Category Archives: Winston-Salem

Supporting Some Local Students Via Their Teachers

If you’re a returning visitor to this old blog you’ll notice a new feature on the left hand column.  I’ve entered the "Blogger’s Challenge" for DonorsChoose.org and I’m hoping to raise some money for four different education projects here in the Winston-Salem Forsyth County schools. That widget you see at the top left is the "thermometer" showing how I’m doing.  Here’s my challenge page on the DonorsChoose.org site so you can see the five projects I’ve chosen.

DonorsChoose is an organization that lets teachers submit proposals for funding projects for their classrooms.  Donors can review all of the proposals and then make donations for the project via the DonorsChoose site.  Simply put it’s a way for people to contribute directly to education projects that they find worthy.

I searched for all the programs in the Winston-Salem Forsyth County schools and found 180 of them.  I sifted through those and came up with four that I particularly liked and added those to my challenge.  The goal is to raise $1,564.70 which is the combined total for the four projects, but I’m not greedy.  Anything we can do will be gravy.  Below are excerpts from the proposals submitted by the teachers for each of the projects I selected, or if you want you can visit my challenge page to check them out.  One thing you’ll notice is that the schools all have high poverty or high need student bodies. My personal philosophy is that the schools in higher income areas are able to hit up their own parents for funding.  In other words if I think a project at my kids’ school is worthwhile then I’ll chip in for it.  For these projects the teachers don’t have that resource so they need to reach outside their community for help.  Thanks ahead of time for any support you can give.

Beginning Podcasting ($246 Project Request)
I am a media coordinator at a low- performing, 70% minority, economically disadvantaged high school.

As a means of addressing literacy issues in our school I would
like to assist our students in the creation of an online literary
magazine. Student work would include poetry, stories, essays, and peer
critiques, as well as original artwork, photography and cartoons. In
order to meet AYP and state standards for End-of Course study, any
opportunity for reading and writing would improve their performance. In
addition, using web technology as a "hook" would generate student
interest, while teaching a variety of technology skills for future use,
such as podcasting, blogging, and web page production.

Our population would greatly benefit from a variety of
non-traditional learning environments. The hands-on production of an
online literary magazine, which I plan to implement, is just such a
format for learning. This project will also give me many opportunities
to work collaboratively with the English and Art teachers integrating
the Information Skills curriculum into both core and elective classes.

My project needs a color document scanner, microphone and headphones. The cost of this proposal is $246, which includes shipping for any materials requested and fulfillment.

"Love You Forever" ($272 Project Request)

Literacy, big word, but it simply means
reading. There many components to reading. My classroom library is
lacking in variety, components, and enthusiasm. I am a new kindergarten
teacher who inherited a classroom that was started in the middle of
last school year. There were 10 small books in the classroom and no big
books or books with tapes. Through the graciousness of other teachers,
some books have been donated.

This is a class of 16 students that are new to school, many
have never been to a preschool or had any formal training. They have
had little exposure to the world of books. These precious students are
most at risk, and have a harder time mastering the basics. I am eager
to get them reading. I want them to gain respect for books and what
they have to offer. A book for these kindergarteners to take home and
share would be the start they need. The children will be taught the
responsibility of caring for books and returning them when assignments
are completed.

I am honored just to have the opportunity to make such a request
to such a wonderful giving organization. Thank you for considering my
proposal.

My
project needs take home readers, books with tapes, and concept books
for the classroom. Requested are: a science book and tape set, learning
to write transition kit, ‘The Story of Ferdinand’, guided reading book
bundle, and much more. The cost of this proposal is $272, which
includes shipping for any materials requested and fulfillment.

Help at Home for the Whole Family ($407 Project Request)

I teach in a school which is nearly 100%
free and reduced lunch. I teach a Title 1 Pre-k class which has 15 four
year old students who need an extra academic boost to be successful in
regular school. Most of our parents have multiple children and
desperately need resources to help their children at home.

It would be wonderful if we had kits that had books, activities,
and tapes to help parents support the work we do at school at home. I
conduct parent workshops with my parents and the number one complaint
they have is they don’t have anything to help their child at home. If I
could provide this type of kit for my parents it would not only help
the children in my classroom, but all the siblings at home. Older
children could read to the younger ones. The whole family could get
involved!! These at home book kits with books, tapes, and activity
cards (plus the bag to carry them with) would fit the need perfectly.
Thank you in advance for helping these families have the resources to
help their children at home. This would greatly empower our parents
while at the same time supporting our instruction at home!

My project needs themed book learning sets and bags to encourage reading at home. The cost of this proposal is $407, which includes shipping for any materials requested and fulfillment.

Wild World of Science ($640 Project Request)

I am a second year teacher working in rural
North Carolina. I work in a wonderful new school in Forsyth County just
outside of Winston Salem, North Carolina; unfortunately we have very
limited funding. I am requesting some exciting science items to use in
my 2nd grade classroom. This year I have students who would greatly
benefit from the use of science centers and hands on manipulatives. In
the coming school year I want to offer my 2nd grade a world of exciting
science adventures.

This proposal is for several science bags with books, games and
puppets that the children can use to help develop their scientific
inquiry. The students will be able to use these in the science center
in our classroom. I am also requesting some non-fiction science reading
materials to be used in the center as well as a butterfly cage and some
manmade habitats for the children to observe animal life cycles.

These items I am requesting would encompass all the Major
Concepts/Skill areas as outlined in the North Carolina Standard Course
of Study. Including Strands: Nature of Science, Science as Inquiry,
Science and Technology, Science in Personal and Social Perspectives.
These centers and manipulatives will reinforce the competency goals as
stated in the North Carolina Standard Course of Study and assist both
teacher and student by providing new and exciting ways to learn and
teach science.

75% of the student population at my school eat on a free or
reduced lunch. Many of my students have no access to science
experiences or scientific reading materials. This would be highly
beneficial to those students who want to learn but have limited or no
access to all things scientific.

Please help me with this vital project. If I could afford this
on my own I would gladly fund this project, unfortunately I am on a
beginning teacher salary with little extra funds. Any and all help
would be greatly appreciated. Thank you!

The
cost of science center activities, including science bags on recycling,
floating and sinking, weather, how a seed grows, what magnets can do,
as well as butterfly lifecycle models, and books on science poetry. is
$640, including shipping and fulfillment.

I’d Rather Have Molars Extracted Without Novocaine

Some people in these parts are really into the Dixie Classic Fair.  Then there’s Esbee who’s REALLY into what I affectionately call "Hell on Earth."  Personally, I’d rather clean the bathrooms with a toothbrush than suffer through watching and listening to this town’s teenagers enjoy the midway.  Honestly it’s like watching cows cough up and re-chew their cud, revolting yet somehow impossible to avoid watching.

Of course my kids are into the "Event Most Likely to Cause Forsyth County NC to Become the Cardiac Care Capital of the World" which means at some point I have to suck it up and go watch people cook and consume fried Twinkies.  Apparently that moment will come this evening after the kids get home from school and complete their homework.

Joy-joy, happy-happy.  Yes, I’m the Dixie Classic Scrooge.

Is Something Going On at Jefferson Middle School?

I heard from a parent of a child attending Jefferson Middle School that the school’s drama teacher has been suspended without pay and that the superintendent is recommending that the teacher be fired.  Anyone heard anything about this?  What I heard is that a letter was sent to all the Jefferson Middle School parents stating what I wrote in the first sentence, but no information was provided as to why the teacher was suspended.  Given what happened there last year I’d imagine some of the parents are a little jumpy.

Chris Paul on NPR

NPR taped its show Wait Wait….Don’t Tell Me at, uh, Wait Chapel on the campus of Wake Forest University last week and it features a guest appearance by Lewisville native and former West Forsyth H.S. and Wake Forest basketball star, and current NBA standout Chris Paul.  Apparently Paul was the first pro athlete to ever appear on the show and he did a great job.  Listen to it here.

Evening with 8 Plus Smitty

The week before last I went to Evening with 8 Plus Smitty at the Piedmont Club in the BB&T tower in Winston-Salem.  The speaker was Michael Miller, publisher of the Winston-Salem Journal and there were about 30 people in attendance.

Mr. Miller gave a nice presentation and did a nice job answering questions and reacting to criticism of the newspaper, in particular the recent decisions to fold the daily business section into the local section and merge the Sunday Arts and Living sections.  I was lucky enough to sit at his table but to be honest I didn’t get a chance to speak to him because the other prominent person at the table was Phil Hanes, the former CEO of Hanes Corporation.  Let’s just say that Mr. Hanes ain’t shy.

Our table of eight was regaled with stories about Mr. Hanes’ efforts to build the Winston-Salem arts community, his involvement with the re-development of downtown Winston, and even some stories from his childhood growing up in the Hanes family.  The man is refreshingly blunt and earlier in the evening he hadn’t been shy in his criticism of the Journal’s op-ed page.  Essentially he called all of the Journal’s columnists nice people who live in the sticks and don’t ever write about what’s going on in the city.  Mr. Miller couldn’t get a word in edge-wise.

Well, I Googled Mr. Hanes and found that he’d written a book called How to Get Anyone to Do Anything and if you look at the reviews you’ll see that the first is from none other than Harper Lee who calls him an  "old friend."   Now if we were playing the Kevin Bacon game, otherwise known as six degrees of separation, that would put me only one step away from the notoriously reclusive author of one of my all-time favorite books, To Kill a Mockingbird.  How cool is that!

I met a lot of other interesting people that evening, but I’ve been so busy lately it’s kind of a blur in my memory now.  The one notable I can mention is Smitty himself.  He’s the publisher of Smitty’s Notes, THE resource for happenings in Winston-Salem and he also does a fine job of putting together some interesting presenters for Evening with 8.  If you’re in the Winston area you should definitely try and attend one (the schedule is here), and I’d join you but unfortunately the rest of the sessions this fall are on Thursday nights and I’m committed to my daughter’s soccer team those evenings.  Maybe I’ll make more in the next session.

CSI: Winston-Salem

CBS has announced that they will be replacing CSI: New York with CSI: Winston-Salem, focusing on the struggles of running an effective crime lab utilizing the latest technology confiscated from meth labs in Appalachia…

Gotcha!  Actually CSI: Winston-Salem refers to a program running all September at Atkins High School (sessions for October and November are already full) that was open to all Winston-Salem/Forsyth County middle school students.  Celeste signed Justin, our youngest, up for the program and he attended his second session earlier this week.  The program is being used to promote the biotech program at Atkins in hopes that they can entice middle schoolers from all over Forsyth County to enroll in the Atkins magnet program when the time comes for them to choose their high schools.

Celeste informs me that Atkins is an impressive school and Justin informs me that the CSI program is way cool. This week they did fingerprints and Justin got his "official" CSI badge.  I’m not sure what next week will entail, but I do know that Justin’s really looking forward to it.

If you have a middle schooler who’s interested in attending the CSI program they have another session scheduled for January 19 & 26.  The information page is here, the registration page is here, or you can call  703-6754, ext. 70503.

The program is being funded by a $3,500 grant from the NC Biotech Center

Crime Maps

Last Friday evening I received an email from Nathaniel Eliason of Hypothesis, a Winston-Salem-based web design firm, and in it he pointed me to winston-salem-crime.com which is a crime map that his firm designed for residents of Winston-Salem.  He must have also emailed Esbee because she posted it as well, and to be honest I guarantee you they got a lot more traffic from her than they will from me. By coincidence I stumbled across a Oakland crime map callled Oakland Crimespotting developed by Stamen Design

It’s interesting to see two firms using their expertise to provide a public service and at the same time show off their capabilities, and I do think this is a public service because it’s far easier to understand the crime data when you can see it presented graphically on a map.  Not sure why the city doesn’t offer this service themselves, but since they aren’t I’m glad someone’s doing it.

Croc Hunter, Winston-Salem Style

Esbee, a.k.a. Life in Forsyth, shares an email from Wake Forest News Service that warns folks about a two foot alligator in Lake Katherine at Reynolda Gardens.  The university police ask that you stay away from the gator and if you do see it to call them and report its exact location. 

To heck with that.  Daddy needs a new pair of shoes so I think it’s time to go hunting. 

But no, it seems I’m too late.  The butler did it (from the W-S Journal):

Van Walls, a butler
at Graylyn International Conference Center, across from Reynolda House,
found the alligator on the center’s driveway Sunday afternoon. He
spotted it after a woman came in saying she had just seen it crossing
Reynolda Road.

“It’s the only guest I ever had hiss at me before,” Walls said.

Walls threw his dress coat over the nearly 2-foot-long alligator before grabbing it by the back of the neck and tail.

Then he put it in a box and took it home.

He started calling such places as the N.C. Zoo near Asheboro in search of someone to take the critter…

Meanwhile, Wake
Forest University police had been on the lookout for the alligator
since Friday, after officers verified a reported sighting and spotted
it themselves.

It was seen soaking up some sun on a log in a pond on the grounds of Reynolda House.

Walls didn’t know
that authorities were looking for the alligator until a supervisor told
him yesterday that university officials sent a campuswide e-mail out
about the search for the alligator.

Walls then told campus police that he had the alligator.

Police alerted Matt
Craven, a local wildlife rehabilitator, who had been trying to catch
the alligator. Craven, who specializes in rescuing and moving reptiles,
went to Walls’ house last night and got the alligator, which appeared
to be healthy.

He then went back to
the Wake Forest campus to show the alligator to university police
before taking it to his home in Mocksville.

Man this story has everything.  It’s wild enough that there’s an alligator strolling across Reynolda but who knew that we still have butlers around?  And then the dude catches the gator and takes it home, but doesn’t know that Mocksville’s very own croc hunter is out looking for it so the school ends up sending out an alert warning people to look out for the man-eater. Well, maybe that’s a stretch.  Take a look at the Journal’s pic (taken by Walt Unks) of the critter and decide if you think it a man eater or an ankle biter:
Wsgator

Winston-Salem Home Boy Named One of 50 Hottest on Capitol Hill

Jeffeinenhauerburr
Every summer The Hill publishes a list of the 50 hottest folks on Capitol Hill.  This year a dude from Winston-Salem was selected and it wasn’t that other W-S native Sen. Burr.  He’s Jeff Eisenhauer (pictured to the left) and here’s what the staff at The Hill wrote about him:

Jeff Eisenhauer
 Age: 26
  Political Party: Republican
  Hometown: Winston-Salem, N.C.
  Dating status: In a relationship

A few years ago in Tanzania, Jeff Eisenhauer was mugged on his way to watch a Super Bowl broadcast.

He
handed the attackers his bag, which contained a pair of shoes, and
survived the incident unscathed. Upon reflection, Eisenhauer said he
probably shouldn’t have been walking through such a tough part of town,
dismissing the move as “macho.” Still, the previous year, locals in his neighborhood had tuned into arm-wrestling instead of the Super Bowl and he needed a football fix.

Eisenhauer
is chock-full of interesting stories about his time as an environmental
volunteer for the Peace Corps, which he called the “best two years of
his life.”

Following his return from Africa a year ago, the
6-foot-1, tanned, surferesque Republican started work as the mail
manager for Sen. Richard Burr (R-N.C.). The lawmaker and Eisenhauer
both hail from Winston-Salem.

Eisenhauer enjoys hitting the gym, rock climbing, watching soccer and attending concerts.

Though
he’s currently taken, Eisenhauer said he likes “a girl who’s open to
trying new things [and is] adventurous, easy going, likes to laugh.”

The floppy-haired blonde is not sure what is his best feature, but he thinks he knows his worst.

“I know it’s not the gap in my teeth,” Eisenhauer said. “I got made fun of all my life [for it].”

 

– By Kelly McCormack
 

 

Bad News at the Winston-Salem Journal

The Winston-Salem Journal announced that they’re laying off five people, including two from the news division, and that they’re folding the daily Business section into the Local section with the exception of Sunday.  They’re also combining the Living and Arts sections in the Sunday paper.

Folding the business section into the Local section is not a surprising development given that recently the biz section has often been a mere four pages and that on at least one occasion I noticed every article was a wire service piece.  I’m not sure if the dearth of local business stories is a result of a severely depressed local business climate, not enough business reporters at the paper or a bit of both, but it’s sure a downer for the local business scene. Of course it’s terrible that five people lost their jobs, but for
Winston-Salem and the surrounding area it’s really bad news that
there’s not enough going on around here to support a full business section.

As Ed Cone wrote: "Good news for the Business Journal, maybe, but bad news for just about everyone else."