listened this song several times a day

and seeing it live did not disappoint.

#3 Ducking Punches – Burnt Matches. Ducking Punches is Dan Allen’s DIY folk band

band from Norfolk, England. This is my favourite song from their 2012 EP ‘I Am Arturo

Bandini’. You just can’t beat a punk rock love story! Check out more of their music at

bandcamp.com/duckingpunches

#4 Iron Maiden – Run To The Hills. I also saw Iron Maiden for the first time at Download

Festival and man, do they put on one hell of a show! For 60 year old dudes they have

more energy now than I had at 16. Run To The Hills was my favourite from their set.

#5 Limp Bizkit – Break Stuff. Another band that I saw for the first time at Download Fest.

The crowd was packed full of 20 somethings reliving their teenage years (so much sweat

and nostalgia). They closed their set with Break Stuff and as someone who was in the

thick of the moshpit, I can attest to the fact that “stuff” was most certainly “broken”. Namely

my body. XD

#6 Louise Distras – The Hand You Hold. Angry political acoustic punk rock from

Wakefield, England. I have been a fan of Lousie ever since I first heard this song about a

year and a half ago. She is self-releasing her debut album at the end of September so this

song has been a regular fixture over the summer in preparation. I CAN’T FREAKIN’ WAIT.

Show her some love: louisedistras.co.uk

#7 Adam and Cuth – Considered… Adam and Cuth are a rapper/producer duo from

Brighton, England. This song is from their 2012 release ‘The Letters EP’, it is about Adam’s

decision to use his real name instead of a stage name like most rappers. Honest, down

to earth and funny to boot. I don’t listen to half as much hip hop as I did 10 years ago but

when I come across a rapper like Adam I remember why I first fell in love with hip hop

music.

#8 Nova Rockafella – Call Me (Batman). Nova is a part Canadian, part Jamaican rapper.

She is the opposite of Adam in that she has more pseudonyms than there are songs on

this playlist. This song ALWAYS gets stuck in my head but I don’t care because I love it.

The video is pretty awesome, too. Check it out: youtube.com/watch?v=e7uJqlhrRNQ

#9 Frank Turner – Photosynthesis (Truck Sessions). The second of three Frank Turner

songs on this playlist. (I’m a big fan, can you tell?!?) This is a live session recording of

my favourite song from his second album Love, Ire & Song. My best friend is also a huge

Frank Turner fan and many an evening this summer has been spent sitting in her back

yard, drinking around a bonfire, listening to Frank. You can always tell how many ciders

I have had by how loudly I sing along to the chorus of this song. “I WON’T SIT DOWN, I

WON’T SHUUUUT UP AND MOST OF ALL, I WILL NOT GROW UUUUUP!”

#10 Amanda Palmer and the Grand Theft Orchestra – Lost. I freakin’ love Amanda

Palmer.  I was out of town when she played a show in my town recently and I was

GUTTED. This is one of my favourite songs from her album, Theatre Is Evil, which she

self-released last year on a ‘Pay What You Want’ basis. I’ve had the album on a constant

loop pretty much all summer. So much awesome.

#11 Against Me! – True Trans Soul Rebel. This is from a 2 track acoustic EP released a

couple of months ago. Against Me! are one of my favourite bands of ever and this release

has really whetted my appetite for their new album. The album will largely focus on singer

Laura’s recent journey in coming out to the world as transgender. It has been three years

since their last album and I really really really can’t wait for this!

#12 Off With Their Heads – Clear The Air. Another band that that I absolutely adore, this

song is from their 2010 album In Desolation. I saw them live at Leeds Festival in August

and they closed their set with this song. So good, It’s a real punk rock heartbreaker.

#13 Daughter – Youth. I got chills the first time I heard this song. Seriously. I can’t

say that for many songs, but this one had a real physical effect on me. It is hauntingly

beautiful.

#14 Moose Blood – Bukowski. Moose Blood are an indie/emo band from Canterbury,

England. This track is from their 2012 EP ‘Moving Home’. It would have been easy

to include the title track on this playlist, as I recently moved back to my home town

myself, however, I went for the track named after my favourite author. Really I could

have picked any track from the EP, they’re all pretty fantastic. Check them out:

mooseblood.bandcamp.com

#15 Gogol Bordello – Name Your Ship. Gogol Bordello recently released their new

album. I have been rocking the album pretty frequently since it came out and this is my

(current) favourite song from it. I am seeing them when they tour the UK in December and

I am a little bit (a lot) excited!

#16 Frank Turner – We Shall Not Overcome. I am a sucker for symmetry, Frank Turner

opened this playlist and he will close it out. This song was one of the ‘bonus tracks’ on

Tape Deck Heart and is one of my favourites. I think one of the main reasons that I love

Frank Turner so much is that I really relate to his songs. We’d definitely be good buddies if

we knew each other in real life. The chorus to this song sums me up perfectly: “The bands

I like they don’t sell too many records and the girls I like they don’t kiss too many boys. The

books I read will never be best sellers, but come on fellas, at least we made our choice.”

I hope you enjoy the songs and I hope my rambling didn’t bore you too much! XD

In Praise of Teachers

I always seem to be surrounded by teachers. My mom is a teacher. Some of my best friends are teachers. Many of my other relatives—aunts, uncles, cousins, grandmother—are or were teachers.

I am not a teacher, although there was a time as a kid when I thought I might like to be. You know why I’m not? Because I know I couldn’t handle it. And after talking with the teachers I know as school starts up again this year, I’m even more convinced that I wouldn’t survive a week as a teacher.

So you can imagine how much I hate it when I hear people insult teachers or talk as if their jobs are easy. You want to know what teachers have to deal with on a daily basis? Here’s just a small sample of it:

-I have fond memories of reading books as a class—we read Stone Fox in third grade, The Witch of Blackbird Pond in fifth grade, etc. In a lot of school districts, this is no longer part of the curriculum. Why, you ask? Effing MCAS. That’s Massachusetts’ state testing, but every state has state-wide testing, and since performance on it reflects on the district, everything revolves around it. Creative writing, which was my favorite part of elementary school? Forget it. My friend’s curriculum director actually said to her once, “Why would you teach the students to connect with what they’re reading? That’s not going to be on MCAS.” The same friend’s superintendent greeted all the teachers on their first day of school by yelling at them that they still weren’t at the highest MCAS level. Oh, and in that same school system, they eliminated an entire year of social studies due to, you guessed it, MCAS.

-Teachers all need to get their master’s degree. If they get it before they start teaching, districts have to pay them more, which makes them less hirable. However, if they get it while they’re working, they have to work full time while also taking classes. And once teachers have their teaching licenses and master’s degrees, they’re not anywhere near done taking classes. They have to take all kinds of classes to keep their licenses up-to-date, some of questionable value. One certain relative of mine spent months whining about a class she was taking on brain-based education (quoth another certain relative: “As opposed to what? Ass-based?”). And these aren’t quick, two-hour seminars—they’re multi-week, 30+ hour classes that teachers take while working full-time.

-Another thing teachers have to deal with now that wasn’t as much of an issue when I was a kid is an increasing number of students with special needs. Full inclusion wasn’t as big of a movement when I was a kid, but there’s a big push for it now. I’m not going to get into the pros and cons of inclusion, but I will say that teachers now have to deal with more students with autism, learning disabilities, behavioral problems, ADHD, mental health issues, the works. Even with help from special education teachers, it can create a lot of challenges. My friend had to evacuate her classroom multiple times when a kid with severe behavioral problems started throwing chairs. If a student is on an individualized education plan, the teacher has to meet with parents and special education teachers many times to discuss the student’s progress—and has to do this for every single student on an ed plan.

-And then there are the parents. The helicopter parents who won’t leave the teacher alone, wanting to know every single thing going on in class and why their kid only got a B+. The parents who yell at the teacher after their kid blatantly lies to them. The parents who can’t believe their little angel is an asshole in school. One of my friends had a parent yell at her because she wouldn’t let her son have his cell phone with him during MCAS (which is a state rule). At the other end of the spectrum, there are also, sadly, some parents who are abusive or neglectful, whom teachers are legally obligated to report to the authorities.

-If you’re one of those people who bitches about how “teachers only work until three” or “teachers get the whole summer off,” do me a favor and punch yourself in the face. Want to know how wrong you are? Let’s start with hours. A new teacher is often encouraged to be an advisor or a coach, which means lots of after-school time. Teachers do most, if not all, of their lesson planning and grading after school, and it usually adds up to way more than a typical 9-5 job. And many teachers don’t get the summer off—because they make so little money to begin with, they take summer jobs. Some even have second jobs during the school year. And not only do teachers not make much money, because districts are cash-strapped, they have often have to buy supplies for their classrooms with their own money.

-And speaking of cash-strapped districts, job security as a teacher? For the first three years, it’s non-existent. The odds are good that a teacher will be laid off after that first year—maybe being re-hired after receiving the pink slip, but maybe not. One friend was laid off and re-hired her first year teaching, then laid off for real after two full years of putting a boatload of time and energy into a difficult inner-city teaching job. Another was laid off, rehired, and almost laid off again after her first year teaching—although by that time, understandably, she’d opted to find another job in a different district. After three years, a teacher is granted tenure and becomes immune to layoffs, but if that teacher ever wants or needs to leave the school district, he or she will have to start over with zero job security somewhere new. That is, if anyone will hire him/her—teachers with more experience are less hirable due to the district having to pay them more.

-There are lots of other things teachers have to deal with as well. Like being paid as a part-time rather than full-time teacher because you’re teaching five high school classes instead of six. (Happened to a friend of mine.) Or having to take over another teacher’s classes because he was fired for sending inappropriate text messages (ditto). Or spending months or years trying to negotiate a new teachers’ contract just to raise your salaries to the average for the area in which you live (happened to a relative). Or dealing with education policy laws that are created by people who’ve never taught before. Or barely having ten minutes to scarf down lunch every day. And zillions of other things that I can’t think of off the top of my head.

Are there bad teachers out there? Absolutely. There are people in every profession who aren’t good at what they do—bad doctors, bad lawyers, bad waiters, bad salespeople. And while in Massachusetts teachers can be fired with cause after they have tenure, that’s not the case in a lot of other places, which I think is a mistake.

The dialogue about what’s wrong with schools today often focuses, I think wrongly, on bad teachers. There’s talk of paying teachers more for getting better results—and results, of course, are measured by standardized tests, with no regard for the specific populations a teacher serves or how well the teachers at a school work together as a team or progress made in a classroom that can’t be tangibly quantified.

Here are some better questions: what makes good teachers leave? How can we attract intelligent, competent, caring people to teaching jobs? What do teachers themselvesfeel could help them do their job more effectively? What do we want the goal of teaching to be—high test scores, or students who love the knowledge and understanding they’ve gained and will go on to do great things in the world?

We all, hopefully, had great teachers through the years whom we remember and admire. I’d love to think that if I ever have kids, they’ll have teachers like that, too, and that those teachers will love their jobs and going to school every day. Most of the teachers I know say that they love the teaching part of teaching and love their students—it’s the rest of the crap they have to deal with that they hate, and sometimes good teachers leave the profession because that crap gets so overwhelming.

So as one small step toward improving education in this country—can we at least give some appreciation to the people who devote their lives to educating kids? There are all kinds of things that teachers deserve that they aren’t getting, but since it may be awhile before there’s fair pay, job security, money for school supplies, support when things get tough, or measuring progress without teaching to a test, for now, we can show teachers the respect they so richly deserve.