Monday, July 31, 2006

So here’s what happened…

I referred earlier to an incident of such horror that it ought not be discussed in polite company. This is the one and only time I’ll lay out the ugly details:

It started yesterday (Sunday in Korea time), really, when another teacher mentioned that she was going for a jog outside rather than using the hotel fitness center. I’d been wanting to see more of Seoul, and her solution seemed perfect – certainly more adventurous than staying within the confines of the hotel to stare into a mirror while sweating on the elliptical machine.

So at 6AM this morning I ventured forth. A bit of background for those of you who don’t know all of my (charming) idiosyncrasies: I have a much-vaunted “keen sense of direction.” I know it’s much vaunted because I’m the one who did all the vaunting – my friends have had to endure the bragging and boasting many a time. And in my defense, it wasn’t hollow braggadocio – there have been numerous occasions (like the stars – too numerous to count) on which my keen sense of direction (hereafter referred to simply as KSOD) took me straight to where I needed to be, unaided other than by the environmental cues and underlying knowledge. And I’ve never been lost. To repeat: I’ve never been lost. Sure, there was been a time or two when I needed to do some exploration before I found my destination, but, really, no problems. One last little bit of info: I am the stereotypical male who doesn’t ask for directions (no need, after all, with my KSOD).

Of course the people reading this are smart enough to see where the story’s going, but I’ll give you the ugly blow-by-blow. So I trotted out of the hotel at 6AM, knowing that our bus was scheduled to leave at 8AM, but only intending to take a short jog – around 30 minutes. I didn’t worry about finding my way, since I figured I’d jog for a while, then turn around and follow the same route back. How hard could that be? I’ll never know, since that’s not what I ended up doing. After jogging for about 15 or so minutes, I turned around, but instead of following the exact route back, I chose instead to travel down in interesting side street. It was easy enough to see what direction it was going, and I figured it would hit another main artery and I’d continue back to the hotel on that. Initially I liked the side street a lot – it led past some of Seoul’s churches and an embassy or two. But it curved and circled a bit, so that when it ended I wasn’t where I thought I’d be. No big deal. After all, I knew I had plenty of time and with my KSOD I was sure I could meander back to something familiar. “Like that Starbucks right there,” I thought happily, except I couldn’t tell if it was exactly the same one I’d seen previously, and, besides, I’d actually passed two or three of them. So I kept going, alternating between jogging and walking, pretty much enjoying myself but knowing it was later than I intended – probably getting to be 6:45 or so. I didn’t know for certain what time it was because I don’t wear a watch because I have – really I do – a KEEN SENSE OF TIME (KSofT) in addition to my KSOD.

But as the minutes ticked past, and block after block blurred together into one big jumble of Korean lettering, shops and huge buildings, I felt my level of nervousness rising. I thought about an hour had passed, but if my KSOD could fail me then what’s to say my KSofT wasn’t equally unreliable? Everything became open to question – like Descartes before me I found my philosophical world crumbling around me. But he had the luxury of time to stop and ponder. If there’s anything more central to my persona than my KSOD and my KSofT, it’s punctuality. I didn’t have time to return to core truth as he did so long ago when he famously pronounced Cogito ergo sum. I needed to get back to the hotel and fast. Cogito ergo screwed.

Nightmare scenarios were crowding into my consciousness – I could picture all the other teachers waiting on the bus, cranky due to today’s earlier start, waiting impatiently when the headcount produces a missing teacher. As the minutes drag on and the late arrival doesn’t show, eventually someone produces a list to figure out who’s missing. And when they figure out that it’s me, surely this group that thus far had seemed magnanimous and gracious would quickly transform into the snarling pack of wild dogs housed in so many school staff lunchrooms (NOT MINE, you understand, but I’ve heard about the others). I could hear in my mind the things they’d say: “What kind of stupid fool doesn’t take a map with him when venturing out in a strange city for the first time?” (One who’s KSOD precludes the necessity.) “Is he so idiotic that he doesn’t think to use the handy-dandy card they gave us to hand to taxi drivers, so that any taxi (which are cheap and reliable in Seoul) could bring him back?” (Again, why would I take such a thing? It’d be like Superman booking a plane flight – just silly.)

These thoughts of peer-torment contributed to an ever-growing sense of disorientation and general befuddlement. I’d given up, for the moment at least, faith in the two traits at the core of my being. All my thoughts and impressions were now suspect. Like my sense that I’d seen that Citibank building on my starting route: “Ah, there’s that huge Citibank building. But wait, did I really see it earlier, or do I just think so because I’ve been jogging toward it for five minutes, looking up anxiously every few seconds for some familiar landmark. Am I remembering seeing it an hour ago, or sixty second ago?”

True enough that I hadn’t brought the pre-printed card with directions too the hotel, but I did have my room key card, which had the name of my hotel on it. Surely a hotel big enough to house two neighboring twenty-story towers would be enough of a landmark that taxi drivers would know it by name. Turns out our twenty-story hotel doesn’t really stand out in Seoul, where there are a plethora of skyscrapers. I learned this when I hailed a taxi, gave him the card, and, pointed to the name, clearly miming that I needed to go there. He squinted, looked at it carefully, thought for 30 seconds or so while my hopes soared, then shook his head and handed it back. Ditto the second cab that I hailed. I knew it was time for drastic measure if I was going to be showered and on time to board the bus with my fellow teachers. So I did the unthinkable: I showed the card to several street vendors, pointing back and forth each time between me and the card – obviously pleading for them to point me in the right direction. And each time I was rebuffed by people who obviously had never heard of the hotel (which in retrospect makes me feel pretty good about my jogging abilities – I must have been further away that I thought “fat-man-jogging” could accomplish).

My savior wore a black chauffeur’s cap, a well-pressed uniform, and drove a cab that said, “Deluxe Taxi Service” on the side. No, he didn’t know instantly where the hotel was located, but when he pulled out a cell-phone I happily leaped into the back seat. Ten minutes later, we pulled up outside my home away from home. I communicated with more pointing that I needed to run up to my room and get money, for which he patiently waited. And, as we had been told, the price was quite reasonable.

Especially so a little while later, when I sat my usual cool, calm and collected self on the bus while we waited for the one teacher who was late.


Postscript: I realized later as I reflected that if one has the proper perspective of the time-space continuum I was never actually lost. After all, the jog marked the beginning of my jogging habit here in Seoul. It doesn’t make sense to view each separate jog as a distinct entity, but instead as one group of jogging sessions. And thus each time I proceed on subsequent jogs and find my way back to the hotel, I will prove yet again that there is no such thing as lost, only longer explorations than anticipated.

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In the bus, headed to KMLA

And we’re on our first field trip out of Seoul. I’m typing in Word whilst traveling on the charter bus, and will simply copy & paste onto the blog tonight or tomorrow AM.

We’re headed to Korean Minjok Leadership Academy. It’s a small boarding school for the cream of the crop of Korean high school students, at least in terms of academics. Virtually every graduate attends American Ivy League colleges following graduation.

Which reminds me of something that’s been bouncing around my mind the last few days. I can’t help but wonder how representative of all South Korea is the slice that I’m seeing in these two weeks. I suppose an analogous trip to the states would look something like this: Arrive in Washington, DC – stay for a week and a half’s worth of touring historic spots like Monticello and Mt. Vernon, plus exposure to elite universities and maybe a secondary school like St. Alban's, interspersed with lectures by Georgetown and George Washington professors on American history, economics, education and select cultural topics – perhaps jazz or blues. Then go on a side-trip for three days to some area of significance in American history – Jamestown or Plymouth come to mind.

How complete and accurate an impression of the United States would such a trip give? Would it encompass the life of the liberal Manhattanite? The conservative rancher in Montana? An Appalachian trailer park (or ANY trailer park)? It’s hard to argue that the breadth of what it means to be American would be sufficiently covered. On the other hand, many off the principles that have shaped and under-girded America in its brief history and meteoric rise to Superpower status would no doubt be covered. Just because the average American is embarrassingly ignorant of fundamentals like divided powers, the Monroe Doctrine, woman’s suffrage and the civil rights movement doesn’t mean these aren’t key in experiencing and understanding America.

So my trip is admittedly narrow in scope. I’m not going to walk away from this two weeks with the same impressions and understandings I’d have if I instead spent two weeks living with a poor family in some rural area. But that would also in turn fail to reflect the reality of the many Koreans.

One key difference between the United States and most nations of the world, including Korea, is that we’re such a large nation in size and population, with a radically diverse range of experiences. S. Korea’s population is roughly one-sixth of ours, condensed into an area the size of Indiana, with the majority living in urban areas surrounded by forests. The picture I’m seeing in this two weeks may admittedly be more elite and academic than the lives of many S. Koreans, but I suspect what I’m seeing gives a more comprehensive view than its hypothetical counterpart to the United States.

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Sunday, July 30, 2006

No time to update this morning...

due to an unfortunate event that I may write about later, or that I may never speak of to any living soul, other than perhaps to seek therapy for the nightmares and other PTSD phenomena which I have every reason to anticipate will haunt me.

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Saturday, July 29, 2006

Nat's wish is my command...

NJC wrote, "Post more!"

Yes ma'am.

Yesterday: Good. Today: time will tell.

Actually, the fact that yesterday was an enjoyable day is notable in that we had two lectures (most days it's just one) and, as I wrote, the afternoon one on Korean Traditional music wasn't exactly something that I was awaiting with baited-breath. But it went well. It was one of those occasions where the instructor's passion for the material carried me pretty far along -- it good inspiration of what I hope I can (sometimes) accomplish with 13 year olds who don't realize (yet) that studying types of government is one fascinating bag of tricks and drama.

The morning lecture was really good. The guy had two hours to give us a thumbnail sketch of Korean history -- all four thousand three hundred years of it. He failed miserably in the sense that toward the end he had to skip whole sections of his outline (alas -- it was mostly stuff from the last century that he didn't have time to more than hit briefly). I sat there and kept feeling really humble about how young the USA is compared to this ancient and proud culture that most of us know very little about. Stretching as far as one can with any degree of credibility, there's no way to claim that the United States is older than 400 years (okay, fine, 450 if you REALLY want to stretch it).

Compare that to Korea. Six major dynasties before 1910, stretching back over 4,000 years. One of those, the Shilla (or Silla), was a major geopolitical power a full 1000 years before the founding of Jamestown. The oldest college in Korea dates back to 372 AD. That's 1,300 years before Harvard. Books were printed en masse in Korea via metal movable type 200 years before Gutenberg.

I'm not engaging in back-handed anti-Americanism (sorry, all my lefty friends out there); I think the USA is pretty dang good, and though I'd never argue it is perfect, I think it has indisputably provided the most freedom, with the highest standard of living, for more people than any other nation in history. And I think many of it's tragic mistakes were not ill-intentioned. It's very interesting to hear Koreans speak of betrayal by America, first in 1905 when the USA secretly agreed to Japan's takeover of the Korean peninsula, and then in 1945 when the United States and Russia decided to divide the peninsula in half, without consulting the, er, Koreans. But as I say, those decisions, while perhaps full of hubris and and in hindsight misguided, were I believe done in the best of intentions (I'm not as sure about the first, but as far as the second goes I don't know that I would have decided differently than Rusk & Truman, despite the fact that 60 years later Koreans are overwhelmingly resentful of the decision). And I'll conclude this paragraph my echoing the professor yesterday who credited the 1953 mutual defense treaty between the USA & S. Korea as the catalyst for S. Korea's unprecedented economic and technological transformation over the last fifty years.

Okay, I'm sensing the glazing over of eyes in my readers so I'll stop the historic riff.

Human interest tidbits of the trip:

  • So far almost every picture I've taken has been of food. The typical meal thus far comprises several side dishes, soup, and at least one entree. Here's a shot of lunch from our first day before the entree came (whoops, for some reason the photo won't upload -- maybe later).
  • Our welcoming ceremonial dinner on Friday night included a whopping 28 side dishes, six or more choices of entree, and several desserts (it's rare to have dessert at a Korean meal -- if any it's usually fruit).
  • Turns out that I've stumbled across some sort of teacher-traveling circuit. Most of the teachers on this trip went on the JFMF trip to Japan that I'm going on this October, but that's only the beginning. Europe, Asia, Africa, S. America -- these folks have been everywhere, it seems to me, and usually through expenses-paid programs for teachers. Yup, I'm making a list of the programs. (-: I may hate the idea of travel, and even while I'm doing it I can't help but look forward to getting home, but that doesn't mean I'm not gonna ride the circuit like the best of 'em.
  • Figured out how to work the power adapter (shout out to SWT for lending it to me, and congrats on the now-official upcoming nuptials). Turns out one has to strong-arm the third prong into the converter, so I'm able to charge the laptop.
  • Today we're headed to three cultural keystones -- Gyeongbok Palace and Changdeok Palace, then Insadong. I'm especially looking forward to wandering around Insadong.
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Friday, July 28, 2006

Day two ahead; day one behind.

And I'm actually having a reasonably good time. So far my fellow teachers are okay (only one on the "avoid-her-whenever-possible" list), and the lectures have been more interesting than not. The monsoon season continues to linger longer than expected, but I think that's kinda cool since I've never experienced monsoon rains before. Although it did cause a cancellation of a campus tour yesterday, which would have been neat.

Today's morning lecture is one I'm looking forward to ("An outline of Korean history"), but the afternoon seminar and field trip will test my ability to focus and engage with the material, as the focus is on traditional Korean music. Heh. I brought some work from home that I can do surreptitiously.

Pretty much the only photos I've taken are of food. (-: I'll try to post some of them soon. Right now the battery is about out of power, and I need to go give the health club a try.

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Thursday, July 27, 2006

Pretty nice digs

Here at the Vambien II . Here' a graphic of my room:






















So far everything works great, once one figures out the idiosyncrasies (e.g. the lights only work if the room key is left in a little slot just inside the door). The Internet connection is great, except that my laptop plug doesn't fit the adapter I brought (not like I would have wanted to check that at home or anything. heh.), so for now I'm on battery power and better cut this short till I get a new adapter.

Today's itinerary:
Tour Yonsei University, including a several informative workshops/lectures. We'll be having lunch and dinner there, the latter a formal affair with the university president, so today is a suit-and-tie day.

I'm gonna head out for breakfast in just a second, but I want to end with this thought that sorta blows my mind: I never experienced the night of July 26. We flew out of Chicago at 1PM, and since we headed west, stayed ahead of nightfall all the way till we landed at 4PM on the afternoon of July 27 (2AM CST). So night came and went but I didn't see or feel it. I suppose one could avoid nights forever, with enough jet fuel. But that's not something I'd want to do -- as it is I feel sorta forlorn for the one I missed.

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See that small red spot on the right (east) side of the map?

That's where I am.




The emptiness of this map is doing a bang-up job of undermining my self-delusion that I'm a world traveler. Still, I might as well give myself a small pat on the back, considering that I'm a home-body who is fighting the impulse to count how many days till I go home. cest la vie


create your own visited countries map

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I'm here, in Seoul

and the total trip from my house to the hotel only took 22 hours. Haven't been up to my room yet or tried the laptop -- soon as I saw an internet station in the lobby I jumped aboard, whilst our bags are brought in. Now the bags are here and I'm going to go shower.

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Tuesday, July 25, 2006

T minus 23 hours

With just about 23 hours till I head out the door for the 19 hour journey to Seoul, S. Korea, I'm my typical pre-trip self: Tense and irritable and wound up tighter than a brand-spankin' new chess clock. As usual I'm dreading just about everything that comes to mind: the 14 hours on a plane from Chicago to Seoul, meeting new people, feeling strange and out of place, looking like a tourist, adjusting to a time zone 13 hours ahead of where I live, staying in a hotel, adjusting back to my time zone after another 14 hours squeezed into a plane seat... etc, etc.

Don't get me wrong: I expect to be glad I'm on the trip and even happier afterward that I did it, but in the days leading up to travel I almost always want to cancel if I could do so with any dignity (junior high teachers need to hang on like no tomorrow to whatever shreds we still have).

One glimmer of happy expectation: I'll probably get to taste some new and enjoyable foods (and learn how to pronounce Korean dishes). If this recent New York Times article is anywhere close to the mark, I'm in for some gourmand pleasures. Money quote:

It was a bowl of homemade buckwheat noodles — naeng myun — that she made in their home in Pyongyang, now North Korea. The noodles nested in cold, mild beef broth topped with slices of tender beef brisket, sweet Asian pear, lightly pickled white radish, cucumber and half a hard-boiled egg. Eating it was as close to an epiphany as a little boy can get.









Hopefully no generic food courts on this trip!

Shout out to JAM for sending me the article's link.

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Monday, July 24, 2006

Something worth celebrating:

The group photo arrived today and it looks great! But I won't have time to distribute them before I leave in 36 hours for S. Korea; it'll have to wait until I return (and at that point it makes sense to wait until school starts, rather than risk them getting bent in the mail). So at least there'll be one upside to the start of school. (-:

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Tuesday, July 11, 2006

Next stop: Korea


Thanks to this program, in just over two weeks I'll be traveling for the first time to Asia, where I'll spend over a week in S. Korea. Hats off to North Korean theocratic-dictator Kim Jung Il, who is making this an awfully exciting time to be traveling to the peninsula.

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My favorite memories

It's hard to know what we'll remember years from now, but at this point, here are my top five favorite memories:

5) The collective pain & discomfort of traveling overnight on the bus. There's nothing like shared misery to bond a group together. (-:

4) Getting to hang out with some seriously neat kids that I had in class as seventh graders. It was really great to squeeze in one last memory with these cherubs before they move on to high school.

3) Simultaneously, I really enjoyed getting to know many of the kids that I hadn't had in class. If it wasn't for this trip, I'd have missed out on a splendid group of engaging and entertaining young adults.

2) The many times I felt proud to accompany such a well-behaved, mature bunch. It means something to say "We're from Concord," and these kids seemed to understand that challenge and live up to it (almost) all the time.

1) Traveling on the Metro with my eight compadres while hundreds of thousands of other people also used it to get home.

I'm not sure if any kids are going to check this site, but if you do, don't be a shy goober -- write a comment that includes your favorite memories.

If you want to see the other photos and video clips

You can find 180 photos that I've collected thus far in this Flickr folder.

There are a few remaining video clips at my YouTube account. I know that these were a pain in the butt if you tried to download them via a dial-up line; on high-speed internet they seem to work pretty well. Here's the last one that I'm going to put here about this trip; it's the kids as they sat on edge of the Capitol Reflection Pool, sharing what had been their favorite stop up to that point:

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A word about the other adults


I made the mistake of calling Kavin our Gettysburg guide super; Kavin was indeed great, but now I'm left searching for the right term to describe our Classic Tours guide Bob, who met us in DC and stayed with us almost for the duration of the trip. Bob was really fantastic -- if Kavin was super then
Bob was SUPER-DUPER. He brings just the right combination of knowledge about the various sites and genuine appreciation of young teens. No matter what curve ball was thrown his way, he remained calm, friendly and helpful. A terrific guy; I'm glad he was our guide. You can see and here him in action here and here (best viewed with high-speed internet).


And of course the other extraordinary adults were my fellow chaperons: Ms. Weatherholt and Ms. Dunk. I'm grateful to have had such energetic, lively and fun people on the trip. They were frequently thinking ahead in ways that I wasn't, such as providing cheap snacks for kids on the bus and bringing along sunscreen and med. kits. They even managed to put up with my idiosyncrasies! We were lucky to have them along.

The sad truth...

... is that these are the best shots I got of Nate. )-:









The ironic twist is that he's one of the most personable, photogenic kids I've met in a while. Maybe that worked against him somehow, if my mind was cataloguing him under "picture taken" when it ought to have been saying "take his picture." Though in my defense his propensity to chew gum with his mouth open and to hide behind cell phones made my job more challenging (despite being the "meanest teacher" the kids have ever met, I'm not mean enough to put those less-flattering shots of him up on this official record of our journey, but you can hunt for them here).

Hopefully you can help me out; I want copies of your photos, not just of Nate (and Trevor, another one who sneaked under the photographic-radar far too often), but of ALL of us. If you've got an entertaining, illuminating, or just plain good photo from the trip, share it with me. Depending on the size, try emailing them to acowells@yahoo.com. Or you could do what I've done and open a Flickr account, then upload them (be sure to let me know if you do). Another option is to save them on a CD and drop it off for me at the junior high. And if you know how to send the photos via MySpace you can find my account and do it there, but you might have to tell me how to retrieve them, since I don't use MySpace very much.

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More pics I would have liked to post from DC







This shot captures Steven's friendly persona.














Matt, Dominic and Brandon H (with half a Mitchell).







Jake, Kylee, Chelsea N, Mildred and Ms. Dunk, in line for Mount Vernon.













Chelsea G, Katie, Grace and Chelsea N, at the WW II Memorial.














Emily and Kylee on the steps of the National Archives. To get a better sense of the majestic size of this building, click here, then here, and finally here.












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Pics I would have liked to post from DC

I had hoped to tie up the loose ends of the DC trip a couple days ago, but as it turned out the headache that began as we traveled home was the beginning of a sinus infection that left me almost useless for the past several days -- laying on my floor most of the time trying not to move my head so as to avoid the waves of resulting pain. I think I'm mostly past it now, and want to finish up this project today.

It would probably have been wise to mention in my disclaimer that I wasn't keeping any formal track of whose photos I posted. So this post is to put up some of the pictures that I meant to get on the web while we were out in DC.


Definitely one of the best photos I got of Matt (and that's Dominic in the IU cap).














Christina and Kylee at the FDR Memorial.












See why I started calling Dominic Smiley?








A shot that I'm proud of -- it captures Kylee's charm and Emily's exuberance.







Trevor, Grace and Chelsea N. at ESPN Zone.










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Thursday, July 06, 2006

Last post from DC

We're leaving in four minutes for an evening tour of several key monuments, then we head out of DC around 8PM. Hopefully we'll roll into the CJHS parking lot at our scheduled time tomorrow morning between 7:30 & 8AM.

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Waiting to take our official group photo

These pics were taken about 9AM on Thursday, 7/6/06 -- our last day in DC. The kids don't look too tired, maybe thanks to the refreshing cool weather that moved in that last day.



Brandon, Dustin, Mitchell














Charlie, Grace, Jake.











Christina, Chelsea G, Katie.















We were hanging out along the Capitol Reflecting Pool, where we had our group photo taken later that morning. In this picture (compliments of Wikipedia), we were on the other side of the pool, just under the smaller statue over to the left.








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A smattering of ESPN Zone shots




Racing against each other -- Cory, Logan & Ken.











Just before the roller-coaster simulation begins, Shianna and Ally are still smiling (in matching tops that I think they purchased on the trip)












I think this shot of Andrew and Brandon was after the simulator had begun.










Nolan and Christina racing (with a third kid off camera to the left who I can't recall offhand -- someone leave a comment if you remember who it was). Nolan was in the lead for most of the race, then Christina took it briefly in the penultimate lap, but he wrested it back just in time to finish the victor.












Dustin and Eduardo racing. I don't remember who won this contest.










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Mitchell gets a Virtual KO at ESPN Zone

Waiting to go up the Monument on Wed. 7/5/06

Yippee! For a mere $3.99, I've bought access to a great wireless connection here at Pentagon City while the kids eat dinner. I'm going to put up as many pics as possible, so there's not time for captions. If I'm feeling productive I hope to polish up the blog and add a bunch more info and pics this weekend.

From left: Haley, Mrs. Weatherholt, Sarah and Steven (who at that particular moment looks like the only one enjoying himself. But that's the problem with a photo; as I recall the brief time we waited before riding up to the top of the Monument wasn't unpleasant at all).












Haley, Sarah & Charlie














Bryce, Nolan, Brandon, Brandon H (and Andrew hiding under his hat).
















Corey, Brandon H (in background), Ken, Shianna.













Mitchell, Jake. I'm hoping that Mitchell was as happy as he looks, and that Jake wasn't as glum
as his face indicates.









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and I thought this was the 21st Century...

Evidently something is seriously impeding the hotel's 'net connection. Despite numerous tries last night and this morning, I've been unable to upload photos or video. Sorry. I may get a chance to upload later at one of our meal stops. Otherwise this will probably be the last post until sometime this weekend (after some serious sleep), when I'll try to get up much of the stuff I haven't had a chance to put up yet.

I suppose it might not hurt to state the obvious: blogging on this trip was a definite experiment. I'm sure you noticed that my prose was rough (and probably the spelling even rougher), nor can I claim to have any skill as a photographer. My intent was to give family members glimpses into the trip. I've accomplished that goal, though I would like to have done more...

It's been a pleasure thus far; there's no reason the next twenty-four hours shouldn't be just as good with a group of kids as bright and enjoyable as this -- each and every kid has pitched in to make the trip a success.

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The Mall, fireworks and a brief account of Wed.

Note: I tried to post this several times yesterday, but the hotel internet connection was giving me fits.


Six months of trying to anticipate the unexpected and figure out just how we were going to keep our eyes on 32 ninth graders whilst trying to find a good spot to watch the show and help them enjoy the experience culminated yesterday evening. And it all worked out perfectly. Or as close to perfectly as real life gets.

We were eating dinner at the food-court at Pentagon City when fierce storms hit. The downpour was so torrential that it overwhelmed the storm drains, surprising us with a geyser of water shooting up several feet out of the floor in the middle of the food-court. From what we heard later, the violent weather may have been our best friend. Word on the street was that The Mall was packed tight, up until the weather turned, but DC police cleared the area just before the storm hit, evacuating inside as it were, into various Smithsonian buildings. Our guess is that lots of people who had staked out spots gave them up for good then, deciding to go home given the uncertain conditions. When we arrived sometime before 7PM, The Mall had plenty of open spots in prime viewing area. So we grabbed a spot, then relaxed for the next couple of hours. Our kids chilled out in typical ways: soccer and Frisbee, various card games, layin’ around on the grass and taking short explorative forays up and down The Mall. The storms had cut the humidity and cooled the temps into a very comfortable summer evening; wet ground was the only negative remnant and it wasn’t so wet as to keep us from sitting fairly comfortably on the lawn.

Two words to describe the fireworks: they rocked. For the adults especially, a particular aesthetic pleasure was how the light show framed and illuminated the sky behind the Washington Monument, though I heard at least one kid ask something like, “Why did they do the fireworks behind that tall pointy thing?” I’m hoping he was joking…


One of the biggest unknowns as we tried to plan the evening was how we’d retreat from the fireworks back to our hotel. We were pretty sure our charter bus wasn’t the best option, so the only other feasible route was the Metro. As you know if you ridden the DC Metro before, it is a fantastic example of clean, reliable and user-friendly public transportation. But the July 4th crowd is super big, and by definition most of the people leave at the same time (unlike, say, the many marches and gatherings that might be as big but probably don’t end quite so abruptly). So it’s fair to say we felt a good bit of trepidation about shepherding our 32 charges through the crowd. We divided into four groups of eight students each, assigned to a specific chaperone and told to stick with that person NO MATTER WHAT. That way even if all thirty-six of us couldn’t stay in one pack given the crowd, surely nine of us could keep each other in sight. And that’s basically how it went. It happened to be my group (Nate, Dominic, Matt, Mitchell, Trevor, Steven, Nolan & Eduardo) that got separated from the others, but we stuck to each other like the proverbial “white on rice.” It was pretty cool to watch the guys counting to make sure we hadn’t lost anyone every time we passed another point of possible separation; it didn’t feel like me herding eight boys but instead like nine of us looking out for each other – a good feeling for me as a teacher and I think a testament to the boys’ maturity. We thought we were woefully behind the others, since we started the trek bringing up the rear. But lo and behold my boys were so quick on their toes and helpful that we ended up first back at the rendezvous point (the others were only a couple minutes behind, and I’m sure I don’t need to tell all you parents the relief I felt when those last couple kids were safely counted). All in all, the night turned out to be a grand success from my perspective.

It will be interesting to hear feedback after the trip about the degree to which the night was “worth it” for the kids. I heard one student say today that the fireworks weren’t much more impressive than in Elkhart. If that’s the general consensus I’ll want to know, but I also recognize that trips like these tend to increase in meaning as the years go by. I recall that my classmates and I ended our high-school trip to DC unimpressed, but over the subsequent years I’ve been surprised how many seeds of interest were planted in those few hot & humid days. I expect that some of our kids will undergo the same experience – as they see the DC fireworks on TV in upcoming years and tell their friends and family, “I was there!” their appreciation of the event will grow.

And of course there’s the issue of trying to keep the kids happy, but at the same time not so happy that all we do is what they want... I’m typing this post at about 6:3oPM on Wednesday night, surrounded by at least eighteen TV screens here at ESPN Zone, while the kids are playing to their hearts’ content below in the game room. These are the same kids who managed to breeze through the Holocaust Museum (HM) earlier today in about thirty minutes. Not all of them, mind you, but even kids who otherwise might find such weighty topics interesting seemed to be “full-up,” too tired from lack of sleep and the busy schedule of the last couple days to give the HM more than a cursory glance. In retrospect, I’ve thought of some ways we might have slowed them down without turning it into an unpleasant power-struggle, but I knew going in that the HM was going to be a tough one for the kids to give its warranted attention. All that to say that just because kids are going to rate the ESPN Zone as more worthwhile than several of our stops doesn’t mean that it’s getting a permanent spot on possible future Concord trips. I recognize that we need a certain amount of “fun” events on the trip, but I’d prefer them to be unique to Washington DC, at the very least.

I should explain that tonight had been scheduled for a dinner & dance cruise on the Potomac, but Classic Tours was informed by the ship’s operating company last Friday that they didn’t have enough other schools signed up to warrant taking out the ship. So ESPN Zone was a last minute substitution forced by the circumstances.

The rest of today (Wednesday) went like this: We left our hotel somewhat later than yesterday and tomorrow’s schedule, leaving for Mount Vernon about 8:45AM. Our visit to Mount Vernon filled up the morning, and got mixed reviews amongst the students. Lunch was at the Reagan Building, and then we walked to the Washington Monument to ride up its fifty stories for some great views; this seemed to be universally enjoyed by the kids. It was while we were up in the Monument that the weather turned against us a bit, drenching several of our kids as they waited for the others to finish at the top. We then walked to the HM, where as I already wrote things didn’t “click” as I would have liked (maybe I’ll learn later that it made more of an impact; feedback from you parents will be particularly helpful). After that our trusty Classic Tours guide Bob took us to the Kennedy Center and the Jefferson Memorial. Then we came here to ESPN Zone for a dinner buffet and two to three hours of games. When we get back to the hotel tonight we’ll begin the packing up process so that we can check out when we leave the hotel tomorrow at 8AM.

And with that I think I better draw this post to a close; I need to get downstairs and see what all the excitement is about. I’ll put this post on the ‘net when we get back to the hotel later tonight.

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Wednesday, July 05, 2006

More hanging out on the Mall...



Ken managed to build his house of cards several layers high.












Brandon and Brandon, not long before the fireworks started.












Looks like too many for Euchre; not sure what they were playing. Clockwise from Cory (in the black shirt): Mitchell, Nate, Charlie & Logan.














Sweaty and spent after playing soccer for a couple hours. Bryce, Jake (behind), Andrew.






Katie, Chelsea G, Dominic










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Hanging out on the Mall, awaiting fireworks.


Ally & Shianna flash smiles to toward the camera.
















Eduardo, Jessica (and Ken) build card houses.















Yikes, definitely not a great shot. Putting it on the web is proof that I was in a hurry when I posted. Anyway, it's Eduardo, Ken (back to camera), Jessika, Christina and Charlie.












Charlie smiles, as Logan looks rueful. Does this mean Charlie and his partner just won a hand of Euchre? Mildred sits quietly behind them.










Who knew that Logan had such a tough-guy look in him?

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Tuesday, July 04, 2006

In Line Outside Ford's Theater

before they put up the sign announcing its closure due to electrical problems because of last week's floods

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4th of July mid-afternoon update

Given the heat and humidity, and the decided lack of enthusiasm amongst our kids for the parade, we did some last-minute switching around of today's schedule. After Ford's Theater (which disappointingly was closed due to electrical problems following last week's flooding), we skipped the planned four-hour hang-out-on-the-Mall-and-take-in-the-festivities time and went straight to Arlington. Bob, our Classic Tours guide, took us on an information-filled, leisurely stroll around Arlington, including highlights like the Changing of the Guard and the eternal flame in JFK's honor, plus numerous other lesser-known sites, including the tombstone of Joe Lewis, amongst others. The temperature was oppressively hot and humid (big surprise, I know, for DC in July), but our kids did a great job of maintaining interest and a respectful demeanor. Well, mostly... (-:

Then after lunch we headed back to the hotel to cool off and get refreshed before leaving in just a bit for dinner, after which the adventure really begins when we try to simultaneously avoid the storms forecast for late this afternoon and find a spot on the Mall to view the fireworks later in the evening. We're crossing our fingers that the storms pass early enough so as not to cancel the big show.

So the next few hours will be interesting, to say the least. I feel a bit like Gandalf heading out on a journey with 32 hobbits in tow. (-:

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Kavin the Super Guide

As I said earlier, Kavin was a terrific guide, though in fairness I suspect many of the Gettysburg guides are top-notch. Here's a clip on him in action (sorry for the odd angle):




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Day one pics...

Here are some of the pictures from yesterday that I tried to post earlier, but didn't have enough time for them to finish uploading:


Nolan & Jessika glance at me while listening to our Gettysburg tour-guide Kavin (later I hope to put a video clip of him in action up on the site). Kavin (that's the correct spelling) was a terrific guide.















As I recall this shot is just before or after Kavin's presentation, as we stood on the ground of the infamous Pickett's Charge. It was one of the most meaningful moments in the two-hour presentation, thinking about the bizarre and complex combination of individual valor, fallible leadership, and passionate patriotism on both sides of this horrible and devastating conflict. But a conflict that, because the Union won, laid the groundwork for the USA to grow into the world superpower that it is today.















Brandon and Jake (with Steven, I think, in the background) listening to Kavin speak about Pickett's Charge.













Andrew let's loose on the bus in a free moment while at Gettysburg, and I think that's Cory in the foreground.















Haley, Emily and Shianna pose with one of the many monuments at Gettysburg. I neglected to make a note of which one this is.




















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So far, so good...

Everything has gone splendidly, in fact, as I write this post over thirty-six hours after we departed CJHS on Sunday evening. The kids have been pretty much spot-on terrific. Our bus ride was uneventful, except for the predictable lack of sleep one experiences in such cramped quarters (the phrase "cruel and unusual punishment" was uttered more than once, but mostly just by chaperons....) Most of the kids found Gettysburg interesting, and even the ones who didn't were well behaved. Then we headed to the National Cathedral, after stopping for lunch at a mall food-court just outside DC. The Cathedral seemed to be universally awe-inspiring, which may have helped our kids to stay focused and polite. After the Cathedral we headed to the National Zoo for just over an hour; it was good to be able to split into smaller groups and just hang-out and wander for a bit. Some of us were lucky enough to get a great view of the pandas. After the zoo we ate at another food court and then checked in at the hotel, where not-surprisingly all our exhaustion magically transformed into energy and excitement, but not so much as to be a problem.

Sorry, time has evaporated and I've only uploaded one photo. More to follow, hopefully today.(he says optimistically as it occurs to him that net access may be just a tad hard to come by, what with the 32 kids to chaperone and all and the schedule that doesn't offer easy internet access...) I'll do my best.





















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