Sunday, July 20, 2014

A new life on the road

Well it has been a long time since I have posted an entry here; I will try to get better about that in the future.  Since I was here last my life has changed a great deal.  I have abandoned the profession of teaching, this is solely due to the insanity of the system and the people who run the school I worked for last.  I am not going to say much more about that except that the system is not doing our next generation any favors and by extension not doing us any favors.  We are no longer educating students; we are showing them how to pass a test that really does not measure anything about their abilities.  I will buy into the idea of standardized testing when you give me standardized students.  Enough said.

I am embarking upon a new career, the 3rd or 4th depending on how you measure these things.  It is my plan to share this new journey here.  I am going to go out and become a “paid tourist” and drive a big rig truck across this great country I have defended in uniform and taught about.  I have started this adventure by attending a Trucking School here in the Twin Cities of Minnesota, at some point I may identify this school by name, but suffice to say that I feel that I am getting great training and will be well prepared to safely drive an 80,000 pound truck on the highways and byways of the United States.

Trucking is a job that affects every part of American life, look around you everything you see made part of its journey to you by truck.  I think it is an under-appreciated part of our society and hopefully this blog will help people better understand the process of becoming a trucker and what the day to day life of a driver entails.

What is the process of becoming a trucker?  Well in my case it started, obviously, with the decision to become a driver.  Since that decision I have had to take multiple tests on a variety of subjects ranging from basic general knowledge about operating a commercial vehicle, how the braking system of a large truck operates, the dynamics of a combination vehicle, the different dynamics of a double and triple trailer truck, what is different about operating a tank truck, and the laws and requirements of handling hazardous materials.  After that a driver has to take a physical examination and a drug test.  After all of that a student driver can start to learn how to drive a truck.  The school for a professional driver runs 160 hours between classroom, practice range and actual driving. 

It is interesting to note that you start learning to drive by going in reverse.  It seems that the most difficult skill to master is backing up the truck.  That is where I currently in the program.  It is much harder than it looks to place a trailer within a foot of where you want it to be.

Well that is all I have to say today, I will try very hard to update this at least weekly, hopefully more often than that.  When I actually get on the road I will try to make daily entries.  Please feel free to let me know any questions or comments in the comments section below.


Thanks for reading, have a great day.

Tuesday, June 21, 2011

A rant about our education system in Minnesota

It has been a long time since I have posted here, I will try very hard to rectify that problem.  It has been a busy crazy time of my life culminating with the loss of my teaching position last week ostensibly due to a decline in enrollment at the charter school where I worked.  Teaching would be a great job if you just had to teach kids, the hardest part of education seems to be dealing with the other adults in the system.  It is much like a medieval world, people fighting to keep their little fiefdoms and protect their illusory world intact.

Education in Minnesota like many other places has been taken over by the requirements of standardized testing.  If there is not a test on the subject, it no longer matters.  I am/was a Social Studies teacher, which by the way was the whole reason public schools started in the United States.  Thomas Jefferson insisted that the electorate be educated so that they could understand what they were voting about.  In Minnesota however we don’t have a state mandated test on the Social Studies; so it seems that many administrators minimize the importance of such silly things as History, Geography, Economics, Government etc… because they get evaluated on the results of standardized tests and no test = no results.  You cannot blame them, their jobs are dependent on these results but how do we return the “soft” subjects to importance in our schools?

The schools are being turned into math and reading factories.  Since the high stakes testing is based in these two subjects, they have assumed a position of prominence in our education system.  Here in Minnesota we are adding Science to the group of subjects that matter by adding yet another state high stakes test.  I find myself torn by this; one side says that it is a good thing that another subject has been anointed with importance simply by giving the students yet another test.  Another side of me looks at the student’s side of this and sees just another test.  Kids take an overabundance of tests already; often the students will take the easy way out and not put any effort into the test. 

As far as my discipline, the Social Studies, I cannot imagine the State of Minnesota coming up with a test on which  the whole state would agree.  Can you imagine the people of Edina (rich suburb, many business executives) agreeing on labor history with the people from the Iron Range?   Probably not, I can also see difficulties on how Native Americans will be dealt with historically and that is just the beginning of the issues we would face, think about economics, government, politics.  I just don’t see how we be able to reach a consensus on what should be tested not to mention what answers would be selected as correct.  It boggles the mind to think of what a committee appointed by the State of Minnesota will come up with as the correct answer.  

Unfortunately, I do not have an answer here; I do know that we are turning out students who have almost no idea of our collective history or even where Botswana is located, not to mention who is the President of the United States (see Jaywalking segment of the Tonight show.)  We are in danger of having future generations that have no idea of what it means to be a citizen of our democracy.  I hope not. 

Saturday, January 22, 2011

Introduction
Welcome to my world.  I hope to look at the world in a slightly different way and share that examination with those of you that might be interested.  As the title of this blog states I am simply a guy form Minnesota, I have had the opportunity to see much of the world thanks to the US Navy and now I work in an inner city High School.  I love what I do, but some days I wonder why I do it.

It makes sense to tell you a little about myself and why I am doing this so you can make a decision about whether it is worth your time to read/follow my random musings.  I was born in Jacksonville Florida, my father was a serving Naval Officer, flying one of the first supersonic fighter planes in the Navy’s inventory and my mother who had the tougher job of being a Navy wife.  When I was about 3 we moved back to Minnesota where, I  with some minor (in one case major) relocations, have lived ever since.  I have an older brother and a younger sister, 3 nieces, one nephew, miscellaneous aunts, uncles and cousins spread about the state and country.

After high school and being academically dismissed from my first attempt at higher education I followed my father into the US Navy, there is where the resemblance in our respective times in the service ended.  He was an Aviator, I was a Submariner; he was an officer, I was an enlisted man.  I spent a little over ten years in the Navy before I returned to Minnesota and wandered through several jobs before deciding to return to college earn a teaching credential and go to work teaching.  The first two parts were reasonably easy but the third has been the source of some interesting times which will I am sure eventually find their way into this blog.

I currently am employed by an inner-city Charter High School on the north side of Minneapolis.  I work with a group of incredibly dedicated people who are doing incredible things with very few resources.  We teach a great group of students who have not experienced the success of some other students for a number of reasons; some of their own making, most however are not.  

When not working I can usually be found with one of several vastly different things (fishing rod, book, camera, gun, cold beer etc…) in my hand or walking my dog (we are both somewhat overweight) when the weather allows (Which it does not today according to the weather service it is 3 degrees outside today) or visiting with friends. 

It is not a particularly glamorous life but I enjoy it. 

Thank you for reading and hopefully I will be able to provide you with a bit of humor and hopefully we can all gain some insight in the coming times.

Have a great day.