Pick Back Up

You will go to sleep with nothing left. Will you have anything to give come morning? Who knows. All you can do is pick back up. You will face setbacks. Are they surmountable? Who knows. All you can do is pick back up. You will have unbelievable achievements, and then face the blank […]

Time-Sensitive v. Urgent

I remember a request long ago being described as “not urgent, but time-sensitive.” It’s worth piecing apart those two phrases, and differentiating between them in our speech. Urgent items are usually time-sensitive. You must complete this vitally important project within a short time-frame. Time-sensitive items aren’t always urgent. It’s important to complete certain menial tasks within […]

Putting Down All of the Juggling Pins

Teachers on “Summer Break” aren’t on break – they’re doing all sorts of different work to prepare. Part of this is active work: planning, programming, cleaning, learning, creating. Part of it is passive work: the important work of recharging emotional and physical stores to be ready to support students for the […]

Secrets and Random Acts

I really struggled keeping a secret from my wife Mandy these last two weeks. Of course, the secret was worth keeping – it was a secret Facebook group devoted to performing Random Acts of Kindness in celebration of her 40th birthday. We set a goal of 40, but ended up achieving […]

A Bridge

Last year I inaugurated spring auditions – I had previously auditioned the first week of school. Now, there are disadvantages, particularly with personnel adjustments due to moves or other summer complications. Collegiate ensembles would have a much harder time auditioning in April for September start. But the biggest advantage I see is […]

Three Important Parts

One of my favorite recipes to cook is Francis Lam’s Weapons-Grade Ratatouille. (He says it’s done when you take a taste and want to punch a wall. He’s not kidding.) What makes his recipe tick, and leave you transformed, is the combination of really three important parts: Simple, quality ingredients Basic […]

Daily Creativity

“I draw two or three cartoons every night.” That’s what keeps me leaning into creativity every day. That quote by my eight-year-old son. Children, of course, don’t consider that anything special – creation is a natural state. And we can return to that default, if we can only get out […]

Auditions As Shibboleths

A shibboleth is a sort of shorthand – a passcode for the ancient Israelites. (I’ll let Jed Bartlet explain.) As conductors, we don’t have time to really gauge personality, work ethic, musicality, ear, demeanor, and all the other factors that go into making outstanding ensemble members. Certainly not in 5 minutes. So we must create […]

Behaviors I Avoid as a Teacher on Social Media

Don’t Friend Students. I accept friend requests from students, and there’s nothing I wouldn’t want seen on my front porch, but I hold hard and fast that they must initiate the connection. Don’t Post Complaints in Groups. A surprising number of colleagues will regularly post complaints about students, about teachers, about administrators. Even in a private group just […]