Month: October 2007

Total 32 Posts

Presenting To The School Board

The Surrogate Son

Ten minutes in front of a school board, from my perspective as a Professional PresenterMeaning I got paid once., is gold. With just four people scattered throughout the audience and a board expecting chart- and data-heavy slides, I enjoyed low expectations.

The result was loose and informal (matching my jeans and coat ensemble) and very smiley. At this point in my life, looking boyish and harmless as I do, I’m running an extremely effective shtick which all but defies my categorization.

If I had to try, I’d call it “The Surrogate Son.” When I step in front of 40- and 50-year-olds, I am instantly adopted as their son. I start collecting these goofy and proud smiles, from the mothers, especially, who see in me their own sons, long gone from their eyes, mothers who hope their sons are somewhere warm, perhaps wearing a suit coat, perhaps doing something responsible like talking to a school board.

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Show and Tell: Day 16

Picture This. It’s a trailer for a snowboard video. Usually I find these reels kinda repellant, all frat-boyish, all juiced up on adrenaline and bong resin and filmed with a Handycam, but Mack Dawg Productions takes an absurd level of pride in the production. Some of these shots are stunners including an xtremely satisfying final shot. (No, the final shot.) ¶ Additionally: the opener question asked when the first cell phone call was made. The answer is 1973 and YouTube cheerfully offers up the very first cell phone commercial. Thanks, YouTube!

Teacher of the Year: Lil Wayne

Asked by MTV how he maintains a creative state, Lil Wayne issues a response that’s perfect for rappers and teachers alike:

MTV: You go everywhere with your music. What are some of the zones that you been going into while making your new album?

Lil Wayne: I go wherever my creativity takes me. I ain’t gotta be in no zone, ’cause if I was in a zone, I ain’t never fall out. I ain’t never out of the zone, so I don’t know what the zone look like or smell like. I’m always creative.

I aim at the same. My best ideas for lessons and movies hit me during some of the least expected or appropriate times. Like now, scribbling a rough draft of this post on yellow legal during a staff meeting on WASC accreditation. [and a second draft during a school board meeting -ed.]

I think your ability to maintain a creative state hinges on this question: what do you do with an idea once it strikes. Your answer, I think, determines the quantity and quality of future ideas.

Here’s my advice, for whatever it’s worth: don’t use your brain to store ideas.

Using your brain to store a good idea for that post or lesson is like using a fancy schmancy laser cutter to chop wood when an ax suffices fine.

Your brain is good for creating ideas. Paper is great for storing ideas.

If I hadn’t wimped out of that Secret of My Success meme awhile back, I would’ve submitted the fact that I’m always packing paper and pen. When I can’t use paper, I use Jott.

I drove an hour last week and left myself seventeen Jotts all relating to the same opener question (the one about Hawaii) all evenly dispersed over the drive, each of which flew from my cell to my gmail box in time for my arrival.

The thing is: Jotts beget more Jotts.

I use the drafts feature of WordPress to store post ideas. Writing down a new idea plus a few supporting notes as they strike costs me nothing. More ideas come.

Making that slideshow, I stored the shot list in GoogleDocs, refreshing it constantly. My brain fully accustomed to the filling/emptying cycle, more shot ideas came.

This is, of course, a founding principle of my trademarked pedagogy, Method Teaching™, which has been optioned for immediate textbook adoption by McDougal-Littel: stay receptive to interesting things and you can’t help but become interesting yourself. Method Teaching and Method Rapping both derive from the same strategies.And any similarity to David Allen’s Getting Things Done system is, I swear, purely coincidental.

True, sometimes it gets out of control.

But I think Young Wheezy would agree with me that a surplus of creativity is always preferable to its absence.

Related:

  1. Method Teaching
  2. Vic Mackey: Teacher of the Year