Sense and Sensibility – –

Jack fails again – so the Wednesday post is stumbling into Thursday – –

With no sign of the pandemic easing any time soon, I continue to remain mostly housebound with only a two weekly run to the recycling station with our garbage to break the monotony. Although actually it’s not the least bit monotonous! The old saying is that ‘nature abhors a vacuum’ and so I have found that getting our bedraggled vegetable garden into shape and keeping the veggies watered takes up a fair bit of time.

Of course once the crop is in it has to be stored, eaten or canned, and that’s also proved interesting. First were the initial lot of peas (eaten of course), then the onions (hanging up in the garage), while all along I’m picking tomatoes as they ripen (eaten and canned). The potatoes were a no show but we have kale, carrots and beets. Walnuts too of course!

The aim is partly to avoid the need to spend time in shops and partly to become as self-sufficient as possible. We have a limited number of friends that we feel safe interacting with as we’re confident in their understanding of the protocols required to stay safe. Luckily they also have home grown produce so we can barter too.

We have relaxed our strict weekly cleaning of floors and surfaces a bit, but when Wendy comes in from delivering PPE or shopping, her clothes go straight into the washing machine, she has a shower and I bleach mop the floor and wipe her phone and car key.

The hardest thing is not being able to freely socialize with all our friends –

A close one is recovering from cancer surgery right now and in order to spend a day visiting him we will be in quarantine for two weeks beforehand as the last thing he needs is Covid 19 as well.

While we are taking this seriously and adjusting our lives accordingly we constantly see examples of folk doing the exact opposite. The motor cycle gathering in Sturges, the gospel singing event at Breaks Park and shoppers here in Wytheville – none making any attempt to wear masks or socially distance. Colleges and schools are being pressured to reopen so that parents can be levered back to work. Already there are new outbreaks that have resulted in colleges closing again and sending students back home where there will surely be more spikes.

But what probably bothers me most are the poor souls living in inner city apartments with no yards or gardens but who are doing their best to stay healthy.

Meanwhile we discover that Trump has admitted to downplaying the seriousness of this, which no doubt plays well in in this part of America, as the picture above amply demonstrates!

What I guess we’re all praying for now is a vaccine, but even with one, I doubt whether we’ll get back to what used to be ‘normal’!

Teaching and Learning

For another week Jack gets in his guest post on time – – –

In the mid 1990s, I was Head of Department in a Scottish community college, which led to a number of bizarre experiences, as one can imagine. Here is just one –

The role of the Scottish Office Education and Industry Department (SOEID) was to inspect all schools and colleges in Scotland. But when it came to specialist subject areas they often asked people from other colleges to be part of the inspection team. On one occasion I was chosen and for three weeks traveled every weekday to Falling Apart College (not its real name, because truth in advertising laws are not big in Scotland.)

The team would convene in the boardroom before heading off in different directions and then re-convening in late afternoon back in the boardroom. All day long the college provided fresh coffee and biscuits—er, cookies to you.

Particularly concerning at FA College were communication from the college president or senior managers to department heads, and then from the heads to lecturers and instructors. These were the main areas for discussion when the team met each afternoon, because none of us could find any proof that they existed. The lowly instructors and lecturers were running the place on a wing and a prayer with no guidance or support from senior managers.

When we began to push harder for evidence of past meetings, an assistant principal handed over a hand-written set of notes from a meeting dated a year earlier. With a smile, my colleague who led the team and had asked for their proof thanked him, and waited for the door to close, leaving just the team in the room. Then he said the Scots equivalent of “Hey, y’all, watch this!” (“Aye, right.”) put the notes on the table and rubbed his finger across them. The “year-old” ink smeared.

It turned out that there had only ever been one full staff meeting three years earlier. When we asked why in heaven’s name they’d never held another, the President of the college looked at the floor and shuffled his feet.

“Well, they all shouted at me about things that wanted changing.”

 Well, we were stuck with having to write up a difficult report. A whole team of senior managers were sitting around doing nothing but pushing paper and showing no interest in the folk who were doing the actual teaching, the teachers were running the place and doing their job, and the president hid in his office most days and hoped no one would knock.

There’s a strict protocol for publishing the final report; the wording is very carefully coded so that any educator reading the report would understand in an instant what a sinking ship or stellar star a place is, but other bureaucrats would miss most of the secret info. And we were required by law to let all the people at Falling Apart College see the report first. None of them knew how badly they’d been bolloxed, but the teachers and lecturers, oh, they were smirking.

But soon the senior staff would smirk too. Shortly after the inspection report was published and the real story came out from news reports and such, translated by education experts, I received an email from the head of the team, apologizing for enclosing a bill for ten pounds. Falling Apart College had finally figured out just how bad the report was, and so they billed us for the coffee and cookies.

To be fair, they were lovely cookies …

Not long after that the Principal took early retirement and the college changed its name. Hey ho, another day in the life of an educator. But there was a certain justice in the people who were doing all the work getting a heads up on the report….